Connecticut

Post posts about what is happening in the State of Connecticut.

Building Audience

This afternoon, Colin McEnroe’s show on WNPR will “look at the State of the Blog. Specifically,… where blogging and other online communication/journalism is -- especially here in CT”. In a little discussion about it going on over on Facebook Colin says, “Old media seems shakier than ever” and continues on to ask “Do you bloggers feel ready to step up and fill the vacuum?” I answered in terms of volunteer and professional journalists and referred to my blog post Covering the Local News.

Jackie Lightfield brought up a related issue, observing, “Don't forget the corollary, advertising and marketing is evolving away from old media, will old media figure it out...” The timing of this is particularly apt, because this morning the American Press Institute holding a conference, “Newsmedia Economic Action Plan Conference”. For more information on this, check out The Information Valet Project, which includes links to live blogging of the conference.

Yet even before you can think about monetizing online content, or any sort of content, you need to have an audience. Colin is fortunate. He has a long history here in Connecticut and when he started his show on WNPR, he had an immediate audience. Yet he needs to grow and maintain that audience. His use of Facebook can help in this area, and his keen focus on keeping his shows interesting is an important aspect of maintaining the audience. This is one area where local newspapers seem to fail. They take the audience for granted, and the audience is diminishing. I suspect the American Press Institute conference will delve into this a little.

This is also an area where I think many bloggers are failing. They write their blog for their family and friends, or for some special niche. Yet too often, they don’t interact with other blogs. I often write about sites like BlogExplosion, MyBlogLog, Blogcatalog, EntreCard, Adgitize and others which provide means of joining in a discussion with other bloggers, visiting their sites, getting them to visit your sites, and perhaps even exchange links.

Some sites go even further with this. Cornyman has been running a contest where bloggers win EntreCard credits for commenting on other blogs. He describes his blog as All you want to know about being financial independent... Saving, investing, earning money worldwide opportunities for your personal finances!. This is not the sort of blog that fits closely to a niche that I would be most focused on. Yet I visit that blog, and he visits me. Hopefully we both get a little bit out of our visits.

I participated in the contest and won 500 EntreCard credits from Confessions of a Fitness Diva. Anyone who knows me will recognize that this is even further from being a niche that I would regularly visit. I will use these credits to advertise on other blogs and bring in hopefully more readers.

All of this is part of reaching out and build a larger and broader audience. For those interested in monetizing traffic, a larger audience usually means more monetization opportunities. For those interested in getting their message out, it means more people reading what you are writing, often people that might not already be thinking about things you are writing about.

I hope I’ll have time to call in to Colin’s show this afternoon and chat with him and others about how bloggers can step in and fill the vacuum being left as the old media becomes shakier and shakier. Perhaps some of the discussion will even be helpful for old media folks rethinking their relationship to online media. I hope you Listen Live to Colin’s Show at 1 PM this afternoon and help grow his audience as well.

Barack Obama, Avery Doninger and the Douchebags at the Central Office

The recent issues around President Obama’s speech to students across the United States came shortly after I received the Amicus brief filed by the Student Press Law Center on the appeal of the U.S. District Court of Connecticut ruling in the Doninger v. Niehoff case and it seems as if the two may be somehow related.

Just imagine, if you will, some student writing in a blog at home one evening earlier this week something to the effect, “Thanks to the douchebags at the Central Office, we will not get to listen to President Obama address students across our country.” To keep this politically neutral, it could just as well say, “we will have to listen to President Obama address students”. Let’s imagine that the writer went on to talk about her mother being upset and contacting the administration which got them really pissed off, and suggesting that other students encourage their parents to similarly contact the school administration.

Would it be a good thing if a few weeks from now, the administration found such a blog post and punished the student for writing it on her own time at home? I submit that not only would it not be a good thing, but it would strike at the fundamental freedoms of our country for it seems to abridge the freedom of speech and the right of the people to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

Yet this is exactly what the Doninger case is all about. True, Ms. Doninger was writing about a different event, a music festival being organized by the students, but the principle is the same.

The SPLC starts off by noting that “in an era when mainstream journalism has expanded into blogs and other new media, the ruling below poses a serious threat to the First Amendment rights of student journalists throughout this Circuit and the nation.”

