Jump to content

State House News Service: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
AFC draft (via script)
No edit summary
Line 4: Line 4:
*[[Draft:State House News Service]]
*[[Draft:State House News Service]]
-->
-->
{{Infobox company
The '''State House News Service''' is an independent, privately owned [[news wire | news wire]] service that has been providing in-depth coverage of Massachusetts state government since 1894. It provides a continuous daily feed of news stories about state-government issues and events, supplemented by photos, audio and video. The SHNS is a subscription-only, [[Paywall|paywalled]] service with limited advertising. Clients include media outlets, government agencies, lobbyists and lobbying firms, political campaigns, advocacy organizations and non-profits, and corporations. The Service produces news stories, daily schedules of state house events, gavel-to-gavel coverage of the House and Senate, and weekly summaries of the week's top stories and of the events and issues likely to be making news in the weeks ahead. Its office is in Room 458 of the [[Massachusetts State House]].
| name = State House News Service
| logo = SHNS2020.png
| image = Wiki SHNS Newsroom.jpg
| image_caption = SHNS newsroom in State House Room 458 (2019)
| type = [[Privately held company|Private]]
| industry = [[News agency]]
| founded = {{Start date and age|1894}} in [[Boston|Boston, Massachusetts]]
| founder = Charles E. Mann
| hq_location = [[Massachusetts State House]]
| area_served = <!-- or: | areas_served = -->
| key_people = Craig R. Sandler {{small|(Manager)}}, Michael P. Norton {{small|(Editor)}}
| website = http://statehousenews.com
}}


The '''State House News Service''' is an independent, privately owned [[news wire | news wire]] service that has been providing in-depth coverage of Massachusetts state government since 1894. It provides a continuous daily feed of news stories about state-government issues and events, supplemented by photos, audio and video. The SHNS is a subscription-only, [[Paywall|paywalled]] service with limited advertising. Clients include media outlets, government agencies, lobbyists and lobbying firms, political campaigns, advocacy organizations and non-profits, and corporations.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://statehousenews.com/about|title=About the News Service|website=statehousenews.com}}</ref> The Service produces news stories, daily schedules of state house events, gavel-to-gavel coverage of the House and Senate, and weekly summaries of the week's top stories and of the events and issues likely to be making news in the weeks ahead. Its office is in Room 458 of the [[Massachusetts State House]].
[[File:SHNS2020.png|thumb|]]


== History ==
== History ==
The SHNS was founded in 1894 by Charles Mann<sup>1</sup> of Lynn, Mass, a self-educated reporter who began covering the State House beat in 1889 for the Boston Advertiser and Boston Record. It was not unheard of for reporters to cover the beat for more than one paper, nor to form their own small news services. Then as now, Mann's bureau afforded out-of-town papers the opportunity to print firsthand accounts of legislative business and track issues of importance to their communities. Mann added papers and reporters over time, and also worked part-time for state government itself, as a clerk on a special commission redrafting the state's statutes.<sup>2</sup>. In 1903, he took a full-time job with the government, as clerk of the state Railroad Commission, and turned the business over to Charles Copeland.<sup>3</sup> The Service has operated continuously since its founding, passing through a succession of six owners to the present day, with the basic product remaining constant: daily news copy covering state government affairs.
[[File:Dan O'Connor, Editor of the State House News Service 1921- circa 1947.jpg|thumb|right|245px|Dan O'Connor, SHNS Editor from 1921 into the 1940s.]]
[[File:Dan O'Connor, Editor of the State House News Service 1921- circa 1947.jpg|thumb|right|245px|Dan O'Connor, SHNS Editor from 1921 into the 1940s.]]
The SHNS was founded in 1894 by Charles Mann<sup>1</sup> of [[Lynn, Massachusetts]], a self-educated reporter who began covering the State House beat in 1889 for the [[Boston Daily Advertiser|Boston Advertiser]] and [[The Boston Record|Boston Record]]. It was not unheard of for reporters to cover the beat for more than one paper, nor to form their own small news services. Then as now, Mann's bureau afforded out-of-town papers the opportunity to print firsthand accounts of legislative business and track issues of importance to their communities. Mann added papers and reporters over time, and also worked part-time for state government itself, as a clerk on a special commission redrafting the state's statutes.<sup>2</sup>. In 1903, he took a full-time job with the government, as clerk of the state Railroad Commission which later became the [[Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities]], and turned the business over to Charles Copeland.<sup>3</sup> The Service has operated continuously since its founding, passing through a succession of six owners to the present day, with the basic product remaining constant: daily news copy covering state government affairs.

