Type | Non-profit |
---|---|
Format | Web |
Editor | Evan Smith (editor-in-chief) Ross Ramsey (managing editor) H.O. Maycotte (technology director) |
Staff writers | Brandi Grissom (reporter) Emily Ramshaw (reporter) Matt Stiles (reporter/data applications editor) Reeve Hamilton (reporter) Julian Aguilar (reporter) Morgan Smith (reporter) |
Founded | 2009 |
Political alignment | Nonpartisan |
Headquarters | 823 Congress Austin, Texas United States |
Official website | texastribune.org |
The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit news organization headquartered in Downtown Austin, Texas,[1] devoted to state government and public policy. It aims to promote civic engagement through original, explanatory journalism and public events.[2] Its website and content in various delivery platforms serves as an alternative news source for Texas, with a goal of supplementing the mainstream sources that exist.
The Texas Tribune, like Voice of San Diego and MinnPost before it, is part of a trend toward nonprofit journalism with an all-digital platform.[3]
In addition to journalism posted online at its site texastribune.org,[4] and in the pages and on the sites of its distribution partners,[5] the Tribune hosts on-the-record, open-to-the-public events: conversation series featuring elected officials and other newsmakers, conferences on major topics of interest to every Texan, a college tour, and the like.
The Texas Tribune was founded in the summer of 2009 by venture capitalist John Thornton and veteran journalists Evan Smith and Ross Ramsey.[6][7] The idea for the organization originated with Thornton, who spent much of 2008 and 2009 barnstorming the country in support of the idea that public interest journalism is a public good. Thornton wrote, in July 2009:[8]
In Micro 101, we learn that such "public goods" as clean air and national defense will not be produced in sufficient supply exclusively by market forces. Allow for the sake of argument that what I'll call "capital J" Journalism — journalism that takes on serious, complex issues and puts them in the context of how citizens interact with their government — is such a good.
Thornton and his wife, Julie, contributed the initial seed money to fund the organization's nascent operations and began to raise money from around the state and around the country from individuals, corporations, and foundations. He hired Smith, the longtime editor of Texas Monthly, to be CEO and editor-in-chief of the Trib, and the two recruited Ramsey, the longtime editor and owner of Texas Weekly, to be managing editor.[9] Smith and Ramsey subsequently hired several well-known members of the Capitol press corps to join the team: Matt Stiles, of the Houston Chronicle;[10] Emily Ramshaw, of the Dallas Morning News;[11] Brandi Grissom, of the El Paso Times; Elise Hu, of KVUE-TV;[12] and Reeve Hamilton, who covered the Texas Legislature for The Texas Observer. Morgan Smith, formerly of Slate, started writing for the Tribune in January 2010.
Brian Thevenot, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner who was formerly special projects editor for The Times Picayune of New Orleans, joined the staff in October 2009. He has since left the Tribune, and is now business editor at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. In 2011, the Tribune announced the hiring of the twice named AP Staff Writer of the Year, Jay Root, formerly of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.[13]
The Texas Tribune has been actively developing an open source publishing platform along with the The Bay Citizen, specifically tailored for nonprofit news organizations like itself. The system, named Armstrong, was funded through a $975,000 grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. It is based on technology the Tribune has been using since 2009[14].
The Texas Tribune launched on November 3, 2009.
Contents |
Staff includes Evan Smith (CEO and editor in chief), Ross Ramsey (managing editor), H.O. Maycotte (director of technology), and about eight journalists.
Smith was Texas Monthly's editor (2000–2008), president (2008–2009).
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Thornton raised more than US $2 million before the project was made public in July 2009. He invested $1 million of his personal money to the organization. By the November 2009 launch, the Tribune raised $3.6 million dollars from more than 1,000 individual donors and at least fifty corporate sponsors.[15]
Financier T. Boone Pickens has donated $150,000. Foundations have also donated around $1.1 million, including a total of $750,000 in grants from the Houston Endowment and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. Corporate sponsorships have brought in the funds as well. Most of the 68 corporate sponsors made a $2,500 commitment as co-founders of the publication, and it seems that this figure has not grown substantially since the launch. "In the coming months, we intend to become far more sophisticated in the way we market corporate sponsorships of both our site and our events series, TribLive," Thornton wrote.[16]