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Covering Hurricanes

Home > Covering Hurricanes
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Karen Dunlap
Ethical concerns, best practices, profiles in coverage, reports from the field and more
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Coverage Topics:
Broadcast
Coping with Trauma
Design/Graphics
Environmental Issues
Ethics
Leading in Crisis
Online/New Media
Photojournalism
Reporting & Writing
Additional resources
Mapping coverage
Lessons from previous hurricanes

Local Coverage of Katrina:

Times-Picayune
The (Biloxi) Sun Herald
More La. papers
More Miss. papers
WWL-TV
WGNO-TV
WDSU-TV
WLOX-TV
WAPT-TV
More La. TV stations
More Miss. TV stations
La. radio stations
Miss. radio stations

National Coverage of Katrina & Rita:
ABC: Katrina, Rita
CBS
NBC/MSNBC
CNN
FOX News

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Free online learning to help your coverage:
Horrible images
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Covering water quality

Dart Center for Journalism & Trauma
Year of Storms: Lessons Learned & Stories Yet to be Told

Several dozen Gulf coast journalists gathered in Biloxi and New Orleans last week to reflect on the experience of covering the catastrophic storms and to discuss where they -- and their newsrooms -- go from here. The conferences were sponsored by The Poynter Institute and the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma.

By Karen Brown Dunlap
Poynter President

Year of the Storms:
Stories Yet to be Told

Year of the Storms: Lessons Learned & Stories Yet to be Told
By Karen Dunlap

The Katrina Beat: Covering the Intersection of Once Was and Will Be
Listen to audio version
By Keith Woods

What Kind of Journalism is Needed When... Your City is Gone?
Listen to audio version
By Gregory Favre

Leading After the Storms
By Butch Ward

A Journalist-Guided Tour of Mississippi’s Coast
By Scott Libin

Journalism in Service to Community: A Checklist of Trials and Triumphs
By Aly Colón

Images of Devastation, Feelings of Hope
By Roy Peter Clark

Respect and Restraint: Traits to Remember in Disaster Coverage
By Bob Steele

A Different Kind of New Orleans Vacation
By Fanua J. Borodzicz


A photo slideshow
from the Poynter / Dart Center Conference
By Kenny Irby

Lessons from Katrina
Comments from the conference


A photo slideshow
of Hurricane Katrina damage
By Kenny Irby

Sense Memories: Recalling the Stories They Told in the Storms
By Jill Geisler

After Katrina, Seeing Still is not Understanding
By Kenny Irby

As the plane began its descent toward New Orleans and the terrain came into view, the passenger next to me became chatty.  He offered to explain what we’d see of his home region, pointing out the blue roof tarps that carpeted an area beneath us. He talked about the slow recovery of the economy, the problems with schools, the huge amount of work to be done, and doubts about the levee system.

He’s thinking about moving away, he said, thinking of starting over in another state.

“Will things get better here?” I asked. 

He paused, and then answered, “Only if the news media keep covering it. Only if they don’t stop covering it.”

It didn’t occur to me to ask his name, but I wish I had. I’d like to share with him what happened on the ground over the next couple of days.

That evening about 40 members of the region’s news media gathered in New Orleans for a two day conference on covering the hurricanes and their effects, sponsored by Poynter and the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma.  Another group of journalists gathered near Biloxi for a similar conference.

News directors and editors, reporters, photojournalists and others told and retold stories of the storms: Katrina, Rita, and for at least one Miami journalist, stories of Wilma.

They talked about the shocks. David Vincent, news director of WLOX-TV Biloxi, told of his station’s work while Hurricane Katrina blew off portions of the station’s roof.  “We huddled in the hall and kept reporting,” he said.  “We had a table set up for the anchors. It was really pretty dangerous.”

Earlier, Anzio Williams, news director at WDSU-TV, New Orleans, told of sending out teams of journalists to the Superdome, an emergency response headquarters in the Hyatt Regency hotel and other sites that were supposed to be safe.  As the hurricane hit and the levees broke, all the locations failed.  He and others went from telephones to cell phones -- and then to text messaging – in efforts to find staffers and report the news.

Stories abounded of living in offices or in the homes of colleagues for weeks at a time. The pre-hurricane drill for staffers included evacuating families.  Like other residents, many members of news staffs found that damage prevented them from returning home after the storm had subsided.

