CalMatters’ staff (from right to left: Reporter Alexei Koseff, Jeanne Kuang, CalMatters Editor-in-Chief Kristen Go along other CalMatters staff not shown) interview Rep. Barbara Lee, a candidate for U.S. Senate, at CalMatters’ office in Sacramento on Feb. 22, 2024. Photo by Larry Valenzuela, CalMatters/CatchLight Local
总之
CalMatters has published more than 11,000 stories and columns that Californians have used to transform the state’s future.
Our nonprofit newsroom has grown steadily over time, but this year has been especially unique: We added The Markup’s tech-focused team, hosted the inaugural CalMatters Ideas Festival in Sacramento, debuted the government transparency tool Digital Democracy, and started airing on California TV five nights a week through PBS SoCal.
The journalism we published over the past year has been called “powerful, impactful journalism” with “great storytelling and (an) impressive depth of reporting” in awards honoring our investigative projects, while our news team also added a second Northern California Emmy to our awards wall.
“We strive to provide unbiased, nonpartisan reporting to hold the powerful accountable. With our colleagues from the Markup we are now even better positioned to report and investigate the intersection of government, technology and privacy on our lives and in our community” said CalMatters Editor-in-Chief Kristen Go.
The Markup joins CalMatters
Earlier this year, CalMatters announced it was acquiring The Markup, a national, investigative nonprofit newsroom that challenges technology to serve the public good
“The Markup journalists built an incredible news operation that has prompted meaningful change nationwide,” said CalMatters CEO Neil Chase. “I’m excited that our combined news operation is so much more powerful than either of us could have been independently.”
“Both newsrooms have proven track records of creating journalism and tools that are independent, community-driven and give the public superpowers,” said Sisi Wei, The Markup’s Editor-in-Chief, who joined CalMatters as Chief Impact Officer. “We are combining CalMatters, a critical resource to both lawmakers and the public in California, and The Markup, with its standout data- and engineering-driven approach to doing journalism. Just imagine what we can do together.”
Staff of the two organizations came together for a celebratory kickoff at CalMatters first-ever Ideas Festival in early June.
New tools for the public, live events, and ways to reach millions more Californians
In June 2024, the Ideas Festival concept materialized into a two-day live gathering in Sacramento.
The festival examined critical policy issues across climate change, reparations, and transportation, and the conference also explored California’s changing electorate, workforce development opportunities and our homelessness crisis. Speakers included Leon Panetta, Xavier Becerra, Barbara McQuade, Rob Bonta, Betty Yee, Julian Castro, Mike Madrid, and Doug Ose.
Planning is already underway for the 2025 festival, so stay tuned for dates and details. Until then, watch the videos from 2024’s day 一 and day 二.
The groundbreaking transparency tool Digital Democracy debuted in April and has already triggered legislative impact.
The AI-powered, searchable database brings journalists, civic leaders and all Californians a powerful new way to peel back the layers of government, including every word uttered in public hearings, every dollar given to a politician, every bill introduced and every vote taken.
The database gives the public, journalists, and legislators themselves access to unprecedented insights. After reviewing more than 1 million votes cast by current legislators over the past five years, CalMatters reporters 成立 that Democrats vote “no” less than 1% of the time, prompting complaints that the process appeared to be a rubber stamp. Instead of voting “no,” legislators often kill bills by simply not voting. Critics say that’s how legislators dodge responsibility for tough decisions.
CalMatters teamed up with CBS-TV to show how advocates for fentanyl legislation learned from Digital Democracy that their bills died when legislators declined to vote. “I personally am insulted,” said the mother of a young person who died from a fentanyl overdose. “That is what they signed up for, to represent us.”
CalMatters’ journalism is now reaching millions more Southern Californians on television thanks to our new partnership with PBS SoCal. Our SoCalMatters daily segment includes two-minute updates on a wide range of quality-of-life issues and airs every weeknight on PBS SoCal at 5:58 p.m. and on PBS SoCal Plus at 5:28 p.m., 5:58 p.m. and 10:58 p.m. Episodes are also available on YouTube and in the free PBS app.
