Police Propaganda Website Blurs Line Between Journalism and PR – paid for in part by taxpayers, and writes from a pro-public safety perspective

Website Blurs Line Between Journalism and PR – paid for in part by taxpayers, and writes from a pro-public safety perspective.

It is a gripping image — a fireman shudders with grief as his mother and family sob in his arms, during a memorial service for a fallen police officer, his brother and her son.

The photo, by Steven Georges, has the framing and emotional punch that gets the attention of judges during journalism awards season.

And that’s exactly what it did, winning Best News Photo in this year’s OC Press Club awards.

But the local publication that published the photo and accepted the award wasn’t a news publication like The Orange County Register, OC Weekly or The Daily Pilot.

It was Behind the Badge OC, a website that is staffed by many former news reporters but produced by a public relations firm, paid for in part by taxpayers, and writes from a pro-public safety perspective.

Its content consists primarily of published news releases and sleek feature stories about officers across seven local police agencies.

Since going live nearly ten months ago, Behind the Badge has garnered 19,000 followers on Facebook and now averages 80,000 unique visitors a month, according to Bill Rams, a principal at Irvine-based Cornerstone Communications, who serves at the site’s editor-in-chief.

It takes the concept of promoting the good work done by police officers and firefighters to another level. And in doing so, it has raised a few eyebrows in the world of media and public policy ethics.

The only mention of taxpayer dollars spent on the site is a disclosure statement on the About page, which states: “Some funding for this site is provided by the participating agencies.”

“Some” equates to 60 percent of the site’s total budget, Rams said. Included among the funders are police departments from Anaheim, Fullerton, Garden Grove, Westminster, La Habra, Tustin and Cypress, as well as the Anaheim Fire Department.

David Medzerian, a former Register staffer and Miami Herald reporter himself, penned a column for the Register in March criticizing Behind the Badge OC for not being more up-front with readers about its funding sources.

“The content is funded in part by agencies that the stories are about. And most readers don’t know that,” he wrote. “That critical information isn’t hidden, really, just difficult to find.”

Battling ‘Cops Behaving Badly’ Image

In an interview, Rams, a former public safety reporter for the Register, quickly acknowledged the site’s funding sources and said he and others in the organization make no attempt to present Behind the Badge OC as an objective news source.

Rams said police departments typically come up with the ideas for stories and rely on his writers to produce a professional product. The purpose, he said, is to help police agencies tell their stories in what he described as an increasingly hostile media environment.

“If you look at how law enforcement is being covered today, it’s mostly cops behaving badly, ‘allegations of inappropriate use of force,'” said Rams. “It’s mostly negative — but that’s not all that’s going on out there.”

The way police agencies typically deal with reporters and dispensing public information– assigning the responsibility to a low-level sergeant with no background in writing or news — has been ineffective, Rams said.

“When I was a reporter, the cops were never good at telling their story,” Rams said. “My experience with police officers is most of them [are] decent people — their job, I felt, was misunderstood. And I thought maybe I can be a force for helping them [explain] how complex their job is.”

In what can be best described as a twist of fate, the site’s emergence has coincided with a period of police scrutiny unmatched since Los Angeles police officers were caught on tape beating Rodney King in 1991.

The site launched in July 2014. One month later, Darren Wilson, a police officer in Ferguson MO, shot and killed Michael Brown, an unarmed black man. Brown’s death and a decision by a grand jury not to charge Wilson sparked days of rioting.

After Ferguson, incidents in New York City and Baltimore sparked protests that have seized the media and triggered a national discussion about race, excessive use of force and community policing.

The genesis of Behind the Badge OC can be traced back to police incidents that sparked protests and unrest in Anaheim and Fullerton.

One of the site’s first clients was the Fullerton Police Department, where Chief Dan Hughes was brought in after significant fallout from the fatal beating of a mentally ill homeless man named Kelly Thomas in 2011, an incident which sparked outrage and public scrutiny of law enforcement and the treatment of the homeless countywide.

“If you look at their old website, there were no pictures, there was no way to contact anybody. [Police department] websites look like they were built in the 1990s,” said Rams. “In this day and age, your website [is] how the public gets an idea of what you’re about.”

That poor communication became increasingly clear as the Fullerton department began to field calls from news outlets across the country, and websites, blogs and social media posts about Kelly Thomas proliferated online.