=== Owners ===
=== Owners ===
Copeland died in 1913 and his wife Elberta inherited the business.<sup>4</sup> The Copelands had made headlines themselves, national ones, with their elopement in 1893.<sup>5</sup>
Copeland died in 1913 and his wife Elberta inherited the business.<sup>4</sup> The Copelands had made headlines themselves, national ones, with their elopement in 1893.<sup>5</sup>
As editor/owner, Elberta spent the first seven years of her career disenfranchised from the government she covered daily; women did not receive the right to vote in Massachusetts until 1920.
As manager/owner, Elberta spent the first seven years of her career disenfranchised from the government she covered daily; women did not receive the right to vote in Massachusetts until 1920.
<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://constitutioncenter.org/timeline/html/cw08_12159.html|title=National Constitution Center - Centuries of Citizenship - Map: States grant women the right to vote|website=constitutioncenter.org|access-date=2019-01-28}}</ref> But Elberta insisted on her rights, becoming the [https://images.findagrave.com/photos/2013/355/38822537_138775040069.jpg first woman to enter the Massachusetts House chamber] on business. In time, she took a more passive role in actual news coverage, hiring a successor of editors and at the end of her long career "she just sat in the corner, proud to own the News Service," her great-grandnephew recalled.<sup>6</sup>
<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://constitutioncenter.org/timeline/html/cw08_12159.html|title=National Constitution Center - Centuries of Citizenship - Map: States grant women the right to vote|website=constitutioncenter.org|access-date=2019-01-28}}</ref> But Elberta insisted on her rights, becoming the first woman allowed onto the floor of the [[Massachusetts House of Representatives|Massachusetts House]] Chamber.

Copeland received a formal expression of concern in 1943 from Gov. Leverett Saltonstall about a serious accident, the nature of which was not specified. In 1947, she formally turned over ownership of the New Service to Paul Ryan, her longtime reporter and editor. Ryan became a legend in the political and journalistic life of the State House, holding court at his corner desk as politicians and would-be influencers came and went went to share news tips and gossip about the issues of the day. He served as editor from 1942 until 1947, and owner/editor until 1979, until ill health forced his retirement.
In time, she took a more passive role in actual news coverage, hiring a successor of editors and at the end of her long career "she just sat in the corner, proud to own the News Service," her great-grandnephew recalled.<sup>6</sup> Copeland received a formal expression of concern in 1943 from Gov. [[Leverett Saltonstall]] about a serious accident, the nature of which was not specified. In 1947, she formally turned over ownership of the New Service to Paul Ryan, her longtime reporter and editor. Ryan became a legend in the political and journalistic life of the State House, holding court at his corner desk as politicians and would-be influencers came and went went to share news tips and gossip about the issues of the day. He served as editor from 1942 until 1947, and owner/editor until 1979 when ill health forced his retirement.

[[File:Paul Ryan, Owner-Editor of the State House News Service 1947-1978.jpg|thumb|left|Paul Ryan, who owned and ran SHNS from 1947 till 1978.]]


Under Ryan, the News Service continued its unsensationalistic approach to coverage, though the reporters it employed had their quirks. Veteran Boston political reporter Peter Lucas remembered that Ryan tended to hire "unemployed reporters who were down and out with temporary jobs" in addition to the regular line reporters.
Under Ryan, the News Service continued its unsensationalistic approach to coverage, though the reporters it employed had their quirks. Veteran Boston political reporter Peter Lucas remembered that Ryan tended to hire "unemployed reporters who were down and out with temporary jobs" in addition to the regular line reporters.


Ryan was in competition with the New England News Service, a similar wire service with a stronger emphasis on feature stories, established in the late 1930s by Arthur Woodman. Woodman's daughter Helen worked for her father's service, beginning her career after graduating from the University of New Hampshire in 1964. In 1978, with his health declining, Ryan asked Woodman to take over the News Service and she accepted. But immediately upon assuming the editorship, Woodman faced a crisis.
Ryan was in competition with the New England News Service, a similar wire service with a stronger emphasis on feature stories, established in the late 1930s by Arthur Woodman. Woodman's daughter Helen worked for her father's service, beginning her career after graduating from the University of New Hampshire in 1964. In 1978, with his health declining, Ryan asked Woodman to take over the News Service and she accepted. But immediately upon assuming the editorship, Woodman faced a crisis.

[[File:Paul Ryan, Owner-Editor of the State House News Service 1947-1978.jpg|thumb|left|Paul Ryan, who owned and ran SHNS from 1947 till 1978.]]
=== Dual-employment controversies ===
=== Dual-employment controversies ===
It was common in the early years of the 20th century for reporters to work side jobs doing research and writing news releases for government agencies and legislative commissions, and News Service reporters did lots this sort of work into well into the 1970s. The appearance of State House reporters on the payrolls of government organizations made headlines from time to time from mid-century onward, and in 1978, just as Ryan's health was seriously declining, the Boston Globe published articles revealing he himself held contracts to do government work. Encouraged by the News Service's competitors to cancel their subscriptions, a number of subscribers did just that, and Woodman had to deal with a crisis of both finances and reputation. But throughout the 1980's, she and her staff slowly won the departed subscribers back, and she made sure the wall between the News Service and the state payroll stayed up for good. Woodman earned a legendary status at the State House in her own right, training generations of reporters who went on to top positions in journalism, government and public affairs in Massachusetts.
It was common in the early years of the 20th century for reporters to work side jobs doing research and writing news releases for government agencies and legislative commissions, and News Service reporters did lots this sort of work into well into the 1970s. The appearance of State House reporters on the payrolls of government organizations made headlines from time to time from mid-century onward, and in 1978, just as Ryan's health was seriously declining, the Boston Globe published articles revealing he himself held contracts to do government work. Encouraged by the News Service's competitors to cancel their subscriptions, a number of subscribers did just that, and Woodman had to deal with a crisis of both finances and reputation. But throughout the 1980's, she and her staff slowly won the departed subscribers back, and she made sure the wall between the News Service and the state payroll stayed up for good. Woodman earned a legendary status at the State House in her own right, training generations of reporters who went on to top positions in journalism, government and public affairs in Massachusetts.


