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The Voices Initiative

The Voices Initiative

How do we transform local news so that it’s more inclusive and better serves all?
How do we transform local news so that it’s more inclusive and better serves all?

About the Initiative

In early 2021, Coloradans from across backgrounds, generations, regions and professions began meeting to tackle a series of questions: What would it take to ensure that local news coverage reflects, respects and reaches out to the state’s communities of color? What actions must newsrooms, community members and funders take to create a future in which communities of color share and shape the power of local news media?

The Colorado News Collaborative (COLab) in partnership with Colorado Media Project, and with the support of multiple co-sponsors and community liaisons, has convened community-led working groups to support an effort to answer those questions and push for action.

This work has given birth to four separate but related projects centering the voices of Black, Latinx, Asian, South Asian, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander, and Indigenous Coloradans that continue to engage journalists and non-journalists to spark more questions, ideas and plans of action that will take us into a future where the media’s power is shared and expanded by communities of color. We invite you to read the recommendations and take action that can lead local newsrooms to center the stories, experiences and information needs of all Coloradans.

To receive more information about the Voices Initiative, email COLab

Amplify Colorado

Take Action Now

Amplify Colorado is a project born out of the Voices Initiative in response to participants’ recommendations. It is an online diverse source guide to help newsrooms tap into the wealth of expertise, insight and experience among Colorado's communities of color and to help those same communities more easily find and connect with local reporters and editors.

Add your name or suggest someone else for inclusion today.

Upcoming Event

The Four Voices Projects

Indigenous Voices

Indigenous Voices

The Colorado News Collaborative and Colorado Media Project co-led a series of conversations throughout the Summer and Fall of 2022 with Indigenous leaders, journalists and storytellers across Colorado to identify best practices, practical supports, structural changes, and potential projects that can lead local newsrooms to center the stories, experiences and news and information needs of Indigenous Coloradans. These conversations took place with the support of Osage Nation citizen Tara McLain Manthey, a former journalist and Colorado-based nonprofit consultant, and the Mountain West News Bureau, a collaboration of public media stations serving Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming.

Much like the Black, Latinx and Asian, South Asian, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander working groups, the goal was to come up with recommendations for concrete projects or system improvements that COLab (with its 180+ newsroom members) and CMP can help implement.

Initially, two affinity groups of Indigenous community members came together through three separate sessions to explore how local news coverage reflects, respects and reaches diverse Indigenous communities in Colorado. The first group included leaders of Indigenous-led and -serving community organizations who have a deep understanding of the barriers community members face to well-being. The second was a space for Indigenous journalists, communicators and storytellers with experience working in local media and communications. Each group met separately and then they came together for a third joint session. 

A second phase of the project took place engage voices from Colorado’s Southwest Indigenous communities and tribes and include their perspectives.  

The Recommendations

Indigenous Voices Consultant & Community Liaison

  • Tara McLain Manthey, Owner and Principal at Returning Light Consulting
AANHPI Voices

Asian, South Asian, Pacific Islander & Native Hawaiian Voices

Starting in March 2022, several Asian community leaders co-facilitated a series of conversations to gather information on improving access to trustworthy news and information that accurately reflects the realities of Asian, South Asian, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Coloradans. The discussions included journalists, community leaders, organizers and philanthropists from across the state, and focused on identifying best practices, practical supports, structural changes, and potential projects that can lead local newsrooms to center the stories, experiences, and news and information needs of AANHPI Coloradans.

These conversations, hosted by the Colorado News Collaborative (COLab) and Colorado Media Project (CMP, a consortium of foundations) are a part of the larger Voices Initiative that started in 2021 with separate Black and Latinx conversations, each of which came up with recommendations on what needs to change (learn more about Black Voices here and Latinx Voices here).

The goal, much like the Black and Latinx Voices groups, was to come up with recommendations for concrete projects or system improvements that COLab (with its 180+ newsroom partners) and CMP can help implement. By gathering Asian, South Asian, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander leaders across the state, the recommendations generated by the working group will be supported institutionally through CMP, COLab and other project partners. 

The Recommendations

Reflections

Watch — AANHPI Open House

On the anniversary of the 2021 Atlanta shootings, Asian Avenue Magazine’s Annie VanDan, Asian Pacific Development…

Asian, South Asian, Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander Voices Community Liaisons

  • Annie Guo VanDan, journalist and President of Asian Avenue magazine,
  • Frances Campbell, President and CEO of Asian Chamber of Commerce Colorado
  • Gil Asakawa, journalist and publisher of Nikkei View
  • Joie Ha, Founder of CORE consulting
  • Sara Moore, Executive Director of Colorado Dragon Boat

Black Voices

Black Voices

In early 2021, News Voices: Colorado — a collaboration among the Colorado News Collaborative (COLab), Colorado Media Project and Free Press — convened the Black Voices Working Group. The group, made up of Black leaders, storytellers, journalists, funders and community members, focused on how to improve access to trustworthy news and information for Black residents throughout the state and sought tangible ways for communities, philanthropy and newsrooms to acknowledge and address the harms — historic and ongoing — local media coverage has inflicted on Black communities.

The Black Voices Working Group developed five key recommendations, detailed in its report, which can be found below: ‘The time is right now:’ A call to action from Black Coloradans for anti-racist and just local news.

The original Black Voices conversations and resulting report took place as part of News Voices: Colorado — a project of Free Press in collaboration with the Colorado News Collaborative (COLab) and Colorado Media Project.

Reflections

Black Voices Community Liaisons

  • Ammiee Brown, Associate Marketing Strategist at Ogilvy
  • Natalie Williams, Director of The Wellbeing Blueprint at The Full Frame Initiative
  • Philip Clapham, journalist and Senior Editor at 5280
  • Tiya Trent,  Program Facilitator at Project Voyce

Latinx Voices

Latinx Voices

In the spring of 2021, a group of Latinx Coloradans from across generations, regions and professions began meeting to tackle a series of questions: What would it take to ensure that local news coverage reflects, respects and reaches out to the state’s Latinx communities? What actions must newsrooms, community members and funders take to create a future in which Latinx communities have the power to prevent the media from sidelining, stereotyping and silencing them?

Our conversations took place as part of News Voices: Colorado — a project of Free Press in collaboration with the Colorado News Collaborative (COLab) and Colorado Media Project. The organizations convened the working group to support a community-led effort to answer those questions and to push for action. History has proven that without community pressure, newsrooms — like most institutions of power — are slow to change.

The Latinx Voices working group developed 4 key recommendations, detailed in its report, “‘Think Big. Act Now.’ A call to action from Latinx Coloradans for equitable and just local news.”

The original Latinx Voices conversations and resulting report took place as part of News Voices: Colorado — a project of Free Press in collaboration with the Colorado News Collaborative (COLab) and Colorado Media Project.

Reflections

Impact

Silvia Solis, Community Engagement Director for the Colorado News Collaborative (COLab), is leading this project in collaboration with other partners. 

Reflections

Related Opportunities

This project was made possible through unprecedented collaboration between dozens of newsrooms and journalists across the state, who are active partners in the Colorado News Collaborative, or COLab.

To support the statewide effort, donate to the Colorado News Collaborative.