“I don’t know if it was just the Kelly Thomas incident, [but] over a number of months, there was misinformation being presented, not only in the press but out on blogs,” said Hughes. “We were not trained on how to communicate on blogs or social media.”

Hughes describes the website as a strategy for increasing public understanding of law enforcement, something akin to a community policing strategy.

“Who are the people patrolling our neighborhood? What are they like off duty? Do they understand what it privilege it is to serve our community?” Hughes said.

PR Response

Other funders of Behind the Badge OC include both the police and fire departments in Anaheim, where hundreds of demonstrators took to the streets in July 2012 to protest the fatal shootings of two young Latino men on consecutive days.

Jose Moreno, a member of a police community advisory board formed in response to months of public backlash, said he doesn’t have a problem with the department spending money on public relations, but questioned its effectiveness.

“The average Anaheim resident isn’t going to go to that website,” said Moreno, who is also president of Los Amigos of Orange County and ran for the Anaheim City Council in November.

Moreno also disputes the notion that local media haven’t been fair to law enforcement.

“The local media haven’t covered [the police] in a critical way. And the department in Anaheim…attack anybody who isn’t 100 percent in support of the department,” Moreno said.

To really make a difference, the site should “cover stories that lead to broader policy conversations,” he said.

It’s not uncommon for reporters to leave journalism for jobs on the so-called “dark side.” With the decline of traditional newspapers has come a growth in public relations specialists, who now outnumber reporters 5 to 1, according to the Pew Research Center.

Joel Zlotnik and Eric Carpenter, former Register reporters, both work in public relations for the Orange County Transportation Authority. Jennifer Muir, the incoming general manager of the Orange County Employees Association, is a former investigative reporter. County spokeswoman Jean Pasco wrote for the Los Angeles Times.

Several writers for Behind the Badge are career journalists, including former Register reporters Greg Hardesty and Jaimee Lynn Fletcher.

Critics like Medzerian, who now runs the University of Southern California’s Communications website, has no issues with former reporters earning a living in PR, but is concerned when they produce content that blurs the line between journalism and promotion.

In a media environment where many people are getting their news through clicks on Facebook and other social media sites, readers are less likely to visit a website’s homepage and most people won’t go looking for information about how a website is funded, Medzerian argues.

Rams, meanwhile, says that from the name of the website to the disclosure on its “About” page, Behind the Badge isn’t being coy about it’s funding.

“Our readers are smart — they’re going to figure it out. Do we need to call ourselves ‘funded-by-the-cops-dot-com?'” Rams said. “We say it’s produced by Cornerstone, you spend some time with our site, and you get the idea of what we’re about.”

Yet the site won first place awards for “Best News Photo” and “Best Feature Broadcast” from the press club, arguably the county’s most notable journalism organization.

Press club president Denis Foley, a former Register editor who is now an adjunct journalism professor at Chapman University, said the club is trying to be inclusive of all the new types of media. Public relations sites, news media and blogs can compete as long as the publications are transparent and judges are aware, Foley said.

“The way I look at it is, there’s so much stuff online, it’s really about news literacy and how readers can distinguish and evaluate different sites and where [news] is coming from,” Foley said. “I look at the About Us page for Behind the Badge, for [Voice of OC] and OC Weekly, and I think everyone is pretty clear.”

Medzerian believes Behind the Badge should disclose its funding more explicitly because there is a business relationship between writers and the subject of their stories.

“What Behind the Badge does well is give [police departments] another way to get their story out, and I like that,” Medzerian said. “What bothers me, and this is speculative, is that agencies might start to use the site as their way to get their information to readers, rather than traditional media.”

A ‘Complicated’ World

Marc Cooper, a journalism professor and Director of Annenberg Digital News at the University of Southern California, contrasts Behind the Badge with a news site embedded within the website of former Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaraslovksy.

Yaraslovsky hired former reporters to staff the site and write about county news and politics.

“While there was no pretense that this was an independent publication, it did cover real news in a somewhat professional way and with a somewhat unpredictable point of view,” Cooper said. “It did not announce or intend to be a counter to the mainstream or local reporters’ covering the county – it considered itself an additional resource.”

Ultimately, Cooper thinks the disclosure question won’t matter.

While the goal of deepening the relationship between the public and law enforcement is noble, he doubts the site will have any impact at all.

“There’s a difference between public relations and community relations — PR sells a product and community relations builds relationships,” said Cooper. “And what you’ve got here is a cereal commercial, a piece of uncritical advertising that is going to convince absolutely nobody who isn’t already convinced.”