By 1996, Woodman felt she had run the News Service long enough and wished to retire, but wanted to turn the business over to someone who would uphold its integrity and news ethos. She found that person in Craig Sandler, who'd worked for Woodman from 1988-1991. Sandler had gone on to work as state government reporter for the [[Tab_Communications|TAB Newspapers]], a chain of free weeklies in the Metrowest suburbs of Boston. The TABs were known for an unusually high quality level of coverage for free shoppers, with robust arts coverage and elements like the presence of a full-time report reporter at the State House. The chain was founded and run by Russel Pergament and Stephen Cummings.
By 1996, Woodman felt she had run the News Service long enough and wished to retire, but wanted to turn the business over to someone who would uphold its integrity and news ethos. She found that person in Craig Sandler, who'd worked for Woodman from 1988-1991. Sandler had gone on to work as state government reporter for the [[Tab_Communications|TAB Newspapers]], a chain of free weeklies in the Metrowest suburbs of Boston. The TABs were known for an unusually high quality level of coverage for free shoppers, with robust arts coverage and elements like the presence of a full-time report reporter at the State House. The chain was founded and run by Russel Pergament and Stephen Cummings.

[[File:SHNSWiki HelenCraig.jpg|frame|right|Helen Woodman with Craig Sandler on her left and SHNS reporters Jon Tapper and Dan Boylan in August 1996.]]


After the TAB, Sandler worked for [[The_Sun_(Lowell)|The Sun of Lowell]], and while he was there, Woodman told him of her interest in selling. Sandler reached out to Pergament and Cummings, and the trio acquired the News Service on Aug. 5, 1996. They have owned it ever since. Just as Elbert Copeland had selected Daniel O'Connor and others to serve as editor after doing the job for several years herself, in 1998, Sandler hired Michael P. Norton, who trained alongside Sandler under Helen Woodman, for the editor's job. Only Paul Ryan has held the editor's job longer.
[[File:SHNSWiki HelenCraig.jpg|frame|right|Helen Woodman with Craig Sandler on her left and SHNS reporters Jon Tapper and Dan Boylan in Aug.,1996.]]
After the TAB, Sandler worked for [[The_Sun_(Lowell)|the Sun of Lowell]], and while he was there, Woodman told him of her interest in selling. Sandler reached out to Pergament and Cummings,
and the trio acquired the News Service on Aug. 5, 1996. They have owned it ever since. Just as Elbert Copeland had selected Daniel O'Connor and others to serve as editor after doing the job for several years herself, in 1998, Sandler hired Michael Norton, who trained alongside Sandler under Helen Woodman, for the editor's job. Only Paul Ryan has held the editor's job longer.


=== Location, Distribution and Technology ===
=== Location, Distribution and Technology ===
The News Service has always had offices on the fourth floor of the Massachusetts State House. The first locating information, from 1906, puts the service in Room 449, farther toward the back of the building than the current room, 458. In 1997, when Thomas "Tip" O'Neill became the first Massachusetts Minority Leader assigned an office, he took over 449, and the News Service was assigned Room 458, where it's been ever since.
The News Service has always had offices on the fourth floor of the Massachusetts State House. The first location information, from 1906, puts the service in Room 449, farther toward the back of the building than the current room, 458. In 1947, when [[Tip O'Neill|Thomas "Tip" O'Neill]] became the first Massachusetts House minority leader assigned an office, he took over 449, and the News Service was assigned Room 458, where it's been ever since.


In the beginning, copy was written out in longhand or typewritten, and early recollections of the service include reference to the [[Mimeograph|mimeographing]] of copy - a cheap, fast, reliable method that was available from the founding of SHNS. The "flimsies," or copies, were picked up by hand by subscribers in the building, and also rushed by messenger boys down to the newsrooms on Newspaper Row in Boston - the modern-day Downtown Crossing. The mimeograph remained in use until the end of 1993. Paper copies were placed in boxes at the front of Room 458 from the time it moved in till well into the era of email. The full spectrum of players in state government would visit Room 458, to pick up the latest news and press releases.
In the beginning, copy was written out in longhand or typewritten, and early recollections of the service include reference to the [[Mimeograph|mimeographing]] of copy - a cheap, fast, reliable method that was available from the founding of SHNS. The "flimsies," or copies, were picked up by hand by subscribers in the building, and also rushed by messenger boys down to the newsrooms on [[Newspaper Row (Boston)|Newspaper Row]] in Boston - near modern-day Downtown Crossing. The mimeograph remained in use until the end of 1993. Paper copies were placed in boxes at the front of Room 458 from the time it moved well into the era of email. The full spectrum of players in state government would visit Room 458, to pick up the latest news and press releases.


