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The 1997 Michener Award Winner
OTTAWA, April 28, 1998 - The Halifax Daily News won the 1997 Michener
award for public service journalism for its coverage of a sexual
abuse scandal at Nova Scotia reform schools.
Supreme Court of Canada Chief Justice Antonio Lamer, acting on
behalf of Governor General Roméo LeBlanc, made the announce- ment
during a ceremony held in Rideau Hall - the Governor General's residence. The
newspaper was among six finalists (drawn from 43 entries) for the
Michener Award. Chief Justice Lamer said it was a privilege to
present the Michener Awards to those whose work he admired - "reporters who have chased down a story, got it right, and
made a difference to society". (full text of
his award night speech)
The Daily News won praise for detaching David Rodenhiser, one
of its nine reporters, for a three-month study of abuse at the
province's reform schools.
"Grim details of beatings, molestations and rapes emerged,"
from the investigation. Much of the information contained in the
Daily News stories was unearthed by reporters who discovered a
"massive sealed archive" of government documents of which even some
senior civil servants had been unaware. Nor had the sealed-off
provincial correspondence been available to the RCMP investigating
allegations at the time from 1,500 complainants. Approximately 400
suspects are under investigation. The RCMP subsequently began
investigating allegations of fraud against some complainants seeking
provincial compensation.
Justice Lamer also announced that
Jean-Pierre Rogel, a science reporter with Radio Canada, was the recipient of
the 1998 Michener Deacon-Fellowship. Mr. Rogel
has specialized in science reporting for over 14 years.
He will use the Michener-Deacon fellowship to complete a book for
non-specialists on the ethics of genetic science. Specifically, in
cooperation with several educational institutions, he will be dealing with the wide-ranging social and
ethical impact of genetic science on areas ranging from human
fertility to agriculture. (Jean-Pierre Rogel Michener Fellowship
Report) Update - Mr. Rogel published his book in
1999 under the title - La Grand Saga des Genes)
(Update: Two years after the Daily News reports were published,
the Nova Scotia government appointed Mr. Justice Fred Kaufmann to conduct an inquiry into the
government’s handling of allegations of abuse.
In his report, published in 2002, Mr. Justice Kaufmann said: “The plight of innocent employees, as
well as the distress of true survivors, was greatly exacerbated by frequent
stories in the press…I have no doubt that there were claimants who were truly subjected to
physical and sexual abuse…Similarly, I have no doubt that there was a significant number of employees who
were falsely implicated".)
Honourable Mention: Le Droit.
The Ottawa-based French language newspaper was recognized for articles
about the proposal to downsize the Montfort community hospital. The
Ontario hospital was ordered to close as part of a massive
province-wide restructuring plan. The Michener judging committee found
the series to be an "energetic reaction to the decision by Premier
Mike Harris' hospital restructuring process to close Montfort", the
only francophone hospital in urban Ontario. The coverage included 371 news
stories, 31 editorials and 177 letters to the editor published by
the daily during the massive call to arms which helped spearhead a
francophone backlash that so far has succeeded in keeping some Montfort
functions as well as strengthening the determination of supporters
to restore it to full operation.
Citations of merit were awarded to:
The Toronto Star, for its exhaustive series on youth
unemployment - 1,000 Voices, Lives On Hold. The Star series on youth unemployment involved interviews
with more than 1,000 young people and was cited by Finance Minister Paul
Martin as having influenced the contents of his 1998 budget, which
included several measures to help youth make the transition from
school to work. The series was prepared by reporters Jonathan
Ferguson, Tanya Talaga and Vinay Menon. It is the sixth straight year that The Star has
been a finalist. James Travers accepted the Citation of Merit on
behalf of the Toronto Star.
The Calgary Herald, for an investigation into despair and
death on an Indian reserve. The Alberta Provincial Court made a
request, which was rejected by a neglectful federal government, to
conduct a Crown investigation into why the well-endowed Stoney
Indian reserve had become a "welfare ghetto ... run like a banana
republic". The Herald, and its team of reporters Kim Lunman, Bob
Beaty, and Mark Lowey, launched an inquiry into the unusually high
rate of unnatural deaths and exorbitant salaries paid to three
chiefs while the tribe was reporting a large deficit. Several months
later, after publication of the daily newspaper’s in-depth
investigation, the federal government took control of the band's
finances.
London Free Press, for a year-long investigation into the
affairs of London Hydro that ended with a public panel of inquiry
which found proof of the allegations first uncovered by the daily -
derelict governance, incompetent management, and corruption among
senior staff. It also uncovered a questionable $2-million
consultant's contract and an apparent illegal Hydro Ontario contract
for a power plant.
Market Place (CBC-TV), for a widely-praised and timely program on
the drug industry which debated the following key questions: Why are
Canadians paying so much for drugs when a lot of the research has
actually been funded by tax dollars? Why are our drug costs so high
when Canadian research and development for pharmaceuticals lag
behind other countries? Why do we spend more on marketing than on
research? Why do we introduce new drugs that often offer no greater
benefit than the older drugs? Marketplace is a CBC-TV consumer
affairs program and has been on the air since 1972. The Citation of
Merit was accepted by Renée Pellerin, representing CBC Television.
Award Night Photo Gallery
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Renée Pellerin
CBC Marketplace
Citation of Merit |
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James Travers
Toronto Star
Citation of Merit |
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photo by Sgt. Christian Coulombe - Office of the Secretary to the Governor General
Left to Right: James
Travers, Toronto Star; David Rodenhiser, Halifax Daily
News; François Roy, managing editor, LeDroit; Philip
McLeod, editor-in-chief, London Free Press ; Chief Justice Antonio Lamer; Renée Pellerin,
CBC-TV; Kim Lunman, Calgary Herald; Jean-Pierre Rogel, SRC.
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Judges for the 1997 Michener Award:
Françoise Côté, author and journalist, Montréal; 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,
Communications Consultant Halifax; Arch MacKenzie, former Ottawa
Bureau Chief, The Canadian Press and The Toronto Star (Chair of the
Judging Panel); Kevin Peterson, former publisher of the Calgary
Herald.
Judges for the 1998 Fellowship:
David Humphreys, Public Affairs Consultant, Ottawa; former Senior
Editor, Calgary Albertan, Ottawa Journal, FP Publications, Globe and
Mail; Duncan McMonagle, Winnipeg, former Editor-in-Chief, Winnipeg
Free Press; Guy Rondeau, former Bureau Chief, La Press canadienne,
Montreal; Shirley Sharzer, Ottawa, former journalist, Toronto
Telegraph, Toronto Star, Globe and Mail; Jodi White, Vice-President
of Corporate Affairs at Imasco Limited; Chair of the Public Policy
Forum (Chair of the Judging Panel).
The Michener Foundation Fellowship is awarded annually to one or
two journalists, depending on merit, for the purpose of advancing
education in the field of journalism and fostering promotion of the
public interest through values that benefit the community.
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