In early 2021, Coloradans from across backgrounds, generations, regions and professions began meeting to tackle a series of questions: What would it take to ensure that local news coverage reflects, respects and reaches out to the state’s communities of color? What actions must newsrooms, community members and funders take to create a future in which communities of color share and shape the power of local news media?
Led by the Colorado News Collaborative (COLab) and community liaisons with support from CMP and The Colorado Health Foundation, The Voices Initiative convened four separate working groups of community members and journalists of color to find answers to those questions and push for action.
This work has given birth to four reports centering the voices of Black, Latinx, Indigenous and Asian, South Asian, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Coloradans — and catalyzed dozens of projects supported by CMP’s Advancing Equity in Local News grant program. These efforts continue to engage journalists and non-journalists and spark more questions, ideas and plans of action that will take us into a future where the media’s power is shared and expanded by communities of color.
We invite you to read the recommendations and join upcoming events that can lead local newsrooms to center the stories, experiences and information needs of all Coloradans.
In new report, Indigenous leaders present three calls to action to combat two main harms: perpetuating invisibility and stereotypes.
In a new report, 30 journalists and community residents of different Asian, South Asian, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) provide four key recommendations for more accurate representation in local media.
A new report calls on Colorado newsrooms to better reflect the experiences, needs and demands of Latinx people throughout the state.
How local news organizations can better listen to, inform, and work with the state's Black communities.
Journalists and journalism institutions are rethinking how they center the needs and desires of communities of color.
What is the history of media and race in Colorado? What role has journalism played in contributing to anti-Black rhetoric and narratives? How can acknowledging this history inform our journalism and begin to repair active distrust between Black communities and newsrooms?
News Voices: Colorado is listening to residents around the state to understand their questions about how local news is covering the protests, how that coverage is specifically impacting Black residents — and what can be done to repair trust.
Colorado Media Project and Free Press are joining forces to launch News Voices: Colorado — a new initiative that will work alongside communities underserved by local media to help strengthen and re-imagine local news.
What we learned from honest conversations about how to shift newsroom culture, to make equity a reality.
Imagine it’s five years in the future. Local news is stronger and more trustworthy. What’s the relationship between journalists and community members like? What stories are being told, and from whose perspectives? What resources exist to tell those stories?