By 1997, it was clear the service needed a digital presence, and its new owners established the email servers, Web site and back-end content preparation system necessary to get the copy out to subscribers over the 'Net. The coming of digital also made possible the transmission of photos for the first time in service history, and they became a standard feature at the end of the 90's. Audio and video followed. The new technology improved both coverage and distribution, but did come with a price: as subscribers switched to digital receipt of the copy, they no longer needed to visit the office in person, so some of the information sharing that went on around the boxes disappeared, replaced only in part by email and text chit-chat. The coming of social media carried its own sort of tradeoff; the universality and immediacy of the new channels made it harder to maintain the integrity of the subscription-only, paywalled approach to monetizing the news. With Twitter by far the medium of choice for the journalism community, at least the niche of government affairs, SHNS staffers learned how to strike a balance between sharing their with the world, while saving valuable content for subscribers behind the paywall.
By 1997, it was clear the service needed a digital presence, and its new owners established the email servers, Web site and back-end content preparation system necessary to get the copy out to subscribers over the [[Internet]]. The coming of digital also made possible the transmission of photos for the first time in service history, and they became a standard feature at the end of the '90s. Audio and video followed. The new technology improved both coverage and distribution. The coming of social media carried a tradeoff as the universality and immediacy of the new channels made it harder to maintain the integrity of the subscription-only, paywalled approach to monetizing the news. With Twitter by far the medium of choice for the journalism community, at least the niche of government affairs, SHNS staffers learned how to strike a balance between sharing their work with the world, while saving valuable content for subscribers behind the paywall.


The digital archives of the service run back to 1986. At that time, Helen Woodman brought the first desktop PC's into the office, along with computer printers, and the mimeograph masters were then printed by computer, but duplicated using the same technology that had been employed since at least the Depression. The stories had to be saved to [[Floppy disk|floppy disk]] before printing, and this created a de facto digital archive years before the world went online. In the early 2000s, all the copy was placed on servers and rendered searchable by Alex Pergament, with software written in-house.
The digital archives of the service run back to 1986. At that time, Helen Woodman brought the first desktop PC's into the office, along with computer printers, and the mimeograph masters were then printed by computer, but duplicated using the same technology that had been employed since at least the Depression. The stories had to be saved to [[Floppy disk|floppy disk]] before printing, and this created a de facto digital archive years before the world went online. In the early 2000s, all the copy was placed on servers and rendered searchable by Alex Pergament, with software written in-house.
Line 41: Line 58:
Press releases were published online from the start of Web operations - scanned from paper, cleaned up with OCR readers, and posted on the Web server. Soon enough, the paper-to-digital process was superseded by the direct delivery of press releases, which could be posted digitally at once.
Press releases were published online from the start of Web operations - scanned from paper, cleaned up with OCR readers, and posted on the Web server. Soon enough, the paper-to-digital process was superseded by the direct delivery of press releases, which could be posted digitally at once.


[[File:Wiki SHNS Newsroom.jpg|thumb|SHNS newsroom in Room 458 of the State House, 2019.|left]]
=== Reach and Impact ===
=== Reach and Impact ===
Pergament and Cummings were experienced salespeople, and they expanded the subscriber base considerably. At the same time, the Internet was proving a bane to traditional journalism, but a boon to the News Service. The business model of ad-based news outlets deteriorated alarmingly after 1999, with advertisers preferring the customizable intimacy and market intelligence available on platforms like facebook and Google, and that led to staffing reductions industrywide that have continued to this day. State House bureaus were downsized, then eliminated, by most Massachusetts regional newspapers. Consolidation of newspaper holding groups became the norm, followed by acquisition of these groups by finance-focused hedge and venture funds who prime focus was on the robustness of investor return more than the vitality of civic life or ensuring a well-informed citizenry.<ref>https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-22/the-hard-truth-at-newspapers-across-america-hedge-funds-are-in-charge Retrieved April 18, 2020</ref> At the same time, the News Service found itself able to deliver its copy instantaneously to any newsroom. Denuded of government reporters, the news outlets increasingly relied on News Service copy for State House coverage that once had been provided by staff members. While hard statistics are difficult to gather authoritatively, it is likely that more people read News Service copy today statewide than at any time in the Service's 125-plus years of existence.
Pergament and Cummings were experienced salespeople, and they expanded the subscriber base considerably. At the same time, the Internet was proving a bane to traditional journalism, but a boon to the News Service. The business model of ad-based news outlets deteriorated alarmingly after 1999, with advertisers preferring the customizable intimacy and market intelligence available on platforms like facebook and Google, and that led to staffing reductions industrywide that have continued to this day. State House bureaus were downsized, then eliminated, by most Massachusetts regional newspapers. Consolidation of newspaper holding groups became the norm, followed by acquisition of these groups by finance-focused hedge and venture funds who prime focus was on the robustness of investor return more than the vitality of civic life or ensuring a well-informed citizenry.<ref>https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-22/the-hard-truth-at-newspapers-across-america-hedge-funds-are-in-charge Retrieved April 18, 2020</ref> At the same time, the News Service found itself able to deliver its copy instantaneously to any newsroom. Denuded of government reporters, the news outlets increasingly relied on News Service copy for State House coverage that once had been provided by staff members. While hard statistics are difficult to gather authoritatively, it is likely that more people read News Service copy today statewide than at any time in the Service's 125-plus years of existence.


