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Neighborhoods Band Together to Prevent Brickline Greenway Gentrification

1 year 1 month ago
From St. Louis Business Journal:  Three north St. Louis neighborhoods have joined forces to create a nonprofit aimed at preventing displacement of residents ahead of hoped-for economic development along the path of the Brickline Greenway. The Brickline North Community Development Corporation (CDC) is a partnership with the Brickline Greenway aimed at pursing neighborhood revitalization through […]
Kacey Crawley

Worker Wellness Blog: Narcan Now More Readily Available

1 year 1 month ago
by Dr. John Gaal Editor’s Note: Each week, Dr. John Gaal, director of worker wellness for the Missouri Works Initiative, a non-profit workforce formed by the Missouri AFL-CIO, collects and comments on news and trends in workforce wellness and life balance. Construction Forum carries the Worker Wellness & Well-Being Blog as a regular feature. The […]
Dede Hance

Daily Deal: Database Administration Super Bundle

1 year 1 month ago
The Database Administration Super Bundle has 9 courses to help you go from data novice to expert administrator. You’ll discover how to build and manage databases with MySQL and MongoDB. Courses also cover Microsoft SQL Server, Informatica, Minitab, Tableau, and regression modeling. It’s on sale for $60. Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and […]
Gretchen Heckmann

Car Repair Shop Proposed for Long Road Crossing

1 year 1 month ago
From West Newsmagazine:  Omaha Collision Company LLC has submitted plans for a proposed vehicle repair and service facility to be known as B Street Collision Center located at 714 Long Road Crossing Drive in the 22.99-acre Long Road Crossing subdivision. An amended site development concept plan was presented at the Chesterfield Planning Commission meeting Sept. […]
Kacey Crawley

Preservation Board Rejects Morganford Apartment Proposal Again

1 year 1 month ago
From St. Louis Magazine:  For the second time in a little more than a year, the St. Louis Preservation Board has spurned developers hoping to tear down three empty buildings on an otherwise vibrant strip of Morganford Road and replace them with a 36-unit apartment building. Neighbors, nearby businesses, and the alderwoman whose ward the […]
Kacey Crawley

Collinsville High Celebrates Student Leaders Gracie Howard and Brion Brown

1 year 1 month ago
COLLINSVILLE — Collinsville High School has recognized Gracie Howard and Brion Brown as the September Senior Students of the Month, celebrating their outstanding contributions to the school community. Gracie Howard, an honor student, is actively involved in several clubs, including the National Honor Society, Childhood Cancer Awareness, and Student Council. In addition to her academic pursuits, she plays softball for Collinsville High. According to her nomination, Howard is described as organized, dedicated, and possessing a positive attitude, making her a reliable presence among her peers. Brion Brown also demonstrates significant engagement at Collinsville High. He serves as the School Board Student Advisor and is the Drum Major for the CHS Band. Additionally, Brown participates in the Madison County Ambassador program, showcasing his leadership skills and commitment to his school and community. The recognition of these students highlights the importance of involvement and

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Meet Harris Armstrong, the Architect Who Shaped St. Louis Modernism

1 year 1 month ago
From Ladue News:  St. Louis boasts a rich architectural history and has been home to several iconic architects, including St. Louis-born greats like Preston J. Bradshaw, Thomas B. Annan and William B. Ittner. Among them is Harris Armstrong, born in 1899 in Edwardsville, Illinois, whose visionary works remain influential today. Armstrong, now regarded as the […]
Kacey Crawley

Grafton Oyster Bar to Host Benefit for Lindsay Blair's Daughter

1 year 1 month ago
GRAFTON - The Grafton Oyster Bar will host a benefit for Lindsay Blair’s 10-year-old daughter Sailor. Starting at 3 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, community members are invited to Grafton Oyster Bar to raise money for Sailor to support her after her mother Lindsay’s passing in June . There will be a live auction, silent auction, duck splash and more. “I have a wonderful friend that passed away this past June. She was a single mom with a 10-year-old daughter,” explained Tracy Clarkson, who helped organize the event. “We’re having a benefit at the Grafton Oyster Bar to raise funds for Sailor.” Lindsay was the general manager at the Grafton Oyster Bar. She was a beloved community member in the Riverbend region. “Just a super nice lady,” Clarkson said. “Everybody loved her and knew her one way or another. She was definitely a woman of faith, and her legacy lives on with the wisdom that she shared.” After her

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St. Louis to Host National Conference on Vacant and Abandoned Properties

1 year 1 month ago
From Stlouis-mo.gov:  The City of St. Louis is honored to host the national Reclaiming Vacant Properties Conference (RVP) [communityprogress.org], set to take place from October 9-11 at the Hyatt Regency St. Louis at the Arch. Presented by the Center for Community Progress, RVP is only national conference focused on the reuse of vacant, abandoned, and […]
Kacey Crawley

