2 days after state's first covid-19 case is confirmed there, Ky. weekly sends a special edition to everyone in its county - Entrepreneur Generations

By Al Cross
Director, Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, University of Kentucky

A weekly newspaper in Kentucky is setting a great example for the rest of the nation of how to deliver reliable information about the new coronavirus.

Today The Cynthiana Democrat sent a special edition to every postal patron in Harrison County, where the first case of covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, was confirmed Saturday.

Editor Becky Barnes
Editor Becky Barnes proposed the idea to Cynthiana Mayor James Smith as they returned Saturday from a press conference that Gov. Andy Beshear held to announce the first case.

"We talked about what should be in there, and decided how it should go to every household in the county," which has 18,000 people and "probably 6,000 households," Smith said.

Smith said he thought it was a good idea because "Not everyone, especially in a rural county like Harrison County, has internet connection; not everybody is on Facebook; not everybody listens to the local radio," and some watch TV stations based in Cincinnati, not Lexington. "Some people in the county didn't even know we had a case in the county."

Newspapers can reach everyone in their home counties quickly because postal regulations allow them mail up to 10 percent of their annual circulation in their home county to non-subscribers at subscriber rates. It's a way to build and maintain print circulation, but many papers don't take advantage of it.

Harrison County (Wikipedia map)
Barnes was familiar with the idea, because The Cynthiana Democrat published a sample-copy edition after a 1997 flood in Harrison County. Her paper is owned by Landmark Community Newspapers, which regularly uses sample copying, and has a press in Cynthiana.

Printed community newspapers also have a high level of trust with their readers, and are ideal vehicles to circulate reliable information on a topic that has become the subject of false or misleading online information and political talking points.

So, who's paying for the printing and mailing of the special edition? Local officials are looking into funding sources, but say they will come up with the money if they have to. "We asked the postmaster if he could bill us later," Smith said. "We told Becky that, as a city, if the money doesn't come from other sources, the county and the city would figure out how to pay."

Smith concluded, "Hopefully, we're setting some examples for other communities."


from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/3aGMHxb 2 days after state's first covid-19 case is confirmed there, Ky. weekly sends a special edition to everyone in its county - Entrepreneur Generations

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