Eleven journalists will report over the next four months on environmental sustainability action in New Jersey, as the newest recipients of New Jersey Sustainability Reporting (NJSR) fellowships. This is the largest group of fellows since the multi-year collaborative news project launched, in 2019, to help accelerate New Jersey's pivot to sustainability and away from ecological deterioration.
The fellows, representing nine diverse news outlets throughout the state, range from pre-career college reporters to journalists with decades of experience. They were selected competitively by a team that included CivicStory staff, trustees, and advisors.
“Journalists and their editors increasingly value both the professional support provided by the fellowship, and the chance to help their audiences recognize their civic capacity for advancing environmental sustainability and environmental justice in New Jersey,” said Pamela B. Daniels, CivicStory board president. “The number of applicants more than doubled compared to each of the three previous rounds of the fellowship.”
TAPinto Hoboken editor Steve Lenox commented, about reporter Kimberly Redmond’s participation, “I have no doubt that Kim’s work as a Sustainability Reporting Fellow is going to have a meaningful impact on our community of readers.”.
The four-month fellowship supports journalists and their newsrooms with per-story stipends, opportunities to learn about sustainability topics, access to sustainability experts statewide, and enhanced visibility for fellows’ stories, which are co-published or co-aired by their own newsroom and on the NJSR website, www.SRhub.org.
“There are so many ways that New Jersey communities and organizations are working to address global warming, pollution, habitat loss, and other environmental injustices," said Maya Curry, selection committee member and Vice President, Communications and Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, Newark Regional Business Partnership. "I believe the fellows’ sustainability news stories will help New Jerseyans understand that both collective and individual action is critical to resolving our worsening climate crisis.”
For more information about the New Jersey Sustainability Reporting Project, and to view stories by past fellows, visit www.SRhub.org.
New Jersey Sustainability Reporting Fellows, April-July 2022
Fellow Selection Committee
Jennie Aylward, Senior Editor, CivicStory
Geoffrey Belinfante, External Relations Director, Jersey Access Group
Maya Curry, Vice President, Communications and Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, Newark Regional Business Partnership
Susan Haig, trustee, CivicStory
Steven Rodas, reporter, NJ.com, and former New Jersey Sustainability Reporting fellow