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States Newsroom
States Newsroom
from Wikipedia

States Newsroom is a nonprofit news network in the United States with newsrooms in 39 states focused mostly on state politics.[2][3][4][5][6] States Newsroom grew out of NC Policy Watch, a progressive think tank founded in 2004 by Chris Fitzsimon,[7][8] who is its current president. In 2017, the project expanded, using the liberal group the Hopewell Fund as an incubator. In 2019 , States Newsroom became an independent 501(c)(3) nonprofit.[9][10][2]

Key Information

Organization

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States Newsroom provides funding, human resources, and digital support to journalists in the state newsrooms.[11] It typically has 4-6 journalists per newsroom[2] and allows its articles to be republished for free under a Creative Commons license.[11][2][3]

States Newsroom accepts no corporate donations and has publicly shared the names of all donors contributing $1,000 or more since becoming a 501(c)(3) in 2019.[2][6][12] The progressive Wyss Foundation gave $1 million to States Newsroom in 2020.[13]

States Newsroom's commentary and opinion pieces are clearly-labeled and generally lean left. The organization does not allow opinion pieces from candidates or political officeholders.[2][10][3] Many, but not all, of the organization's larger donors also lean left.[2] States Newsroom did not disclose its donors until 2020, when it started disclosing the names of all donors giving more than $1,000 since becoming a 501(c)(3) in 2019.[9] In August 2020, Inside Philanthropy reported that Google was one of the funders of States Newsroom.[9]

In 2023, the Pew Charitable Trusts transferred its Stateline news service, which provides nonpartisan reporting on trends in state policy, to States Newsroom with $3 million to help with the transition.[10]

As of 2024, States Newsroom reported having 220 full-time employees, with an annual budget of more than $22 million.[2] It grew from five affiliates upon its 2019 launch to 39 freestanding newsrooms at 11 partner outlets covering all 50 states by early 2024.[2]

Newsrooms

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In July 2019, States Newsroom had 13 outlets, nine of which were in swing states.[8] As of 2024, States Newsroom had newsrooms in 39 states under its umbrella and the nationwide Stateline newsroom. In the other 11 states, States Newsroom syndicates content from independent nonprofit newsrooms such as CalMatters,[2] CT Mirror,[14] Honolulu Civil Beat,[2] Mississippi Today,[15] New York Focus, and the Texas Tribune.[2]

Iowa Capital Dispatch was the first to report a lawsuit against a local Tyson pork-processing plant for work conditions during COVID-19.[11]

Reception

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Given its history of "dark money" funding and left-leaning editorial boards, some have questioned the partisanship of States Newsroom's journalism.[8][16] In January 2020, Steven Brill of NewsGuard asked States Newsroom to reveal their donors—which the organization did later that year.[17][3][9] But in 2021 after accepting a $1 million donation from the progressive Wyss Foundation, NewsGuard said their journalism was "bought by people with a political agenda".[13] A June 2024 NewsGuard study continued to categorize State Newsroom as a partisan outlet designed to look apolitical.[18] In June 2024, Axios called States Newsroom "one of the more strategic" of the "politically motivated websites masquerading as independent local news outlets."[6]

In 2020, the Nieman Foundation for Journalism listed but then retracted adding the newsrooms as "hyperpartisan" in a map.[19][20] In 2023, Nieman noted the experience of the journalists[10] and in 2024 called NewsGuard's depiction of States Newsroom "misguided."[21] In April 2024, Cameron Joseph wrote in the Columbia Journalism Review that the outlets "are nothing like the 'pink slime' organizations that pass off partisan propaganda as local news. Many of the journalists running the local newsrooms... had previously been at major state newspapers" and that reporters and editors were largely autonomous from the national operation.[2]

At a November 2020 press conference, Missouri Governor Mike Parson refused to take a question from a Missouri Independent reporter, saying "I am not going to respond to a c4 out of Virginia that is absolutely a propaganda news agency." According to PolitiFact, the Missouri Independent is a legitimate news organization, a 501(c)(3), and "not a website peddling hoaxes."[5]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

