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The Globe and Mail wins 2004 Michener Award
for sponsorship investigation
Ottawa, April 14, 2005 – The Globe and Mail has won the 2004
Michener Award for meritorious public service in journalism. The
newspaper was honoured for its
relentless investigation of the federal sponsorship scandal which began with reporter Daniel Leblanc’s access to information request
more than four years ago.
It was a significant contributor to developments in 2004 including a scathing report by Auditor General
Shelia Fraser, the recall of Alfonso Gagliano as Canada's Ambassador to Denmark, the firing of three heads of Crown corporations and
the launch of the public inquiry headed by Mr. Justice John Gomery. Coverage by the Globe continued through 2004. The newspaper also won a Citation of Merit for another entry (see below).
The Globe's editor-in-chief, Edward Greenspon, accepted the
award on behalf of his newspaper from Governor General Adrienne
Clarkson.
Pierre Bergeron, President of the Michener Awards
Foundation, said the finalists were selected from 51 entries,
representative of large and small news organizations from across
Canada. He said that the excellent quality of the entries was an
indication of the high calibre of public service journalism being
done in Canada.
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Jenny Manzer |
The 2005 Michener-Deacon Fellowship was presented to
Jenny Manzer, a freelance journalist from Victoria, B.C., for her proposal to study
and produce a series of articles about Canada’s drug approval and
monitoring system. She plans to investigate all stages of the
approval process and provide realistic proposals that policy-makers
can consider to develop a system that puts public safety first.The fellowship provides $25,000 for four months’
work on an approved project (full story)
During her opening address prior to the presentation of the
awards,
Governor General Adrienne Clarkson said that "when we speak of
journalism and public benefit, we are talking about stories that
leave some-thing substantial behind, not simply by giving insight or
evoking empathy but in actually improving the social condition."
(Full Text)
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Daniel Leblanc |
Globe and Mail reporters Daniel Leblanc and Campbell Clark
began their inquiry into the Federal government sponsorship program
after hearing concerns about the management practices of some senior
bureaucrats in Ottawa. They began following the money trail by
filing access-to-information requests and examining internal government documents
& the sponsorship program's audit from 2000. Earlier stories
highlighted the questionable nature of sponsorship program spending.
By 2002, the sponsorship scandal was no longer about patronage or
uncontrolled spending, but about alleged fraud. Their investigation led to
one of the biggest political scandals in Canadian history.
Mr. Leblanc said it was the aggressive use of the Canadian flag in
federal advertising in Quebec that piqued his interest because other
advertisers weren't doing the same thing. The documents he obtained
gave him a sense that something was wrong and every time he wrote a
story that got close to this he would receive anonymous calls and
letters telling him to go forward.
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Pierre Bergeron - President
Michener Awards Foundation 2000-2005
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Tonight's Award ceremony marked the
completion of Pierre Bergeron's five year term as President of the
Michener Awards Foundation. He commented on the finalists for the
2004 trophy. "This year Michener Award finalists made and shaped the news, today's news, that
are making and shaping Canadian society hopefully for the better and parfois
for the less better. This is what we are all about. This is the challenge of
doing our job in the public spotlight with the public interest in mind.
The news organizations we are honoring this year did not wait for the news to
hit them and report to the public. They went one large and important step
further by taking the time and asking the classic 5 W’s of our profession by
putting a special emphasis on the fifth 'W', the Why? They made the news. They
provoked and they challenged and this is why they are here tonight to be
honoured and recognized. As I come to the end of my stewardship, it
is with great sincerity that I thank you again, Your Excellency, for
your beneficial interest in and quiet support for the Michener
Awards Foundation. Our award process has been made stronger by your
advice and challenge. I am also happy to report to you and this
wider audience that our financial foundation is stronger than ever
through the continuing generosity of the Deacon family, our
directors and the work of the Community Foundation of Ottawa."
David Humphreys was named President of the Michener Awards Foundation. He is
a former bureau chief of The Globe and Mail and former managing
editor of The Ottawa Journal and The Albertan (Calgary). He also
served as Europe correspondent for FP Publications. He is currently president of
the Humphreys
Public Affairs Group. Past President Pierre Bergeron will continue as a
Director on the Foundation's Board.
