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The Spokesman-Review
The Spokesman-Review
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The Spokesman-Review is a daily broadsheet newspaper based in Spokane, Washington, the city's sole remaining daily publication. It has the third-highest readership among daily newspapers in the state, with most of its readership base in eastern Washington and northern Idaho.

Key Information

History

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The Review Building and tower was designed by Chauncey B. Seaton to make use of the unusually shaped plot and make it prominent in the center of Riverside Avenue. Seen here in 1907 and 2012.

The Spokesman-Review was formed from the merger of the Spokane Falls Review (1883–1894) and the Spokesman (1890–1893) in 1893 and first published under the present name on June 29, 1894.[3][4] The Spokane Falls Review was a joint venture between local businessman, A.M. Cannon and Henry Pittock and Harvey W. Scott of The Oregonian.[5][6] The Spokesman-Review later absorbed its competing sister publication, the afternoon Spokane Daily Chronicle.[7][8] Long co-owned, the two combined their sports departments in late 1981 and news staffs in early 1983.[9] The middle name "Daily" was dropped in January 1982,[10][11] and its final edition was printed 33 years ago on Friday, July 31, 1992.[7][8]

The newspaper formerly published three editions, a metro edition covering Spokane and the outlying areas, a Spokane Valley edition and an Idaho edition covering northern Idaho. After a large downsizing of the newsroom staff in November 2007, the paper moved to a single zoned edition emphasizing localized "Voices" sections staffed primarily by non-union employees. The "Voices" section still caters to the three original editions, publishing a Valley "Voices", a North Spokane "Voices" and a South Spokane "Voices".

Owner of both papers since 1897,[9] W.H. Cowles set the Chronicle on a course to be independent and The Spokesman-Review to support Republican Party causes. Time magazine related the papers' success gaining lowered rates for freight carried to the Northwest and an improved park system and that helped the region. Increasing its reputation for comprehensive local news and by opposing "gambling, liquor and prostitution," The Spokesman-Review gained popularity. The paper's opposition to building the Grand Coulee Dam was not quite so universally applauded, and when it opposed the New Deal and the Fair Deal, it so disturbed President Harry Truman that during a visit in 1948 he declared The Spokesman-Review to be one of the "two worst" newspapers in the nation (Chicago Tribune, the other).[12][13][14] The Scripps League's Press closed in 1939, making Cowles the only newspaper publisher in Spokane. Cowles created four weeklies, the Idaho Farmer, Washington Farmer, Oregon Farmer, and Utah Farmer.[15] Cowles died in 1946. When William H. Cowles Jr. succeeded his father as publisher, James Bracken received much more news and editorial control as managing editor.[15]

The Spokesman-Review has been described as moderate-to-liberal, especially in issues around hate groups in the region. In 1997, three extreme-right militants were tried and eventually convicted of bombing the Spokane Valley office of The Spokesman-Review as well as an abortion clinic (see Citizens Rule Book).[16]

The Spokesman-Review is also one of the few remaining family-owned newspapers in the United States. It is owned by Cowles Company, which also owns KHQ-TV/Spokane and The KHQ Television Group. While the newspaper wins awards, it also draws opposition from local critics and activists who suspect the Cowles family of using its alleged vast local media influence to sway public opinion. In particular, a (1997–2004) issue regarding a public-private partnership wherein the Cowles family may have profited, some claim, up to $20 million. This is referred to as the "River Park Square Parking Garage" issue. The newspaper underwent an independent review by the Washington News Council regarding its River Park Square coverage and was found to be at fault for its news bias.[17][18]

In 2004, Spokane mayor James E. West became the target of a sting operation conducted by The Spokesman-Review.[19][20] Some journalists and academics criticized the paper for what they saw as a form of entrapment.[21] West was later cleared of criminal charges by the FBI but not before the mayor lost a recall vote by the citizens of Spokane in December 2005;[22][23] the following summer, West died of cancer.[24][25][26]

According to the Audit Bureau of Circulations, as reported in the Puget Sound Business Journal on April 29, 2010, the newspaper's average Sunday circulation totaled 95,939 and weekly circulation averaged 76,291. That represented a year-over-year decrease of about 10.5 percent; a trend widely reflected during the same year in newspapers throughout Washington state. With the demise of the print edition of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Spokesman-Review is the state's third-largest paper, after the Seattle Times and The News-Tribune of Tacoma.

