Clark Davey - President of the Michener
Awards Foundation -
His Remarks at the Michener Awards ceremony, May 9, 1994
Your Excellencies. It is appropriate as the Michener Awards
program enters its 25th year, that we acknowledge again the support
we have received from you both and from your predecessors for what
is really a celebration of the principle of public service which
guided Roly Michener's life.
It is appropriate too to recognize and thank you for your personal
initiative which led to the invitation to a number of bright young
Canadian journalists who are with us today, some of them already
award winners in their own right.
And, since this is the only public occasion we have, it is
appropriate also to honour the dedication and commitment of one of
our number, Mr. Paul Deacon, whose work for the last many years has
been instrumental in keeping this organization vibrant and strong. I
am delighted to tell you that at its annual meeting this morning the
board of the foundation unanimously elected Mr Deacon as president
emeritus.
As you know in addition to the awards themselves, the Michener
Foundation supports four month study leave fellowships for
mid-career journalists working on projects to advance education in
the field of journalism and foster promotion of the public interest
through values that benefit the community.
May we present this year's fellowship winners:
François Brousseau of Montreal has worked for Le Droit here in
Ottawa and for Le Journal de Montreal before joining the foreign
affairs staff of Le Devoir. Fluent in Italian, he will examine the
corruption crisis in Italy with particular emphasis on relations
among the media, the senior judiciary and the entire political
process.
Robert Hepburn is the Middle East correspondent for the Toronto
Star. He will study the movement towards human rights - especially
women's and children's rights - and democracy in the developing
world particularly in southeast Asia, a subject with which you've
had some recent contact, your Excellency. Mr. Hepburn will focus his
studies on the impact of human and civil rights on trade and
political relations.
Now for the awards themselves. I use the plural because every
organization represented by the six finalists has demonstrated its
leadership in the field of public service journalism. The judges
tell us this was a vintage year with the six finalists tonight only
the best of an outstanding group of 58 entries from radio stations,
television stations and networks, community newspapers, periodicals,
news services and daily newspapers.
Often when the kinds of stories that win the Michener Award - good
old fashioned muck racking - are broadcast or published there isn't
always instant public recognition that the public interest is being
served. Often the news organization and the journalists who report
these kinds of stories take a considerable amount of heat. Happily
the newspapers and broadcasters represented here tonight show no
signs of wanting to get out of the kitchen.
The finalists are:
The Edmonton Journal, last year's winner of the Michener Award, is
back with two massive entries which reflect the continuing and
growing concern Canadians have about their own health and the health
care delivery system. The judges decided to combine these two
entries.
One produced more than 200 stories over a period of months on key
issues affecting health in men and women from teen years through the
sixties. There were bi-weekly public forums which drew turn away
crowds. The other series, ranging over eight days, examined the
tough choices to be made in health care delivery in the wake of the
Alberta government's 25 per cent cutbacks in funding.
The Ottawa Citizen through columnist Greg Weston provided voters
with another major lightning rod for their discontent with the
government of Brian Mulroney through exposing the deal for the
privatization of Toronto's Pearson airport.
Weston's detailed reports in the middle of the election campaign
were a significant factor in the investigation and subsequent
cancellation of the multi-million dollar deal. The Citizen’s
submission put it well: "Rarely in recent political history has a
government initiative of such magnitude and public consequence been
cloaked in such secrecy, the truth tightly guarded among a small
group of mainly self-interested players”.
The CBC's fifth state opened the locker room door to one of the
darker sides of Canadian sport - the sexual harassment of female
athletes by their male coaches.
The program emphasized how many amateur sports organizations shy
away from confronting by refusing to acknowledge that it exists. And
yet, as the CBC submission said, the program offered convincing
proof that "from Woodstock to Calgary, some male coaches of
volleyball, rowing and swim teams have taken advantage of their
positions of tremendous power and trust by sexually harassing female
athletes, some as young as 14 years old." The program has prompted
calls for codes of conduct comparable to those governing the legal
and medical professions.
The Toronto Star is another returning finalist this time with a
two-part series by health reporter Linda Priest on the difficulties
of getting treatment for Ontario breast cancer patients.
Like a lot of other great investigative stories, this one started
with a telephone call from a patient distraught about delays in her
radiation treatment. Ms Priest discovered that Toronto area women
might have to move to northern Ontario facilities for six weeks for
treatment after breast surgery and doctors admitted to her
reluctantly that they were being forced into much more radical
surgery because they feared delays in the less drastic treatment.
The cash-strapped Ontario government moved quickly to add 26 more
radiation specialists and started development of a long-term cancer
treatment plan.
The Standard of St. Catharines, Ontario, has demonstrated again you
don’t have to have the resources of a network or a major
metropolitan paper to make a difference, an important consideration
for the Michener judges.
About 20 months ago, the Standard, with reporter Carol Alaimo
leading the way, began an investigation of the municipal Hydro
commission and administration. As a direct result of the stories,
there was a special audit of the Hydro books, the $100,000-a-year
general manager was fired, both the mayor and the chairman resigned
from the Hydro commission, a management study was commissioned, the
city council even passed a formal thank you motion to both the
Standard and Ms, Alaimo and, to the delight and perhaps surprise of
hydro consumers, rates were cut. Now that's impact.
And, finally, The Globe and Mail. We are not aware that there have
been previous finalists who have qualified two years in a row with
reporting on the same topic. That's the position The Globe is in.
It was a finalist for the 1992 award with its expose of the tainted
blood saga that was responsible for more than 1,000 aids-related
deaths as a result of blood transfusions in the 1980s. And this
year’s judges were also impressed by the Globe's persistence in
continuing to poke at and probe the tangled and tragic events behind
what many believe will be Canada's worst public health disaster.
Last September's four-part series revealed how the provinces
conspired to deny compensation to victims of tainted blood and how
many of them were dying destitute because federal support had run
out. Federal and other reviews followed quickly. Within weeks the
provinces had reversed their seven-year-old policy and provided a
$159 million compensation package. And the saga continues. Perhaps
The Globe will be back again next year on the same topic.
Now if the auditor general will please come forward with the
envelope containing the judges' ranking.
Clark Davey
President
Michener Awards Foundation
Rideau Hall, Ottawa
May 9, 1994
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