They go on to say, “The court below framed a controlling question of law: “Whether a school may discipline a student for inappropriate comments made off campus on a blog… The SPLC urges reversal of the lower court’s decision, which held that the First Amendment did not protect Ms. Doninger from being punished for posting a blog entry from her home that used a colloquial term for ‘jerk’ to criticize a decision made by her school’s administrators.”

Key points that the SPLC brought up included that “The speech at issue occurred entirely outside of school property, from a computer in the student’s home. It was conveyed through a medium (a blog) that could only be ready by individuals who deliberately sought access by entering specific search terms into a computer. And the student’s words themselves were quintessential political speech, criticizing the decision of school officials in contemporary, colloquial terms and inviting others to petition for redress if they, too, disagreed with the decision.”

“The District Court’s ruling would move this Circuit toward a standard under which anything posted online is regarded as having been distributed on campus, based on its potential (even if unrealized) to be read or acted upon on campus. This is a drastic and dangerous move that the Court should resist. Because it is established that schools may prohibit the on-campus distribution of materials their officials have not reviewed, the District Court’s standard would permit a principal to enforce a rule against writing anything online about the school unless an administrator has pre-approved it.”

We may not like the words used by students to express their opinions, we might not even agree with the opinions, but there are important lessons to be learned. How much does the Government, in the form of school administrations and District Courts honor the importance of freedom of speech and the right of the people to petition the Government for a redress of grievances? To me, these are fundamental to the sound functioning of our government, even when the level of civility is less that I would like and we risk grave damage to our democracy by punishing people for speaking openly and candidly about their opinions about school administrations and the Government.

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Obama and Socialism

Today, the mother of one of my daughter’s best friends kept her children home from school, because of an irrational fear that the President of the most powerful country in the world might be trying to indoctrinate students to some socialist agenda. It was not because she did not want her children to hear the President’s speech. It was because she wanted them to hear it and the school where her kids attend refused to show it.

Apparently, a small group of people, lacking patriotism and critical thinking called and complained, and the school administration capitulated to the fears of a small vocal minority, thus depriving the majority of students of a great educational experience. Yet this, in and of itself, perhaps is an important educational experience for all of us.

What sort of respect should be shown the President of the United States? Especially, when he is talking about the importance of the children of our country staying in school? What do you think about political pundits encouraging people to not listen to our President?

In my daughter’s school, they watched, and talked about the speech. The part of the message that she remembers is that students shouldn’t drop out.

Jack Nork has a blog post up about How Bethany, Woodbridge and Amity are handling the Obama Speech, including a quote from the chair of the Woodbridge Board of Education:

My understanding is that, as the CSDE notes in its letter, this is a local matter for each BOE to decide. Accordingly as Chairman I've consulted with the Superintendent and signaled that after viewing the relevant material available at the whitehouse.gov website, and consulting with the Public Information officer at the CSDE, I have concluded that this initiative can in no way be viewed as controversial subject matter, and does not necessitate a letter home to parents or opt-out notice (such as we see routinely with sex ed or mature subjects in films like Schindler's List, etc.). Therefore, teachers will be free to incorporate this material into their curriculum, either live at noon or by viewing a recording the tech department will make available (many kids will be at lunch at noon, etc.). I've also advised that anyone calling with "political concerns" be directed to me, in my capacity as their elected representative in this little thing we call a democracy.

You can read the prepared text of President Obama’s speech on the Whitehouse Website. I have only briefly scanned it. It does not jump out at me as one of the top one hundred speeches in United States history, but it may be that the uproar about the speech may place it in a special place in our history. I hope that teachers at the high school level will look at this speech and one speech that is often listed as one of the top one hundred speeches.

On June 9, 1954, Joseph Welch delivered the famous, ”Have You No Sense of Decency" speech which led to the downfall of Senator Joseph McCarthy. It is time to dust off that speech and for high school history teachers to discuss it.

How is the fear of communism in the 1950s like the fear of socialism today? How is it different? How is the fear of communism in the 1950s like the fear of terrorist, Muslims, or immigrants today? How are political pundits like Sen. McCarthy? These are questions that should be discussed in history classes, as well as around the dinner tables of today.

Perhaps most importantly, who will deliver the “Have You No Sense of Decency" speech for the twenty first century? I’m proud that the chair of my local Board of Education erred on the side of decency and Joe Welch, instead of the side of McCarthyesque fear mongering.

