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1983 Michener Award Winner -
Kitchener-Waterloo Record
November 10, 1984. The Kitchener-Waterloo Record won the 1983 Michener
Award for meritorious public service journalism for a trio of three
stories -
Revenue Canada's tax collecting methods, high pressure stock sales
in Ontario and quality control problems in farm supply industries.
The stories had been submitted as three entries but judges felt
their overall quality was sufficient to combine them into one.
The Ottawa citizen and the Kingston Whig-Standard earned
honour- able mention, while the Calgary Herald, CBC (The Journal) and
the Edmonton Journals received citations of merit. The case of James
Keegstra, the controversial mayor of Eckville, Alberta, was a
recurring theme in the judging of the 1983 Michener Award. (see
citations below)
Governor
General Jean Sauvé presented the awards at a
Saturday night ceremony and dinner held at Rideau Hall in Ottawa.
The event was attended by invited guests and representatives of the
six finalists chosen from 39 entries in the 1983 competition. Her
Excellency commended the finalists on their "very special
contribution to the ongoing quest for knowledge and truth, and on
your dedication to the high standards of excellence which so
obviously govern your work". (full text
of Her Excellency's award night address)
Jim Romahn accepted the Michener Trophy
on behalf of the Record. The publisher of the Kitchener- Waterloo Record, Sandy
Baird, said he was honoured to receive the award for the third time in
five years. The trio of submissions entered by the Record in the competition
included:
1) a series by reporter Philip Jalsevac on Revenue Canada
search-and-seizure methods and other tax collecting practices -
including the surprising disclosure that auditors were working on a
quota of revenues - that shocked Parliament and public alike. The
revelations led to intense scrutiny of the department’s methods, the
removal of a deputy minister, the end of the quota system, and
promises of further changes of policy.
2) a set of stories about suspected quality control difficulties in
fertilizer and feed by Record farm reporter Jim Romahn that
illustrated how to use Canada's recently enacted
access-to-information law success- fully. The information in
the government reports that were examined shocked Canadian farmers
and the resulting newspaper stories pressured farm supply companies
to pull up their socks.
3) an exposé by reporter Brock Ketcham of high pressure stock sales activities
that victimized small, unsophisticated investors across the
Province. The 6-month inquiry, amid threats of legal action by
broker-dealers, forced the Ontario Securities Commission to order
an investigation. This led to reforms by the OSC and some
disciplinary fines for salesmen and companies that had been investigated.
Former Governor General Roland Michener
presented a special award
for the late Clark Todd, a CTV reporter who was killed in
September 1983 while covering the civil war in Lebanon. A native of Saint John
New Brunswick, he was a London correspondent for NBC News from
1974-1980 and appointed CTV London Bureau Chief in 1980. He was the
recipient of many journalism awards for his work covering the
international news scene. The award for 'an
exceptional contribution to public service and journalism' was
accepted by his widow Anne Todd.
Honourable Mention: The Citizen, Ottawa, for stories
focusing attention on the Canadian Transport Commission's 40-year practice of
allowing people involved in regulatory control of
airlines and public servants to accept free air travel for business
or pleasure. The series was written by reporter Michael Prentice and
detailed the use of free air passes by active and retired airline
regulators and the 130 staff of the Canadian Transport Commission. The practice was abolished following
publication of the stories.
The Kingston Whig-Standard was awarded honourable mention for
an illuminating study of the deal the federal government made with Bell Helicopter of
Fort Worth, Texas, to locate a
new plant near Mirabel Airport in Quebec, rather than Kingston. This
location ranked lowest on Bell's own list of choices. Reporter Jack
Rafter spent six weeks researching the deal. The judges commended
him for his 'painstaking and
detailed examination' of Canada's first helicopter factory which
will be heavily subsidized by the governments of Ottawa and Quebec.
Citations of Merit were awarded to:
CBC's The Journal, the Calgary Herald, and the Edmonton Journal
each for its part in focusing public attention on the controversial
case of James Keegstra, the Eckville, Alberta, high school teacher
who taught anti-Semitic theories in his classroom. Each of these
finalists played a different role in developing a public awareness
which led to Mr. Keegstra's loss of his teaching position, his
defeat in a bid for re-election as mayor, and dismissal as a member
of the executive committee of the national Social Credit party.
Judges for the 1983 Michener Award:
Fraser MacDougall, executive secretary of the Ontario Press
Council; Bill Boss, former director of public relations at the
University of Ottawa; Emery LeBlanc, former editor of L'Evangeline
and former director of public relations for Via Rail; and William
Metcalfe, former managing editor of Winnipeg Free Press and Ottawa
Journal.
The Michener Award, founded in 1970 by the late Right Honourable
Roland Michener, then Governor-General, goes to a news organization.
The judges’ decisions are heavily influenced by the degree of
public benefit generated by the print and broadcast projects
submitted for consideration. The annual award is open to daily and
weekly newspapers, news agencies, radio and television stations,
networks and periodicals.
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