Clear It with Sidney | Hillman Foundation

Clear It With Sidney

The best of the week’s news by Lindsay Beyerstein

Clear It with Sidney

Sidney's Picks: Climate Change Creates New Threats at Work

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Jim CrockerCreative Commons

Best of the Week’s News:

Call for Entries: 2024 Canadian Hillman Prizes for Journalism

 

Toronto, Ont. (Nov 14, 2023) - The Sidney Hillman Foundation is now accepting nominations for the 2024 Canadian Hillman Prizes, honouring excellence in investigative journalism in service of the common good. 

The Hillman Prizes celebrate print, digital and broadcast reporting that exposes social and economic injustice and leads to meaningful public policy change. 

For the first time, the Foundation will award three annual Hillman Prizes instead of one. The judges will consider entries in the following categories: print/digital, broadcast (tv, radio, podcast) and local/community news. 

The Canadian Hillman Prize winners will be awarded a $2,500 honorarium and a certificate at our celebration in Toronto, to be held on April 4, as well as travel to New York City to be a guest at the U.S Hillman Prize ceremony on May 7. 

Previous Canadian Hillman Prize winners include the Toronto Star, the Hamilton Spectator, The Walrus, The Globe and Mail, the Crackdown podcast, CBC’s fifth estate, the Calgary Herald, the Edmonton Journal, CBC/Radio-Canada, and TVO

Since 1950, in the United States, and 2011 in Canada, the Sidney Hillman Foundation has honoured journalists, writers and public figures who pursue social justice and public policy for the common good. Sidney Hillman was the founding president of the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union of America, a predecessor union of Workers United, SEIU. An architect of the New Deal, Hillman fought to build a vibrant union movement, extending beyond the shop floor to all aspects of working people’s lives. 

“As the world around us becomes more divided and dangerous, we are reminded of the importance of the truth, and the crucial role investigative journalists play in uncovering  it,” said Canadian board member Alex Dagg. “Their work holding powerful people to  account deserves to be acknowledged and supported, now more than ever, and  the Sidney Hillman Foundation is proud to do just that.” 

Eligibility: Entries must have been published or broadcast in 2023 and made widely available to a Canadian audience. Nominated material, and a cover letter explaining how the entry meets the requirements, can be submitted here. There is no fee to enter. 

Timeline: 
January 15, 2024:    Deadline for entry 
March 19, 2024:       Winners announced 
April 4, 2024:            Winners honoured at Canadian Hillman Prize ceremony–Toronto
May 7, 2024:            Winners honoured at U.S. Hillman Prize ceremonyNew York City 

Judges: 
Neil Docherty - internationally acclaimed documentary maker
Garvia Bailey - arts journalist, broadcaster and producer
Bonnie Brown - documentary and news producer, CBC Radio and Television 

For entry or event questions, please contact: Alexandra Lescaze (alex@hillmanfoundation.org or 917-696-2494) 
For more information about the Hillman Prize, please visit hillmanfoundation.org. 

Sidney's Picks: Philanthropists pledge a half-billion to save local news

Photo credit: 

John SCreative Commons

The Best of the Week’s News:

Sidney's Picks: Huge Rideshare Settlement

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Joe RossCreative Commons

The Best of the Week’s News:

Sidney's Picks: News Industry Struggles as Traffic from Big Tech Plummets

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Russell DaviesCreative Commons

The Best of the Week’s News:

  • News industry frets as clicks from Big Tech plummet. (NYT)
     
  • Elon Musk yanks the NYT’s verification badge as misinformation on Israel-Hamas war spreads unchecked. (WaPo/NYT)
     
  • New California law raises minimum wage for health care workers to $25 an hour. (CalMatters)
     
  • Skyrocketing housing costs force professionals to live in their cars. (NYT)
     
  • Meet Leonard Leo, the man behind the right wing overhaul of the judicial system. (ProPublica/WNYC
     
  • A $20,000 lectern and a girls’ trip to Paris spark an investigation into Arkansas governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders. (40/29 News)

Sidney's Picks: Triangle Fire Memorial Dedicated; UAW Expands Strike

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Triangle Factory Fire memorial, Remember the Triangle Fire Coalition

The Best of the Week’s News:

Sidney's Picks: NYC's Right to Shelter is Under Fire

Sidney’s Picks:

  • New York City tries to dodge its 40-year-old obligation to house migrants. (NYT)
     
  • NLRB steps up to protect undocumented workers. (Documented)
     
  • Trump allegedly blabbed critical submarine secrets to a Mar-a-Lago guest who told…basically everyone. (ABC)
     
  • What did the writers win in the 5-month WGA strike? (Prospect)
     
  • Repetitive injuries take hidden toll on autoworkers. (Nation)
     
  • Deliveristas’ wage hike on hold as tech giants win stay of new law. (The City)

Sidney's Picks: Meat Giants Under Investigation for Alleged Child Labor

Photo credit: 

Thomas Hawk, Creative Commons. 

The Best of the Week’s News:

Sidney's Picks: Migrant Kids Work Deadly Jobs; UAW Strike Spreads

The Best of the Week’s News:

Sidney's Picks: United Autoworkers On Strike

Photo credit: 

Joe BruskyCreative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News:

  • Seeking better pay and benefits, the United Autoworkers take on the whole Big Three in historic strike. (AP, NYT)
     
  • Last-minute deal raises CA fast food minimum wage to $20/hr and averts an industry-sponsored ballot measure to overturn pro-union law. (SacBee)
     
  • California legislature may soon require restaurants to pay for mandatory food safety training, instead of workers. (NYT)
     
  • Minnesota labor activists push for a code of conduct to protect construction workers. (Guardian)
     
  • Wisconsin Republicans declare war on democracy. (Mother Jones)
     
  • Families of Birmingham church bombing victims fear that Alabama’s law against teaching “divisive concepts” will erase history. (HuffPo)

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