States Newsroom is a 501(c)(3) established in 2018 that funds and supports a network of independent, state-focused news outlets across the , with the stated mission of providing non-partisan coverage of state politics and policy issues affecting daily lives.
The organization operates in all 50 states, fully funding newsrooms in 39 of them, each led by experienced local journalists, and has grown to become the nation's largest dedicated exclusively to state-level reporting, including the 2023 acquisition of ' Stateline service with a $3 million transition grant.
Funded primarily through philanthropic grants and individual donations from left-leaning donors such as Swiss billionaire Hansjörg Wyss, States Newsroom has faced criticism for exhibiting a center-left in its commentary and affiliations, despite its non-partisan claims, contributing to broader concerns about donor influence in and perceptions of systemic progressive tilt in nonprofit media networks.

History

Founding and Early Development

States Newsroom traces its origins to NC Policy Watch, an online news and commentary platform founded in 2004 by Chris Fitzsimon, a -based and , which focused on state policy issues. Fitzsimon, who had previously directed progressive-leaning initiatives like the Common Sense Foundation, led NC Policy Watch until 2017, during which it operated as a project of the left-of-center North Carolina Justice Center starting in 2007. In 2017, Fitzsimon launched States Newsroom as a national expansion of this model, becoming its publisher and CEO to address declining coverage of state-level governance amid job losses exceeding 50% since 2008. The organization was initially incubated by the Hopewell Fund, a progressive managed by that channels philanthropic support to left-leaning causes, providing seed funding and operational backing without direct editorial control. This arrangement enabled early growth, with States Newsroom establishing its philanthropic, ad-free structure aimed at non-partisan reporting on state politics and policy, though its roots in raised questions about inherent ideological leanings among critics. In 2019, it transitioned to independent 501(c)(3) status under EIN 84-2113822, formalizing its nonprofit framework while maintaining Fitzsimon's leadership. Early development emphasized recruiting veteran local journalists to lead affiliate newsrooms, starting with a handful of states and prioritizing underreported issues like legislative actions and executive decisions. By 2020, the network had begun scaling, leveraging grants to hire reporters and produce daily coverage, with an initial focus on filling "news deserts" in state capitals where traditional media retrenchment had reduced investigative capacity by over 25% in the prior decade. This phase laid the groundwork for broader expansion, supported by institutional donors aligned with policy-oriented , though the reliance on such funding sources—often from foundations with progressive priorities—has prompted scrutiny over potential influences on topic selection despite claims of .

Expansion and Milestones

States Newsroom began operations in 2018 as a nonprofit initiative aimed at bolstering state-level amid declining coverage. Early growth focused on establishing independent newsrooms in underserved states, with initial launches in locations such as and to cover policy and politics without reliance on advertising revenue. By 2019, the organization transitioned to full independence as a 501(c)(3) entity, separating from its initial incubation support and enabling scaled philanthropic funding. A significant milestone occurred in March 2021 with the debut of the "Capital Connections" syndication service, which provided free access to reporting from approximately 100 journalists across 20 state capitals, facilitating republication by other outlets under a . This launch coincided with expansion plans to reach 25 states by year's end, incorporating new newsrooms in , , , , and to address gaps in statehouse coverage exacerbated by the pandemic's impact on local media. The service projected distribution of around 25,000 articles in 2021, emphasizing non-partisan, ad-free content funded by donors and readers. In March 2023, States Newsroom acquired Stateline, a veteran project originally founded by in 1998, integrating its data-driven, multi-state reporting on policy impacts and thereby enhancing national aggregation of state-level stories. This move expanded editorial capacity without corporate funding ties. By April 2024, the network achieved coverage across all 50 states, operating fully funded newsrooms in 39 states with over 220 full-time staff and partnerships in the remaining 11 for coordinated reporting from every state capital. Further milestones included bolstering infrastructure, such as opening a Washington, D.C., bureau for federal-state intersections and launching specialized newsletters on topics like and . In September 2024, leadership expanded with new roles like Editorial Director and Communications Director to manage the scaled operations serving millions via direct sites and syndication. These developments positioned States Newsroom as the largest nonprofit state-focused news entity, countering a 25% drop in statehouse reporters from 2014 to 2022.