A 2017 Rotary Club article stated that under editor Rob Curley, hired in 2016, circulation increased from 68,000 to 82,000 in one year.[27]

In April 2020, the paper ceased printing its Saturday edition.[28] In 2025, the Cowles family announced it will donate The Spokesman-Review to the nonprofit Comma Community Journalism Laboratory.[29] A few months later Hagadone Media Group of Coeur d’Alene announced it will print The Spokesman-Review after the paper's previous in-house printer Northwest Offset Printing announced it was ceasing operations.[30]

References

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Further reading

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from Grokipedia

The Spokesman-Review is an American daily newspaper based in Spokane, Washington, serving the region including and northern with a focus on , sports, and community issues. It holds the third-highest readership among Washington state's daily newspapers. Tracing its roots to the Spokane Falls Review established in 1883 and a merger with The Spokesman in 1893, the paper was acquired and renamed by William H. Cowles in 1894, initiating over a century of family ownership by the . In April 2025, amid challenges from declining advertising revenue, the Cowles family donated the newspaper to a Spokane-based to facilitate a transition to a hybrid nonprofit model aimed at long-term sustainability. The publication has been recognized for its regional but has encountered controversies, including accusations of news bias favoring the former owners' business interests, such as in coverage of the River Park Square mall redevelopment.

History

Founding and Early Development (1883–1910)

The Spokane Falls Review, the direct predecessor to The Spokesman-Review, was established as a weekly newspaper on May 19, 1883, by Frank M. Dallam in Spokane Falls, Washington Territory. Dallam, who had relocated from California, launched the paper amid the region's rapid growth following the arrival of the Northern Pacific Railway. Its early editions covered local developments, including the Coeur d'Alene gold rush, which significantly boosted circulation by attracting prospectors and investors. In 1884, the Review expanded to a daily format under the name Spokane Falls Evening Review, soon shortened by dropping "Falls" to reflect the evolving local nomenclature. By 1885, it transitioned to morning publication as The Morning Review, solidifying its position in the competitive Spokane media landscape. A rival paper, The Spokesman, emerged in 1890 as another morning daily, intensifying competition; that year also saw the start of construction on the Review Building, a key infrastructure milestone for the paper's operations. William H. Cowles arrived in Spokane in 1891 at age 24 and took over as publisher of The Spokesman. In 1893, during the economic turmoil of the , The Spokesman merged with The Morning Review to form The Spokane Review, with Cowles contributing $24,000 and assuming a share of the Review Building's mortgage. The following year, on June 28, 1894, Cowles bought out his partners to become sole owner and renamed the publication The Spokesman-Review. Under Cowles's direction, the paper acquired the Spokane Daily Chronicle in 1897, enhancing its regional reach. Circulation exceeded 10,000 daily copies by 1900, reflecting the newspaper's growing influence amid Spokane's booming economy. By 1910, The Spokesman-Review had established itself as a leading voice in the Inland Northwest, advocating for progressive municipal reforms such as a new city charter and a parks bond measure that supported the development of urban green spaces.

Growth and Editorial Shifts (1910–1950)