We also teamed up with the visual-first journalism organization, CatchLight, to deliver a newsletter, California in Pictures. It offers a free, monthly look behind the lens at the daily lives and extraordinary moments defining California.
Impact and awards
Our journalism has had real-world impact on the lives of Californians. Here are some of most recent examples:
The state takes steps to start measuring the efficiency and effectiveness of parole programs. After CalMatters revealed that California spent more than $600 million on a parole rehab program but couldn’t say whether it helped participants, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation said it will begin measuring the efficiency and effectiveness of parole programs as it shrinks the prison population. A request for proposals on the state’s procurement website said that the department has “received one-time funding to measure parole outcomes.”
Assemblymember introduces bill to stop maternity ward closures. CalMatters’ ongoing coverage of maternity ward closures has detailed the struggles that mothers and hospitals face, with an outsized impact on poor and rural families. Citing our journalism as the inspiration, Assemblymember Dr. Akilah Weber introduced legislation designed to curb the closures.
State senator starts work on new domestic violence laws. After CalMatters reported on how courts and law enforcement were failing to protect victims of domestic abuse from armed abusers, Senator Catherine Blakespear wrote to the Orange County Register: “…I am working on two bills (Senate Bills 899 & 1002) that expand the proven concepts that have helped Orange County in domestic violence cases to other circumstances involving threats of harm.” She cited CalMatters’ reporting in the opening line of her opinion piece.
Mayor’s office takes action to fulfill a promise to hel页 Black workers get jobs. With many Black workers retiring and a high city job vacancy rate, Los Angeles promised to hire 200 Black trainees through a partnership with the LA Black Worker Center. After CalMatters reported that the partnership was falling short of its goal, Mayor Karen Bass’s office appointed Deputy Mayor Brenda Shockley to work with the center to get 88 people hired quickly.
Journalism from our freshly-forged investigative team is already being recognized with top honors. On July 15, we won first and second place for investigative reporting and first place for in-depth journalism in the California Journalism Awards.
Sonya builds bridges between the community and CalMatters as director of membership. Previously, she led engagement, membership, marketing, digital storytelling and product at Voice of OC, a nonprofit... More by Sonya Quick
Republish
CalMatters’ 9th anniversary: Trusted community-centered journalism, now with The Markup
我们很高兴您愿意与读者分享我们的故事。数百家出版物定期转载我们的作品。
CalMatters 上的所有文章均可免费重新发布,但须遵守以下条件:
Give prominent credit to our journalists: Credit our authors at the top of the article and any other byline areas of your publication. In the byline, we prefer “By Author Name, CalMatters.” If you’re republishing guest commentary (example) from CalMatters, in the byline, use “By Author Name, Special for CalMatters.”
Credit CalMatters at the top of the story: At the top of the story’s text, include this copy: “This story was originally published by 加州事务. 报名 for their newsletters.” If you are republishing 评论, include this copy instead: “This commentary was originally published by 加州事务. 报名 for their newsletters.” If you’re republishing in print, omit the second sentence on newsletter signups.
Do not edit the article, including the headline,除非是为了反映时间、地点和编辑风格的相对变化。 例如,“昨天”可以改为“上周”,“阿拉米达县”可以改为“加利福尼亚州阿拉米达县”或“这里”。
CalMatters’ 9th anniversary: Trusted community-centered journalism, now with The Markup - CalMatters
加州事务
加利福尼亚州,解释
Sonya Quick
Sonya builds bridges between the community and CalMatters as director of membership. Previously, she led engagement, membership, marketing, digital storytelling and product at Voice of OC, a nonprofit news agency in Orange County, Calif. She has worked as an adjunct professor of digital journalism at Chapman University and mobile app development at Saddleback University. She worked for a decade at the Orange County Register as an editor, product manager and reporter across mobile, social media, web and mobile app development, disaster coverage, infographics, technology and community news. She has been awarded for her work on infographics, news website design, news article design and social media engagement in reporting. She has a bachelor's degree in journalism from Cal State Long Beach where she led the student newspaper in transitioning to an independent model, and she has practiced journalism since starting a newspaper in the fourth grade.