Last Updated: August 05, 2002
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“The thing
I saw right away was that these people were telling stories about their
neighborhoods and their communities. It was neat to be able to tell
those community stories with a community voice.”

Steve
Corrigan
Savannah Morning
News
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Some evenings, Margaret Bailey
has to scoot her grandchildren out of the kitchen so she can get a few minutes
to herself, time to sit at the kitchen table with pen and notebook and think
through her next story for the Savannah (Ga.) Morning News.
A pipe fitter
for 20 years before an injury forced her to retire, a frequent sitter for her
grandchildren, a friendly, modest woman who stays close to home, Bailey doesn’t
fit the typical image of a hard-bitten, fast-moving newspaper reporter.
Yet she is
everything a reporter should be. She knows her beat: Savannah’s Liberty City
area where she’s lived for 15 years. She’s learning more all the time, working
on her writing, meeting new sources in the community and looking for the stories
that will interest people in her neighborhood, particularly African-Americans
like her.
Bailey became
a weekly contributor to the Savannah Morning News in summer 2000 after she completed
the newspaper’s first Neighborhood Newsroom program — a monthlong series of
workshops on journalism basics taught by news staffers for people in the community
who wanted to write.
The idea,
Closeup Editor Steve Corrigan said, was “teaching regular Joes how to become
newspaper reporters and then sending them back into their communities.”
The Morning
News recruited nine people — many of them African-American — to participate
in the first Neighborhood Newsroom program in June 2000.
Staff members
taught sessions on journalism basics four evenings a week for four weeks. Sessions
included interviewing, how to write a lead, how to incorporate quotes in a story,
and doing research on the Internet. Each weekend, the participants did a story
that was revised and edited during the week. Participants earned $400 for completing
the workshops, and several joined the ranks of paid free-lancers for the newspaper,
according to Corrigan.
“The thing
I saw right away was that these people were telling stories about their neighborhoods
and their communities,” Corrigan said. “It was neat to be able to tell those
community stories with a community voice.”
Bailey — whose
stories may range from the installation of bike racks on buses to a 617-pound
pumpkin to a traditional homecoming at a local African-American college to the
trend of some women growing very long fingernails — said she’s trying to fill
a gap in the Morning News.
“Story ideas
come from my surroundings, whatever is happening in my neighborhood or something
that we’re interested in my neighborhood,” Bailey said.
“I receive
the paper, but a lot of things I skip over because I don’t think it pertains
to me,” Bailey said. “That’s the part I’m trying to add, not only for the paper
but for the black community as well.”