Friday was a great day for SPJ. About 100 people from across the country gathered at DePauw University in Greencastle, Ind. to celebrate the 100th anniversary of SPJ. We had some great events. From Richard Tofel's discussion of his book on Barney Kilgore to the panel on the state of the news business to the inspiration and entertaining speech Jane Pauley delivered, it was a great day.
Here are my remarks before Friday night's dinner:
I’m sure if our 10 founders could be here today, they would be proud that SPJ is still strong, still supporting journalists and still improving and protecting journalism.
I’m sure they would be proud to see we are still defending the First Amendment, still standing for high ethical standards and still providing first rate professional development.
It is a great honor to be president of this great organization, on this historic day, during this historic year. It is a great honor to follow in the footsteps of the 10 young men who loved their craft so much that they created a fraternity on this campus, what is now SPJ, to assure that their profession would be here 100 years later.
It is a great honor to follow in the footsteps of many of you, past presidents who led this great organization. It’s a great honor to be here before those of you who have toiled on previous boards and committees or simply volunteered their time to first work on behalf of journalism but also on behalf of SPJ. Without your work, without your efforts without your talent, truth and your energy, we might not be here today celebrating a centennial birthday.
And here we are, 10 decades later - still strong as an organization even as our profession staggers and stumbles to survive a crippling recession, a more competitive market and a mistaken belief that the news is less credible.
We have been around for 100 years and we will soon tonight finish celebrating our birthday. But we have not completed our journey. We have not finished our job. There is still work to be done. We are not done telling stories, we are not done covering the news and we are not done playing our watchdog role that is so important to democracy.
SPJ will not stop. Not while people are still denied access to public records. SPJ will not stop. Not while reporters are still facing fines and subpoenas. SPJ will not stop. Not while the shield bill waits in Congress for passage. SPJ will not stop. Not while an American journalist from Fargo sits in an Iranian prison. SPJ will not stop, not now not ever.
Those of you in this room have played your part in fulfilling our mission. You played your part in living up to the great dream that Eugene C. Pulliam and his fellow founders had 100 years ago. They dreamed of an organization that would support their chosen craft.
The flame will go out on our birthday cake today. The flame cannot go out in our hearts, the flame cannot go out in our will, in our responsibility to do what those who came before us did. We must continue to follow their lead to improve and protect journalism.
This summer, we will expend all our energy and marshal all our volunteer power to pass a shield law through congress so no journalist has to spend one minute or one second in court or behind bars for doing their jobs. The SPJ founders would have wanted it that way.
This spring we will conduct nine town hall meetings throughout the country assuring the public that journalists are serious about high standards, about telling the truth, about being accountable.
The SPJ founders would have wanted it that way.
And the rest of this year, we will provide the best available training to journalists so they can do their jobs better and prepare themselves as the professional landscape shifts beneath them.
The SPJ founders would have wanted it that way.
We have been here 100 years. And we will be here at least 100 more. Our work is not done. The SPJ founders would have wanted it that way.
To those of you here, thank you for your dedication and support of SPJ. Thank you for the work you have done that has helped SPJ thrive for 100 years. Thank you to all 9,000 members; Some who simply pay their dues and cheer from the side while others serve as a chapter presidents licking stamps and judging contests and doing the work that is SPJ. Regardless of your level involvement, it is all vital to the success of SPJ.
So our centennial celebration will soon end but our efforts will not.
The SPJ founders would have wanted it that way.