[[File:Logo of the News Service of Florida.png|thumb]]
=== News Service Florida ===
=== News Service Florida ===
[[File:Logo of the News Service of Florida.png|thumb]]
By the mid 2000s, the new digital paywall model for the News Service had been validated, and Sandler began visiting other state capitols to see if the model could be replicated. Florida had the lucrative market, thriving government-affairs sector and complicated politics that would support a large enough staff and infrastructure to run a full-fledged capitol bureau, so Sandler selected [[Tallahasee, Florida | Tallahassee.]] The business model, operating structure, product offering and customer base are very similar to those of the State House News Service.
By the mid 2000s, the new digital paywall model for the News Service had been validated, and Sandler began visiting other state capitols to see if the model could be replicated. Florida had the lucrative market, thriving government-affairs sector and complicated politics that would support a large enough staff and infrastructure to run a full-fledged capitol bureau, so Sandler selected [[Tallahasee, Florida | Tallahassee.]] The business model, operating structure, product offering and customer base are very similar to those of the State House News Service.


== Role in the State House ==
== Role in the State House ==
The News Service serves most immediately as a "cheat sheet" for reporters assigned to the State House itself, to fill them in on stories they can't cover directly because they are working on other stories or assignments. This "cheat sheet" function has diminished in importance as the number of State House reporters, and the ranks of journalists assigned to cover government, has diminished significantly in recent years. At the same time, this phenomenon has increased the value of the Service in newsrooms across Massachusetts (and Florida, in the case of NSF). News organizations use SHNS stories in place of pieces that once would have been written by State House reporters (Capitol reporters in Florida). However, the SHNS copy lacks the inclusion of details about the roles played by the legislators from the area each newspaper covers - a hallmark of state-capitol reporting in earlier decades.
The News Service serves most immediately as a "cheat sheet" for reporters assigned to the State House itself, to fill them in on stories they can't cover directly because they are working on other stories or assignments. This "cheat sheet" function has diminished in importance as the number of State House reporters, and the ranks of journalists assigned to cover government, has diminished significantly in recent years. At the same time, this phenomenon has increased the value of the Service in newsrooms across Massachusetts (and Florida, in the case of NSF). News organizations use SHNS stories in place of pieces that once would have been written by State House reporters (Capitol reporters in Florida). However, the SHNS copy lacks the inclusion of details about the roles played by the legislators from the area each newspaper covers - a hallmark of state-capitol reporting in earlier decades.


Beyond the journalism community, the Service serves as a de facto news source of record for the wider state-government community - the legislators, legistlative staffers, agency employees, political organizations and industry groups, and the like.
Beyond the journalism community, the News Service serves as a de facto news source of record for the wider state-government community - the legislators, legistlative staffers, agency employees, political organizations and industry groups, and the like.


== Editors ==
== Editors ==
Howard W. Kendall, 1914-1918
*Howard W. Kendall, 1914-1918
*Grover C. Hoyt, 1919-1920

*Daniel J. O'Connor, 1921-1942
Grover C. Hoyt, 1919-1920
*Paul C. Ryan, 1942-1979

*Helen Woodman, 1979-1996
Daniel J. O'Connor, 1921-1942
*Craig Sandler, 1996-1998

