Wisconsin Watch founders honored for contributions to non-profit news

Wisconsin Watch founders Andy and Dee Hall were recently awarded the 2024 Service to Nonprofit News Award, the biggest honor from the Institute for Nonprofit News

Andy and Dee Hall accept the Service to Nonprofit News Award from the Institute for Nonprofit News in Atlanta on Sept. 18, 2024 (Krys Alex photo).

INN bestowed the honor last month in Atlanta at an awards ceremony co-emceed by INN board member Ron Smith, editor of the Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service, which recently merged with Wisconsin Watch.

Wisconsin Watch state bureau chief Matthew DeFour was named a finalist for INN’s Nonprofit Newcomer of the Year Award, which honors an individual who has been in the nonprofit news field for less than two years and is contributing to the success of the person’s organization through innovation.

And environmental reporter Bennet Goldstein and managing editor Jim Malewitz were also named finalists for the Insight Award for Explanatory Journalism in the medium division for Hogtied, a three-part series examining the siting of a concentrated animal feeding operation in northern Wisconsin.

Andy Hall, who retired last year after 15 years as executive director of Wisconsin Watch, recalled being among the founding members of INN in 2009, then known as the Investigative News Network. 

Roughly 30 members signed an “idealistic declaration” that its mission is “to aid and abet in every conceivable way individually and collectively the work and public reach of its member news organizations” and “to foster the highest quality investigative journalism and hold those in power at the local, national and international levels.”

Dee Hall, previously managing editor at Wisconsin Watch and now editor-in-chief of Floodlight, a national investigative outlet reporting on climate issues, said INN has “become that and more for the burgeoning nonprofit news sector.” The organization has grown to more than 450 members.

The Halls shared their predictions for the future of nonprofit news:

• The nonprofit news industry will continue to face intensified pressures from dis- and misinformation, but journalists, particularly INN members, will adapt.

• INN will play a leadership role in determining best practices.

• More newsrooms will merge.

• Newsrooms will continue to team up and share business and journalistic functions to  maximize others’ returns on their investments.

• Newsroom cuts and reorganizations will continue, affecting start-ups as well as established larger news organizations.

Wisconsin Newspaper Association