Wildwood, Chesterfield Keep Open the Option to Annex Clarkson Valley

1 year 1 month ago
From West Newsmagazine:  Several West County municipalities recently had the chance to submit boundary map plans to the St. Louis Boundary Commission. It’s part of a five-year map plan that Missouri cities must submit. On Aug. 27, representatives from Ballwin, Chesterfield, Ellisville, Wildwood and St. Louis County presented their proposals, including any intentions to annex […]
Kacey Crawley

Frivolous suits stalk journalists in states without anti-SLAPP laws

1 year 1 month ago

A small nonprofit newspaper in Wisconsin recently won a legal victory against a frivolous defamation lawsuit. But sometimes winning isn’t enough.

The case against the Wausau Pilot & Review is a prime example of how resentful subjects of reporting can weaponize the legal system to attack the First Amendment. Without strong laws that protect against meritless lawsuits that chill speech, known as strategic lawsuits against public participation, or SLAPPs, even journalists who win can lose.

Lawsuit thrown out, but at what cost?

Last week, a state appeals court threw out a defamation lawsuit against the Pilot & Review brought by Cory Tomczyk, a local businessman turned state senator. Tomcyzk sued the newspaper after it published a report that he had used an anti-gay slur at a county meeting.

A trial court dismissed Tomcyzk’s suit last year, but he appealed. Now, the appeals court has thrown the case out again, concluding that Tomcyzk hadn’t met the legal standard to make his case.

The Pilot & Review and its reporters should be celebrating this First Amendment victory. But because Wisconsin doesn’t have an anti-SLAPP law, their win may actually turn into a loss.

The Pilot & Review has spent nearly $200,000 on legal bills so far, according to its editor Shereen Siewert. That’s almost as much as the newspaper spends each year to run its newsroom. And Tomcyzk could appeal again, forcing the newspaper to rack up more expenses.

Those costs have a real impact on local journalism. Siewert told Wisconsin Public Radio that the newspaper “had to put hiring on hold” because of the lawsuit. The New York Times reported last year that legal expenses could put the newspaper out of business.

Anti-SLAPP laws needed in all 50 states

Thankfully the Pilot & Review has scraped by, in part because of donations. But no news outlet should have to rely on the kindness of strangers to survive a defamation lawsuit that it wins.

The costs of SLAPPs can be staggering. For instance, in 2022, the Center for Investigative Reporting received a more than $1.92 million settlement to cover its legal fees from a SLAPP plaintiff.

In California and many states, the news media and other speakers are protected by anti-SLAPP laws. But not in Wisconsin or 16 other states.

Anti-SLAPP laws give people who are sued for exercising their First Amendment rights tools to fight back. They often allow for cases to be dismissed early, before costs rise, and give winning defendants the right to recoup their legal fees. As a result, SLAPP victims are less likely to be intimidated into silence.

Anti-SLAPP laws don’t just protect the speakers. They also protect the public’s right to know. When journalists and whistleblowers have confidence that they won’t be crushed by legal costs for reporting or speaking out, more information about important issues like corruption, corporate wrongdoing, and crime makes it to the public.

That’s why we need every state — and the federal government — to pass strong anti-SLAPP protections.

Protect local nonprofit journalism with anti-SLAPP laws

Anti-SLAPP laws are particularly important for nonprofit news outlets, like the Pilot & Review, which are increasingly filling the gap in a news media ecosystem that’s been devastated by the closure of newsroom after newsroom.

Nonprofit newsrooms that operate on shoestring budgets and lack in-house legal help are especially vulnerable to SLAPPs. In 2023, the Institute for Nonprofit News reported a medium revenue of about $477,000 for its members, an amount that could be quickly exhausted by just a single SLAPP.

But even relatively larger nonprofit news outlets can be harmed by SLAPPs. ProPublica Managing Editor Charles Ornstein recently wrote about the toll of a six-year libel battle based on his reporting. The case is just one of six in which ProPublica and its journalists have been unsuccessfully sued for defamation since the news outlet was founded.

ProPublica spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to defend itself in the case based on Ornstein’s reporting, through multiple rounds of appeals. Its journalists spent “dozens of hours gathering materials and working with lawyers” that could have otherwise been spent on reporting. Ornstein was even denied a mortgage because he disclosed he was a defendant in a lawsuit.

The case was eventually thrown out under Texas’s anti-SLAPP law. But future SLAPP victims in Texas might not get the same protections. State lawmakers have repeatedly targeted the law, and this week they’ll hold a hearing that may be a step toward gutting it.

That would be a step backward, and one that could devastate Texans’ right to know about what’s happening in their communities.

Texas, Wisconsin, and every state and the federal government need strong anti-SLAPP laws that protect First Amendment rights. Without them, wealthy and powerful people and corporations will continue to use the legal system to attack the reporting that holds them to account, and journalists who face SLAPPs will be in a no-win situation.