Under the continued stewardship of publisher William H. Cowles, The Spokesman-Review experienced operational expansion amid Spokane's post-1900 population growth from 36,848 to 104,402 by the 1910 census, which bolstered demand for local news coverage. In 1911, the newspaper partnered in establishing the Inland Empire Paper Company at Millwood to manufacture its own newsprint, reducing reliance on external suppliers and supporting increased page counts that reached 40 pages on Sundays by the early 1910s. Sunday circulation hit 50,530 that year, reflecting quadrupled readership since Cowles's 1894 takeover, driven by broader regional distribution and investments in printing infrastructure. Diversification beyond print marked further growth, as Cowles Publishing Company acquired Northwest Farm Trio, Inc., in 1915—rebranded later as Western Farmer-Stockman—to publish agricultural magazines serving Washington, , and farmers, tapping into the Inland Northwest's agrarian economy. By 1925, the company relaunched KHQ as a 1,000-watt radio station in Spokane, affiliating with the National Broadcasting Company by and extending its media footprint amid rising broadcast popularity. Competition intensified with launches like the Inland Herald in 1910 and the Scripps League's Spokane Press, but the Press's closure in 1939 left Cowles as Spokane's monopolistic publisher, consolidating market dominance during the when Cowles personally invested to sustain operations. Editorially, the newspaper maintained a Republican orientation under Cowles's direct control, endorsing silver-standard Democrat William Jennings Bryan in 1896 and 1900 but aligning with party orthodoxy thereafter, including advocacy for and civic reforms like outlawing "rustle box theaters" in 1901. It championed progressive local governance, such as the 1910 commission form of city government, yet faced threats including a 1927 plot against its offices, leading to firefighter Henry Ilse's 1930 conviction for attempted linked to labor disputes. coverage emphasized patriotic mobilization without noted shifts, while wartime expansions included pictorial reporting innovations by . By 1948, President publicly lambasted it as among the nation's worst papers during a Spokane visit, citing perceived against his administration—a critique rooted in its consistent anti-New Deal and Republican endorsements. Cowles groomed successors amid these developments, appointing son W. H. Cowles Jr. as in following the death of another son, Cheney, in 1943; upon William Sr.'s death in 1946, Jr. assumed publishing duties, acquiring full control of KHQ radio that year to integrate broadcast and print synergies. This era saw no fundamental ideological pivots, with editorial control centralized under family oversight prioritizing regional boosterism and , though monopoly status post-1939 invited scrutiny over potential influence on local politics.

Post-War Expansion and Challenges (1950–1990)

In the post-war era, The Spokesman-Review capitalized on Spokane's and regional economic recovery, achieving peak Sunday circulation of approximately 169,000 in the 1950s and 1960s through combined distribution with the affiliated afternoon Spokane Daily Chronicle. Under publisher William H. Cowles Jr., who succeeded his father in 1946 following the latter's death on January 15, the newspaper expanded its media holdings, acquiring farming publications such as the Farmer in 1950 and Farmer-Stockman, Inc., in 1963, while launching in 1952 as Spokane's inaugural commercial and pioneering full-color programming in the region by 1955. By the mid-20th century, the Cowles enterprise encompassed Spokane's two daily newspapers, an television affiliate, and two radio stations, reflecting a strategy of to counter emerging broadcast competition. The 1970s brought leadership continuity with William H. Cowles III assuming the publisher role in 1970 after his father's death, amid supportive coverage of transformative local events like the 1974 , which drew over 5 million visitors and boosted Spokane's profile. Operational growth continued with the addition of a third building to the Review-Chronicle complex in 1983 and acquisitions like Farmer-Ranchman magazine in 1984, alongside journalistic accolades such as columnist Dorothy Powers' 1960 Memorial Award as the first woman recipient. The historic Review Building earned status in 1975, underscoring the paper's enduring physical presence in downtown Spokane. Despite these advances, the period presented challenges from regional economic stagnation in the 1950s and 1960s, which constrained broader development even as the newspaper maintained profitability and influence. Rising television penetration posed a threat to print readership nationwide, though the Spokesman-Review mitigated this via its broadcast ownership; by 1983, newsroom mergers between the morning Spokesman-Review and afternoon signaled early consolidation to address operational efficiencies amid shifting media consumption. Intensive local reporting, including the late-1970s to early-1980s coverage of the serial rape case, highlighted the paper's role in community accountability but also drew scrutiny over investigative depth in a monopoly news market.

