Thursday, January 28, 2010

WEB ALLOWS "SCHLUBS" TO COMPETE WITH BIG MEDIA


The internet makes anyone a journalist and shatters the traditional media’s monopoly on news.


Tony Veltri is the best example of this. He’s editor, reporter and designer of the New Tecumseth Free Press Online.

He was first a writer for the Alliston Herald before he was fired for insubordination.

MAP OF NEW TECUMSETH, Ont., courtesy Google.

It was then the internet arrived.

“I had a flash about how great an idea it would be to publish a newspaper in every sense of the word except it would be online,” Veltri said.

Veltri launched his website then reporting council and school borad meetings, crime and court stories and other local news. He also started some investigative reporting.



“I'm a one man band really, going on a full 11 years which makes my site older than Google and the Time Warner AOL merger,” he said.

Veltri said his operation could never exist if it wasn’t for the world wide web.

“The internet is the great equalizer. Because a schlub like me working from home can compete mano a mano with the Metroland chain of newspapers and make a solid go of it. And it doesn't cost a fortune to do it,” Veltri said.

Monday, January 18, 2010

PRISONS DON’T WORK: JOURNALIST SAYS


Toronto's prison system is becomming overloaded and a waste of tax dollars says Toronto Star Journalist Jim Rankin, yesterday.

"It's just easy to build a prison. We're spending a lot of money on police. That's more police and more salaries," Rankin told a lecture hall of journalism students at Ryerson University.

Students listened to how the award winning journalist developed the Star's web feature Crime and Punishment.

The project shows for approximately every prisoner in jail the federal government spends $250 a day. And the province spends $160.

His work maps communities with the highest incacerations.

"It's where single mothers live. It's where high rates of diabetes occurr. It's where they have the lowest levels of eductaion."

Salaries for lawyers, courts, judges, police and maximum security prisons could be spent on other social services.

"We havem't put more social workers in schools. Instead we're putting more police officers."

ALTERNATIVES TO INCARCERATION

· Reduce poverty and school dropout rates.

· Invest in comprehensive childhood development initiatives.

· Make housing affordable.

· Increase access to health care and rehabilitative programs.

· Reduce incarceration rates, partly through alternatives to jail, and direct savings to neighbourhoods with a high number of offenders.

Source: thestar.com

Monday, January 11, 2010



Toronto's breweries are must sees on any tourist's itenarary.



The Distillery District attracts many visitors each year. Englishmen James Worts and William Gooderham opened the facility in 1831. And at one point it brewed almost half of Ontario's total alchohol production.



Many other breweries dot Toronto. Underneath the CN Tower sits Steam Whistle Brewing. The brewery only began in 1998 after three brewers decided to open the business when they just lost their jobs.



The city produces many beers, including pilsners, lagers and stouts. Most beers are made from water, malted hops and yeast. However, Toronto beer manufacturer Cool Beer makes one of its beers from British Columbia’s finest hemp.