Friday, September 28, 2007

Details Thin on What CCRC Thinks We Need

If you want to know what really transpired at yesterday’s meeting of the Comprehensive Communications Review Committee (CCRC) – the details of who said what – waiting until mid-October will be a must. You won’t find details in today’s Honolulu Advertiser and Honolulu Star-Bulletin stories.

Stories prepared for the Sunday, October 14th papers will have information on the final report of the CCRC, timed to be released nearly one year after Earthquake Sunday in October 2006.

As for today’s news, this is typical of the reporting:

Meanwhile, media outlets big and small talked about how they plan to get the messages out to the public, many adding or upgrading generators and installing simple land-line phones or satellite phones as an alternative to cell phones.

The sentence is taken from yet another story that gives the appearance of telling us what happened without actually do so. Exactly how do media outlets big and small intend to get the messages out to the public? Which outlets have upgraded their backup capability and which haven’t? (And are reporters writing these details, only to have them excised by an editor somewhere up the chain?)

Note to Editors:

The public needs these details in order to know whether we can trust the emergency responders to do the right thing. They weren’t prepared to keep us informed in October, and we have every reason to be skeptical about their preparations to date.

Finally, we need to ask whether the final report will provide details that will help citizens appreciate which media outlets have done their homework and which haven’t. CHORE doubts the report will include anything potentially embarrassing to anyone. The CCRC at its core is a club of insiders – government insiders, media insiders, communications industry insiders, civil defense insiders. A club of insiders isn’t likely to be tough on one another.

And because only members of the public might have risen to the level of asking tough questions, CHORE and like-thinking citizens are still on the outside and likely to stay there.

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