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Five Years Of The Ohio Valley ReSource

Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource

The Ohio Valley ReSource marks its fifth anniversary this month. With your help, thiscollaboration among seven public media stations in three states is still doing the job it set out to do in June, 2016: to tell the untold stories in the under-served parts of our region. 

On June 17, 2016, the ReSourcepublished its first story, a piece about problems with the disposal of radioactive waste generated by the gas drilling technique known as fracking.

The package of stories tracked a load of “hot” waste as it crossed state lines from drilling pads to a West Virginia processing facility and finally to a landfill in Estill County, Kentucky. The landfill was not supposed to take that sort of waste. It was also close to two schools and several homes, where a resident concerned for her family’s safety told us it felt like “the henhouse was not guarded and the fox got in.”

We might not have known it at the time, but that first story from our collaborative journalism enterprise contained many of the elements that would become hallmarks of our journalism for years to come:

It reflected a commitment to investigation and explanation of big issues. 

It brought a regional perspective to common challenges for communities around the Ohio Valley.

It resulted from a partnership with another news organization, theCenter for Public Integrity.

And it showed a propensity for puns and wordplay. (The headline of that first story? “Hot Mess.”)

Five years later we’re still tackling the big issues in the Ohio Valley: public health, the region’s energy transition, infrastructure failures, our food system, the opioid crisis, and more. 

We tell these stories from the community perspective — because we live and work in the communities we report on — and we stick to the stories that matter over time. (In an ironic twist, arecent episode of our podcast focuses on much the same topic as did that very first story, the continuing environmental and public health challenges associated with fracking.) 

Partnerships continue to play a big role in our work. For example, we partnered again with Center for Public Integrity and our colleagues at the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting for aseries on worker safety issues in Kentucky, highlighting serious flaws in the state’s program for preventing workplace fatalities.

In 2016 we partnered with NPR investigative reporter Howard Berkes to investigate thenonpayment of roughly $15 million in taxes and fines by the companies belonging to coal executive — and now West Virginia Governor — Jim Justice.    

We worked with NPR and Berkes again to investigate the deadlyresurgence of black lung disease among coal miners, an ongoingissue we have committed to covering for as long as it takes.

We’ve also partnered with theSolutions Journalism Network to focus on the many ways that people here are working for solutions, such as thecollective of rural schools in eastern Kentucky who are not only improving education but increasing the chances that towns can develop more diverse and sustainable economies.   

We also get ambitious, stretching into new ways to better tell the full story of our region, such as with our book, “Appalachian Fall,” published last year.

Oh, and the wordplay? Yeah, we still do some of that, too. (A story about tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, for example, included section headlines “Steely Ban” and “Aluminum, Foiled.” You're welcome.)   

In a June 9, 2016,web post announcing the ReSource’s arrival, I wrote that “our goal is to promote understanding, engagement, and a cross-pollination of ideas among those tackling the region’s toughest problems.” 

And I said that while much of our work will focus on the real but hidden costs of the region’s extractive industries, we would do our work with an understanding that “the region’s historic contributions to the country are also real and deserve recognition.

“These connections among economic activity, cultural identity, and social change will be at the core of our journalism.”

Five years on, that’s just what we’re doing, thanks to a great team of dedicated, talented journalists; a solid partnership of visionary public media leaders; support from important institutions, such as the Corporation for Public Broadcasting; and you. 

Yes, you!   

You know what we like to say: You are the public in public media. Through your support for our partner stations, you have made the ReSource possible. Thank you! And, as I wrote five years ago, I hope you find this ReSource a valuable one.

If you appreciate access to this important content during this global pandemic, please help us continue to provide public service journalism and information to Central and Eastern Kentucky communities. Please make your contribution to WEKU today.

ReSource managing editor Jeff Young has reported from Appalachian coalfields, Capitol Hill, and New England’s coast, among other places. Jeff worked for West Virginia Public Broadcasting and was Washington correspondent for the nationally distributed program Living on Earth. Recently, he directed communications for ocean conservation with The Pew Charitable Trusts in Boston. Jeff grew up near Huntington, West Virginia, and studied journalism and biology at Marshall University and the University of Charleston. His reporting has been recognized with numerous awards and he was named a 2012 Nieman Journalism Fellow at Harvard University.
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