*Michael P. Norton, 1998-Present
Paul C. Ryan, 1942-1979

Helen Woodman, 1979-1996

Craig Sandler, 1996-1998

Michael P. Norton, 1998-Present


== Notable Alumni ==
== Notable Alumni ==

*[[Elliot Paul | Elliot Paul]]: The author of 33 novels from 1925 through 1953, notably ''The Last Time I Saw Paris'', Paul worked for the News Service during its days as Copeland News Service from 1914 to 1921, interrupted by his service in World War I in 1917-1918.
*[[Elliot Paul | Elliot Paul]]: The author of 33 novels from 1925 through 1953, notably ''The Last Time I Saw Paris'', Paul worked for the News Service during its days as Copeland News Service from 1914 to 1921, interrupted by his service in World War I in 1917-1918.
*James Vincent Faraci: A messenger for the News Service in the 1930s, running sheets of news copy from the Copeland News Service to Newspaper Row on Tremont St., Faraci left when he was just 16 to become a jazz drummer, and made it big as "Jimmy Vincent" under bandleader Louis Prima; one of his best known pieces of work is "I Wan'na Be Like You," recorded by Prima's band for the oringal "Jungle Book" film soundtrack.
*James Vincent Faraci: A messenger for the News Service in the 1930s, running sheets of news copy from the Copeland News Service to Newspaper Row on Tremont St., Faraci left when he was just 16 to become a jazz drummer, and made it big as "Jimmy Vincent" under bandleader [[Louis Prima]]; one of his best known pieces of work is "I Wan'na Be Like You," recorded by Prima's band for the oringal "Jungle Book" film soundtrack.
*Loretta McLughlin: Editorial Page Editor of the Boston Globe in the early 1990s, she was married to News Service reporter Jim McLaughlin, befriended Ryan, and may well have done some pieces for him as she broke into the male-dominated journalism profession.
*Loretta McLaughlin: Editorial Page Editor of the Boston Globe in the early 1990s, she was married to News Service reporter Jim McLaughlin, befriended Ryan, and may well have done some pieces for him as she broke into the male-dominated journalism profession.
*[[Stephen Kurkjian | Stephen Kurkjian]]: Three-time Pulitzer Prize winner for the Boston Globe who helped lead its coverage of the Catholic clergy sex-abuse coverup. He worked for the News Service while attending Boston University and Suffolk Law School in the late 60's and early 70's.
*[[Stephen Kurkjian | Stephen Kurkjian]]: Three-time Pulitzer Prize winner for the Boston Globe who helped lead its coverage of the Catholic clergy sex-abuse coverup. He worked for the News Service while attending Boston University and Suffolk Law School in the late 60's and early 70's.
*Jim McGarry: A rookie reporter with Kurkjian who shipped off to Vietnam soon after working at the News Service and was killed in 1969 after just a week overseas.
*James McGarry: A rookie reporter with Kurkjian who shipped off to Vietnam soon after working at the News Service and was killed in 1969 after just a week overseas.
*Robert Healy: Boston Globe State House Bureau Chief and editor.
*Robert Healy: Boston Globe State House Bureau Chief and editor.
*Michael Levenson: New York Times general assignment reporter.
*Michael Levenson: New York Times general assignment reporter.
*Cyndi Roy: Spokeswoman for the Massachusetts Democratic Party and Communications Director for Gov. Deval Patrick and Attorney General Maura Healey.
*Cyndi Roy: Spokeswoman for the Massachusetts Democratic Party and Communications Director for Gov. Deval Patrick and Attorney General Maura Healey.



==References==
==References==

Revision as of 20:48, 5 May 2020

State House News Service
Company typePrivate
IndustryNews agency
Founded1894; 130 years ago (1894) in Boston, Massachusetts
FounderCharles E. Mann
HeadquartersMassachusetts State House
Key people
Craig R. Sandler (Manager), Michael P. Norton (Editor)
Websitehttp://statehousenews.com

The State House News Service is an independent, privately owned news wire service that has been providing in-depth coverage of Massachusetts state government since 1894. It provides a continuous daily feed of news stories about state-government issues and events, supplemented by photos, audio and video. The SHNS is a subscription-only, paywalled service with limited advertising. Clients include media outlets, government agencies, lobbyists and lobbying firms, political campaigns, advocacy organizations and non-profits, and corporations.[1] The Service produces news stories, daily schedules of state house events, gavel-to-gavel coverage of the House and Senate, and weekly summaries of the week's top stories and of the events and issues likely to be making news in the weeks ahead. Its office is in Room 458 of the Massachusetts State House.

History

File:Dan O'Connor, Editor of the State House News Service 1921- circa 1947.jpg
Dan O'Connor, SHNS Editor from 1921 into the 1940s.

The SHNS was founded in 1894 by Charles Mann1 of Lynn, Massachusetts, a self-educated reporter who began covering the State House beat in 1889 for the Boston Advertiser and Boston Record. It was not unheard of for reporters to cover the beat for more than one paper, nor to form their own small news services. Then as now, Mann's bureau afforded out-of-town papers the opportunity to print firsthand accounts of legislative business and track issues of importance to their communities. Mann added papers and reporters over time, and also worked part-time for state government itself, as a clerk on a special commission redrafting the state's statutes.2. In 1903, he took a full-time job with the government, as clerk of the state Railroad Commission which later became the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities, and turned the business over to Charles Copeland.3 The Service has operated continuously since its founding, passing through a succession of six owners to the present day, with the basic product remaining constant: daily news copy covering state government affairs.

Owners

Copeland died in 1913 and his wife Elberta inherited the business.4 The Copelands had made headlines themselves, national ones, with their elopement in 1893.5 As manager/owner, Elberta spent the first seven years of her career disenfranchised from the government she covered daily; women did not receive the right to vote in Massachusetts until 1920. [2] But Elberta insisted on her rights, becoming the first woman allowed onto the floor of the Massachusetts House Chamber.

