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Newspaper Politics In A Small Town

By Philip Murphy

1-06-04
 
One thing people never seem to get tired of is wondering what evil forces
are at work behind the scenes that shape the reporting of local news events
in our village newspapers. Any controversial subject that finds it's way
into print usually generates a rumor that someone down at the paper (any
paper) has an axe to grind or friend to protect, hence the supposedly
slanted reporting. Of course the truth is that the majority of local news
events printed don't have any spin or slant to them, since they don't
involve the paper's sponsors, the advertisers. But sometimes papers do get
used as weapons, and sometimes just slanting a story isn't enough, a
full-fledged campaign of dis-information must be employed.
 
When the Lake County Record-Bee first began reporting on Personal Support
Group, a drug and alcohol recovery service, readers quickly noticed a
pattern develop. According to the Bee's star reporter Margaret Gan-Garrison,
PSG was always in trouble with various government agencies, and was a
genuine menace to the community. Never mentioned were the hundreds of
clients who had their lives saved and restored by PSG, or that no one else
was willing or able to handle the task of straightening-up Lake County's
abundant drug and booze addict population. In the last year alone the Bee
ran over two dozen articles concerning PSG, including an in-depth five-part
series of stories about the business and it's history. Every story had the
same tone, PSG was always the source of controversy and angst, and any
possible benefit was studiously omitted. The only two breaks in the non-stop
negativity were a couple of guest editorials, one penned by PSG doctor Bob
Gardener, and the other written by the mother of a satisfied client.
 
PSG got started in Lake County with operations in Lucerne, where it opened
a small residential facility and also took over the run-down,
fifties-vintage Sands resort. Though problems were few and always minor in
nature in Lucerne, the ones that did surface were blown way out of
proportion by the Bee and gave a hint of what was to come at the Cove resort
in Lakeport. Four years ago PSG bought the Cove resort, which had been
occupied by several groups of squatters, most of whom were drug abusers of
one kind or another. The lakeside resort's swimming pool was filled with
trash, the parking lot was half-filled with abandoned derelict cars, and the
Cove's frightening unauthorized tenants wandered the neighborhood at all
times of day and night.
 
PSG took over and quickly got the place back in shape, and set about
straightening-out their own collection of drunks and druggies, but given the
reaction by the locals you'd have thought they had opened a nuclear waste
dump. Drug treatment was fine the neighbors said, but not in a town,
especially our town. By now the Bee's anti-PSG campaign began to really take
shape with "investigation" being the most common theme for the headlines,
everything was "under investigation". PSG did have to operate the Cove as a
sober living environment after it was discovered that they had been
functioning as a drug treatment facility in that location without the proper
licensing, but all that rather minor technicality that meant was that they
couldn't dispense medications there. Pressure driven by the Bee's accounts
of the mostly imaginary dangers presented by PSG's clients quickly mounted
on county officials, with the government's hastily-planned strong-arm
approach resulting in a lawsuit filed against them by PSG. At odds over
whether or not the Cove was zoned for rehab-related activities, the county
was finally forced to make a deal to avoid an embarrassing and expensive
court loss. The county was so desperate to keep PSG out of Lakeport and
court it agreed to buy the resort for $475,000, and also agreed to help PSG
find a new facility. The county's case for a zoning violation had been
severely undercut by the bumbling of former county Community Development
Director Dan Obermeyer, who's incompetence meant that approved changes in
the area's zoning hadn't actually been completed because he was too busy
committing adultery with one of his staff members, one of many reasons he
asked to leave his post quietly.
 
So with a half-million dollar hole still smoking in it's backside, the
county went looking for a new home for PSG, and wound up in Anderson Springs
at the old McKinley Summer Camp. Sitting on 320 acres next to the Geysers
geothermal plants, The McKinley camp was used as a drying-out facility for
drunks by the Salvation Army fifty years ago, and had seen service in recent
years as a summer camp for children. PSG's plans to run the camp as a rehab
facility quickly got the same welcome the news of their arrival got in
Lakeport, drug treatment was fine the neighbors said, but it should be done
in a town were all the necessary services are close at hand. It's too
dangerous here neighbors claimed, fires and earthquakes and rattlesnakes are
constant concerns, though none of this ever came up when children were the
occupants of the camp. Even the Sheriff got into the act, saying that it
would take an enormous amount of manpower if someone got lost and a search
had to be conducted, though following the same logic it would probably make
sense to close the Mendocino National forest too, since people could get
lost in all those trees. Naturally the Bee headlined every stage of the
controversy, always playing-up the problems and complaints, with never a
word of praise or an alternative plan offered. PSG also found itself in the
middle of election year politics, as county supervisors Farrington and Robey
battled over the move to camp McKinley, Farrington wanting to see PSG leave
his district and Robey trying to stop it coming to his, with both sides
shamelessly pandering to their constituencies. The Bee even went as far as
to hype a story about a real estate deal that fell-apart involving
Farrington and one of PSG's doctors, the only connection between the two
being that they were thinking of buying adjoining parcels from the same
owner.
 
