Meet SPJ San Diego’s 2024 Walls and Windows Honorees

Every year, the San Diego Society of Professional Journalists hosts our Walls and Windows event to honor those in our community who have worked hard to expand the public’s right to know by fighting for transparency — and hold accountable those who have stifled these efforts.

Join us on Thursday, April 18 to hear from the awardees and mingle with other local journalists! Some food will be provided and drinks will be available for purchase.

When: Thursday, April 18 at 6:30 p.m.

Where: Mujeres Brew House, 1983 Julian Ave, San Diego, CA 92113

Window Award: Emily Cox, San Diego Superior Court

SD-SPJ’s annual Window Award goes to a person or public agency that has prioritized transparency and access to information. This year’s recipient is Emily Cox, public affairs officer for the San Diego Superior Court. 

In 2020, we gave a Skylight award to Emily’s predecessor, Karen Dalton, upon her retirement. “For years, it was difficult to get basic information on happenings at the San Diego County Superior Court and court officials were rarely prepared for major news events that drew large groups of reporters,” we wrote. “That reality changed with Karen Dalton.” In other words, Emily had some big shoes to fill. 

But reporters who cover the court will tell you that Emily’s upheld Dalton’s legacy and then some. She responds quickly to information requests and is always available to assist reporters who have questions about court business or who need help digging into case files. 

Emily launched a series of virtual town halls to help the press and members of the public better understand different types of court functions and services; she also participated in our recent Know Your Rights panel and regularly assists in organizing the annual Bench / Bar / Media panel discussions. 

Sunshine Award: Will Carless, USA Today

SD-SPJ’s Sunshine Award goes to a journalist or community member who went above and beyond to make the government more transparent and hold elected officials accountable. Will Carless, a national correspondent for USA Today, has been dogged in his efforts to pull back the curtain on extremism. (Will is a former staff writer for Voice of San Diego — and once a San Diego journalist, always a San Diego journalist.) 

Earlier this year, Will published an investigation into how the Department of Defense has lagged in promised efforts to root out extremists among its ranks. Though the stories didn’t directly have a San Diego tie, our region has large population of current and former military members and, as Will points out, research shows that “being affiliated with the U.S. military is the ‘single strongest’ predictor of violent extremism in America.” Despite threats to his personal safety, Will has tracked down people who participated in the Jan. 6 insurrection — including the son of the former chair of the San Diego Republican Party — and profiled the woman behind a social media account whose anti-LGBTQ+ posts have been tied to schools, hospitals and libraries being targeted by bomb and death threats. 

For too long, media outlets have not taken the recent rise in extremist rhetoric and activity seriously. This, we now know, was a mistake. Will’s reporting is critically important in letting people know how extremism festers and spreads, what its consequences are and what we need to do to combat it.

Wall Award: San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria

The Wall Award goes to the person or public agency that made it difficult for journalists to do their jobs by ignoring information requests or otherwise compromising the public’s right to know. The award this year goes to the office of San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria. 

The Mayor’s office has been busy over the past year coordinating responses to weather-related emergencies, grappling with an ongoing influx of migrants at the Southern border and creating new policies to address the burgeoning unhoused population in the city. Given all of the pressing issues affecting San Diego, we would expect the Mayor’s office to act with transparency by cooperating with journalists who are reporting on these urgent topics. However, we think officials have fallen short.

The Mayor’s office has developed a reputation for contacting journalists in the wake of unfavorable coverage to downplay, dispute or undermine their reporting, claiming that their important work is promoting distrust in the community. In one of many instances experienced by San Diego journalists, the Mayor’s chief spokesperson described a news story about the city’s neglect of Black and Latino neighborhoods prior to an unprecedented flood as inaccurate, “dangerous” and “harmful.” We disagree.

Multiple journalists working in print, TV and radio said they have been unfairly denied access to interviews, press conferences and site tours involving the Mayor’s office. Some described situations where the Mayor canceled or delayed interviews after critical news coverage about his administration. As one example, La Prensa, a news outlet with a history of critical coverage of Mayor Gloria, was denied access last year to tour a city-sanctioned campsite for unhoused residents, while 12 other newsrooms were invited to attend. The Mayor has declined accountability interviews about his approach to homelessness, and his office has ignored questions from reporters about the recent migrant crisis. We believe the Mayor’s office should focus more on cooperation and less on reputation management.

