1979 Michener Award Winner: The Kingston-Whig StandardOttawa, Saturday, November 8, 1980. News stories about fluoride poisoning on Cornwall Island have
brought the Kingston Whig-Standard the 10th annual Michener Award for
investigative journalism in 1979.
The series investigated emissions from a Massena, New York, aluminum
plant of Reynolds Metals Co. which drifted across an Indian reserve
on Cornwall Island - endangering the health of Indians, cattle and
vegetation. The newspaper began with a six-month old National
Research Council report late in 1978 which had been ignored but had
pinpointed Cornwall Island as a case of environmental pollution.
The Whig-Standard was honoured at a black-tie Government House dinner attended by Governor General Edward Schreyer and two former governors-general, Roland Michener, for whom the award is named, and Jules Léger and their wives. News editor Harvey Schachter accepted the Michener Award on behalf of the Kingston newspaper.
The Edmonton Journal received honourable mention and citations of
merit were awarded to the Calgary Albertan, the Calgary Herald and
the Toronto Star (see below). His Excellency congratulated the
finalists and remarked how fortunate Canadians were "to live in a
country which cherishes its freedom of the press. We must jealously
guard this freedom" (full text).
The finalists for the 1979 Michener Award were selected from a total
of 26 submissions.
In making the award to the Whig-Standard, the judges said that "the
series jarred a lethargic Canadian government into action on a
problem it had know about for five years, embarrassed the Ontario
government into clumsy acts of secrecy and shocked an apathetic
public into an awareness of the dangers posed by an industrial
pollutant usually looked on merely as a beneficial tooth decay
preventative for children". The series was also recognized for what
the judges termed "a first-class pursuit of a story which had been
ignored in Canada and the United States."
In its award-winning series of stories, the Whig-Standard also
revealed that fluoride emissions in Brampton and Rosedale - the home
ridings of Ontario Premier William Davis and then federal Health
Minister David Crombie - exceeded the allowable level. The news team
comprised reporters Penny Stuart, Karl Polzer, Sylvia Wright and Ann
Lukits along with editors Norris MacDonald, Shelagh Stanley and
Harvey Schachter. The team represented one-quarter of the
paper's entire city and district reporting staff.
Honourable Mention:
The Edmonton Journal, for a series on the way some disturbed and problem children were handled at a
government-run centre which used solitary confinement in small, poorly ventilated rooms -- called "thinking rooms" -- as a punishment
for even minor misdemeanours.
The series of 45 stories led to an investigation by the Alberta Ombudsman, Dr. Randall Ivany. His report contained four pages quoting
the series, by reporter Wendy Koenig, crediting her and the Journal with prompting the investigation. His recommendations included a
call for a 45-minute limit on use of solitary confinement rooms in juvenile centres operated by the provincial government.
The Journal noted that the series was produced under a constant barrage of pressure. The province's social services department issued
a no-comment order to all employees. The director of Westfield, the centre that came under fire, tried to prevent the researching
and the writing of the stories. A group of Westfield staff filed a libel action against the Journal. The deputy minister of social
services sent a letter to the newspaper's publisher that "amounted to character assassination of the worst sort."
Citations of Merit were awarded to:
The Calgary Herald, for an exposé of police complicity in the illegal entry of a Calgary house during a drug investigation in an arrangement with a self-confessed criminal. Acting on a tip, Herald reporters and photographers were able to watch and photograph the entry. Following publication of the story, two police detectives were suspended, pending an investigation, but were later cleared. When the police commission closed its book on the case, it formally endorsed the police chief's stated policy that illegal acts by police officers would not be condoned.
The Windsor Star, for stories on the high rate of cancer deaths due to asbestos fibre contamination of Windsor's Bendix Automotive Co. plant which manufactured asbestos brake lining. Stories by reporter Kevin Mclntosh disclosed for the first time a possible link between the high cancer rate and the airborne asbestos fibres that had swirled through the plant for more than 30 years. The Ontario government agreed to hold public hearings and also forced Bendix to introduce new safety measures. Although Bendix denied that asbestos caused the cancers, it changed some procedures in the plant and agreed to provide regular X-rays for workers in and around the asbestos operation.
The Calgary Albertan, for a series that brought to public
attention the economic squeeze on Canadian Armed Forces families due
to small salary increases and hefty increases in rents on
government-owned housing. The government had proposed to increase
pay by 6.4 per cent while increasing rent for married quarters on
Canadian Forces Base Calgary by 25 to 50 per cent. The stories by
reporter Bob Bergen brought results. The defence minister said
changes would be made in the system of fixing rents. Acting on this,
Bergen covered protests at political meetings. He also developed
exclusive stories on soldiers leaving the forces in unprecedented
numbers; and on some families at the Calgary base going on public
welfare, and receiving income supplements of $5 to $125 a month.