Caitlin Vogus

Frivolous suits stalk journalists in states without anti-SLAPP laws

1 year 1 month ago

Wisconsin is one of seventeen states without a law that protects journalists and other speakers from frivolous lawsuits meant to chill speech. At least one local newspaper is paying the price.

Gary Waters/Ikon Images via AP Photo.

A small nonprofit newspaper in Wisconsin recently won a legal victory against a frivolous defamation lawsuit. But sometimes winning isn’t enough.

The case against the Wausau Pilot & Review is a prime example of how resentful subjects of reporting can weaponize the legal system to attack the First Amendment. Without strong laws that protect against meritless lawsuits that chill speech, known as strategic lawsuits against public participation, or SLAPPs, even journalists who win can lose.

Lawsuit thrown out, but at what cost?

Last week, a state appeals court threw out a defamation lawsuit against the Pilot & Review brought by Cory Tomczyk, a local businessman turned state senator. Tomcyzk sued the newspaper after it published a report that he had used an anti-gay slur at a county meeting.

A trial court dismissed Tomcyzk’s suit last year, but he appealed. Now, the appeals court has thrown the case out again, concluding that Tomcyzk hadn’t met the legal standard to make his case.

The Pilot & Review and its reporters should be celebrating this First Amendment victory. But because Wisconsin doesn’t have an anti-SLAPP law, their win may actually turn into a loss.

The Pilot & Review has spent nearly $200,000 on legal bills so far, according to its editor Shereen Siewert. That’s almost as much as the newspaper spends each year to run its newsroom. And Tomcyzk could appeal again, forcing the newspaper to rack up more expenses.

Those costs have a real impact on local journalism. Siewert told Wisconsin Public Radio that the newspaper “had to put hiring on hold” because of the lawsuit. The New York Times reported last year that legal expenses could put the newspaper out of business.

Anti-SLAPP laws needed in all 50 states

Thankfully the Pilot & Review has scraped by, in part because of donations. But no news outlet should have to rely on the kindness of strangers to survive a defamation lawsuit that it wins.

The costs of SLAPPs can be staggering. For instance, in 2022, the Center for Investigative Reporting received a more than $1.92 million settlement to cover its legal fees from a SLAPP plaintiff.

In California and many states, the news media and other speakers are protected by anti-SLAPP laws. But not in Wisconsin or 16 other states.

Anti-SLAPP laws give people who are sued for exercising their First Amendment rights tools to fight back. They often allow for cases to be dismissed early, before costs rise, and give winning defendants the right to recoup their legal fees. As a result, SLAPP victims are less likely to be intimidated into silence.

Anti-SLAPP laws don’t just protect the speakers. They also protect the public’s right to know. When journalists and whistleblowers have confidence that they won’t be crushed by legal costs for reporting or speaking out, more information about important issues like corruption, corporate wrongdoing, and crime makes it to the public.

That’s why we need every state — and the federal government — to pass strong anti-SLAPP protections.

Protect local nonprofit journalism with anti-SLAPP laws

Anti-SLAPP laws are particularly important for nonprofit news outlets, like the Pilot & Review, which are increasingly filling the gap in a news media ecosystem that’s been devastated by the closure of newsroom after newsroom.

Nonprofit newsrooms that operate on shoestring budgets and lack in-house legal help are especially vulnerable to SLAPPs. In 2023, the Institute for Nonprofit News reported a medium revenue of about $477,000 for its members, an amount that could be quickly exhausted by just a single SLAPP.

But even relatively larger nonprofit news outlets can be harmed by SLAPPs. ProPublica Managing Editor Charles Ornstein recently wrote about the toll of a six-year libel battle based on his reporting. The case is just one of six in which ProPublica and its journalists have been unsuccessfully sued for defamation since the news outlet was founded.

ProPublica spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to defend itself in the case based on Ornstein’s reporting, through multiple rounds of appeals. Its journalists spent “dozens of hours gathering materials and working with lawyers” that could have otherwise been spent on reporting. Ornstein was even denied a mortgage because he disclosed he was a defendant in a lawsuit.

The case was eventually thrown out under Texas’s anti-SLAPP law. But future SLAPP victims in Texas might not get the same protections. State lawmakers have repeatedly targeted the law, and this week they’ll hold a hearing that may be a step toward gutting it.

That would be a step backward, and one that could devastate Texans’ right to know about what’s happening in their communities.

Texas, Wisconsin, and every state and the federal government need strong anti-SLAPP laws that protect First Amendment rights. Without them, wealthy and powerful people and corporations will continue to use the legal system to attack the reporting that holds them to account, and journalists who face SLAPPs will be in a no-win situation.

Caitlin Vogus