By Michael Serrill
Silurians Board of Governors
One of the biggest New York stories in 2023 was the sudden arrival of tens of thousands of migrants from around the world. Many were bused in by Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas in his zeal to punish “liberal” northern cities for their unofficial status as “sanctuaries” for the hordes of homeless refugees wandering the world. Others arrived after hearing that New York was, by law, required to accommodate them. The crisis that the migrant flood created for the city also presented a unique challenge for local journalists eager to cover every aspect of this complicated news story.
That test was met and surpassed by The New York Times in a series of stories and photographs by reporters Andy Newman, Dana Rubinstein and Julie Turkewitz, and photographers Todd Heisler and Juan Arredondo. Their efforts earned them one of two President’s Choice Awards in the Silurian Press Club’s annual Excellence in Journalism awards.
Newsday was the other President’s Choice winner, with a monumental series titled “Feeling the Squeeze: The High Cost of Living on Long Island.” The 12-part series, complete with charts and videos, paints a deep, comprehensive and affecting portrait of how hard it is for many middle-class and low-income Long Islanders to get by in a time of rising prices for virtually everything.
The New York Times and the Newsday teams were two of the 23 Medallions honoring local journalist to be awarded this year. The Times won a total of seven Medallions and three runner-up Merit awards. Newsday took two Medallions and four Merits, while THE CITY, an ambitious online news service, brought home three Medallions and two Merits.
Another winner of multiple awards was The Record/northjersey.com, which won two Medallions and a Merit, while Bloomberg News earned a Medallion and two Merits.
The New York City News Service at CUNY’s graduate journalism school earned a Medallion with a package on the migrant crisis, headlined “The Newest New Yorkers,” which won in the Minority Affairs category. “The quality of the competition this year was as high as it has ever been,” said Awards Chairman Jack Deacy. “Whether the category was breaking news, feature and sports photography, arts and culture reporting or coverage of business scandal, the judges had a hard job choosing the best from a host of excellent entries.”
Silurians President Joe Berger said of the Times migrant entry, “The team combined vivid, revealing photographs and eloquent, compassionate reporting and writing on the burden the surge has created.”
Newsday’s deep dive countered any popular notions of Long Island as largely a land of McMansions and the Hamptons. The stories point out that 19 percent of residents in Nassau County and 26 percent in Suffolk don’t make enough money to meet their basic needs — and that with rising inflation, particularly in housing prices and rents, the situation is worse than it was just four years ago.
The project went beyond reporting the facts to offer solutions in the form of links and telephone contacts for agencies and other critical resources. This is the 100th anniversary of the Silurians Press Club.
Our local Excellence in Journalism awards began in 1945. But as local news outlets die by the dozens, it is more important than ever to honor those who go all out to cover news, and scandal, from their home communities. Following are our Medallion winners this year.
The New York Times
“NYC Struggle to Respond to
the Migrant Surge”
(l-r) Dana Rubinstein, Juan Arredondo, Todd Heisler, Andy Newman (holding Award), with outgoing Silurain President Joe Berger.
The Staff of Newsday
“Feeling the Squeeze: The High Cost of Living on Long Island”
(l to r): Newsday Editor Rochelle Sleets, publisher Debbie Krenek, special writer/reporter Beth Whitehouse, and associate managing editor Bob Shields, with President Aileen Jacobson
The New York Times
“Coverage of the Manhattan District Attorney’s Indictment of Donald Trump”
William K. Rashbaum (left), Jonah E. Bromwich (center), (missing,
Ben Protess)
John Leland
The New York Times
“Selected New York Stories”
THE CITY
“Investigative Pieces on Rikers Island, the NYPD and Mayoral Campaign Finances"
Bianca Pallaro, Haidee Chu, April Xu, Katie Honan, Tom Robbins, George Joseph, Rueben Blau and Yoav Gonen. (Accepting: Martin Gottlieb, senior editor for investigations, and Alyssa Katz (c), executive editor..)
Susan Antilla
Business Insider
“The Ugly Business of a Toxic Workplace”
Scott Fallon (l) and Lindy Washburn
The Record/northjersey.com
USA Today Network
“Aging in New Jersey”
The Staff OF The Record/northjersey.com
USA Today Network
“Hazards Next Door”
Accepting for team, Ashley Balcerzak (holding Award) and James O’Neill
Alex Vadukul
The New York Times
“The Hogwarts of Fashion”
Kevin Armstrong
Newark Star Ledger
“Ghanian Grace”
WABC TV Eyewitness News Team At 11
“Manhattan District Attorney’s Indictment of Donald Trump” June 2024
Sarah Kim, Morena Basterio (holding award)
Amy Julia Harris and Jan Ransom
The New York Times
“Mentally Ill, Homeless and Mishandled by New York”
Joyce Wadler
Substack
“Several Stories”
Rukmini Callimachi
The New York Times
“Anderson Cooper’s Newest Assignment:
Grief (His Own)”
Teara White, Deidre Foley (holding award)
New York City News Service Craig J. Newmark Graduate School of
Journalism at CUNY “The Newest New Yorkers”
Stephanie Keith
Bloomberg News
“Image of Sam Bankman-Fried”
Ben Fractenberg
THE CITY
“Image of a Bloodied Man”
Jonah Markowitz
The New York Times
“Dawn to Dusk on the Corner Where
Bangladeshi Brooklyn Gathers”
Michael Karas
The Record/northjersey.com
“When Najee Seabrooks Called for Help”
Yoav Gonen & Jeff Basinger
THE CITY
“NYPD’s Abuse of Authority and Interference Unearthed in a Brooklyn Gun Incident” (Basinger accepting also on behalf of Gonen)
Ashley Milne-Tyte
Marketplace Tech
“When Everything Goes Digital, Older
Adults Can Be Left Out” (with Aileen Jacobson)