The American Journalism Project has announced $5.4 million in new support for four nonprofit news organizations: Deep South Today, Grist, New York Focus and Spotlight Delaware. In addition to funding, the venture philanthropy will give the nonprofit news organizations strategic support to grow their revenue, strengthen their organizations and expand their local reporting capacity.
Since its founding in 2019, AJP has committed $55.3 million to a portfolio of 44 grantee partners, including 40 established news organizations and four concepts under incubation. With these new grantees, AJP’s portfolio represents nearly 20 percent of the Institute for Nonprofit News members focused on local or statewide news.
“We are in the midst of a rebirth in local news across this country, driven by a new generation of local news innovators changing the way we sustain community journalism,” said Sarabeth Berman, CEO of the American Journalism Project. “Each of these organizations have compelling visions for journalism that strengthens their communities. We’re thrilled to partner with them to help them build enduring organizations.”
The organizations receiving new funding have ambitious plans to grow original local reporting and expand their business and revenue operations. More details on each organization and how they will use this new support:
Beyond financial philanthropic investment, the American Journalism Project will provide each of these organizations with venture support, coaching, peer learning and capacity building. Over the three-year grant period, these local news organizations will be able to reinvest their increased revenue back into the newsroom to expand their ability to do more original reporting. AJP’s first cohort of grantees grew their combined revenue by $15 million over three years, resulting in a 4.9x return on AJP’s annual investment, and grew their news budgets by 66 percent.
Since 2019, the American Journalism Project has raised $168 million for local news, including nearly $60 million from local philanthropies to support local news initiatives in their markets. In 2023, AJP received several commitments of note, most recently $5 million from the Abrams Foundation, which represents a significant increase in their commitment. It also received $500,000 from the Patrick J. McGovern Foundation, which joined OpenAI’s $5 million commitment to enable the launch of AJP’s new Product & AI Studio.
About the American Journalism Project:
The American Journalism Project is a venture philanthropy dedicated to local news. We believe in civic journalism as a public good and are reimagining its future by building a model to finance and sustain the local news our democracy requires. We make grants to local nonprofit news organizations to build their revenue and business operations, partner with communities to launch new organizations, and mentor leaders as they grow and sustain their newsrooms. To learn more about the American Journalism Project, visit our website. To learn more about our grantees, visit our portfolio page.
About Deep South Today:
Deep South Today is a nonprofit network of local newsrooms that includes Mississippi Today and Verite News. Founded in 2016, Mississippi Today is now one of the largest newsrooms in the state, and in 2023 it won the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting. Verite News launched in 2022 in New Orleans, where it covers inequities facing communities of color. With its regional scale and scope, Deep South Today is rebuilding and re-energizing local journalism in communities where it had previously eroded, and ensuring its long-term growth and sustainability.
About Grist:
Grist is an innovative nonprofit media organization focused on climate, justice, and solutions. Its agenda-setting journalism shines a light on scalable climate solutions, empowering readers to imagine a more equitable, livable future — and reshapes the broader media narrative on climate change.
About New York Focus:
New York Focus is New York’s only statewide nonprofit newsroom. Launched in 2020, its journalism exposes how power works in the Empire State, holds decision-makers accountable, and gives citizens the tools they need to participate in their democracy. It fills a glaring gap: almost half of New York’s newspapers have died in the last two decades. Its stories have spurred legislation, lawsuits and hearings, shaped regulation, and driven national news cycles.
About Spotlight Delaware:
Spotlight Delaware, a project of the Local Journalism Initiative, is a new collaborative nonprofit newsroom that will provide Delaware communities with free local news and information. Spotlight Delaware will focus on public policy and how it affects the daily lives of Delawareans throughout the state, with a particular emphasis on underserved and underrepresented communities.
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