The controversy went public after a story published
March 8 in the student newspaper, The Crimson White, detailed student
journalists’ frustrations with the policy, which the story said started
last summer when the university hired Media Relations Executive Director Deborah
Lane to improve its public image.
Crimson White Editor in Chief
Marlin Caddell said the since the new policy has been in place at the Tuscaloosa
campus, it has “filtered” information from all levels of campus
administrators — from low-level department directors to the university
president.
Caddell said Lane told him “you go through us or
you don’t get the sources.”
“It’s really creepy
and something that I’m not accustomed to,” Caddell said.
“They are limiting what we can do.”
University
spokeswoman Cathy Andreen disputed Caddell’s claims, saying that all news
outlets have to contact media relations to interview campus
officials.
“Some people in the university prefer that all media
— not just student media — go through media relations office for
interviews,” Andreen said. “We may be a bit more formal about it
now, but the students are getting the interviews they want almost all the
time.”
But Doug Ray, executive editor of the Tuscaloosa
News, said his reporters typically do not need to contact the media
relations office to interview administrators. He said that regular staff
turnover at student newspapers could be a reason for the
problems.
“We have established relationships with folks,” Ray
said.
Adam Goldstein, attorney advocate at the Student Press Law Center,
said the policy could be considered censorship if The Crimson White is
treated differently than other news outlets, as it “complicates the
process for news stories to be written.”
“It’s an
attempt to homogenize a message and that’s the worst reflection of an
academic community you could have,” Goldstein said. “The best way to
fight something like that is to not cooperate.”
Caddell said his
newspaper has complied with the policy until now, but said if a source directed
student reporters to the media relations department, the newspaper would print
that they declined to comment.
“We don’t need to follow this
policy,” Caddell said. “We’re going to defy
it.”
Should the new policy remain in place, it would hurt student
journalists’ ability to learn and build relationships with sources on
campus, Caddell said.
“As student journalists, we have a high
turnover rate,” he said. “There will be nobody who remembers how
things used to be and an that this is an accepted way of doing
things.”
Lane was unavailable for comment.
By Jared
Taylor, SPLC staff writer
© 2007 Student Press Law Center
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