Digital Era and Adaptation (1990–Present)

The Spokesman-Review entered the digital era with the launch of Virtually Northwest in 1996, its inaugural online service delivering newspaper stories and regional content via the World Wide Web. This initiative represented an early pivot toward internet-based distribution as personal computing and online access proliferated in the mid-1990s. By the early 2000s, the newspaper's digital presence expanded through spokesman.com, though print remained dominant amid initial revenue pressures from shifting advertising models. Declining print circulation and —disrupted by online alternatives like —prompted cost-cutting measures, including the of 25 newsroom staff in 2001 and approximately one-fourth of the in 2008 during the . To monetize digital readership, the newspaper introduced a metered on its website in August 2015, limiting free article access to encourage subscriptions for unlimited content. This strategy aligned with broader industry efforts to replace lost print ad dollars with recurring online revenue, though digital subscriptions initially grew slowly compared to legacy print among older demographics. Under executive editor Rob Curley, appointed in 2016, the Spokesman-Review intensified modernization, emphasizing multimedia storytelling, mobile optimization, and audience engagement to compete with social media and national outlets. Print challenges escalated, with subscriptions dropping 39% between 2019 and 2022; in response, the paper suspended its Saturday edition in April 2020 while bolstering digital formats like the e-Edition replica. In 2021, it revived the historic Spokane Daily Chronicle as a digital newsletter for subscribers, targeting evening news delivery via email. Complementary innovations included the 2022 founding of the Comma Community Journalism Lab to experiment with data-driven reporting and community-focused digital tools. By the mid-2020s, digital subscriptions and e-Editions formed a core revenue stream, supplemented by targeted retention tactics such as campaigns that reduced subscriber churn. Print circulation, while retaining eight-figure annual revenue from loyal readers, supported rather than drove growth as leadership prioritized online metrics like page views exceeding 4.5 million monthly. The 2025 shift to nonprofit ownership under the Comma Journalism Lab enabled hybrid funding—combining digital income with grants—to sustain and expand tech infrastructure without for-profit shareholder pressures. This model addressed persistent industry headwinds, including a national newspaper circulation halving from 50 million in 2005 to 10 million by 2024, by insulating operations from pure market volatility.

Ownership and Governance

Cowles Family Stewardship (1894–2025)

William H. Cowles, a native who had worked in newspaper publishing, arrived in Spokane in 1891 and invested in the struggling Spokesman newspaper amid the economic Panic of 1893. By 1894, Cowles had acquired majority control of the Spokesman and merged it with its rival, the Spokane Falls Review, renaming the combined publication The Spokesman-Review and assuming the role of sole owner and publisher. Under his direction, the paper consolidated its position in the local market, including the 1897 purchase of the Spokane Daily Chronicle, which operated as a separate afternoon edition until its closure in 1992. The Cowles family maintained continuous ownership through four generations, with leadership passing from William H. Cowles Sr. (1866–1946) to his son William H. Cowles Jr., who served as president and editor for over two decades and chaired the American Newspaper Publishers Association in 1959–1960. Subsequent stewardship by the third generation, including expansions into broadcasting via the family-held , supported the newspaper's growth while navigating industry shifts such as the rise of television and print declines. The fourth generation, led by publisher William "Stacey" Cowles since 1992, oversaw digital adaptations, including the launch of online operations in the and investments in content amid falling print circulation. By 2025, facing broader newspaper industry pressures including losses and staffing reductions, the Cowles family announced on April 15 their intent to donate The Spokesman-Review to the Spokane-based Comma Community Journalism Lab, a newly formed nonprofit, accompanied by a $2 million endowment to sustain operations. This transition marked the end of 131 years of direct family stewardship, with the retaining no ongoing control while aiming to preserve the paper's role in regional journalism.

Transition to Nonprofit Model (2025 Onward)

