蜜桃传媒破解版下载

Skip to main content

Snow news day: The challenge of climate reporting as newsrooms cut back

Snow covers the Flatirons in Boulder.

The Flatirons, in Boulder, during a more typical winter. CMDI鈥檚 Water Desk has been fielding calls throughout the winter drought from resource-starved reporters looking for help covering a warm, extremely dry season. Photo by Joe Arney.

Call it the winter of our discontent: With just 23 inches of snow accumulation since November, Boulder鈥攁nd Colorado as a whole鈥攊s enduring one of the driest winters on record.

And as parts of Colorado and the American West start to look more like deserts, they鈥檙e becoming news deserts, as well. Cuts, closures and consolidations are shuttering newsrooms and robbing reporters of resources, making it harder to ensure the public is getting trustworthy, verified information about the scope of this crisis.

It鈥檚 a challenge Luke Runyon sees daily as co-director of .

Headshot of Luke Runyon

Luke Runyon

鈥淚t鈥檚 been an extremely dry and extremely warm winter for the southern Rocky Mountains鈥攔eally, for much of the West,鈥 said Runyon, whose work with a local NPR station won a prestigious Murrow Award in 2024.

鈥淲hat I鈥檇 love to see more of is reporters going into the field and talking to the people on the ground who have to make tough decisions because of a lack of water. But I understand why that doesn鈥檛 happen鈥攊t鈥檚 more expensive to do that kind of reporting, to find the characters who tell that story.鈥

It鈥檚 not that you can鈥檛 watch the local news to see reports of just how dry the weather has been. But resource-starved newsrooms have to make hard editorial decisions about which in-depth stories to pursue, and Runyon said environmental reporting struggles to compete with other beats鈥攕o it鈥檚 often scaled back.

We ignore water coverage at our own peril, Runyon said, especially as climate change stresses ecosystems, upends established norms and ushers in more brutal fire seasons.

鈥淭he reason snow gets so much coverage in the winter is because it has all these domino effects that are felt through the rest of the year.鈥

Luke Runyon, co-director, The Water Desk

鈥淎ccess to water is the issue affecting the modern West, one that underlies almost every major question we鈥檙e talking about,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t pops up in housing, agriculture and our ability to feed ourselves, recreation and the broader environment. If we鈥檙e not talking about water, we鈥檙e missing a huge piece of what it means to live in the west.鈥

Beyond just financial support

At The Water Desk, Runyon works directly with the journalists trying to tell those stories. Its work has evolved as the needs of journalists have changed. The team used to exclusively provide financial support through small grants; today, it also offers assistance with data visualization and mapping on big stories, even direct editing support from Runyon, who鈥檚 covered Colorado River issues for nearly a decade. The Water Desk, which is housed out of the Center for Environmental Journalism at 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 College of Communication, Media, Design and Information, also on timely issues.

That鈥檚 important because while there are good reporters covering water issues, it鈥檚 been a hard time to be a journalist鈥攅specially one covering a highly complex issue like water, 鈥渂ecause it isn鈥檛 easy to understand the crazy infrastructure, the complicated legal mechanisms in place to manage water,鈥 he said.

A major story right now that is getting national attention is the need for an updated management proposal for the Colorado River, which supplies water to seven Western U.S. states and Mexico. The states, which disagree on how to manage a shrinking supply of water, missed a fall deadline to submit a plan to the federal government; the new deadline is Saturday.

鈥淭he timing of this very dry year comes at a critical moment for the river itself,鈥 Runyon said. 鈥淚 think you鈥檒l see more being written on this leading up to the 14th.鈥

Most of the stories Runyon is fielding calls about right now concern poor skiing conditions and the economic impact on resorts and mountain towns. He expects the cycle to turn to agriculture in the spring鈥攅specially how farmers will adjust plantings in the face of shortages鈥攁nd to recreation and ecology in the summer.

鈥淭he reason snow gets so much coverage in the winter is because it has all these domino effects that are felt through the rest of the year,鈥 Runyon said.

Finding ways to help a dwindling cast of media to tell deeper and more impactful stories remains his greatest challenge, but Runyon does see opportunities for people looking to break into journalism, especially as new platforms allow reporters to offer their audience deep dives on important topics like climate and water.

鈥淭here are a lot of cool, innovative startups out there,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd there is a much broader definition of who gets to call themselves a journalist. You can be an expert with a Substack newsletter, and you鈥檙e basically running your own small business. Hopefully, there鈥檚 more of that to come.鈥


Joe Arney covers research and general news for the college.