Earlier
in my career I was a journalist. I
worked for INC Magazine, was a news anchor at NBC and received a Peabody
Award. All of which is to preface some
discouraging remarks about the media these days. I know quality journalism, and we’re often
not getting it when it comes to local reporting on transportation.
Case
in point: The Norwalk Hour’s coverage of
recent legislative hearings in Hartford on possibly reinstating tolls on
I-95. While those proposals center on
use of electronic tolls, The Hour’s sister publication, “The Wilton Villager”
ran a headline proclaiming “Toll
Booths Have Little Support”. Who’s
talking about toll booths?
And
in every story those papers have written on this issue in recent years, there
is always a reminder that tolls were eliminated in 1985 following a “fiery
truck crash” that killed seven people at the Stratford toll barrier.
While
that accident was unfortunate, it was as rare as Haley’s Comet. Trucks do not crash into toll booths and
those barriers have been replaced with non-stop electronic tolling (like
EZPass).
Newspapers
are certainly entitled to their editorial opinions on tolling, but they should
also get their news coverage straight as to what is being proposed instead of always
beating the drums of fear over trucks crashing into non-existent tolls booths.
Even
when papers do editorialize, they don’t get the facts straight. Consider The Waterbury Republican-American’s
most recent screed against rail commuters on Metro-North in an editorial
entitled “Subsidized Chutzpah”. When rail
service on the Waterbury branch was suspended for four days (with no substitute
bus service) after the blizzard, commuters thought they should have their
weekly and monthly tickets
refunded.
But the newspaper called that
“chutzpah”, saying the riders of the heavily subsidized rail service should be
grateful for any service, adding “One way to demonstrate their gratitude would
be to decline to take advantage of the occasional opportunity to trash their
benefactor.”
Wow.
If the Republican-American couldn’t deliver papers after the storm,
would they consider subscriber requests for a refund to be “chutzpah”? I’d hope not.
So why the contemptuous attitude toward hard-working local citizens who
ride the train?
Ironically, the Republican American’s
offices are in the beautiful old Waterbury rail
station whose iconic tower is a city landmark. It’s a shame to waste such a great building
on such a snarky rag.
Mind you, not all journalists are so
sloppy or hate their readers. The
Hartford Courant, Stamford Advocate and Cablevision’s News 12 usually get it
right and have gone out of their way to report on the work of the CT Rail
Commuter Council, for which we are grateful. And, of
course, I owe personal thanks to this newspaper for running my column for lo
these many years
So, caveat emptor! When it comes to reporting on crucial
transportation issues in our state, consider the source. And always search out a second opinion.
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