On April 15, 2025, the , owned by the Cowles family, announced its intention to donate The Spokesman-Review to Comma Community Journalism Lab, a Spokane-based 501(c)(3) formed to foster community-owned local . The donation aims to ensure the newspaper's long-term viability amid declining advertising revenue and industry-wide financial pressures, while avoiding sale to for-profit chains that might prioritize cost-cutting over community-focused reporting. Publisher Stacey Cowles stated that the move would extend the paper's sustainability, noting, "If you had the chance to extend its viability… why would you not do that?" The transition adopts a hybrid funding model combining subscriptions, which currently account for approximately 70% of revenue, with and philanthropic contributions from individuals, , and businesses. To facilitate the handover, the pledged a $2 million matching grant, contingent on the raising an equivalent amount within 12 months to support operations projected at $800,000 to $3 million annually. Governance will shift to Comma's board, with a "hard firewall" separating funders from decisions to preserve ; transparency reports will disclose major grants, though reporters typically remain unaware of specific donor influences. The model draws inspiration from prior nonprofit conversions, such as in 2016 and in the same year, which sustained through diversified revenue without compromising core operations. Publication continuity is prioritized, with no planned staff reductions, retention of current pay and benefits, and the six-day print edition alongside digital access maintained; select grant-funded content will remain freely available. The newsroom will continue operating from its existing Cowles-owned facility, and plans to add up to $1 million in positions, including partnerships with local academic institutions and programs like Report for America. Editor Rob Curley emphasized empowerment, stating, "A should own its narrative… putting power back into the hands of readers." As of late 2025, the transfer remains contingent on fundraising progress, with a potential completion by October 2025 or shortly thereafter, though challenges include developing digital revenue streams and securing sustained donor engagement.

Operations and Content

Circulation, Distribution, and Formats

The Spokesman-Review maintains a daily print circulation supported by home delivery subscriptions, generating revenue in the eight figures annually as of 2025, bolstered by a loyal readership among older adults in the Inland Northwest region. Its combined platforms reach an average of over 143,000 readers daily, reflecting sustained demand for both physical and digital access despite broader industry declines in print readership. Distribution occurs primarily through subscription-based home delivery in Spokane, Coeur d'Alene, and surrounding Inland Northwest communities, with carrier routes available for independent contractors earning $600 to $1,500 monthly. Print production shifted in September 2025 to Hagadone Media Group in Coeur d'Alene for cost efficiencies, following the closure of the newspaper's in-house Northwest Offset Printing facility. Single-copy sales supplement subscriptions at local newsstands, though home delivery dominates, with all print subscribers receiving bundled digital access without additional outlying area expansions noted since reductions in the 1990s. Available formats include a daily print edition, an e-edition replica for digital viewing, and full online access via Spokesman.com, which records over 4.54 million monthly page views and 1.62 million unique visitors. Subscriptions integrate print with unlimited , newsletters, and podcasts, adapting to reader preferences amid print revenue stability contrasting digital growth in user engagement metrics.

Key Departments and Journalistic Practices

The Spokesman-Review's newsroom encompasses core departments focused on local and regional coverage, including News, Sports, Business, and Lifestyle, alongside support units such as Photo, Copy Desk, Design, and Online. The News department handles reporting on Spokane-area events, Northwest regional issues, state politics, and select national topics, with reporters stationed from Olympia to Washington, D.C.. Sports covers professional, collegiate, and high school athletics in the Inland Northwest, while Business addresses economic developments, real estate, and corporate activities impacting the region. Lifestyle and features sections explore community trends, health, education, and cultural events, managed under a dedicated editor. The Photo department documents visual stories, integrating imagery into print and digital formats, and the Online team adapts content for web and mobile distribution. Specialized initiatives like the Teen Journalism Institute engage student contributors for youth-oriented reporting. Journalistic practices at the newspaper adhere to an internal ethics code established in 2008, which mandates verification of facts, prompt correction of errors through an "Accuracy Watch" feature, and balanced sourcing to ensure fairness. Independence is prioritized by prohibiting staff political involvement, rejecting gifts or gratuities, and requiring editor approval for anonymous sources, with potential use of independent reporters for stories involving owner interests. Accountability mechanisms include an ombudsman for public complaints and disciplinary measures for violations, applicable to all employees. Investigative reporting falls under the News department, with reporters like Thomas Clouse having conducted probes into local government and business practices prior to editorial shifts. Digital content follows identical standards, avoiding partisan personal blogging, while limited fact-checking of sources is permitted under editorial oversight to maintain source cooperation without compromising integrity. Leadership, including Executive Editor Rob Curley and Managing Editor for News and Photo Liz Kishimoto, oversees these practices to sustain local accountability journalism amid the 2025 nonprofit transition.