In time, she took a more passive role in actual news coverage, hiring a successor of editors and at the end of her long career "she just sat in the corner, proud to own the News Service," her great-grandnephew recalled.6 Copeland received a formal expression of concern in 1943 from Gov. Leverett Saltonstall about a serious accident, the nature of which was not specified. In 1947, she formally turned over ownership of the New Service to Paul Ryan, her longtime reporter and editor. Ryan became a legend in the political and journalistic life of the State House, holding court at his corner desk as politicians and would-be influencers came and went went to share news tips and gossip about the issues of the day. He served as editor from 1942 until 1947, and owner/editor until 1979 when ill health forced his retirement.

File:Paul Ryan, Owner-Editor of the State House News Service 1947-1978.jpg
Paul Ryan, who owned and ran SHNS from 1947 till 1978.

Under Ryan, the News Service continued its unsensationalistic approach to coverage, though the reporters it employed had their quirks. Veteran Boston political reporter Peter Lucas remembered that Ryan tended to hire "unemployed reporters who were down and out with temporary jobs" in addition to the regular line reporters.

Ryan was in competition with the New England News Service, a similar wire service with a stronger emphasis on feature stories, established in the late 1930s by Arthur Woodman. Woodman's daughter Helen worked for her father's service, beginning her career after graduating from the University of New Hampshire in 1964. In 1978, with his health declining, Ryan asked Woodman to take over the News Service and she accepted. But immediately upon assuming the editorship, Woodman faced a crisis.

Dual-employment controversies

It was common in the early years of the 20th century for reporters to work side jobs doing research and writing news releases for government agencies and legislative commissions, and News Service reporters did lots this sort of work into well into the 1970s. The appearance of State House reporters on the payrolls of government organizations made headlines from time to time from mid-century onward, and in 1978, just as Ryan's health was seriously declining, the Boston Globe published articles revealing he himself held contracts to do government work. Encouraged by the News Service's competitors to cancel their subscriptions, a number of subscribers did just that, and Woodman had to deal with a crisis of both finances and reputation. But throughout the 1980's, she and her staff slowly won the departed subscribers back, and she made sure the wall between the News Service and the state payroll stayed up for good. Woodman earned a legendary status at the State House in her own right, training generations of reporters who went on to top positions in journalism, government and public affairs in Massachusetts.

By 1996, Woodman felt she had run the News Service long enough and wished to retire, but wanted to turn the business over to someone who would uphold its integrity and news ethos. She found that person in Craig Sandler, who'd worked for Woodman from 1988-1991. Sandler had gone on to work as state government reporter for the TAB Newspapers, a chain of free weeklies in the Metrowest suburbs of Boston. The TABs were known for an unusually high quality level of coverage for free shoppers, with robust arts coverage and elements like the presence of a full-time report reporter at the State House. The chain was founded and run by Russel Pergament and Stephen Cummings.

Helen Woodman with Craig Sandler on her left and SHNS reporters Jon Tapper and Dan Boylan in August 1996.

After the TAB, Sandler worked for The Sun of Lowell, and while he was there, Woodman told him of her interest in selling. Sandler reached out to Pergament and Cummings, and the trio acquired the News Service on Aug. 5, 1996. They have owned it ever since. Just as Elbert Copeland had selected Daniel O'Connor and others to serve as editor after doing the job for several years herself, in 1998, Sandler hired Michael P. Norton, who trained alongside Sandler under Helen Woodman, for the editor's job. Only Paul Ryan has held the editor's job longer.

Location, Distribution and Technology

The News Service has always had offices on the fourth floor of the Massachusetts State House. The first location information, from 1906, puts the service in Room 449, farther toward the back of the building than the current room, 458. In 1947, when Thomas "Tip" O'Neill became the first Massachusetts House minority leader assigned an office, he took over 449, and the News Service was assigned Room 458, where it's been ever since.

In the beginning, copy was written out in longhand or typewritten, and early recollections of the service include reference to the mimeographing of copy - a cheap, fast, reliable method that was available from the founding of SHNS. The "flimsies," or copies, were picked up by hand by subscribers in the building, and also rushed by messenger boys down to the newsrooms on Newspaper Row in Boston - near modern-day Downtown Crossing. The mimeograph remained in use until the end of 1993. Paper copies were placed in boxes at the front of Room 458 from the time it moved well into the era of email. The full spectrum of players in state government would visit Room 458, to pick up the latest news and press releases.

By 1997, it was clear the service needed a digital presence, and its new owners established the email servers, Web site and back-end content preparation system necessary to get the copy out to subscribers over the Internet. The coming of digital also made possible the transmission of photos for the first time in service history, and they became a standard feature at the end of the '90s. Audio and video followed. The new technology improved both coverage and distribution. The coming of social media carried a tradeoff as the universality and immediacy of the new channels made it harder to maintain the integrity of the subscription-only, paywalled approach to monetizing the news. With Twitter by far the medium of choice for the journalism community, at least the niche of government affairs, SHNS staffers learned how to strike a balance between sharing their work with the world, while saving valuable content for subscribers behind the paywall.

