Milk the Story

I can’t recall odder coverage in my five years as a Times-Standard reader. Ghilarducci disappeared for a week and the T-S reported the news with a 429-word story. It devoted more words to the guy with the Hitler assassination attempt documents. Since that first story, five reporters worked on Creamery stories, not counting a column by James Faulk. But it would be better to put one reporter on full-time. Five reporters working part time on a story can’t develop sources. Remember how many stories Thadeus Greenson wrote about former police chief Dave Gunderson. The Creamery affects far more people than one crazy cop in a town of 1,100 people.

Six journalists, 10 stories, and the reader is left with more questions than answers. The longest story didn’t come out until March 28, and that one was shorter than this column.

What about the milk? When I grab a carton of organic Humboldt Creamery milk I wonder how the creamery separates the organic cows/milk from the non-organic. That was before I had any doubts about the guy running the operation or the finances of it.

In Dan Barry’s story, farmer John Vevoda says that the Creamery’s collapse has put him in a cash crisis. He’ll be forced to give his cows cheaper feed. As a milk buyer I ask: Can he do that? Do the milk producers not dictate the quality of feed? How bad a feed quality are we talking? Are there farmers even worse off that will use the worst feed, and how does that affect what’s in my kid’s sippy cup?

As investigators pore through the Creamery’s cooked books, is anyone checking out the cows and the equipment? You might recall that shoddy operations at a one peanut plant forced an entire nation of school kids off peanut butter. Meanwhile I feel for Vevoda, who Barry said threw up in the middle of the night because of the stress this has caused. What are our other farmers going through? How as a community should we react? Is there anything we need to do?

James Faulk gave us this: “So, here’s to hoping that Humboldt Creamery lands on its feet, that it succeeds despite what may have been the dishonest machinations of its former CEO, and that it continues to function as an example of what a locally branded company, one that stays true to its roots, can do. And I for one will be buying Humboldt Creamery milk.”

He wrote: “I submit this column to the universe as a cosmic hail Mary on behalf of the company …”

We don’t need a Hail Mary. We need good information. It is hard for me to argue that the community needs to support the local paper, when people who comment to the paper’s articles ask better questions than do the reporters who bylined the articles. The acting head of the company won’t comment? Find other sources. In a small town it is hard to keep secrets. There’s 200 employees at the company. Find them and call them. Find the dairy economist at Berkeley who can explain the ramifications. Maybe the cheesery up the road has a clue what’s going on. This doesn’t take investigative reporting. It takes old-fashioned reporting. You talk to one person after another until you figure out what the hell is going on. And then you let your readers know. That’s what the Enterprise is doing. That’s what the T-S needs to do.

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FIVE Comments

Comment / By Capdiamont / April 2, 2009, 7:13 a.m.

“At home he’s got four kinds, including a three-month old baby. ”

kids maybe?

Comment / By Ryan Burns / April 2, 2009, 9:19 a.m.

Right you are, Cappy. It’s fixed now.

Comment / By Buggery / April 2, 2009, 11:30 a.m.

So wait, the NY Times sends out a reporter to write the first of a series of pieces on the impact of our nation’s economic crisis, he speaks with a well-known dairyman and just what about that 1,620-word epic was news?

Please, go read the piece, I did, three or four times. Vevoda and his family are getting hit hard. The other dairymen are getting hit hard. They are all struggling to pay bills.

There is nothing, absolutely nothing in that piece that gave us some new insight, a new piece of information regarding Ghilarducci’s financial shenanigans, how it happened, what happened and how it’s going to be fixed.

The only thing compelling, at least in Burstiner’s view, is that it was written by an employee of the august NY Times and therefore vastly outstrips the T-S in its coverage. I wonder where the NY Times writer got his tip?

Comment / By Benjamin Rush Payne / April 8, 2009, 7:41 p.m.

Great reporting,Ms.Burstiner.Whatever are you doing here? You should be polishing your craft with the likes of Cambell Brown,Matt Laur,and that crew. Your good,too good for this neck of the woods.Hope to see you anchor primetime.

Comment / By Glenn Franco Simmons / April 23, 2009, 1:31 a.m.

As one who has criticized Marcy, she is 100 percent correct in her analysis.

Caroline Titus has done an excellent job.

It is a sad day when out-of-the area media break the story of Humboldt Creamery’s filing for bankruptcy.

For full disclosure, I once worked for the Times-Standard, Caroline Titus, and I was the founding managing editor of The Eureka Reporter.

However, one has to give credit where credit is due, and this article shows what happens when there is a lack of competition.

In case you are interested, you can now subscribe to The Ferndale Enterprise online.

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