Organizational Structure

Leadership and Governance

States Newsroom operates as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization governed by a board of directors that oversees strategic decisions, financial audits, and major approvals, with executive session information routinely presented to the board for ratification. The board selects the audit committee unanimously and ensures alignment with the organization's mission of nonpartisan state policy coverage, though specific board member names are not publicly disclosed on the organization's website or in recent filings. Central leadership, based in Washington, D.C., directs operations across its network of state affiliates, which function as independent partner news sites while adhering to shared editorial standards. Chris Fitzsimon serves as Publisher and , responsible for strategic direction, , and oversight. A former television news reporter, Fitzsimon founded Policy Watch, a progressive-leaning outlet, before establishing States Newsroom in 2019 as an expansion of state-focused . Breanne Porter, promoted to on March 10, 2025, manages day-to-day operations and mission alignment; her prior role at , a firm handling left-of-center philanthropic funds, underscores the organization's ties to progressive donor networks. Fernando Wright acts as Chief Financial Officer, handling financial strategy with over 20 years in nonprofit finance, including a stint at the focused on . Andrea Shaw, elevated to Chief Content Officer (previously Editorial Director in September 2024), leads the editorial team and upholds reporting standards; she is a winner with 23 years at The Times-Picayune. Supporting roles include Lara Weber as Communications Director, hired in September 2024 with 25 years at the , and Andrea Verykoukis as Strategic Advisor following her transition from COO after launching 39 state newsrooms. These appointments reflect the network's growth to coverage in all 50 states by 2024, emphasizing operational scalability amid donor-funded expansion. The governance model centralizes executive authority while decentralizing reporting to state-level teams of 4-6 journalists per , fostering localized coverage under national coordination. This , reliant on philanthropic without , prioritizes but invites scrutiny over potential ideological influences from backgrounds rooted in progressive policy advocacy.

Funding Sources and Financials

States Newsroom, established as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit in November 2019, derives its funding exclusively from individual contributions and institutional grants, eschewing corporate donations, , , foreign government support, or anonymous gifts. This philanthropic model emphasizes transparency, with the organization publicly disclosing all donors contributing $1,000 or more since its independence, alongside annual IRS filings available on its website. Prior to 2019, the initiative operated as a fiscally sponsored project of the Hopewell Fund, a 501(c)(3) entity managed by and characterized by analysts as facilitating left-of-center grantmaking, which incubated multiple progressive-aligned media efforts. Post-independence, institutional grants form the bulk of revenue, sourced from foundations including the , , McKnight Foundation, , Rockefeller Family Fund, and Wyss Foundation; while many of these entities have histories of funding progressive and environmental , States Newsroom has also received support from center-right groups such as the Indiana Chamber of Commerce Foundation. In fiscal year 2023, States Newsroom reported total of $17,087,945, with contributions comprising $16,987,264 (99.4%), supplemented by minor other income. Expenses reached $25,370,322, resulting in an operating deficit funded by reserves, yielding net assets of $12,605,033 against liabilities of $2,565,347. totaled $252,302, or 1.0% of expenses. Earlier years showed growth, with 2021 figures exceeding $21 million per some analyses, reflecting expansion amid reliance on grant-dependent . This structure, while enabling state-focused reporting absent commercial pressures, raises questions about potential donor influence on coverage priorities, given the ideological leanings of predominant funders.

