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More details on the Region 4 conference

Here's a much-anticipated look at the Region 4 conference on March 14-15 in Pittsburgh, including some information on hotels and speakers.

Stay tuned to the Pittsburgh chapter's Web site for more information, including a way to register online. The following info comes from Pittsburgh's Ginny Frizzi and her team:

Hotel:   Omni William Penn Hotel, in downtown Pittsburgh. Reserve online here.

Room Rate: $132 per night, plus tax

Hotel Parking Costs: $14 per day (weekdays); $5 per day (weekend)

Conference Registration:

Student:  SPJ Member: $65       Non-Member:   $75

Pro: SPJ Member: $85      Non-Member:   $105       

Checks should be made out to “Pittsburgh Pro SPJ” and sent to Ginny Frizzi, Office of Media Relations, Point Park University, 201 Wood Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15222. Ginny can be reached at (412) 392-3987 or vfrizzi@pointpark.edu

Note: Registration deadline is March 10. $20 extra for late or on-site registration.     

Conference Theme: The conference theme of “Digital Democracy” will explore how the digital revolution--including blogs, online video, websites and social media-are changing traditional news media coverage and citizens' access to the political process

Conference Program: The conference will open with a reception at 7 p.m. on Friday, March 14 at the Allegheny/Harvard-Yale-Princeton, located within a short walking distance of the hotel at the corner if William Penn Place and Strawberry Way.

On Saturday, March 15:

7:45-9 a.m.        Breakfast with Keynote Speaker

Two tracks with programs from 9:15-10:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.-Noon, with a coffee break between sessions.

Mark of Excellence Luncheon from 12:15-2 p.m.

Two tracks with programs from 2:15-3:30 p.m. and 3:45-5 p.m., with a coffee break between sessions.

Bob Mayo of WTAE-TV is serving as program chair. He will be slotting the actual sessions and speakers very soon.

To date, we have:

Confirmed Speaker:

Jan Schaffer, executive director

J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism

Topic: "Participatory Journalism & Citizen Media ".  Learn about the growth and content of citizen media. "Local news web sites offering content generated by users are securing a valuable place in the media landscape and are likely to continue as important sources of community news", according to a report  by J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism."  J-Lab is an incubator for innovative news experiments that use new technologies to help people actively engage in critical public issues.  Schaffer, former Business Editor and a Pulitzer Prize winner for The Philadelphia Inquirer, is executive director of J-Lab and one of the nation’s leading thinkers in the journalism reform movement. She launched J-Lab in 2002 at the University of Maryland’s College of Journalism to help newsrooms use innovative computer technologies to inform people about important public issues. The center spotlights new forms of digital storytelling on www.J-Lab.org. It rewards innovative practices through the $16,000 Knight-Batten Awards for Innovations in Journalism. It funds cutting-edge citizen media start-ups through its New Voices project (www.J-NewVoices.org). It has also built a web tutorial on how to launch community news sites (www.J-Learning.org).. 

Schaffer will also speak about the work of J-Lab.



Confirmed Speaker:

Matthew Sheffield, executive editor

NewsBusters.org

Invited Speaker: A representative of MediaMatters.org. MediaMatters says it hopes to participate, but has not confirmed yet, as of this writing.  They hope to have an answer next week.

Topic: "Tables Turned: Online Media Criticism from the Right and Left".

Representatives of political websites discuss their organizations' role of critiquing the mainstream news media via the web.

NewsBusters --a project of the Media Research Center (MRC)-- describes itself as "the leader in documenting, exposing and neutralizing liberal media bias." The MRC launched the NewsBusters blog "to provide immediate exposure of liberal media bias, insightful analysis, constructive criticism and timely corrections to news media reporting."

Media Matters for America is a Web-based, not-for-profit, 501(c)(3) progressive research and information center which describes itself as "dedicated to comprehensively monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media".  Media Matters works to systematically monitor a cross section of print, broadcast, cable, radio, and Internet media outlets for "conservative misinformation."


Confirmed Speaker:

Brad King assistant professor, Media Informatics

Northern Kentucky University


Topic: "New Media: Journalism 2010".  A presentation for journalists about "going digital".

King will provide an overview of the new technologies, and discuss what the modern newsroom needs to look like to accommodate the web. He'll also talk about which new skills journalists should --or should not learn.   This session will provide an overview of how new social technologies and integrated news departments create new business models.
 


Confirmed Speaker*:

Toni Locy, Shott Chair of Journalism

West Virginia University

Former Reporter for USA Today
 

Topic: " Subpoenaed for Her Sources: A Journalist's Story". Former USA Today reporter Toni Locy is the subject of a contempt-of-court request by lawyers for Dr. Steven Hatfill for her refusal to identify sources who provided information to her about the 2001 anthrax attacks and the subsequent investigation.  Hatfill was publicly identified by then-Attorney General John Ashcroft as a "person of interest" in the investigation. Hatfill is suing the Department of Justice for violating his Privacy Act rights by leaking information about him to reporters.

A federal judge has ordered  Locy and four other journalists to reveal their sources. She and another reporter face possible contempt charges for refusing to do so.  Hatfill's attorneys are seeking thousands of dollars in fines for which they want her to be personally liable.

* If the subpoena against her is resolved before the SPJ Region 4 Conference, Locy will talk about her experiences in that case. She will address her concerns about the use of "waivers" to get reporters out from under promises of confidentiality to sources. Locy  will also speak of the potential for people to use civil lawsuits to go after reporters and, she fears, silence them.  Locy will also discuss developing your sources and the increasing legal dangers facing reporters.

 

Confirmed Speaker:

David L. Marburger, a partner in the Cleveland office of Baker Hostetler. He is recognized as an authority on legal issues related to the content side of the communications industry, particularly constitutional law litigation (especially First Amendment rights of free speech and freedom of the press, 14th Amendment, commercial speech, commerce clause), libel and privacy, state and federal freedom of information and copyright.

Confirmed Speaker:

  Teri Henning, General Counsel, Pennsylvania Newspaper Association (PNA).  Henning , advises Pennsylvania newspaper personnel regarding legal and legislative matters affecting newspapers, files amicus briefs in court cases significant to Pennsylvania newspapers, and conducts member education seminars.

Confirmed Speaker:

Brian Farkas, News Editor for West Virginia, Associated Press, Charleston. Farkas is active in efforts to form an Open Government Coalition in West Virginia.

Topic: "Open Records Laws: Forum & Update". Learn about and compare Open Records Laws in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia, and Michigan.  Our panel of experts will discuss the current status and use of the laws, proposed changes, and what a model Open Records Law might look like.


Confirmed Speaker: Mark Briggs

Assistant Managing Editor for Interactive News The News Tribune, Tacoma

Topic: "Journalism 2.0: How to Survive and Thrive"

Briggs' presentation would be based on his "Journalism 2.0", "a 128- page digital literacy guide for the information age."  Briggs introduces new media techniques for pros who have been in the business for years or amateurs who want to do community news. He discusses everything from writing scripts and blogs to RSS feeds and editing video.


Confirmed Speaker: Robert Cox

President of the Media Bloggers Association

"The Media Bloggers Association is a nonpartisan organization dedicated to promoting, protecting and educating its members; supporting the development of "blogging" or "citizen journalism" as a distinct form of media; and helping to extend the power of the press, with all the rights and responsibilities that entails, to every citizen.

Published Tuesday, January 15, 2008 7:50 PM by jwsteele
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