Usually, when I hear of the Pulitzer awards, I expect to read about a newspaper reporter winning an award for an article about children somewhere.
But, this year, a number of Pulitzer's were presented for investigative journalism articles reporting on government problems and corruption.
Government Corruption?
Yes, Corruption is being covered by newspapers, and is actually one of the reasons to continue subscribing to them and reading them. Blogs, even those like mine, rarely use freedom of information or public records requests to get info on corrupt politicians, but newspapers and magazines do. The good ones earn the "Fourth Estate" label by being the fourth branch of Democracy and keeping an eye on how goverment works and spends taxpayer funds.
So, here is the article listing many of the awards, so check them out...
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The Los Angeles Times' series on wildfires run amok is among the winners.
The Las Vegas Sun won the coveted public service medal for exposing lax safety standards that led to construction workers' deaths on the Strip.
As papers scale back, the danger of official abuse going unchecked increases, Pulitzer Prize administrator Sig Gissler said as he announced the winners at Columbia University. "Sometimes I think we take for granted the watchdog role of newspapers," Gissler said, referring to the array of winners cited for investigative work.
In their wildfire articles, reporters Bettina Boxall and Julie Cart reported that costly aerial drops of water and retardant often were ordered against firefighters' better judgment because they "make good television" and helped win political points for local officials. The series took 15 months from conception until publication last summer. It took seven months alone to get the results of a Freedom of Information Act request to the U.S. Forest Service that provided details on the effort to quell the so-called Zaca fire. The 2007 blaze burned a quarter-million acres in the Los Padres National Forest outside Santa Barbara.
"Calculating how the money was spent gave us a window into explaining how these escalating costs came about," Cart said. "Then you can look at all the component parts and ask, 'Are they necessary?' and, most importantly, 'Are they effective?' This is taxpayers' money."
"We are delighted to get the award at a time when the Los Angeles Times has gotten a lot of bad news," Boxall said. The Times' parent company, Tribune Co., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in December and has cut hundreds of jobs in the last year.
Editor Russ Stanton noted that fewer papers across the country still do in-depth reporting but said that The Times "will always be one."
Judges called the reporting a "fresh and painstaking exploration." Frank Clifford, then The Times' environmental editor, launched the reporting in 2007 before leaving the paper, and the series was edited by Marc Duvoisin. Duvoisin and Clifford also helped guide The Times to a 2007 Pulitzer for its "Altered Oceans" series.
The most prizes won Monday went to the New York Times. It was honored in the breaking news category for coverage of Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s downfall amid revelations of his involvement with a prostitute. The newspaper also was awarded the investigative prize for "tenacious reporting" by David Barstow that revealed the Pentagon’s use of retired generals -- working as radio and TV analysts -- to make its case for the war in Iraq. In international reporting, the New York Times won for coverage of U.S. military and political challenges in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The newspaper also won for Holland Cotter’s art reviews and for Damon Winter’s "memorable array of pictures deftly capturing multiple facets of Barack Obama's presidential campaign."
The newspaper holds the record of seven Pulitzers in a single year, for coverage of the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks.
Two papers shared the local reporting prize Monday. The Detroit Free Press won for uncovering a "pattern of lies" that led to jail time for Mayor Kwame Kirkpatrick. And the East Valley Tribune of Mesa, Ariz., was cited for reporting on how public safety was compromised by a sheriff's obsession with chasing illegal immigrants. One of the two reporters on the winning Arizona team, Paul Giblin, was laid off in January when the newspaper slashed 142 jobs. The reporter who worked with Giblin, Ryan Gabrielson, said it took them six months to complete the project. "This is about the only word to describe it -- unbelievable," Gabrielson said when he learned of the Pulitzer, the Tribune reported.
The East Valley Tribune is a free community newspaper. It cut back publishing to four days a week in January to reduce costs and will go to three days May 15, but operates seven days a week online.
Patrick Farrell of the Miami Herald won the breaking news photography prize for his work in Haiti, focusing on the humanitarian crisis in the wake of major storms. The San Diego Union-Tribune’s Steve Breen won a second Pulitzer for his editorial cartoons, and Mark Mahoney of the Post-Star of Glens Falls, N.Y., won for editorial writing.
Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post was cited for his commentary on the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign.
The story of a grossly neglected girl adopted into a new family garnered the feature-writing prize for Lane DeGregory of the St. Petersburg Times. The newspaper also won for national reporting for its fact-checking examination of more than 750 claims during the presidential campaign.
Las Vegas Sun reporter Alexandra Berzon was cited by the Pulitzer judges for "courageous reporting" that led to changes in conditions for constructions workers. "We spent basically a year on this story," said Berzon, according to the Associated Press. "To see things change as a result, that is really a satisfying thing."
Of the 1,028 journalism entries submitted, 65 came from online only publications. It was the first time such outlets had been able to submit entries. None won, but Politico.com was a finalist in editorial cartooning.
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Times staff writer Andrew Blankstein in Los Angeles contributed to this report.