In addition, freelancers continue to have difficulties receiving press credentials from the San Diego Police Department, which is overseen by the Mayor’s office. Newsrooms also continue to experience issues accessing public records, a problem dating back years in the Gloria administration.

Mayor Gloria’s refusal to attend debates during the primary election is another example of a lack of openness that is harmful to both journalists and the public as a whole. We hope that this award will remind Mayor Gloria and his office that hindering journalists only hurts the people he was elected to serve.

Congratulations to our annual Wall, Window and Sunshine and awards winners!

Every year, the San Diego Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists honors public officials, individuals and agencies who did the best (and the worst) job of ensuring that government is accessible and transparent. We’re proud to announce this year’s award winners and will celebrate them with a reception at Mujeres Brewing in Logan Heights (1983 Julian Ave.) from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday, March 15. Light refreshments will be served. An RSVP is required. Please note that this is an outdoor venue, so dress appropriately.

Window Award: Paul Parker

SD-SPJ’s annual Window Award goes to a person or public agency that has prioritized transparency and access to information. This year’s recipient is Paul Parker, executive officer of the Citizens’ Law Enforcement Review Board, or CLERB, which provides oversight of the San Diego Sheriff’s and Probation departments, including investigating deaths in custody and making policy recommendations. Under previous executive officers there was little engagement between CLERB and the community and strict rules about communication with the media. Under Parker’s leadership, CLERB has become a more proactive, responsive organization, which helps bolster the public trust in the review board’s mission. Parker has proactively met with community groups and organizations to discuss how CLERB functions and the role of oversight. He’s also authored more detailed, insightful annual reports. Perhaps most important, though, are the summaries of cases the board’s investigative staff provide for review each month in which they include every morsel of information they’re legally allowed to provide. Parker regularly meets with families of people who’ve died in jail and, last year oversaw virtual town halls about in-custody deaths and the Center for Policing Equity’s report on racial disparities in traffic stops and use of force. Parker is also very responsive to media requests and each month posts to CLERB’s website his communications with board members about important updates and news articles concerning CLERB and law enforcement oversight. We hope other public officials and agencies take note.

Wall Award: San Diego County 

The Wall Award goes to the person or public agency that made it difficult for journalists to do their jobs by ignoring information requests or otherwise compromising the public’s right to know. Unfortunately, this award will again go to San Diego County, marking the third time in six years. Reporters from multiple news organizations throughout the region continue to struggle to gather basic information from the county’s communications team in a timely manner. The communications office, led by Michael Workman, typically requires reporters to submit requests through email and often provides terse responses that only raise more questions. Officials leading county agencies and initiatives are rarely made available for interviews, which could provide reporters — and thus the public — with more context and insight on their work. Public records requests can  sit unanswered for unreasonable lengths of time. We became hopeful for real change when the Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to establish a new transparency advisory committee, and when officials agreed to create an online public request portal to track and manage requests. But we have not seen the shift to a more transparent county government that the committee presented and the request portal is taking longer to roll out than we would have liked. The same problems continue and it’s happening at a detriment to the community. We hope this award will remind San Diego County that the public deserves transparency.

Sunshine Award: Trust SD Coalition

SD-SPJ’s Sunshine Award goes to a journalist or community member who went above and beyond to make the government more transparent and hold elected officials accountable. This year’s recipient is the TRUST SD Coalition, an alliance of 30-plus community organizations that advocates for government transparency in surveillance.

The coalition formed in 2019 to address the city of San Diego’s “smart” street lights, which were being used for surveillance without the public’s knowledge or consent. Since then, TRUST SD has written two city of San Diego ordinances that outline how the city acquires and operates surveillance technology, such as streetlight cameras, noise-detecting microphones, body-worn cameras and license plate readers. 

TRUST SD’s first ordinance, adopted by the City Council last April, established a privacy advisory board to provide community oversight on surveillance proposals, with seats reserved for residents who have been historically affected. Its second, called the Transparent and Responsible Use of Surveillance Technology ordinance, was adopted last August. It ensures that any proposed surveillance measures are reviewed by the City Council initially and annually, and guarantees that these meetings allow feedback from the public, with sessions held in districts that will be affected. 

These achievements, in addition to the coalition’s ongoing educational and advocacy work, have significantly improved transparency and protected San Diegans’ civil liberties.