“The station’s generator provided power so many of us stayed there,” said Dan Gresham, morning anchor/producer at KFDM-TV Beaumont.

Vicki Zimmerman, news director of WAFB-TV in Baton Rouge, said her house became a camp-out site for some, including journalists sent from out of town by her corporate office.  “There were about 11 there at one point,” she said. “We worked long hours and they were a big help.”

Much of the conversation during the conferences revealed pride in the coverage. Zimmerman said one of her station’s goals was “to minimize harm.”  That caused the station to shy away from some stories on weapons sales in Baton Rouge to avoid inflaming a city rife with rumors of rapes and gunfire. 

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Photo by Kenny Irby/Poynter
Karen Brown Dunlap, president of The Poynter Institute, greets journalists who covered the storms of 2005 during the conference's opening dinner.
Paul Cloos, assistant managing editor of the Mobile Register, said his station sent a reporter to New Orleans after readers in Mobile kept telling the newspaper stories of violence in New Orleans.  He said that the result was that the Register was among the first to report that many of the claims of violence were untrue.

As conversations continued, a deeper effect of the storm emerged. Roger Simpson, executive director of the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma, led participants in the Biloxi/Gulfport group in talking about how they have changed.  They spoke of sleeplessness, irritability and anxiety about next year’s hurricane season.  Some spoke of guilt at suffering only minor damage as they witnessed so much loss around them.

The roads from New Orleans to Gulfport reveal the long-term destruction from the storm that greets residents.  Along I-10, some shopping areas and housing complexes are quiet. Houses sit askew and windows are missing.  Highway billboards sag at odd angles, some large metal poles bend in half. 

Across from the beaches of Gulfport, trees dangle ghostly white and colored objects: paper, clothes, shredded sheets and towels, pieces of businesses and lives.  Only the inner frames of hotels remain.  All that’s left of restaurants are signs, some saying that they will return.  The steeples of historic, stately churches rise but missing windows and doors reveal that the insides are empty.

A car pulls over and two tourists jump out.  One takes a picture while the other smiles before a backdrop of what used to be. Nearby, an older woman wanders through a yard, searching through what’s left. Small signs crowd the ground near intersections advertising for painters, haulers and roofers.  For some poorer areas, the devastation doesn’t look new.  It’s a reminder that some folks have lived in the middle of a storm much of their lives.

Traffic hassles add to the misery.  A westbound bridge is out along I-10 near Slidell, so the eastbound lanes divide to serve both directions.  That causes major back-ups for those leaving New Orleans in the afternoon.  Many intersections operate as four-way stops in the absence of swept away traffic signals or electricity.   

Journalists live with their own stresses while reporting on those of others.  At last week’s meetings, they spoke quietly of friends who avoid church because they don’t want to see others, of loved ones who had white collar jobs but now spend their days as laborers in the clean-up and repair.

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Photo by Kenny Irby/Poynter
Karen Brown Dunlap
Roger Simpson of the Dart Center explained that post-traumatic stress was once believed to be caused by unexpected events, but doctors are beginning to agree that it also results from the cumulative effect of listening to others’ distress.  Journalists in the gulf would qualify for both causes.

Simpson reminded them that the symptoms they described, including headaches and forgetfulness, were typical of stress. He led them through a process aimed at helping them understand it and deal with it.

“We need to look at stress in individuals, in the newsroom and in the community,” he said.

Most organizations have stories of staffers who left their jobs after the storm.  Some took early retirement, jobs elsewhere or simply decided to leave.  

In the long post-hurricane phase, journalists continue to inform and lead their communities.  As the groups met Friday, the New Orleans Times Picayune front page announced federal plans for a $3.1 billion outlay to rebuild levees.  The page featured a picture of Mayor Ray Nagin and President George Bush shaking hands.  There was also news about phone service and a feature on the reunion of two Canadian tourists and the New Orleans family that helped them escape flooding.

On the day before the conference the Biloxi Sun Herald carried an editorial saying attention is turning away from destruction in Mississippi.   It said the devastation of the storm, particularly in Mississippi, cannot be forgotten.

The weekend gave journalists a chance to repair and compare.  To hear from others who have covered communities after devastation and to rethink their craft skills and their approaches to the news.  After guests fly away, these journalists continue on.  If things are to change in the battered coast, the news media will have to bind its wounds and keep covering the storm.

Posted by Karen Dunlap at 11:49 PM on Dec. 23, 2005

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