Torres is an early career journalist at the San Antonio Report. In February, she received a tip about a community center that had shut down without warning. The residents wanted to know why. It was located in a predominantly Latinx neighborhood on the south side of San Antonio, about 30 minutes from downtown and even farther away from where she lived. She noticed the tip came into a shared email account that many staffers in the organization have access to. Torres said she could have ignored it or passed it along to another reporter that day but she wanted to pursue the story because closing a community center might mean residents wouldn’t have access to childcare or senior programs. She pitched it to her editor who approved the assignment and then she hopped in her car.
The Villa Coronado Neighborhood Association, which Torres said is not often in the news, wasn’t the only one having trouble getting information about what happened to the community center. Torres had to file an open records request with the city to learn the building was physically falling apart and why the residents weren’t informed of the safety concerns. After her story was published, Torres said the neighborhood association president called to thank her because she would never have known why the community center closed if not for her reporting.
“It’s something I want to keep my eye on because it’s a small South Side neighborhood,” Torres said. “This came in as a tip, that is true, but it also should be wired in you as a reporter to want to talk to neighborhoods that you don’t usually see in the newspaper or on TV. You shouldn’t be scared to cover a neighborhood because it’s far away. I think that’s what I learned from this.”
Torres’ newsroom doesn’t track sources on every story. Instead they conduct the source tracking periodically to see how sourcing changes over time and to rally the newsroom around collective goals.
Editor-in-Chief Leigh Munsil said the Report’s source tracking and community listening efforts have informed their strategies on how to better serve San Antonio, particularly with well-reported community news on the south, east and west sides of the city where the Report has historically had lower readership.
When Torres joined the Report she said she was surprised that while the majority of the city identifies as Latinx, the audiences who consumed their content were not. Source Matters is helping her newsroom expand their coverage to the voices and communities that might be underrepresented, she said.
The work she began on the South Side is now expanding to the larger newsroom. Munsil said for the next several weeks, the Report is starting a community sprint inspired by their involvement in Poynter’s Media Transformation Challenge. During this time, three reporters will work together to cover one to two stories per week focused on South Side neighborhood issues. In addition to the content, the reporters have goals of increasing newsletter signups and talking to two people each week they might not otherwise have gotten to know.
“It takes time to build trust, as well as the audience expectation that we will be present in their area covering hyperlocal news,” Munsil wrote in an email about the project. “This sort of intentional, ground-level work to build trust on the South Side is a great way to measure how well we are serving that community, and we will apply the learnings to all of our neighborhood coverage — eventually expanding this work to other neighborhoods.”