Editorial Stance and Coverage

Historical Political Positions

The Spokesman-Review's predecessor publications, including The Spokesman acquired by William H. Cowles in 1891, were explicitly aligned with Republican Party interests in the late 19th century, reflecting the dominant political currents in the growing Inland Northwest. Following the 1893 merger with The Spokane Falls Review—itself a Republican-leaning daily—the combined Spokesman-Review maintained a staunch pro-Republican editorial stance under Cowles family stewardship, advocating for party platforms on issues such as tariff policies, railroad regulation, and local economic development tied to Republican governance. This positioning contrasted with the family's other Spokane outlet, The Spokane Chronicle, which Cowles designated as more independent to broaden market appeal while reserving The Spokesman-Review for overt partisan support of Republican candidates and causes. Throughout the early 20th century, the newspaper's editorials consistently backed Republican presidential nominees and state-level figures, including endorsements during the Progressive Era that emphasized and anti-labor union measures amid Spokane's mining and rail booms. By the mid-century, this tradition persisted, with the paper's political advocacy influencing local elections and reflecting the Cowles family's business-oriented worldview, though specific endorsement records from pre-1950s presidential races remain sparse in digitized archives. Into the late 20th century, the pattern held with explicit support for Republican candidates, such as the 1988 endorsement of for president, underscoring a historical reluctance to diverge from GOP orthodoxy on and . Shifts in the paper's positions were gradual and issue-specific rather than wholesale ideological reversals; for instance, while maintaining Republican endorsements on federal races, it occasionally critiqued party excesses on social reforms or environmental regulations in the context. This evolution aligned with broader trends in regional journalism, where ownership-driven conservatism tempered reactions to national Democratic surges like the , prioritizing local business stability over ideological purity.

Contemporary Reporting Focus and Bias Assessments

In recent years, The Spokesman-Review has emphasized local and regional journalism centered on the Inland Northwest, particularly Spokane, Washington, with coverage spanning government accountability, community issues, public health, business developments, sports, entertainment, and outdoor recreation. This focus includes in-depth reporting on municipal elections, infrastructure projects, and social services, as evidenced by dedicated election centers tracking local races and ballot measures such as fire and police levies in Spokane County towns. National and international stories appear selectively, often tied to regional impacts, such as economic policies affecting Washington state or federal funding for local research grants. Bias assessments of the newspaper's contemporary output vary across evaluators, reflecting differing methodologies for measuring ideological slant in story selection, wording, and editorializing. AllSides rates it as Lean Left, citing consistent framing that aligns more closely with progressive viewpoints in opinion pieces and occasional news coverage. Ground News similarly assigns a Lean Left aggregation based on combined ratings from multiple analysts. In contrast, Media Bias/Fact Check deems it Least Biased overall, praising high factual reporting through proper sourcing and minimal failed fact checks, though acknowledging occasional left-leaning editorial positions. These discrepancies highlight limitations in bias rating systems, which can undervalue local context or overemphasize national partisan cues, with some critiques noting that regional papers like The Spokesman-Review face systemic pressures from urban media ecosystems prone to left-leaning norms. A notable episode underscoring perceived occurred in 2020, when publisher Stacey Cowles published an unsigned urging support for then-President Trump's reelection, prompting backlash from staff and readers who viewed it as inconsistent with the paper's typical tone, leading to the cessation of candidate endorsements thereafter. Recent s have critiqued conservative initiatives, such as petitions from the Family Policy Center on school curricula, while advocating rejection of certain tax measures to preserve . The 2025 ownership transition to the nonprofit Comma Community Journalism Lab, announced on with a $2 million Cowles family endowment, aims to bolster independence and community-driven reporting amid declining ad revenue, potentially mitigating commercial influences on coverage but introducing reliance on donations that could invite donor pressures. Prior to this shift, a 2007 News Council review faulted the paper for injecting opinion into news sections, particularly in political reporting.