Operations and Coverage

Network of State Newsrooms

States Newsroom operates a decentralized network of 39 fully funded, state-specific news outlets, each maintaining its own editorial team and website focused on local and , while partnering with 11 additional established nonprofit news organizations to ensure reporting presence in all 50 state capitals as of 2024. This structure allows for specialized, on-the-ground coverage tailored to each state's legislative and executive activities, with outlets led by experienced local journalists who direct daily operations independently from the central organization. The network's expansion began with initial outlets in swing states like Pennsylvania's Capital-Star in 2019 and grew rapidly, adding full-time bureaus in states such as and in early 2024 to achieve nationwide coverage. Central to the network's operations is a collaborative framework that provides shared resources, including training programs, data tools, and editorial support, without imposing uniform content directives on state-level reporting. A key feature is the Capital Connections syndication service, launched in 2020 and expanded to 25 states by , which distributes concise state capital stories free of charge to over 3,000 publications annually, enabling broader dissemination of policy developments. Partnerships extend to prominent independents like , Vermont Digger, and State Spotlight, integrating their reporting into the network's ecosystem while preserving their autonomy. Examples of directly operated outlets include the Arizona Mirror (Phoenix), California Globe (Sacramento), Sun (), Hawaii Public Radio's capitol bureau (), Current (Carson City and ), and In Depth (Santa Fe), among others spanning regions from the Midwest to the Southeast. Complementing the state outlets, the network includes Stateline, a dedicated platform for cross-state policy analysis acquired from in 2023, and a Washington, D.C., bureau that tracks federal legislation's state-level implications, such as congressional delegations and rulings. This integrated model employs over 220 full-time staff across the outlets, emphasizing nonprofit funding to avoid advertising influences, though external analyses have questioned the network's claims of nonpartisanship, citing consistent left-leaning editorial patterns in coverage of issues like and .

Editorial Standards and Practices

States Newsroom's editorial standards are outlined in its official ethics policy, which mandates adherence to the guidelines of the (SPJ) and the National Press Photographers Association (NPPA), supplemented by practices from organizations including the , , , , and . Exceptions to these standards require approval from both a state newsroom editor and the national editor. Core principles emphasize accuracy, requiring journalists to report truthful facts transparently and fairly, with prompt corrections for errors issued within affected stories and on channels; readers may submit correction requests via to editors listed on state site "About" pages. Fabrication, , and of content are prohibited, with sourced material needing proper credit and links. For visual media, edits are restricted to technical adjustments like cropping or , barring substantive alterations that could mislead viewers. On sourcing and fairness, on-the-record sources are preferred, while anonymous sourcing demands prior approval from editors, verification of the source's reliability, and an in-story explanation of its use; pseudonyms are not permitted, and partial name usage (e.g., first or middle names) requires case-by-case approval. Journalists must identify themselves, explain story purposes, and avoid deception or payment for interviews, making multiple contact attempts before publication. Identities of sexual or survivors are protected without consent unless overridden by . Sources' potential biases must be identified and reported where relevant. Impartiality rules prohibit journalists from covering stories involving personal vested interests, participating in political campaigns, accepting gifts over $20 in value, or engaging in partisan activities; moderating nonpartisan events may occur with approval. decisions remain independent of donors, with no anonymous donations accepted to preserve transparency. The organization asserts nonpartisan coverage of state policies amid and news deserts. Critics, however, question the of these practices given the network's from left-leaning donors and its characterization as comprising left-of-center outlets focused on state and . Independent assessments rate its positions as left-biased, though noting high factual reporting, with commentary sections leaning left while news aims for balance. Founder Chris Fitzsimon has acknowledged the board tilts "on the liberal side," potentially influencing opinion content despite claims of journalistic independence. Such concerns align with broader skepticism toward nonprofit media funded by ideologically aligned philanthropies, where donor influence on framing, even if not direct control, may erode perceived neutrality.