Citations of Merit were awarded to:
Calgary Herald: An eight-page investigative report, "The
Direct Sell", was the result of a year's worth of work by
business reporter Grant Robertson. The report explored the deceptive
marketing practices of Direct Energy, a U.K.-based company that was
poised to become the energy supplier to four out of every five
Alberta homes. After the report was published the Alberta government
reinstated a consumer education program and Direct Energy announced
a number of changes in its sales tactics, including independent
monitoring.
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation: “Faint Warning" was
a unique CBC investigative project to evaluate the federal
government's adverse drug reaction reporting system. It took five
years and many legal appeals under the access to information law to
obtain the government's 37-year database of adverse drug reaction
reports. A searchable version of this database has been posted on
CBC.ca, the corporation's web site. After the series was broadcast
on radio and television,
the number of adverse drug reactions reported to Heath Canada increased
sharply as did the number of alerts issued by the department. The
federal health minister has vowed to make it mandatory for doctors
to report serious and unexpected adverse drug reactions.
Canadian Medical Association Journal and Découverte
(Radio-Canada science program): The Canadian Medical Association
Journal (CMAJ) and Découverte were selected jointly for their
reports on the outbreak of Clostridium difficile, a
hospital-acquired infection, in Quebec hospitals. CMAJ reporter
Laura Eggertson broke the story in June with her report that at
least 79 patients had died of the infection. As a result, the Quebec
Ministry of Health struck a committee of experts which recommended a
number of changes to hospital protocols. In October, Découverte
aired a report on the virulence of the strain of Clostridium
difficile, which had just been established, and identified it as a
possible cause of the deaths of 600 hospital patients in one year.
Following the report the Quebec health minister formed a
surveillance committee and reviewed policies on the use of
antibiotics. The Public Health Agency of Canada announced the launch
of a surveillance program at 25 major Canadian hospitals.
The Globe and Mail: Investigations of the insurance and
mutual funds industries by teams of reporters from the Report on
Business disclosed improper use of funds and had significant
results. In November, property and casualty insurers announced that
they would disclose all commission practices and send a brochure to
every policy holder in the country outlining relationships with
independent brokers. In December, four of Canada's largest mutual
fund companies and three major brokerages agreed to pay $200 million
in restitution to investors in a settlement with securities
regulators.
The Independent (Newfoundland and Labrador): A cost-benefit
analysis of Confederation published over a period of six weeks
required a significant commitment of resources by a relatively small
weekly newspaper. The analysis indicated that the rest of Canada has
benefited much more than Newfoundland from the province's decision
to join Canada in 1949. The Independent's work was widely reported
in other media across the country. While some economists have
disputed the results, the newspaper's work was a significant
contribution to the debate about equalization and Newfoundland and Labrador's place in Canada.
Award Night Photo Gallery
Representatives accepting Citations of Merit on behalf of their respective news organizations
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John Hoey
Editor-in-Chief
Cdn. Medical Association Journal |
Malcolm Kirk
Editor-in-Chief
Calgary Herald |
John Stackhouse
Editor - Report on Business
Globe and Mail |
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Pierre Sormany
Editor-in-Chief
Découverte SRC |
Esther Enkin
Editor-in-Chief
CBC Radio |
Ryan Cleary
Managing Editor
The Independent |
Judges for the 2004 Michener Award:
Russell Mills (chair), Dean of the Faculty of Arts, Media and
Design, Algonquin College, and former Publisher of the Ottawa
Citizen; Arch MacKenzie, former Ottawa Bureau Chief, The Canadian
Press and The Toronto Star; Dr. Catherine McKercher, former
Washington correspondent, The Canadian Press, Associate Professor of
Journalism and Communications, Carleton University; Duncan McMonagle
former Senior Editor, The Globe and Mail and former Editor-in-Chief,
Winnipeg Free Press; René Roseberry, former News Editor, Le
Nouvelliste, Trois Rivieres and President of the Grands Prix des
Hebdos du Quebec.
Launched in 1970 under the auspices of Canada's third Canadian
Governor General, the late Roland Michener, the award focuses on the
degree of public benefit generated by media projects, both large and
small, in print and broadcast.
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