Achievements and Notable Contributions

Awards and Investigative Journalism

The Spokesman-Review has received recognition for its journalism through several prestigious awards, though it has not secured a Pulitzer Prize win. In 1993, the newspaper was named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Spot News Reporting for its comprehensive coverage of the 1992 Ruby Ridge standoff in northern Idaho, which involved a deadly confrontation between federal agents and Randy Weaver's family. Additionally, staff photographer James Lott III was a 1984 Pulitzer finalist in Spot News Photography for an image capturing a dramatic moment during a Spokane-area emergency. These nominations highlight the paper's historical strength in on-the-ground reporting of high-stakes events, with the Ruby Ridge series involving multiple reporters, including future author Jess Walter, who contributed to the team's finalist entry. Beyond Pulitzers, the Spokesman-Review has earned top regional honors from the (SPJ), including first-place wins in seven categories at the 2021 Excellence in Awards for work spanning , feature writing, and visual . In 2022, reporter Orion Donovan Smith received the from the National Press Foundation for investigative reporting that exposed systemic flaws in a federal child support enforcement program, detailing cases where erroneous incarcerations imposed severe human costs on low-income parents unable to pay imputed debts. These accolades underscore the paper's focus on accountability within its circulation area. The newspaper's investigative efforts have produced impactful series that prompted official responses and policy scrutiny. A prominent example is the 2005 series on Spokane Jim West, which revealed allegations of his with minors in the as a county official and later use of his mayoral office to solicit sex from young men via online personas and government perks. The reporting, based on victim accounts, court records, and undercover interactions, triggered a campaign, West's in May 2005 amid public pressure, and a subsequent FBI probe—though federal investigators closed the case in February 2006 without charges due to insufficient evidence for prosecution. This work exemplified the paper's willingness to pursue local power abuses, resulting in the mayor's ouster despite legal non-indictment. Other investigations have targeted federal program failures and community issues, such as Smith's series, which highlighted over 1,000 annual incarcerations nationwide under flawed guidelines, advocating for reforms to prevent poverty-driven cycles. The Spokesman-Review's track record includes dozens of such probes over decades, often leveraging and witness testimony to drive in and institutions, though outcomes vary based on evidentiary thresholds for legal action.

Impactful Stories and Community Role

The Spokesman-Review's 2005 investigative series on Spokane Mayor Jim West revealed allegations of child sex abuse dating to the and misuse of his office to solicit sexual encounters with young men via public resources, prompting a federal probe by the FBI and U.S. Attorney's Office that concluded without charges but amid ongoing scrutiny of West's conduct. The reporting, led by Bill Morlin and others, fueled recall efforts, eroded West's political standing, and generated statewide attention to ethical lapses in local leadership, though it drew criticism for methods including online deception by investigators. In 1992, the newspaper's coverage of the in northern , involving white separatist and federal agents, earned a 1993 Pulitzer Prize finalist nomination for spot news reporting, with reporters and Bill Morlin providing early on-scene accounts that highlighted the siege's escalation, resulting in three deaths and broader debates on federal overreach. This work, drawn from direct observation amid limited communication infrastructure, contributed to national discourse on tactics and militia movements in the . Reporter Karen Dorn Steele's 1980s series on Hanford Nuclear Reservation exposed unreported radiation releases during and the , including health impacts on downwind communities from plutonium production that supplied nearly two-thirds of U.S. stockpiles, spurring public awareness and influencing federal cleanup priorities at the site, which still requires up to $590 billion in remediation as of 2025. Investigative journalist Bill Morlin, over four decades, uncovered corruption, extremism including activities, and local crimes, with his reporting on figures like Spokane firefighters' misconduct and broader threats from white supremacists establishing the paper's reputation for persistent scrutiny of regional threats. More recently, Orion Donovan-Smith's 2022 series on defects in the Department of ' electronic health records system detailed human costs including patient deaths and errors at facilities serving Spokane veterans, earning the National Press Foundation's Feddie Award for federal reporting and prompting calls. As Spokane's sole remaining daily since merging with the Spokane Daily in , The Spokesman-Review has served as the Inland Northwest's primary forum for local news, sports, and events since 1883, fostering through in-depth regional coverage that influences policy on issues like environmental hazards and . In 2022, it raised $1 million via partnerships to bolster journalism amid declining ad revenue, demonstrating efforts to sustain its watchdog function. The 2025 shift to a nonprofit model, donated by the Cowles , aims to preserve this by prioritizing community-supported reporting over commercial pressures.