Then suddenly the clouds parted and it all made sense. In the October 29th
edition of the Bee an editorial concerning PSG appeared, and the pieces of
the puzzle began to fit together. In a piece titled "PSG:Too many questions
remain", the editorial staff of the Bee explained why PSG wasn't a wise
choice as the county's primary drug treatment provider, and offered their
own vision of local rehab services. Treatment should be offered by medical
professionals working for a "health care facility" in close proximity to
that "health care facility", the Bee's brain trust declared, though in spite
of the coy vagueness of the terminology nearly everyone knew exactly what
they were proposing, and which "health care facility" they had in mind. The
publisher of the Bee is Judi Pollace, who runs many of Media News Group's
north coast papers, Lakeport's Bee and Clearlake's Observer, along with the
Willets News and Ukiah Daily Journal, among others. Pollace also sits on the
board of directors of Catholic Healthcare West's Sutter Lakeside Hospital,
which now sees the drug rehab business as their turf, especially with the
public clamoring for treatment instead of jail terms and willing to spend
lots of tax dollars on it. PSG, with it's bare-bones no-frills approach has
made it hard to compete with on a cost basis, hence the Bee's crusade to
drive them out of wherever it is they wind up until they hopefully leave the
county and let Sutter enjoy the same monopoly in the rehab biz as it has in
the medical field.
 
In contrast to PSG's fixing old, dilapidated structures, Sutter will
doubtlessly need a new building to house it's clients and the offices of
it's highly-paid staff of health care professionals, and it's hard to
imagine that Sutter's full-time grant writer hasn't already eyed some of the
government supplied drug rehab money floating around to make it happen.
Sutter Lakeside is a testament to all that is wrong with our current
healthcare system, and there is no reason to believe that a new drug
treatment facility wouldn't sink into the morass of bureaucracy that makes
the rest of the hospital so unbelievably inefficient. But between Sutter
having the only local paper's publisher on it's board of directors and also
being one of the paper's biggest advertisers, Sutter got a never-ending free
pass on stories critical of their doings, along with plenty of free PR for
their various programs and services. This was readily apparent when nurses
threatened to call a strike against Sutter two years ago over patient load
and staffing levels, which resulted in Sutter locking them out for several
days. The Bee ran letters to the editor ripping the union members picketing
the hospital but refused to print letters from the nurses telling their side
of the story, citing their policy of not running letters critical of local
businesses as their defense, though in the past other out-of-county based
commercial interests have never been granted the same immunity.
 
Sutter Graveside, as it locally known, has been constantly expanding it's
sphere of influence, branching out into everything from child care to it's
just opened day spa and massage service, in addition to dreaming up and
sponsoring the "Dickens Christmas" event in Lakeport last year. Why a
hospital was trying to drum-up business for main street merchants when it
had so much difficulty providing basic medical care was never questioned by
the Bee, and when rain kept the masses at home and the event fizzled-out,
Bee readers were lead to believe that everything had gone just fine.
Pollace's finger prints were all over that fiasco, which paralleled her work
as president of the Lakeport Chamber of Commerce, a job any publisher with
an ounce of ethics would have never taken due to the enormous conflict of
interest.
 
Another typical conflict of interest arose when the Bee's editorial staff
championed the use of county money to fund the ill-fated bass fishing
tournament in Clearlake last April, as it was never mentioned that Pollace
also sat on the board of directors of the Clearlake Chamber of Commerce, the
event's main sponsor. Pollace's name was also never mentioned when the Bee
could no longer ignore the fact that for over a year there had been serious
allegations of major financial mis-doings and incompetence by the executive
director of the chamber, even though the chamber's board members were also
obviously guilty of negligence for letting things get so far out of hand.
While the Bee's editorial staff has taken several bold stands on issues like
the Patriot Act, Planned Parenthood and the Iraq war, when it comes to
relaying the truth regarding local members of the business community and
their pals, all bets are off. And what little reporting of local events that
is done is usually the work of $7 dollar-an-hour trainees who's tenure is
measured in months, guaranteeing that people knowledgeable in Lake County's
commercial and political history are never doing the reporting. Even Pollace
says the Bee is serving as a training ground for rookie newshounds, though
many who do a stint in the Bee's newsroom head for other professions after
their need for financial stability exceeds their desire to write for a
living. So what we get for our fifty cents is sixteen pages of ads held
together with stories off the news wire, with one or two watered-down pieces
on local events that may or may not reflect reality, depending on whether or
not they help or hurt the "right" people. Most of the Bee's profits are
shipped back to the home base in Denver, just another one of corporate
America's tentacles squeezing the lifeblood from another small town. With so
little money and space devoted to informing the public, the paper is able to
expend most of it's resources on what it does best, which is to provide a
venue for advertisers, and to promote government programs that subsidize
local capitalism. Welcome to the new dark age of American journalism!
 
 
 
 
hellsbnd@pacific.net

 
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