The digital archives of the service run back to 1986. At that time, Helen Woodman brought the first desktop PC's into the office, along with computer printers, and the mimeograph masters were then printed by computer, but duplicated using the same technology that had been employed since at least the Depression. The stories had to be saved to floppy disk before printing, and this created a de facto digital archive years before the world went online. In the early 2000s, all the copy was placed on servers and rendered searchable by Alex Pergament, with software written in-house.

Press releases were published online from the start of Web operations - scanned from paper, cleaned up with OCR readers, and posted on the Web server. Soon enough, the paper-to-digital process was superseded by the direct delivery of press releases, which could be posted digitally at once.

Reach and Impact

Pergament and Cummings were experienced salespeople, and they expanded the subscriber base considerably. At the same time, the Internet was proving a bane to traditional journalism, but a boon to the News Service. The business model of ad-based news outlets deteriorated alarmingly after 1999, with advertisers preferring the customizable intimacy and market intelligence available on platforms like facebook and Google, and that led to staffing reductions industrywide that have continued to this day. State House bureaus were downsized, then eliminated, by most Massachusetts regional newspapers. Consolidation of newspaper holding groups became the norm, followed by acquisition of these groups by finance-focused hedge and venture funds who prime focus was on the robustness of investor return more than the vitality of civic life or ensuring a well-informed citizenry.[3] At the same time, the News Service found itself able to deliver its copy instantaneously to any newsroom. Denuded of government reporters, the news outlets increasingly relied on News Service copy for State House coverage that once had been provided by staff members. While hard statistics are difficult to gather authoritatively, it is likely that more people read News Service copy today statewide than at any time in the Service's 125-plus years of existence.

News Service Florida

By the mid 2000s, the new digital paywall model for the News Service had been validated, and Sandler began visiting other state capitols to see if the model could be replicated. Florida had the lucrative market, thriving government-affairs sector and complicated politics that would support a large enough staff and infrastructure to run a full-fledged capitol bureau, so Sandler selected Tallahassee. The business model, operating structure, product offering and customer base are very similar to those of the State House News Service.

Role in the State House

The News Service serves most immediately as a "cheat sheet" for reporters assigned to the State House itself, to fill them in on stories they can't cover directly because they are working on other stories or assignments. This "cheat sheet" function has diminished in importance as the number of State House reporters, and the ranks of journalists assigned to cover government, has diminished significantly in recent years. At the same time, this phenomenon has increased the value of the Service in newsrooms across Massachusetts (and Florida, in the case of NSF). News organizations use SHNS stories in place of pieces that once would have been written by State House reporters (Capitol reporters in Florida). However, the SHNS copy lacks the inclusion of details about the roles played by the legislators from the area each newspaper covers - a hallmark of state-capitol reporting in earlier decades.

Beyond the journalism community, the News Service serves as a de facto news source of record for the wider state-government community - the legislators, legistlative staffers, agency employees, political organizations and industry groups, and the like.

Editors

  • Howard W. Kendall, 1914-1918
  • Grover C. Hoyt, 1919-1920
  • Daniel J. O'Connor, 1921-1942
  • Paul C. Ryan, 1942-1979
  • Helen Woodman, 1979-1996
  • Craig Sandler, 1996-1998
  • Michael P. Norton, 1998-Present

Notable Alumni

  • Elliot Paul: The author of 33 novels from 1925 through 1953, notably The Last Time I Saw Paris, Paul worked for the News Service during its days as Copeland News Service from 1914 to 1921, interrupted by his service in World War I in 1917-1918.
  • James Vincent Faraci: A messenger for the News Service in the 1930s, running sheets of news copy from the Copeland News Service to Newspaper Row on Tremont St., Faraci left when he was just 16 to become a jazz drummer, and made it big as "Jimmy Vincent" under bandleader Louis Prima; one of his best known pieces of work is "I Wan'na Be Like You," recorded by Prima's band for the oringal "Jungle Book" film soundtrack.
  • Loretta McLaughlin: Editorial Page Editor of the Boston Globe in the early 1990s, she was married to News Service reporter Jim McLaughlin, befriended Ryan, and may well have done some pieces for him as she broke into the male-dominated journalism profession.
  • Stephen Kurkjian: Three-time Pulitzer Prize winner for the Boston Globe who helped lead its coverage of the Catholic clergy sex-abuse coverup. He worked for the News Service while attending Boston University and Suffolk Law School in the late 60's and early 70's.
  • James McGarry: A rookie reporter with Kurkjian who shipped off to Vietnam soon after working at the News Service and was killed in 1969 after just a week overseas.
  • Robert Healy: Boston Globe State House Bureau Chief and editor.
  • Michael Levenson: New York Times general assignment reporter.
  • Cyndi Roy: Spokeswoman for the Massachusetts Democratic Party and Communications Director for Gov. Deval Patrick and Attorney General Maura Healey.

References

  1. ^ "About the News Service". statehousenews.com.
  2. ^ "National Constitution Center - Centuries of Citizenship - Map: States grant women the right to vote". constitutioncenter.org. Retrieved 2019-01-28.
  3. ^ https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-22/the-hard-truth-at-newspapers-across-america-hedge-funds-are-in-charge Retrieved April 18, 2020

External Links