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SPJ NorCal Honors 2025 Excellence in Journalism Award Winners

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

CONTACT: Laura Wenus at 650-996-3112 or spjnorcal@gmail.com, or Ben Trefny at 415-290-2421

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SAN FRANCISCO — The Society of Professional Journalists, Northern California chapter, honors Hilda Gutiérrez of NBC Bay Area as Journalist of the Year for the 40th Annual Excellence in Journalism Awards to be held Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025.

Gutierrez has been at the forefront of immigration coverage across the Bay Area since January. She was the first reporter to break the news that undercover ICE agents were hanging out at San Francisco’s immigration court, and one of the first journalists to report on the arrests that began taking place there. 

She has broken stories on the firing of immigration judges, new civil penalties levied against Bay Area immigrants, and new federal policy memos dramatically changed immigration enforcement. Additionally, Gutierrez reported on vulnerable tenants facing eviction, problems plaguing women in the fire service, a rodent infestation at Whole Foods, a day care where two children drowned, and inadequate responses to sexual assault allegations against law enforcement.

The SPJ NorCal board honors Kevin Fagan with the Career Achievement Award in print journalism. Fagan spent decades doing award-winning, on-the-ground reporting about the realities of homelessness in the Bay Area for the San Francisco Chronicle, from which he retired this year. He went so far as to spend six months on the streets to give readers a clearer picture of what it means to be unsheltered. In “The Lost and the Found,” published this year by Simon & Schuster, Fagan’s own reporting plays a role in reuniting two people, who slid into deep despair on city streets, with their families. Earlier in his career, Fagan covered crime, disaster and war. He reported an international hit podcast series about the “Doodler,” a murderer who targeted gay men in San Francisco. Somehow, through years of tireless reporting on wrenching aspects of the human experience, Fagan has remained a steadfastly kind and sunny person who regularly regales colleagues with bawdy songs about being an ink-stained wretch in the news business. 

The board honors Monica Campbell with the Career Achievement Award in broadcast journalism. Monica is a longtime public radio reporter who spent her career as an immigration reporter in the Bay Area and Latin America. During her time as the Mexico City correspondent for PRI’s “The World,” Campbell’s stories ranged from covering indigenous education along Nicaragua’s Mosquito Coast and the investigation of civil war crimes in Guatemala, to Mexico’s rising drug cartel violence, and dissident poets in Cuba. This year, she stepped up to lead the state-funded California’s Local News Fellowship program, which places up-and-coming journalists in newsrooms around the state. 

The board honors Jane Braxton Little, editor-in-chief of The Plumas Sun, with the Distinguished Service to Journalism Award. After decades in environmental journalism, Jane played an integral role in starting The Plumas Sun, following the discovery that the county’s last news outlet was shuttering. Now in its third year, The Plumas Sun newsroom relies on Little’s leadership to produce essential coverage in rural northeastern California. 

Kevin Epps receives this year’s Silver Heart Award. When the San Francisco Bay View National Black Newspaper was on the brink of closure, Epps stepped in as executive editor to stabilize it, revitalize the newsroom and reconnect it to the people it serves. He brought fresh energy, multimedia storytelling and digital innovation to one of the Bay Area’s last Black-owned newspapers, ensuring that it remains a vital platform for truth. Through journalism and film, including his groundbreaking documentary, “Straight Outta Hunters Point,” Epps amplifies voices often ignored, while mentoring young writers and artists. His leadership has saved a treasured institution and strengthened the heartbeat of Black media in San Francisco.

Alejandra Armstrong of Cityside is being honored with the Unsung Hero Award. As audience engagement editor, Armstrong ensures that reporting from Cityside’s three newsrooms is published with readers as the priority. Her strategic vision, editorial creativity and data savviness ensure that fundamental coverage questions are addressed long before reporting begins.

The John Gothberg Award for Meritorious Service to SPJ NorCal goes to Shadeed Wallace-Stepter, former chair of San Quentin’s SPJ chapter. Wallace-Stepter spent countless hours this year training journalists inside the prison on visual storytelling, giving the chapter’s program an incredible boost. His work has been instrumental in getting a new wave of journalists to be familiar with video equipment. Plus he has trained an entire production crew that is now capable of producing stories and films. 

Dozens of volunteer judges chose award recipients for 70 categories, including Public Service, with awards going to Cynthia Dizikes and Joaquin Palomino of the San Francisco Chronicle; Lydia Chavez, Abigail Van Neely and Oscar Palma of Mission Local; and Alastair Boone, Victor Tence and Angela Johnston of KALW. 

All 2025 winners will be honored at SPJ NorCal’s 40th Excellence in Journalism Awards Ceremony, to be held Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025, at the Bayview Opera House in San Francisco. 

Early bird pricing is available through Wednesday, Nov. 5. Award winners should watch for an email about their tickets and other event details.

2025 Award Winners

Board Awards

Contest Awards 

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