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CALL FOR NOMINATIONS: JAMES MADISON FREEDOM OF INFORMATION AWARDS FOR 2024 ACHIEVEMENTS

40th Annual James Madison Awards now accepting nominations of 2024 achievements.

DEADLINE: Sunday, January 5, 2025, at 11:59 p.m., Pacific time.

The Society of Professional Journalists, Northern California chapter, is now accepting nominations for the James Madison Awards, recognizing the people and organizations of Northern California who have advanced freedom of information and expression through journalism, activism and the courts in 2024. Our chapter has hosted these multidisciplinary awards for 40 years because we recognize that protecting the First Amendment and open government takes an ecosystem that extends beyond the press – to officials, whistleblowers, citizens, nonprofits, educators and more, all working on different parts of the same goal. Of course, we honor journalists as well.

There is no contest entry fee. Enter here.

The awards are named after James Madison, the creative force behind the First Amendment. SPJ NorCal presents the awards during National Freedom of Information Week near Madison’s birthday, March 16. We’ll announce details as the date nears.

We welcome nominations for individuals who, during 2024, have defended public access to government meetings, public records, court proceedings, or otherwise promoted the public’s right to know, publish, and speak freely about issues of public concern.

Please note: The JMA journalism awards have a strong emphasis on accessing records, meetings, and the courts. Our awards do not focus on investigative work based primarily on human sources. That work should be nominated in the source/whistleblower category, honoring the source(s)/whistleblower(s).

You can nominate others or yourself or your own organization. Our committee members regularly submit nominations as well and sit out voting in any categories in which they have a conflict of interest.

Our awards include:

Career Achievement

The Norwin S. Yoffie Career Achievement Award is named in honor of a founder and stalwart supporter of the chapter’s Freedom of Information Committee, who died in 2000 after many years of distinguished service to SPJ and dedication to sunshine.

Professional Journalist(s) – with categories in Print/Digital, TV/Video, Radio/Audio, and Data Visualization

Professional Journalist and Student Journalist awards recognize journalists who have fought for access to records, meetings or court proceedings; and/or, have made exceptional use of public records in their reporting; and/or, who have promoted education on open government and information freedom issues through stories, editorials or other advocacy.

Nominees are separated into larger and smaller outlets. Community outlets and small newsrooms are encouraged to apply.

We are open to all scopes of work: from a single piece of journalism, to a series, to a collaborative effort by an entire newsroom or even a team of newsrooms.

The Radio / Audio division honors an individual or team for a single story or work in a series of programs distributed in broadcast or podcast format. Submit up to four episodes for judging.

Student Journalist(s)

Nonprofit Organization

This category is for nonprofits that have advanced public records access or freedom of information in the past year. Nonprofit news organizations should apply in the journalism categories.

Source/Whistleblower

Some Source(s)/Whistleblower(s) want to remain anonymous. In such cases, we may honor them anonymously alongside the journalist they worked with, where merited, in our award language.

Citizen

The Citizen award recognizes individuals (of any immigration status) who are actively engaged with their communities to advance the cause of transparency and open government. For example, a tireless open meetings advocate or a public records requester who goes on to serve as a plaintiff in an open records lawsuit may be nominated in this category. For individuals who are being nominated primarily for serving as a source for a story, please use the source/whistleblower category.

Public Official

The Public Official award is given to a government official who has demonstrated an extraordinary commitment to keeping public records or meetings public, or otherwise has taken exemplary leadership on transparency or First Amendment issues.

Educator

The Beverly Kees Educator Award recognizes remarkable efforts by educators to cultivate a devotion to the values of freedom of information and/or expression. It is named for the journalist, SF State professor, transparency activist and former SPJ NorCal president who died in 2004.

Legal Counsel

Librarian

Electronic Access

Write-in (for entries that don’t fit our other categories)

Qualifying region: For the purposes of this contest, our California region extends from Santa Barbara County to the Oregon border. The nominees should be based in this area, though may have played a role in a more geographically dispersed effort.

Please submit your nomination in this Google Form.

See our last year’s winners here; and our 2023 winners here.

Send questions to Freedom of Information Committee Chairs Thomas Peele and Laura Wenus at spjnorcalfoi@gmail.com.

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