VIRGINIA — The print edition of
the Captain’s Log, the student newspaper at Christopher Newport
University in Newport News, Va., could soon be no more. During a May 11
meeting with Dean of Students Kevin Hughes, staff members learned of a proposal
to cut all funding from the newspaper’s print version. The proposal, which
Hughes said is part of a campus-wide effort to “go green,” would not take
effect until the 2012-13 academic year. The newspaper staff,
however, is concerned that the administration’s move is a direct response to
some of their coverage over the past school year. “[The newspaper’s]
agenda this year has been investigative journalism,” Captain’s
Log adviser Terry Lee said, adding that student journalists took
“unbelievable heat for not sticking with the lighter, features reporting that
the school is used to seeing.” Editor-in-Chief Emily
Cole cited multiple articles — one on the operational suspension of a campus
fraternity and another on an admissions snafu in which 2,000 acceptance emails were mistakenly sent to applicants — that may
have rubbed school officials the wrong way. During a Feb. 23
meeting with Provost Mark Padilla, Lee said he was told the student journalists
were working as “scandal mongers” through their reporting. University spokeswoman
Lori Jacobs wrote in an email that the administration “neither likes nor
dislikes the student newspaper. The administration recognizes that the student
newspaper has a right to publish what it sees fit, even if those stories
contain inaccuracies, fall short of standard journalistic practices or are
offensive to large segments of the university community.” Since February, Lee
has been called into three other meetings with university officials to discuss
the newspaper. Though Lee has asked administrators to point to specific
coverage that could be considered objectionable, he said he has never been
given a concrete response. Cole said she is “not
even sure if our administration has even read any of our stories. It’s clear
that they don’t know what we do.” Apart from a letter
addressing budgetary concerns that was presented to the Captain’s
Log by Hughes, Cole said there has been no written correspondence on
the specifics of the proposal. “Where this is all
coming from has been very mysterious,” Cole said. “He (Hughes) needs to tell us
more.” In addition to cutting
funds for the print edition of the Captain’s Log two years
down the road, the administration has also announced that it will not provide
funding for Limelight and Currents — two literary
magazines — for the upcoming academic year. In the letter Hughes
gave to the Student Media Board —
an umbrella organization that allocates funds between campus publications and
serves as a link between student journalists and the administration — students
were told that the school’s Student Activities Fee Appropriations Committee
“recognizes the value of Limelights and Currents, [but has] a
greater responsibility to the student body. In short, the committee is charged
with making sound and responsible financial decisions.” Both publications
failed to meet their target number of issues for the year, which was part of
the rationale to cut funding, the letter said. Students have also
been told by administrators that the university is looking to transform the
media board into a club, a move Lee said would severely inhibit its ability to
procure university funding and to “serve as a firewall for the freedom of the
press.” Matthew Davenport, a
rising senior at CNU and chairman of the media board, agreed, adding that he is
currently drafting a letter to Hughes addressing the need to maintain the board
in its current form. “It’s no secret that
the administration hates the Captain’s Log,” Davenport said. Though funding for the
print edition is safe for at least one more year, Rachel Carter, the
newspaper’s business manager, said the student journalists are looking for
“more longevity in the budget.” Cole said the
administration has offered to provide funding for the newspaper to expand its
online operations and technological resources, but has balked at the prospect
of allocating those same funds to printing costs. “The print edition has
made the administration look bad around campus, and they apparently don’t like
that,” Cole said. Printing costs for the
newspaper have decreased consistently over the past few years, she added. “If the Captain’s
Log wishes to pursue a print edition, the Captain’s Log may
rely on advertising revenue or outside sources of income,” Jacobs wrote. “The
university does not seek to inhibit student speech. It is disappointing that
our student journalists apparently do not understand the university’s
commitment to the Constitution and seek to impugn the administration’s motives.” In addition to the
school’s campus-wide effort to increase environmental sustainability, Jacobs
said the move to an online-only platform would help bring the student newspaper
in line with new media trends. To help the Captain’s
Log, Cole said she has already begun contacting newspaper alumni for
support. She is also working on submitting requests under the Virginia Freedom
of Information Act to top administrators at CNU, in hopes of getting more
information about the budget changes. “I’m going to do what
it takes to make sure that there’s a paper to put out,” she said. While Cole is ready
for a long fight, Lee said he is hoping for a speedy resolution. “I don’t like how
polarized things have become. My feeling is that this has to sift out sooner or
later,” Lee said. “Either way, though, I’ll support my students in whatever
they choose to do.” By Seth Zweifler, SPLC staff writer
© 2011 Student Press Law Center