In September, the CBC radio show Out in the Open
broadcast a piece about how difficult it is for homeless women to get sanitary
napkins or tampons when they get their periods.
The piece, which was
reprised in December, described how shelters and food banks can provide food
and other items, but usually can’t provide the one thing that poor, homeless
women need the most when they menstruate.
This leads to all sorts of
challenges and problems, including putting their health and well-being at risk.
It was a fine piece of
journalism, bringing to our attention a serious problem in desperate need of
fixing.
But when the piece came to
an end, it just ended. It offered no solutions or ways for listeners to help.
During the reprise
broadcast, the producer noted that the piece had provoked a lot of feedback. It
even prompted some Canadians to donate menstrual supplies to homeless shelters.
This caused the host of the
show to note, with what seemed a bit of surprised satisfaction, that “it is a
thing in journalism to try to spur people to make the world a better place and
change things.”
If that’s the case, it’s
more by accident than design.
For the majority of reporters, their only
job is to report the story. They may hope that someone might follow up on an issue that needs attention, but it’s
not their job to promote those actions.
Once the report is finished,
their work is done. After that, it’s up to media consumers to figure out on their own how
to take it from there.
The only exception to this
rule is exceptional cases of national or international emergency—like last
spring’s Fort McMurray wildfire.
Then the media may encourage
people to respond, providing the names of organizations accepting donations, or
other ways to help.
But most news report just
end with no solutions, like the piece about periods.
If someone wants “to make the world a better place,” they are on
their own.
But is that good enough
anymore?
A new way of thinking about
journalism says no.
Called Solutions Journalism, and sponsored by the Solutions Journalism
Network, its goal is to help journalists “overcome their professional discomfort
with reporting about creative responses to problems.”
“How
do we help journalists tell whole stories?” they ask.
“Not just stopping after
revealing a deficiency, but looking further into how people are trying to
construct solutions?”
They also aims to help journalists report on potential solutions “without engaging in
overly-simplified ‘good news’ or ‘hero-oriented’ reporting.”
This
kind of reporting, they go on to say “should never take the form of advocacy,
but rather sound coverage of problem solving.”
It
should be “top-notch story-driven journalism that helps society understand how
problems are being addressed, looking at ideas and models that show promise
based on evidence and data.”
What do you think? Can this work? Can the media move beyond
just giving people information, and start providing ways to fix problems as
well? Should it?
At a time when many people are turning away from the media because they are tired
of being told all the time how bad things are, providing solutions to some of our most intractable problems might be a way for journalism to reclaim its important place in society.
It might be worth a try.