Narrator:
As communities around the country are learning, the key to effective prevention
is to use multiple strategies in multiple settings for achieving one
common goal. One important strategy is communications. By developing
the feature series “The Deadliest Drug,” the Portland Press
Herald demonstrated the power of this strategy.
Barbara Walsh, reporter, Portland Press Herald:
“ The Deadliest Drug: Maine’s Addiction to Alcohol” was an
eight-day series that described the human and financial cost of alcohol abuse
in Maine, and that appeared in the Portland Press Herald for eight days, and
it was a series that had everyone in the state talking about what we need to
do about alcohol abuse in Maine.
Kurt Hazlet, managing editor, Portland Press Herald/Maine
Sunday Telegram:
Regardless of what it was, whether it was a crime story, very often, most often,
there was a root in alcohol. Traffic accidents—the vast majority of those
seemed to be alcohol-based. Health issues—everything seemed to revolve
around the issue of drinking, yet this was nothing that was ever articulated.
There were several stories that came out. Such absolutely chilling stories
that they couldn’t help but connect with readers, and that was pretty
much the point of what we were doing. There was a story that looked at a rather
poor family that was devastated when the husband and father was killed in an
accident by a drunk driver. This story was especially compelling because the
man’s son survived him and was really just devastated by the loss of
his father, and there was a really memorable photograph of the son sitting
next to a wooden cross. The family was so poor, especially after his death,
that they weren’t able to buy a headstone, and it was just an utterly
grim photograph that accurately portrayed a pretty grim reality, which is that
families are really ripped apart by this sort of thing. As the week went on,
we got a lot of reaction, almost all of it positive, as people began to read
these stories and to get a sense of just the enormous impact that this social
problem was having. We had people who called to say that the series had actually
changed their lives. This is demonstrated to some degree by the numbers. There’s
a rehab program here in town at one of the hospitals that reported a substantial
rise in requests for treatment after the series ran.
Barbara Walsh:
As a journalist, you can hope that you go into this business because you want
to be a watchdog, you want to take a look at the community and hold a mirror
up and say, “Hey, guess what? There’s some problems here,” and
let those citizens look at it and say, “Well, should we do something?” And
you hope that when you do write these projects that people will care, and
they’ll say, “Hey, we’ve got to do something.”
Kurt Hazlet:
I think the biggest impact that the series had was to serve as a catalyst for
a lot of people who are already working in this field. Suddenly, they had
something that provided real data about the problem and the scope of the
problem—not only that, it was readable, it was a teaching tool, and
within a few weeks it became clear that this series in a reprinted form was
going to be valuable for a lot of organizations that work against substance
abuse.
Barbara Walsh:
I mean, we had 20,000 reprints made of this series, and most of those are gone—schools
called, churches, citizens and 2,000 citizens came forward to meet over the
course of a year to discuss solutions, and they came up with a book called
The Voices of Hope.
Narrator:
Communications efforts like the Portland Press Herald series can raise
community awareness about an issue—and they can also provide materials
for groups to use as tools for discussions and action planning.
Kurt Hazlet:
The newspaper worked with a number of organizations to get involved with helping
the community—I use that in the broadest sense—to deal with the
problem. One way we did that was through roundtables, which were formed largely
by the organizations themselves, with some logistical support from us. But
it was their game, and they took the effort that we did a step further. In
other words, they used what we published as the teaching tool; they went
out and tried to organize grassroots support throughout Maine, in towns and
cities, to deal with the problem, and the way you deal with a problem like
that is that you have discussion.
Elizabeth Weaver, citizen:
And that would create a kind of process where people could not just look at
the issue but look at ways to maybe how they personally could have an impact
on the issue, because that’s what would keep it kind of a grassroots,
I think, more practical kind of level.
My contribution to that was to take it into the school.
First, we kind of gave them an overview, talked about what they thought
about alcohol, what were some of their impressions about it. Then the
second session, we kind of brainstormed what were some solutions to that
that they saw, and what the kids said, so eloquently, is, “Hey,
it’s about all of us. It’s about adults too. And if you want
to have an impact on this, you have to first look at what you’re
doing, to set an example.”
John Cranshaw, student:
They have a lot of good information about how big a problem it really is. Going
in, I read them in a health class, basically, and it was really helpful because,
you know, sitting there with all these other you know, kids my age, we’re
all there thinking, “Oh, we know all this alcohol stuff, we’ve
heard it all before,” but I sat down with the paper and really started
to read it, and there was a lot of new stuff in there.
Elizabeth Weaver:
The youth that have been involved with some of those study circles that—would
I say that they never go to a party again? No. I think that’s probably
naïve to say that, but I think there’s another forum for thinking
about it, and there’s another way of thinking about this behavior, and
what some of the risks are, that begin to set up a process for how you make
those decisions and what some of the ramifications are. And I think that’s
what we can hope for as a community.
Kurt Hazlet:
A great deal of discussion took place in the months after the publication,
and that really had the impact, the purpose, of focusing a lot of people
on a problem that they never really thought they could solve, and they still
haven’t solved it. But what it did was, it allowed people to see in
their own lives, what around them needed to be fixed. It was a real example
of people coming together in a united fashion, first just to talk about a
problem; second, to come up with solutions for it, and that process is still
going. I think the best way for an organization to get attention from a newspaper
is to provide the newspaper with what it needs to see that there is a story.
Don’t try to persuade them necessarily with just
words. Provide facts.
Barbara Walsh:
But it’s finding the right person. Sometimes journalists are very busy
with whatever, breaking news, and it’s finding that right person at the
paper that’s going to listen to you and hopefully understand that this
is an important story, and they’ll take it from there.
I think, as a journalist, we don’t like things pushed
down our throat—someone says, “You have to do this”—but
if you explain that this is a problem and this is something that the
community needs to know about, then hopefully that reporter will say “You’re
right” and tackle it.
Kurt Hazlet:
When I say you shouldn’t just try to persuade people with words, words
can be cheap; they can also be very eloquent. But words themselves don’t
necessarily carry enough weight to persuade a news editor to drop what he or
she is doing and to take up another story. What really works is the fact. The
fact that you know that there is a problem, you can quantify the problem, and
that you can persuade that editor that by pursuing those few facts and perhaps
making a story out of them—you will have a substantial piece of journalism
that will have an impact on the community.
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