National and Specialized Reporting

States Newsroom conducts national reporting primarily through its Stateline division and , bureau, emphasizing trends in state policies that influence or reflect broader national dynamics. Stateline, which joined States Newsroom in March 2023 after operating under , focuses on policy challenges spanning multiple states, such as access, funding, environmental regulations, and demographic shifts. Its journalists analyze cross-border issues, providing context on how state-level decisions aggregate into national patterns, with content made freely available for republication by other outlets to amplify reach. The D.C. bureau complements this by tracking federal actions affecting states, including congressional legislation, from the , and U.S. rulings with state-level implications. For instance, senior reporter Ashley Murray covers how federal policies intersect with state governance, such as funding allocations or regulatory preemptions. Additionally, the "News From The States" initiative aggregates daily state reporting to highlight emerging national trends in policy and politics, drawing from all 50 states. In specialized reporting, States Newsroom prioritizes in-depth coverage of policy domains like , housing affordability, , and inequities, often through Stateline's dedicated beats. Examples include examinations of state responses to voting rights changes and disparities across regions. The organization has produced series such as "The Deciders" in 2024, which analyzed state-level issues like access, economic policies, and administration potentially influencing national outcomes. Topic-specific feeds facilitate access to ongoing specialized content in areas like and the environment, supporting targeted analysis over general news. This approach leverages the network's 220-plus staff across state capitals to inform national discourse with granular, state-sourced data.

Content Focus

Policy and Politics Emphasis

States Newsroom prioritizes reporting on state-level and , maintaining newsrooms in all 50 state capitals to cover legislative sessions, gubernatorial actions, and policy debates that influence residents' daily lives. The organization employs over 220 journalists and editors dedicated to this focus, producing content on issues such as , , environmental regulations, and economic policies without paywalls or advertisements to maximize accessibility. This emphasis stems from the recognition of declining traditional coverage of state governments, which the network addresses through relentless, on-the-ground reporting from capitols. Coverage extends to the practical impacts of policies, including how state decisions on taxation, , and affect communities, with an intentional effort to highlight underreported consequences for ordinary citizens. For instance, member outlets track initiatives, budget allocations, and regulatory changes, often providing data-driven analyses of fiscal outcomes and demographic disparities in implementation. Series such as "THE DECIDERS" examine state-specific priorities in battleground states, including voting laws, abortion restrictions, and economic incentives, linking them to broader electoral dynamics as of September 2024. Through its Stateline division, States Newsroom addresses multi-state policy trends and federal influences on state affairs, such as congressional legislation or rulings that alter state authority in areas like and education funding. This includes D.C. bureau reporting on how national developments cascade to state levels, emphasizing causal connections between federal policy shifts and local governance challenges. The network's , "Stories From The States," launched in November 2024, further amplifies weekly updates on capitol politics and policy shifts across the country. While States Newsroom asserts a non-partisan commitment aligned with standards, critics from conservative media watchdogs have alleged a left-of-center in story selection and framing, citing donor influences from progressive foundations and past hiring preferences for ideologically aligned reporters as evidenced in 2020 job postings. Independent raters have similarly classified its editorial positions as left-leaning while noting high factual accuracy in reporting. Such perceptions underscore the challenges of maintaining neutrality in policy-focused amid systemic ideological tilts in nonprofit media ecosystems.

Notable Investigations and Series

The Blood Money series, published by the Alabama Reflector in May 2025, comprised a four-part investigation into excessive force allegations within Alabama's correctional facilities. It documented over 90 lawsuits settled by the Alabama Department of Corrections since 2015, totaling millions in taxpayer-funded payouts, often involving repeated claims against the same officers. The reporting relied on public records, court documents, and interviews, revealing patterns of violence including beatings and use of chemical agents on restrained inmates. A collaborative year-long investigation by Source New Mexico and , beginning in 2023, scrutinized the Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) handling of nearly $4 billion in congressional aid for victims of the Hermits Peak-Calf Canyon Fire, 's largest wildfire ignited by federal controlled burns. Reporters found FEMA had disbursed less than 2% of funds by September 2023, citing stringent proof-of-loss requirements that excluded emotional harm and informal arrangements common in rural communities. This probe, drawing on survivor interviews, internal documents, and claim data, prompted FEMA Director Angela Gladwell's resignation in January 2024 and spurred lawsuits by victims seeking broader compensation. The Unnatural Disaster series by NC Newsline in 2022 examined flaws in North Carolina's ReBuild NC program, intended to aid survivors with $800 million in federal recovery funds. Through analysis of state audits, beneficiary accounts, and program data, it highlighted delays, mismanagement, and failures to deliver promised housing, leaving hundreds in substandard conditions years after the storm. The series catalyzed legislative hearings, media follow-ups, and gubernatorial deployment of advisers, resulting in policy adjustments and aid for affected households. Other investigations include the Iowa Capital Dispatch's 2020 exposé on managers allegedly wagering on infection rates among Waterloo plant workers, which triggered firings and a denied Supreme Court appeal; and the Missouri Independent's 2023 reporting on Coldwater Creek radioactive contamination near , prompting bipartisan calls for federal remediation. The Deciders series, launched in September 2024, analyzed voter priorities in swing states like and ahead of the presidential election, based on polling and on-the-ground reporting.

