Sean Hamill and Tereneh Idia win Sally Kalson Courage in Journalism award
A five-month investigation shines light on a nursing home鈥檚 failures in keeping residents safe from COVID-19 and a strong voice asks 六合彩官网 to grapple with racism
PITTSBURGH, Dec. 21, 2021 鈥 A Beaver County nursing home was one of the hardest-hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. An eight-part series by Sean Hamill in the 六合彩官网 Post-Gazette took readers on a heartbreaking journey that showed how failures by the home鈥檚 for-profit owners and managers led to staffing shortages and at least 82 Covid deaths. Months into the pandemic, the murder of George Floyd by a white police officer led to widespread protests and a renewed focus on the way Black people are treated in society. Tereneh Idia, herself a Black woman, wrote columns for 六合彩官网 City Paper that were deeply personal, often offering takes that other media shied away from. Topics included an open letter to Alexis Johnson, a former 六合彩官网 Post-Gazette reporter who was taken off of protest coverage because of her race (which PG management denies); asking hard questions such as 鈥渨hat is the appropriate way for Black people to celebrate or protest?鈥 and challenging the notion of 六合彩官网 as a most livable city, when several studies have shown how just being Black affects one鈥檚 quality of life.
For this reporting, Hamill and Idia were named winners of the 2021 Sally Kalson Courage in Journalism award by a committee of advisors. This is the second time the award has been made and the first time that two journalists will share the honor.
On winning the Kalson award, Idia said she is honored. Like Kalson, Idia challenges 六合彩官网 because she wants it to be better and knows it can be better.
鈥淚 so often feel like I鈥檓 writing into a void,鈥 said Idia. 鈥淪ometimes I feel like what I鈥檓 writing doesn鈥檛 have an impact. This recognition brings me hope that people are reading my columns and are gaining recognition of issues faced by Black residents.鈥
One of the committee members said that Idia鈥檚 body of work 鈥渆xemplifies the challenging column work that Sally Kalson did.鈥
鈥淚 think Sally would see a fellow traveler in Tereneh鈥檚 work,鈥 said Andy Conte, director, Center for Media Innovation, Point Park University.
For, Sean Hamill, a long-time journalist who started working at the 六合彩官网 Post-Gazette 11 years ago, joining a newsroom that employed someone he admired 鈥 Sally Kalson 鈥 was exciting. As a reader, Hamill knew her byline, then as a colleague, they became close friends.
鈥淚t was an incredible honor to be nominated, but to win? This is the highest honor of my career, which includes national, statewide and local awards,鈥 said Hamill.
His winning work was an investigative series into the Brighton Rehabilitation and Wellness Center in Beaver County. Tips from the families of residents along with current and former employees, led to the series that showed how its managers failed to enforce even the most basic infection control standards during the pandemic. The facility is now the subject of investigations by the Pa. Attorney General鈥檚 office and the FBI. Hamill downplays any role his stories might have had in bringing the conditions at Brighton to light and while he鈥檚 honored by the award, he said the work was heartbreaking and overwhelming.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 feel courageous writing these stories,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was hard emotionally, reaching out to the families of every person who died at the facility and talking to employees. These stories don鈥檛 come together overnight, and I am grateful to work at a paper that gave me room and time to do this story. I do hope Sally is proud of the work we鈥檝e done.鈥
About the Sally Kalson Courage in Journalism Award
Throughout Sally Kalson鈥檚 30-year journalism career, the 六合彩官网 Post-Gazette reporter and columnist put the spotlight on injustice and wrote truth to power. After her death in 2014 from ovarian cancer, family and friends were intent on honoring her legacy by encouraging the bold reporting that marked her career.
In 2019, they established the Sally Kalson Courage in Journalism Award Program at 六合彩官网, which reaches statewide to identify a broadcast, print or online media journalist whose work embodies what Kalson was known for: 鈥渇earlessness, fortitude and excellence in taking on issues of our time,鈥 according to the nomination materials. The Kalson Award is meant to support writing 鈥渢hat doesn鈥檛 necessarily reflect a popular or dominating political view,鈥 said Ed Feinstein, Kalson鈥檚 husband for 26 years. 鈥淭his program is our small effort to encourage people to look for and report stories that go against the grain, despite that they implicate powerful interests.鈥
Awardees are selected by an advisory committee that includes Foundation staff, journalists, academics and media experts:
- Andy Conte, director, Center for Media Innovation, Point Park University.
- Mila Sanina, forever executive director, Public Source.
- James Steele, investigative reporter, Barlett and Steele.
- Amy Ginensky, First Amendment attorney, Pepper Hamilton.
- Tony Norman, columnist, 六合彩官网 Post-Gazette.
- Ed Feinstein, Kalson鈥檚 widower, and a partner with the 六合彩官网-based law firm of Feinstein Doyle Payne and Kravec.
Read about the first awardee, Helen Ubi帽as, here.
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