Controversies and Criticisms

Allegations of Bias and Editorial Slant

In 2007, the Washington News Council released a report criticizing The Spokesman-Review for instances of , particularly in coverage that appeared to prioritize the interests of its owners, the , over impartial reporting. The council highlighted a now-defunct "" policy, in place until 2001, which allowed family members to pre-review certain stories, potentially influencing content to avoid negative portrayals of family enterprises. Media bias rating organizations have offered mixed evaluations of the newspaper's slant. Media Bias Rating assigns it a "Lean Left" classification, attributing this to a moderate-to-liberal orientation in opinion pieces on local governance, social issues, and regional challenges like hate groups. Ground News similarly aggregates a Lean Left bias score based on combined assessments from multiple raters. In contrast, deems it Least Biased overall, citing balanced story selection and high factual accuracy through proper sourcing, though it notes occasional left-leaning positions. Conservative-leaning critics have alleged liberal bias in specific content. The Washington Policy Center, a free-market , condemned a 2021 opinion column by Accountability Northwest as a "baseless and smear-filled" attack on conservative policies, exemplifying what it described as the paper's pattern of partisan editorializing against non-left perspectives, including opposition to mandates. Local reader letters published in the paper itself have accused it of by underreporting stories that challenge progressive narratives, such as voter ID requirements, and overly relying on East Coast liberal writers while sidelining alternative viewpoints. Historically, the newspaper endorsed Republican presidential candidates, including in 1916, in 1924, and in 1928, reflecting its origins as the more conservative of Spokane's papers under Cowles ownership. Over time, allegations have emerged of a shift toward liberal editorial stances, particularly on social and regional issues, though the paper maintains it prioritizes local factual reporting over national partisan divides.

Conflicts of Interest and Ownership Influences

The Spokesman-Review has been owned by the via the since 1893, when William H. Cowles acquired and merged the assets of The Spokesman and The Review during the economic panic of that year. The company, a privately held diversified media and entity based in Spokane, Washington, maintained control through multiple generations, with William Stacey Cowles serving as publisher as of 2025. This long-term family ownership raised periodic concerns about potential influences on editorial decisions, particularly given the Cowles Company's involvement in local commercial and development projects alongside its media holdings. A notable instance of alleged ownership-driven conflict occurred during the late 1990s and early 2000s River Park Square controversy, where Cowles subsidiaries developed and owned interests in the downtown Spokane mall and its parking garage. Public disputes arose over $26 million in city subsidies for garage repairs amid sinking and leaking issues, with critics accusing The Spokesman-Review of biased coverage that downplayed scandals and favored the developers' position, thereby compromising journalistic independence due to the shared corporate parent. The Washington News Council reviewed the matter in 2007, describing the dual role as "unprecedented" and highlighting how ownership ties potentially skewed reporting on taxpayer-funded aspects of the project, though the newspaper defended its work as factual. Separate legal representation for the newspaper and Cowles business interests also drew ethical conflict claims from journalists, underscoring tensions between media oversight and proprietary stakes. To mitigate such issues, The Spokesman-Review adopted an ethics code in 2008 explicitly targeting conflicts of interest, requiring staff to disclose and discuss potential biases with editors, including freelance work or personal involvements that could affect coverage. The policy extends to political activities and online expressions, aiming to preserve perceived neutrality despite ownership structures. In April 2025, the Cowles Company announced plans to donate the newspaper's assets to Comma Community Journalism, a Spokane-based nonprofit founded by executive editor Rob Curley, accompanied by a $2 million endowment matching community donations, marking a shift from for-profit family control to a hybrid nonprofit model. Proponents argued this would insulate operations from commercial pressures, potentially reducing ownership influences on content, though the transition's full implementation remained in progress as of mid-2025. No major conflicts tied to the impending change have been publicly reported, but the move reflects broader industry efforts to address sustainability amid declining ad revenues without perpetuating familial or corporate sway over local journalism.

References

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