Public radio stations across Texas are teaming with NPR to increase coverage of statewide issues and boost reporting from underserved regions, including the border with Mexico. Reporters and editors from the state’s four largest public radio stations — Houston Public Media, KERA in Dallas, KUT in Austin, and Texas Public Radio in San Antonio— will plan statewide coverage together, share resources, and dig deeper into the most important stories in Texas.“Without access to information in local communities, at the state level, at the national and international level, nothing short of our nation’s democracy is at stake,” said Nancy Barnes, senior vice president of news and editorial director for NPR. “The Texas Newsroom is the first step in our collaborative journalism project that, when fully developed, will make public radio the strongest reporting network in the country.”This innovative collaboration begins with six live, statewide newscasts each weekday that draw content from public radio stations large and small across the state. So far, a dozen Texas NPR member stations are carrying these newscasts, with others likely to join. As a result, public radio audiences in Texas get both local coverage from their local stations, as well as a broader, state-level view of the news.“The ultimate goal is to have one unified structure that ties together Texas public media stations and NPR – with an eye toward more robust, coordinated local coverage,” said Lisa Trapani Shumate, general manager of Houston Public Media. “The horizontal collaboration may be the more powerful result, further connecting related stories in different parts of the vast state and filling gaps in community news coverage.”In addition to producing live statewide newscasts, the Texas stations are sharing in-depth reporting that appears on Texas Standard, a daily newsmagazine produced by KUT in Austin in collaboration with NPR member stations across the state. This includes local stories of interest to a broader audience and statewide perspectives on issues that affect communities from El Paso to Corpus Christi. To lead this collaboration, The Texas Newsroom is hiring a managing editor and two senior editors. It has also hired two newscasters and a newscast editor to produce the statewide newscasts. They join a team of more than two dozen reporters at the partner stations, including two who are based along the Texas/Mexico border.NPR and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting have made significant investments in the initiative, which will help reshape the way public media stations engage their audiences. Both national entities have identified this collaboration as a prototype for the way stations throughout the country can share resources and produce more of the journalism their communities need.NPR’s Collaborative Journalism Network will build on existing and new regional reporting collaborations across the country. The stations that now make up The Texas Newsroom came together four years ago after the launch of Texas Standard to form the Texas Station Collaborative, an innovative, industry-leading partnership.The Texas Newsroom in ActionThe advantages of this multi-station and network collaboration are already evident, especially in breaking news situations like the recent mass shootings in El Paso and in Midland/Odessa.As soon as the El Paso shootings were reported, the newly-appointed Texas Newsroom senior editor based in Dallas dispatched reporters to El Paso, while a reporter in San Antonio went on the air with the first newscast spots for NPR’s national audience. Houston Public Media’s Politics and Government Reporter Andrew Schneider went to El Paso, Texas, to cover President Trump’s visit to Texas, as well as the reaction from the community in the wake of the tragedy. This seamless, multi-layered coverage was the result of relationships built through statewide collaboration and would not have been possible before the partnership was established.This new regional collaboration in Texas is an important step. By working more closely together across the state, we will hear from new, more diverse voices, we will provide deeper news coverage, and we will strengthen local journalism.(This post was taken from a release sent to me by Houston Public Media)