The site is a constant experiment, Rams said, and he defends his site as professional content produced by veteran reporters, worthy of publication in the Register or LA Times.

“Everything is complicated in the world right now. Law enforcement is going through a state of disruption, media is going through it,” Rams said. “Police leaders everywhere are trying to do a better job of engaging their communities.”

Contact Thy Vo at [email protected] or follow her on Twitter @thyanhvo.

https://voiceofoc.org/2015/06/website-blurs-line-between-journalism-and-pr/

Water Districts and City Hall Never Saw a Drought and Price Increase They “Didn’t” Like – Nobody “Needs” California Almonds – Court Rules “tiered water rates are unconstitutional” – Thank You Jim Reardon

In a ruling with major implications for California’s water conservation campaign, a state appeals court on Monday ruled that a tiered water rate structure used by the city of San Juan Capistrano to encourage conservation was unconstitutional.

The Orange County city used a rate structure that charged customers who used small amounts of water a lower rate than customers who used larger amounts.

But the 4th District Court of Appeal struck down San Juan Capistrano’s fee plan, saying it violated voter-approved Proposition 218, which prohibits government agencies from charging more for a service than it costs to provide it.

“We do hold that above-cost-of-service pricing for tiers of water service is not allowed by Proposition 218 and in this case, [the city] did not carry its burden of proving its higher tiers reflected its costs of service,” the court said in its ruling.

The stakes are high because at least two-thirds of California water providers, including the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, use some form of the tiered rate system.

Gov. Jerry Brown immediately lashed out at the decision, saying it puts “a straitjacket on local government at a time when maximum flexibility is needed. My policy is and will continue to be: employ every method possible to ensure water is conserved across California.”

Brown added state lawyers are now reviewing the decision.

It also remains unclear what effect the ruling would have on other agencies that use tiered rates.

The court said that tiered prices are legal as long as the government agency can show that each rate is tied to the cost of providing the water.

San Juan Capistrano resident Jim Reardon is part of a group challenging the city over its tiered water-rate structure.

“The water agency here did not try to calculate the cost of actually providing water at its various tier levels,” the court said of San Juan Capistrano. “It merely allocated all its costs among the price tier levels, based not on costs, but on pre-determined usage budgets.”

The highly anticipated decision comes in the wake of Brown’s executive order directing water agencies to develop rate structures that use price signals to force conservation. His order, which also requires a 25% reduction in urban water usage, marked the first mandatory water restrictions in state history and came as the state enters a fourth year of an unrelenting drought.

A group of San Juan Capistrano residents sued that city, alleging that its tiered rate structure resulted in arbitrarily high fees. The city’s 2010 rate schedule charged customers $2.47 per unit — 748 gallons — of water in the first tier and up to $9.05 per unit in the fourth. The city, which has since changed its rate structure, was charging customers who used the most water more than the actual cost to deliver it, plaintiffs said. The law, they argued, prohibits suppliers from charging more than it costs to deliver water.

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power currently uses a two-tier rate structure, but agency officials have said they are preparing to roll out a revised system that would employ four tiers and that would make high water use even more costly than it is now.

Experts say 66% to 80% of California water providers use some type of tiered rates. A 2014 UC Riverside study estimated that tiered rate structures similar to the one used in San Juan Capistrano reduce water use over time by up to 15%.

An author of the study, Ken Baerenklau, said the effect was greatest on the heaviest water-users. In a previous interview with The Times, he said that if the court found in favor of the plaintiffs, as it did Monday, the decision “would be a big deal” because it would “stand in the face of significant momentum” toward tiered rates.

https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-water-rates-case-20150405-story.html

California almonds are a popular bagged treat in China’s convenience stores and supermarkets and a must-have item in holiday gift baskets.

As big a global money-maker as California’s agriculture is, though, it’s little more than a blip in the state’s economy. And that’s driving the debate on water use.

https://www.sfgate.com/news/science/article/Almonds-get-roasted-in-debate-over-California-6209631.php

Shots Fired – SWAT Teams – Helicopters Landing – Police Dogs – Armored Vehicles – School Lockdowns – Road Closures – TV News – Overtime – and “One” Boy Burglar




April 10, 2014

Tustin, California –

Shots were fired when a police officer confronted a man reportedly seen walking with a sawed-off shotgun near an apartment complex Thursday morning, officials said, prompting a “soft lockdown” of 10 nearby schools for more than four hours.