What District are you in?

New England has a long and wonderful traditional of small town governance, right down to the traditional town meeting. Yet in some cases, it is more efficient to work on a regional level, and state legislative offices often cross town boundaries.

The announcement Friday of the Connecticut’s Probate Redistricting Commission plan caused me to stop and think a little bit about what districts Woodbridge is part of.

Woodbridge is part of the 114th Assembly District which also includes parts of Derby and Orange. Our State Senate District is the 17th which also includes Ansonia, Beacon Falls, Bethany, Derby, parts of Hamden, and parts of Naugatuck. On a larger scale, Woodbridge is part of Congressional District 3 which includes many towns.

While our elementary school district covers only Woodbridge, our high school is part of the Amity Regional School district, No. 5. It includes Bethany and Orange. For an even larger school region, Woodbridge is part of ACES which includes about two dozen other school districts.

For cable television, especially as it relates to the public, educational and government access channels, Woodbridge is part of the Cable Advisory Council Area 2, which includes Bridgeport, Fairfield, Milford, Orange, and Stratford.

Now, there is the proposal for the new Probate districts. Woodbridge would be in a district with Ansonia, Derby, and Seymour.

My guess is that there are other regional districts that Woodbridge is part of that I am not aware of. I am not sure how various decisions where made, or will be made about what districts Woodbridge is part of, but it does seem a bit scattershot. What do you think? Are there better ways to do districting?

Promoting Community Engagement

In a recent blog post about local news coverage, I noted a problem with volunteer citizen journalism. Volunteer citizen journalists only cover things that they are interested in when they have time to do it. There are many things going on in our communities that we should be interested in. In that blog post, I talked about the ribbon cutting for the Kucinskas loop at Beecher Road School in Woodbridge CT, an Ice Cream Social run as a fundraiser by the local Parent Teachers Organization, and the Woodbridge Commission on the Use of Publicly Owned Property meeting.

When Dr. Stella became the Superintendent at the Beecher Road School people advised him to engage the community. Previous school administrations had failed to do that one administration quickly succeeded the next. The annual school budget for Beecher Road School is over eleven million dollars, and unless you have a child in the school, are a realtor, or are trying to sell your house, you may not appreciate the great value that the town is receiving for its educational expenses.

The ribbon cutting for the Kucinskas loop was a great example of engaging the community. The school band and the local scout troops brought in kids and their parents that were already involved, as did representatives from the board of education and the parent teacher organization. The noted public figures, such as First Selectman Ed Sheehy, State Senator Joe Crisco, and State Representative Themis Klarides attracted those interested in the political side of things. Mr. Kucinskas’ daughter recalled stories of her father and the dedication brought back some of his older students, families and friends.

Mr. Kucinskas was a great runner, and Dr. Stella talked about how the loop would be used not only for student classes and events, but added to the recreational opportunities for the whole town.

The town of Woodbridge has other great recreational activities and a vibrant parks and recreation commission. Many people take long walks or runs out on around the cornfields. Others swim or play golf and the town’s latest new property, the Country Club of Woodbridge. Yet too few people appreciate the great opportunities in town or take up roles to make sure that these properties are used as extensively and responsibly possible.

On Tuesday evening, I attended the Commission on the Use of Publicly Owned Property’s monthly meeting. This too often overlooked commission has the important task of making sure that the town’s properties are used according to the deeds and covenants placed on the properties when the town received them. At this meeting, two people spoke an effort to create an ADA compliant playground that would be attractive to many more families than currently use the choo-choo playground. The commission spoke about the best places to place such a playground. While some on the commission suggested that the cornfields might be a better location, all of the work done so far had been focused on the athletic fields on Pease Road as the best possible location.

When there was an opportunity for public comment, I spoke about the Country Club of Woodbridge property and asked what was being done to make sure this property would be used as extensively and responsibly as possible. There was a good discussion about issues around the success of this property and I hope to see the town work closely with the current property manager to make sure that the club is a success for both the town and the manager.

Dr. Stella has done a great job of promoting community engagement with Beecher Road School. Those who are involved realize how valuable his work is to the school and to the community as a whole. Hopefully, the managers of the Country Club of Woodbridge will do a similar job in promoting community engagement in the club so that more citizens of the town will appreciate how valuable the club can be to the town as a whole.

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