Our Salvation is at Hand

Good news from this week’s El Paso Inc.

The El Paso Community Foundation and the former El Paso Times executive editor, Robert Moore, are teaming up to launch a nonprofit online publication dedicated to local news reporting.

. . .

[EPCF President and CEO Eric] Pearson and Moore agree that starting an online newspaper should be easier now than it was when Newspaper Tree went under because there’s more foundation money available for the support of nonprofit journalism.

Mr. Moore is going to get donations from private donors to run an online newspaper. That should surely shine a light into the dark shadows of local government, don’t you think? Maybe he’ll run a series on the influence of big money donors on our elected officials.

What could go wrong?

Remember, under Mr. Moore’s leadership, the El Paso Times enthusiastically supported the 2012 Quality of Life bonds, and the ballpark. If you were one of the people who called into question the costs and benefits of the ballpark, Mr. Moore’s editorial board labeled you a “Crazy.”

Remember?


“The idea of nonprofit as the model has really taken hold, in part because of the success of Texas Tribune and The Lens in New Orleans,” Pearson said.

Coincidentally, local philanthropists Woody Hunt and Paul Foster, as well as Mayor Dee Margo, have given hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Texas Tribune. Maybe that’s why the Trib has limited it’s scope to subjects that won’t offend big money donors. The Trib never wrote a word about the ballpark controversy or El Paso’s Quality of Life bonds.

And the El Paso Community Foundation mothballed the archives of NewspaperTree, some of which featured reports critical of the Quality of Life juggernaut. The EPCF took NewspaperTree offline. Do you know how much it would cost to keep those reports online? Perhaps dozens of dollars.

Mr. Moore was the Editor for the El Paso Times when they ran this guest column supporting El Paso Electric Company’s $30 minimum bill for customers with rooftop solar.

Is it “discriminatory” to trim the subsidies bestowed upon a given class of power consumers by everyone else? Would those customers be transformed into second-class citizens?


That is the gist of the recent criticisms of the proposal by El Paso Electric to impose a “demand charge” on customers with rooftop solar systems.


Well, no and no. El Paso power consumers with rooftop solar systems benefit massively from a subsidy called “net metering.” Power consumers who install solar panels receive a credit on their bills for the power that they produce but do not consume; they pay only for their “net” electricity consumption.

A quick Google search would have revealed that the author was a paid commenter who had previously worked for the Tobacco Institute. An enquiring mind could have surmised that the writer was likely paid by the El Paso Electric Company. You’d think that the El Paso Times would have included a disclaimer if it chose to publish the column at all. A little fact-checking would have found that the credit rooftop solar customers receive is much less than they’re charged despite the writer’s claim to the contrary.

But why let the truth get in the way of your agenda?

Mr. Pearson confronts any issues with Mr. Moore’s professionalism head on.

“Bob is a person of high journalistic integrity, and I feel like it’s a great opportunity to help him provide this additional voice to the community, focusing on community oriented and investigative journalism.”


“This is essentially Bob’s vision, and we want to be in support of that. Right now, we’re really looking at raising some money around it.”

If you’re trying to sell a blind horse, the first thing you tell the mark is how well it can see.

Will Mr. Moore bite the hands that feed him? I don’t know. Is his house paid for yet? Not everyone can afford principles.

In a related but unrelated news story, there’s this:

ProPublica announced on Wednesday that it has hired two editors, Zahira Torres and Michael J. Mishak, to help oversee its Local Reporting Network, a growing initiative to support investigative journalism at local and regional newsrooms across the country.


Zahira Torres will serve as editor of the six additional journalists joining ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network on July 1. She is currently the editor of the El Paso Times and enterprise editor for USA Today Network’s Texas/New Mexico newspapers.

Lots of turmoil in the local spin news industry. I can’t wait to see what happens.

7 comments

  1. I have known and interacted with Bob Moore for a number of years. We do not always agree. I do know he often disagreed with the “Editorial Board” position at the Times, but like every good subordinate put it forth as though he owned it. I do find it highly unlikely though that anyone will get a fair shake from the bought and paid for spin media groups in El Paso. They all exist to be parrot mouthpieces for EPISD, City Council, The Mayor, The Hunts, The Fosters, County Commissioners, Sheriff’s Dept, Police Department and so on. It is a shame the only news source is still El Paso Inc. with a high degree of honesty and journalistic ethics. It also appears, given the opposite views voiced at El Paso Inc, here and other blogs, the EPCF online news will be to buttress any of the views put forth by our so-called local media.

  2. Yeah, gotta admit that this is not exactly encouraging news, is it? We have not had local journalism for way too many years, now, and the result is the current boondoggle of our crumbling streets, ongoing legal battles for an arena nobody wants, a trolley to/from nowhere that nobody rides, a push for a stadium for minor league soccer, closing pools, and the list goes on. When nobody is following the money, it gets kinda lost in the shuffle, don’t it?

  3. Bob has done a lot of damage in this town. He’s had a psychopathic desire to auto fellate himself for decades now. This might be, physical constraints considered, his big chance. We’re only flesh and blood. And the heart wants what the heart wants.

    1. Tom, after I stopped laughing at the mental image, I Had to agree. However, charitably tongue in cheek, wouldn’t you agree that Bob Moore would fit in very well with the Hunts, Margos, Fosters, and other local media darlings ( Robert O’Rourke included).? BTW in other contexts I think it would be called a circle jerk.

  4. So we’re going to get a non-biased news source from a guy who cheered for every thing the city and rich have done, who is going to be sponsored by a group whose members probably have multiple connections to the Borderplex Alliance. Riiiiggghhhhtttttt, pull the other one.

    1. No, we’re going to get a news spin of dramatic proportions to convince us we should all worship in the Church of The City Council, led by his Eminence Cardinal Margo, attended by his acolytes Hunt, Foster and et al.

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