The man fled from officers after the shooting, officials said, sparking a search through several nearby apartment buildings. He was taken into custody before 2 p.m., uninjured, said Sgt. Andrew Birozy of the Tustin Police Department. The school lockdown was lifted after the man was taken into custody.

He was identified as Henry Justin Herrera, a 20-year-old Tustin resident. He was taken into custody after a resident reported seeing him in the area, Police Chief Charles Celano said. Officers responded and ordered Herrera to get on the ground.

No weapon has been recovered, Celano said.

The shooting was reported near Nisson Road and Red Hill Avenue, a busy area surrounded by shops, homes and apartment buildings. It was not clear who fired, and police did not immediately disclose other details of the shooting.

“This is a very populated area,” said Celano said. “We have businesses and children walking around.”

No officers were hurt, Birozy said.

Herrera was taken into custody on suspicion of brandishing a weapon. According to court records, he was arrested earlier this year on burglary charges, pleaded guilty to the charges in February and was sentenced to 60 days in jail.

The shooting occurred about 9 a.m., after witnesses reported seeing an armed man in the area, Birozy said. Officers saw the man running toward an area of two-story apartment buildings in the 1600 block of Nisson Road.

Tustin officers set up a perimeter and shut down Red Hill from Nisson to Mitchell Avenue as they searched for the man, Birozy said. By noon, Red Hill was open to traffic. Nisson Road remained shut down from Red Hill to Browning Avenue until 2 p.m.

Police searched multiple apartment buildings in the 1600 block of Nisson Road.

Harry Flores, a resident in the apartment buildings where police were searching, said he heard several pops Thursday morning but did not think they were gunshots. He left to run errands and returned to find heavily armed officers canvassing his neighborhood and helicopters overhead.

His wife and son were still in the building, he said. They told him they could hear officers yelling in the area, asking someone to surrender to officers.

Neighboring law-enforcement agencies were called to assist in the search, Birozy said, including Irvine police and the Orange County Sheriff’s Department.

Seven schools in the Tustin Unified School School District were placed on a “soft lockdown” as a precaution, said Mark Eliot, spokesman for the district. Students were asked to remain in classrooms, and outdoor activity was being limited.

After the soft lockdown was lifted, kids were released as normal after school. Sports activities continued as planned. The district sent out a phone and email message to parents letting them know what happened and that it was all clear. The schools locked down in the Tustin district were Lambert Elementary, Tustin High, Beswick Elementary, Veeh Elementary, Nelson Elementary, Utt Middle School and Currie Middle School.

St. Cecilia Catholic school and Calvary Christian School, both of which have preschool through eighth grade, were also locked down, officials with the schools said. Edgewood PrePrimary Academy, which has preprimary to kindergarten students, was also on lockdown, a school officials said.

Red Hill Lutheran School, kindergarten through eight grade, was not on lockdown, but outside activities were stopped as a precaution.

“There was never any threat to the schools, but some schools in the immediate area were put on soft lockdown,” Eliot said. “We’re thankful our school staff as well as police department for handling the situation safely and effectively.”

Contact the writer: 714-704-3788 or [email protected]

https://www.ocregister.com/articles/birozy-609277-officers-area.html

Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) pointed to Ferguson, denouncing what Holder referred to this week as “unnecessarily extreme displays of force” by police.

The image of Ferguson, Mo., police officers in camouflage pointing high-caliber rifles from armored vehicles at unarmed protesters has crystallized a debate over whether a decades-long flow of military-grade equipment to the nation’s police departments has gone too far.

On both left and right, political figures as varied as Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) pointed to Ferguson, denouncing what Holder referred to this week as “unnecessarily extreme displays of force” by police.

That debate fits into a larger pattern: A huge upsurge of mayhem in the 1970s and 1980s led to tough-on-crime measures across the country. Now, after two decades of improvements in most places, policies such as long, mandatory prison sentences and expansions of police surveillance are being questioned.

The use of military-style equipment by even small-town police departments is the latest tactic to come under scrutiny.

https://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-police-demilitarize-20140816-story.html#page=1

Editors Note: Landing a Police Helicopter or Any Helicopter on a City Street or Intersection is an Expensive and Risky Business – and – So Is Flying in Formation on Overtime for Events – Air Shows and Tributes – Be Careful Guys!

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