2016 Winner Jackman Award for Excellence: Telegraph-Journal for Tracking Daycare Deficiencies. The Tyee was Nominated, Recognizing Andrew Nikiforuk’s reporting on fracking

2016 CJF Jackman Award for Excellence Winner is the Telegraph-Journal for Tracking Daycare Deficiencies

2016 06 16 Winner CJF Jackman Award for Excellence, Telegraph Journal for 'Tracking Daycare Defficiences'

2016 CJF Awards Sold Out!

2016 060 16 The Canadian Journalism Foundation Awards snap

2916 96 16 Canadian Journalism Foundation, Special Citation, Boston Globe Spotlight Team Sasha Pfeiffer, Michael Rezendes, Walter Robinson, for examplary journalism

2016 06 16 CJF Jackman Award for Excellence in Journalism, honours Canadian org embodies exemplary journalism w resulting impact on the community it serves

The Tyee (Vancouver based)
Did Alberta Just Break a Fracking Earthquake World Record?
Fracking Industry Has Changed Earthquake Patterns in Northeast BC
Supreme Court Rejects Argument to Dismiss Landmark Fracking Case

2016 04 15 CJF Jackman Ward for Excellent in Journalism, 2016 shortlist small media, includes three articles on fracing by Andrew Nikiforuk

Tyee Nominated for CJF Jackman Award for Excellence in Journalism, Winners to be announced June 16 in Toronto by Robyn Smith, April 15, 2016, TheTyee.ca

The Tyee has been named a finalist for the CJF Jackman Award for Excellence in Journalism this year, in large part based on reporting Tyee contributing editor Andrew Nikiforuk has done on the fracking beat.

The annual award, handed out by the Canadian Journalism Foundation, honours a Canadian organization that “embodies exemplary journalism with a resulting impact on the community it serves.”

This year’s nomination in particular recognizes Nikiforuk’s 2015 Tyee reporting on the fracking industry, including industry-caused earthquakes and the high-profile, landmark fracking lawsuit of Jessica Ernst.

Nikiforuk’s reporting is supported by the readers who pledge voluntary financial contributions as Tyee Builders. Many thanks to Builders!

Great fellow nominees

The Tyee has won the CJF award twice before, in 2009 and 2013.

We’re honoured to be recognized among such excellent company in the small media category this year, including Metro of Ottawa, National Observer, The Telegraph-Journal and Toronto Life.

Nominees for the large media category include 16×9 Global News, CBC News, the Globe and Mail, Maclean’s and the Toronto Star.

The winners will be announced at the Canadian Journalism Foundation awards on June 16 in Toronto. [Emphasis added]

2016 Finalists small media, includes Tyee for Andrew Nikiforuk's reporting on fracking quakes, Ernst vs AER at Supreme Court CJF Jackman Award for Excellence in Journalism

The annual awards recognize Canadian news organizations that embody exemplary journalism with a resulting impact on the community they serve. Since 1996, the CJF has honoured news organizations that embrace ideals of journalistic excellence – accuracy, independence, accountability, courage and originality – with this prestigious award.

“The entries show the tremendous range and depth of quality journalism being produced across the country,” says Christopher Waddell, chair of the jury and associate professor, School of Journalism and Communication, Carleton University. “While the past year marked concern in some quarters about journalism’s future, large news organizations are still committing significant resources to tell stories that make a deep impact with audiences. At the same time, the breadth and depth of entries in the smaller news organization category demonstrate the excellent work that can be done with a small staff and limited resources.”

The five finalists in the large media category (more than 50 full-time employees), and the stories for which they are nominated, are:

16×9, Global News
“Under Fire: Were Moncton RCMP officers ready for the call?”

CBC News
“Missing & Murdered: Unsolved cases of indigenous women and girls”
“Families of missing and murdered indigenous women give police a failing grade”
“Family prays for justice 12 years after Felicia Solomon’s remains found in Red River

The Globe and Mail
“The Unremembered”
An investigation that revealed at least 54 soldiers and veterans killed themselves after returning from fighting in Afghanistan, and how the investigation unfolded.

Maclean’s
“Welcome to Winnipeg: Where Canada’s racism problem is at its worst”
“One year later: Winnipeg leaders on a city’s fight against racism”
“‘It could have been me.’ Thirteen remarkable women share their own stories.”

Toronto Star
“Sick Kids reassigns oversight of Motherisk program”
“Scope of Motherisk probe doubled to cover 2005-15”
“Damning review of Motherisk drug testing sparks call for second probe”

The five finalists in the small media category (fewer than 50 full-time employees), and the stories for which they are nominated, are:

Metro Ottawa
City of Ottawa won’t divulge Parliament Hill shooting report recommendations”
“Privacy watchdog reviews Ottawa’s redaction of Parliament Hill shooting report”
“Parliament Hill report finds not enough guards to quickly lock down Ottawa city hall”

National Observer (Vancouver based)
“Redacted diary reveals oil’s hidden route to Harper”
“Enbridge dismisses allegations of impropriety in Duffy communications”
“Questions persist in Parliament on Duffy-Harper-Enbridge connection”

The Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, N.B.)
“Tracking Daycare Deficiencies”

Toronto Life
“The Skin I’m In: I’ve been interrogated by police more than 50 times—all because I’m black”

The Tyee (Vancouver based)
“Did Alberta Just Break a Fracking Earthquake World Record?”
“Fracking Industry Has Changed Earthquake Patterns in Northeast BC”
“Supreme Court Rejects Argument to Dismiss Landmark Fracking Case”

The winners in both categories will be announced at the annual CJF Awards held at the Fairmont Royal York on June 16 in Toronto.

The members of the jury are:

Chair – Christopher Waddell, associate professor, School of Journalism and Communication, Carleton University

Hershell Ezrin, managing director, Ezrin Communications

Trina McQueen, adjunct professor, MBA Program in Arts and Media Administration, York University

David Skok, managing editor and vice-president of Digital, The Boston Globe

Shauna Snow-Capparelli, associate professor and chair, Bachelor of Communication-Journalism, Mount Royal University

Follow #CJFawards on Twitter.

About The Canadian Journalism Foundation
Established in 1990, The Canadian Journalism Foundation promotes excellence in journalism by celebrating outstanding journalistic achievement. Our signature events include an annual awards program featuring a must-attend industry gala where Canada’s top newsmakers meet Canada’s top news people. Through J-Talks, our popular speakers’ series, we facilitate dialogue among journalists, business people, academics and students about the role of the media in Canadian society and the ongoing challenges for media in the digital era. The foundation also supports journalism websites J-Source.ca (English) and ProjetJ.ca (French) and fosters opportunities for journalism education, training and research.

SOURCE Canadian Journalism Foundation

For further information: Natalie Turvey, Executive Director, The Canadian Journalism Foundation, 416-955-0394, email hidden; JavaScript is required

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