Sunday, July 18, 2010

Irony: Joplin Globe reporter pulled from MSSU coverage wins investigative reporting award for it

The news has not been officially released since Missouri Press Association has not held its annual Better Newspaper Awards Banquet, but I have heard from a couple of reliable sources that Joplin Globe reporter Greg Grisolano has won second place in the "Best Investigative Reporting" category for his coverage of the ongoing shenanigans at Missouri Southern State University.

Of course, the irony behind this is that Grisolano was pulled off that beat several months ago and put on the Newton/McDonald County beat as new Globe publisher Michael Beatty began advising MSSU President Bruce Speck on the best way to handle the press.

As I wrote in the May 12 Turner Report:

An e-mail sent from newly-minted Globe Publisher Michael Beatty to Missouri Southern State University April 6 shows that the Globe dropped attempts to dig deeper into the troubled situation at the university, offered to bring Editor Carol Stark to meet with President Bruce Speck to give him "examples of positive stories" the Globe wanted to run about MSSU, and offered Speck advice on how to manage the news.

The e-mail, which was released through a freedom of information request by the one newspaper that has actually been pursuing the truth behind the controversies at the university, The Chart, also indicates that the get-tough approach of Globe reporter Greg Grisolano to the MSSU story may be the reason why other reporters are now covering the university. It was Grisolano's Freedom of Information requests that Beatty stopped, in an apparent effort to curry favor with Speck, MSSU Board of Governors member Dwight Douglas, and most likely, the Joplin Area Chamber of Commerce leadership, which has steadfastly stood behind Speck, Douglas, and the doomed effort to bring a medical school to Joplin.

Beatty's love letter to Speck included the following passage:


"We wanted to do an arboretum story for Arbor Day, a story on the mansions (sic) renovation, a story on the Science Fair, of course, the Prairie Issue, and lastly on how you saved money for the university on the hiring of the two new VP's."

Beatty opens the e-mail by giving Speck the good news that the critical investigation into his presidency is apparently a thing of the past:


"You will hear that we are withdrawing our requests for your schedule, Rod's schedule, and your expenses."

After that opening, Beatty asks for the meeting with him, Carol Stark, and Speck. It looks as if access is the most important thing as far as Beatty is concerned:


"As I thought more about the issue of a spokesperson, I will share with you what I experienced in Baltimore. I was used to the spokesperson to be more of a facilitator of the organization on how the message should be controlled. Examples would be call to Rod (Surber) about a story, he knows how you want the story played out so he picks the spokesperson. This gives him/you appropriate individual time to develop the message. The process is really about controlling the message when working with the press and keeping transparency to the taxpayers."
          "I think we can find a middle ground so that all will be satisfied with the process."


***


And now the Joplin Globe will receive an award for the type of hard hitting journalism that Beatty has clearly indicated is no longer welcome. That is the very definition of irony.

3 comments:

Who cares? said...

Too bad the Board of Governors knows nothing more than what appears in the Globe nowadays. Out of touch can't begin to describe the MSSU board.

Anonymous said...

You have to blame Nodler for the fine mess MSSU is in. After all, he engineered all the appointments to the Board via the Governor.

Anonymous said...

Blame Nodler and Dwight Douglas, that's where it started, then Wyman, then Brooks, then McGinty, then Ansley, then Jones, then Anderson, and today's bunch.... Follow that with Bruce, Agee, Eis, Yust, Gibson, Harrington, Kleindl,Messik, Oakes, etc., etc. Plenty of blame to go around, but the worst of all.. Napoleon Douglas. Poor MOSO...

It'll be a long time before Southern recovers... the board of governors is fooling themselves if they think that things have quieted here...