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The
Ottawa Citizen & The Globe and Mail - Co-winners of 1993
Michener Award
Ottawa,
May 9, 1994. The1993 Michener Award for
meritorious public service journalism was shared by the Ottawa
Citizen and The Globe and Mail. The tie, sixth in the 24 years of the
Michener Awards, honoured the Citizen for its coverage of the controversial plan by the
Progressive Conservative government to privatize Toronto's Pearson
airport. The Globe and Mail won for coverage of the tangled, tragic tainted
blood story.
The Award ceremony was held at Rideau Hall, Ottawa and hosted by
Governor General Ramon Hnatyshyn. The 1993 Michener Award was
accepted by reporter Greg Weston on behalf of the Citizen. The six finalists were selected
from among fifty-eight entries including news-papers, news services,
broadcasting, and periodicals. In his address to invited guests, the
Governor General praised the high quality of the individual entries
and how they met the highest standards of journalism.
He also said that times had changed and the evolving media world
would startle the journalists of yesteryear. He touched on the
serious challenges posed by new technology and what impact the
proliferation of personal computers might have on traditional forms
of print and broadcast journalism. Questions have to be answered
about fundamental journalistic values and ethics and how these
standards might be affected by fiscal restraint and bourgeoning
competitive forces. (full text of the
Governor General's address)
The Ottawa Citizen was co-winner of the 1993 Award for
exposing the deal to privatize Toronto's Pearson airport, a series
that provided a major lightning rod for voter discontent with the
government of Brian Mulroney. Detailed reports by columnist Greg
Weston in the middle of the federal election campaign were a
significant factor in the investigation and subsequent cancellation
of the multi-million dollar deal. In its submission, The Citizen
described the airport scheme this way: '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 Globe and Mail was selected as a finalist for the 3rd
year in a row. The newspaper was honoured tonight for its continuing probe of the tangled and tragic
events behind what many believe will be Canada's worst public health
disaster. As a finalist for the 1992 award, the newspaper reported
on the tainted blood saga that was responsible for more than 1,000
aids-related deaths as a result of blood transfusions in the 1980s.
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.
The President of the Foundation, Clark Davey, presented the 1994
Fellowships to Francois Brousseau and Robert
Hepburn.
Mr. Brousseau of Montreal, has worked for Le Droit 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 in fast-changing
times.
Robert Hepburn is currently the Middle East correspondent for the Toronto
Star and has been bureau chief in Ottawa and Washington. He will study the movement towards human rights - especially
women's and children's rights - and democracy in the developing
world
in southeast Asia. Mr. Hepburn will focus his studies on the impact
of human and civil rights on trade and political relations between
China, Hong Kong and Taiwan and how Canada is responding to such
local concerns at the same time it is trying to increase trade with
these emerging nations. Mr. Hepburn's proposal comes at a time when
the Canadian government is being criticized for appearing to put
trade ahead of concerns about human rights.
(Hepburn
Fellowship report)
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.
Mr. Davey also announced the decision by the Foundation board to honour the dedication
and commitment of Paul Deacon, whose "work for the last many
years was instrumental in keeping the Michener Foundation vibrant
and strong". At its annual meeting, the board unanimously elected Paul Deacon as president emeritus.
In his award night address, Clark
Davey said that "every organization represented by the six finalists
has demonstrated its leadership in the field of public service
journalism. 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".
(Full text)
Honorable Mention: The Standard (St. Catharines) for an
extended investigation of the municipal Hydro commission and
administration. As a direct result of the stories with reporter
Carol Alaimo leading the way, there was a special audit of the Hydro
books, the $100,000-a-year general manager was fired, both the mayor
and the chair man resigned from the Hydro commission, a management
study was commissioned, and city council even passed a formal thank
you motion to both the Standard and Ms, Alaimo. And, as a further
consequence of the probe, rates were cut for hydro consumers. Judges
noted that small news organizations don't require the resources of a
network or a major metropolitan newspaper to make a difference. The
impact of The Standard's investigation demonstrated that fact and
was an important consideration for the judges.
Citations of Merit ware awarded to:
The Edmonton Journal (last year's winner of the Michener
Award), for 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 percent cutbacks in funding.
CBC's 'the fifth estate' for opening 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". It said that the problem exists in many
amateur sports right up to national levels but sports organizations
shy from confronting it. The program prompted calls for codes of conduct
comparable to those governing the legal and medical professions.
The Toronto Star (another returning finalist) for a two-part
series by health reporter Lisa Priest on the difficulties of
getting treatment for Ontario breast cancer patients. Like a lot of
other 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.
Judges for the 1993 Michener Award:
Arch MacKenzie, Chair of the judging panel; former Ottawa bureau
chief of the Canadian Press and the Toronto Star; Jeannine Locke,
former journalist with the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, the Ottawa
Citizen and the Toronto Star; now-retired CBC film-maker; Marilyn
MacDonald, former Atlantic provinces magazine and CBC journalist,
now director of public relations at Dalhousie University, Halifax;
Barry Mullin former ombudsman, Winnipeg Free Press, now journalism
lecturer at the University of Winnipeg; Guy Rondeau, former bureau
chief, Canadian Press, Montreal.
Judges for the 1994 Fellowship:
The Honourable D. Keith Davey,
Senator (Chair of the Judging Panel); Sandy Baird, former publisher, The Kitchener-Waterloo
Record; Diane Filer, a now-retired director of CBC international
relations; Emmanuelle Gattuso, a former senior executive with the
Canadian Association of Broadcasters; and Jody White, Ottawa public
affairs consultant and a former senior adviser to Joe Clark and Kim
Campbell.
The distinction between the Michener Award and other media awards is
primarily the emphasis on the degree of arms-length public benefit
that is generated. Journalistic excellence alone is not enough.
Websites:
www.michenerawards.ca
www.prixmichener.ca
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