Reception

Achievements and Impact

States Newsroom has achieved significant expansion since its 2018 launch, establishing full-time reporting operations in all 50 states by March 2024 and becoming the nation's largest nonprofit news organization focused on state-level policy and politics coverage. The network fully funds newsrooms in 39 states while partnering in the remaining 11, employing 223 full-time staff members across and support roles. In 2023, its outlets generated 151 million page views and had over 96,000 stories reprinted or syndicated by other media, demonstrating broad dissemination of its content. The organization has garnered substantial recognition for its , accumulating more than 1,293 awards network-wide as of late 2025, including a 2024 Pulitzer Prize finalist designation in commentary for Alabama Reflector editor Lyman's columns critiquing state policies. This growth in awards—from 761 reported in its 2023 —reflects increasing acclaim amid a decline in traditional statehouse reporting by legacy outlets. States Newsroom's reporting has demonstrably influenced accountability and policy discussions, as detailed in its self-assessments; for example, Capital Dispatch investigations into executives betting on employee infections in 2020 prompted firings, lawsuits, and internal reforms. Similarly, Independent exposés on radioactive waste risks in in 2023 spurred bipartisan legislative hearings and remedial actions, while Newsline's scrutiny of post-hurricane housing grant mismanagement in 2022 led to state oversight hearings and program adjustments. These outcomes highlight the network's role in filling coverage gaps left by shrinking local news resources, though broader systemic impacts on policy enactment remain tied to specific, localized responses rather than nationwide shifts.

Criticisms and Bias Allegations

States Newsroom has faced allegations of left-wing bias primarily from conservative media watchdogs and funding transparency organizations, which attribute this to its reliance on grants from liberal-leaning philanthropies and foundations. Critics argue that donors such as the Hopewell Fund—a fiscal sponsor linked to progressive causes—and networks managed by , which facilitate anonymous "dark money" contributions totaling hundreds of millions for left-of-center initiatives, influence the organization's priorities toward rather than neutral reporting. These funding ties, including past incubation under Hopewell before States Newsroom's 2019 independence as a 501(c)(3), have led to claims that the network functions as an extension of donor-driven agendas, such as advancing progressive state-level reforms on issues like voting rights and . Media bias rating services have corroborated a left-leaning editorial slant, with Media Bias/Fact Check classifying affiliates like News from the States as left-biased due to story selection that routinely favors liberal positions, though maintaining high factual accuracy in reporting. InfluenceWatch, a project of the Capital Research Center, describes States Newsroom as comprising "left-of-center media outlets" focused on state politics, citing examples where coverage amplifies progressive narratives while downplaying conservative perspectives. Conservative state-level critics, such as those in Colorado and Wyoming, have highlighted specific instances, including Colorado Newsline's emphasis on progressive policy critiques of Republican-led initiatives, funded through States Newsroom's national structure, as evidence of systemic slant over balanced journalism. In response to these allegations, States Newsroom maintains , prohibiting direct donor influence on content and rejecting corporate to avoid commercial pressures. However, skeptics from outlets like the contend that the nonprofit model's dependence on ideologically aligned grants—often from figures associated with or via intermediary funds—incentivizes alignment with donor priorities, eroding public trust in its claim to nonpartisan state capital coverage. Additional scrutiny arose in 2020 when , a nonpartisan credibility assessor, critiqued the network's transparency, though States Newsroom has since expanded to 39 states without resolving broader concerns over funding opacity. These debates reflect wider conservative distrust of ecosystems perceived as countering right-leaning political gains at the state level.

References

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