Current:Home > ScamsApply for ICN’s Environmental Reporting Workshop for Midwest Journalists. It’s Free! -Financial Clarity Guides
Apply for ICN’s Environmental Reporting Workshop for Midwest Journalists. It’s Free!
View
Date:2025-04-17 06:37:52
Are you a Midwest journalist or have one on staff who would benefit from training to produce more in-depth clean energy, environmental and climate stories for your news outlet?
InsideClimate News, the Pulitzer Prize-winning national nonprofit newsroom, will hold a two-day training for about a dozen winning applicants from March 7-8 in Nashville. The workshop will be business journalism-focused and will center on covering the clean energy economy in the Midwest. The training is part of ICN’s National Environmental Reporting Network.
We are looking for reporters, editors or producers from Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio and Wisconsin who have the ambition and potential to pursue clean energy and climate stories. Journalists from all types of outlets—print, digital, television and radio—are encouraged to apply.
The workshop will be held at the First Amendment Center in Nashville. All lodging, food and reasonable travel costs are included. Some of the sessions will be conducted by professors from Vanderbilt University, and others by ICN’s journalists. They will include presentations and discussions on the clean energy transformation; climate science; how to find compelling and impactful clean energy stories; how to search for public records and build sources; and other important journalistic skills and tools. You will be asked to bring a story idea and will receive one-on-one confidential coaching to launch your idea.
If your newsroom is chosen, your reporter or producer will also receive ongoing mentoring. Attendees can apply to ICN for story development funds and other financial assistance. Opportunities will also exist for co-publishing on our website. It would be helpful if your newsroom is open to this type of potential collaboration.
The training is made possible thanks to the generosity of the Grantham Foundation, Park Foundation, Wallace Global Fund and others.
Preference will be given to journalists from newsrooms, but freelancers can apply.
To nominate yourself or a team for this opportunity, complete this form. The application deadline is Feb. 1, 2018.
In your application, you will be asked to identify a project you would like to work on following the workshop. Please be as specific as you can, as we want to help you as much as possible during the one-on-one sessions. All ideas will be kept confidential. Winning applicants will be notified by Feb. 8.
About the National Environment Reporting Network
A national ecosystem that informs the public about critical environmental issues is collapsing, and its survival hinges on an endangered species: the local environmental journalist. In the last 10
years, conversations around climate, energy and basic pollution protections have suffered from a hollowing out of local environmental news, particularly in the country’s interior.
InsideClimate News is developing a National Environment Reporting Network to counter this trend by establishing at least four national hubs to help local and regional newsrooms produce more in-depth reporting. Our first hub, in the Southeast, is staffed by veteran environmental reporter James Bruggers, who is based in Louisville. Our second hub in the Midwest was launched in mid-September and is run by Dan Gearino, a longtime business and energy reporter based in Columbus, Ohio.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Judge denies Sidney Powell's motion to dismiss her Georgia election interference case
- Accountant’s testimony sprawls into a 4th day at Trump business fraud trial in New York
- Criminal charges lodged against Hartford ex-officer accused of lying to get warrant and faking stats
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Tom Hanks: Don't fall for AI version of me promoting dental plan
- Bangladesh gets first uranium shipment from Russia for its Moscow-built nuclear power plant
- Trump ‘temporarily’ drops lawsuit against former lawyer-turned-witness Michael Cohen
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Mysterious injury of 16-year-old Iranian girl not wearing a headscarf in Tehran’s Metro sparks anger
Ranking
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- NYC mayor to residents of Puebla, Mexico: ‘Mi casa es su casa,’ but ‘there’s no more room’
- Slovakia halts military aid for Ukraine as parties that oppose it negotiate to form a new government
- Fired Northwestern football coach Pat Fitzgerald is suing school for $130M for wrongful termination
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- A year after Thai day care center massacre, a family copes with their grief
- PGA Tour's Peter Malnati backtracks after calling Lexi Thompson's exemption 'gimmick'
- Big Ten releases football schedule through 2028 with USC, UCLA, Washington, Oregon
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Francia Raísa Says She and Selena Gomez Needed That Time Apart
Pepco to pay $57 million over toxic pollution of Anacostia River in D.C.'s largest-ever environmental settlement
What causes high cholesterol and why it matters
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
Russia has tested a nuclear-powered missile and could revoke a global atomic test ban, Putin says
The CDC will no longer issue COVID-19 vaccination cards
Tom Holland and Zendaya’s Latest Photos Are Paw-sitively Adorable