From Publisher Judy Hodgson:

Today Carrie Peyton Dahlberg takes over as editor of the North Coast Journal. I’ll tell you a little more about Carrie below. But first I’d like to acknowledge and thank the entire Journal team for weathering the past several months of transition.

In particular, I’d like to single out acting editor Ryan Burns and staff writer Heidi Walters. The two have been functioning more or less as co-editors, all the while keeping up on their staff writer duties and blogging. Ryan has been chief traffic cop in the editorial department, coordinating story assignments for staff, freelancers and interns, in addition to responding to the public. (Ryan declined, by the way, to apply for the permanent position of editor, preferring to return to full-time reporting.) Heidi has been handling the letters to the editor, editing copy and acting as liaison to the production department. The third and fourth legs of the stool that kept the editorial department functioning smoothly, of course, are Bob Doran, the Journal‘s veteran arts and culture editor, and Andrew Goff, calendar editor, cartoonist, writer and more.

And now, about the Journal‘s new editor:

Carrie Peyton Dahlberg is a journalist and educator whose work has appeared in numerous newspapers, magazines and websites including Inside Science News Service, the American Association for the Advancement of Science and Yoga Journal. She worked for 23 years at the Sacramento Bee newspaper, where she won national and regional environmental and medical reporting awards and also was an assistant city editor and copy desk chief. Before joining the Bee, Peyton Dahlberg was a reporter or editor on newspapers in California, New York state and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as a researcher for a magazine in Germany. She has a master’s degree in science journalism from Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. Peyton Dahlberg has taught reporting and editing courses at California State University, Sacramento, and served as a writing coach at Columbia University. She is relocating to the Eureka area with her husband, their two cats, and as she said, “far too many books.” See her Linkedin profile here.

— Judy Hodgson

A note from the editor:

You’re probably looking at this Web page because you expect to find something worthwhile here. Maybe it’s calendar listings or columns. Maybe it’s arts coverage or a deeper look at the news, explored in ways that give you something to think about. I’m not going to mess with that.

As the new editor of the North Coast Journal, I’m going to try to build on what already works, and bring another pair of hands, ears and eyes to writing about what matters here.

Because I’m new to Humboldt County, I can pretty much guarantee that I’ll blunder now and then, misunderstanding the place or getting something screamingly wrong. Tell me. Let me know when the Journal delights you, when it infuriates you, and when it disappoints you. We won’t always agree, but I will listen. Let me know if you’ve wondered about writing for the Journal. Arts and entertainment editor Bob Doran would like to hear from writers interested in the arts, and I’m looking for someone who wants to write about the outdoors. You can reach me at carriepeytondahlberg@northcoastjournal.com, or 442-1400, extension 321. Because I’m new here, you won’t see my byline much at first. I need to learn a little more before I can write anything intelligent.

I’ve been visiting the North Coast a couple of times a year for the past decade. My husband and I have long planned to move here. We’ve stayed in Trinidad and McKinleyville, Eureka and Arcata. So while there’s plenty I don’t know yet, there are a few things I do know about Humboldt’s coast. I know that the Arcata Bottoms, on a day when sun breaks through clouds, can take my breath away. I know that I can watch of flock of wheeling dunlins as if I were watching a ballet, transfixed by the patterns of light and dark. I know I love Loleta Cheese Factory’s roasted garlic cheddar, Ramone’s scones, Japhy’s soups and just about everybody’s microbrews. And that’s a start.

 

  — Carrie Peyton Dahlberg

Ryan Burns worked for the Journal from 2008 to 2013, covering a diverse mix of North Coast subjects,...

Join the Conversation

21 Comments

  1. Welcome! Just keep a sense of humor and the wackiness we expect from the Journal, along with hard-hitting news, and we’ll be happy!

  2. Welcome, Carrie! You’ve got a great bunch of people working for you. Good luck with the move — and the move forward!

  3. Welcome and best wishes to Ms. Dahlberg.

    I’d like to add that I agree that Ryan Burns and Heidi Walters did a great job of keeping things going and continuing to produce quality journalism, in the midst of a very challenging and fluid situation. Well done, Ryan and Heidi!

  4. Welcome, I would like to add that Ryan did a bang up job, and is a solid asset to have on a investigative team. I hope you do not have the same world view from the 1980s that Hank S. had in relating to the things going on around us. May your stay be more stable than Abate’s.

  5. That’s not something the real Will Rogers would have said. Carrie’s well familiar with Humboldt, has visited here a lot and even owns a home here. She’s a fine working journalist with little drama potential for you to work with. But thanks for the swipe; it demonstrates what I told her about the facts-optional blog chatterers – just to ignore them.

  6. I agree, Kevin, but keep in mind Tom owned a house here too, as he never tired of telling us….

  7. Sorry, but Hodgson hired outside our community, thus demonstrating her contempt for us. We should return the favor.

  8. Hodgson has hired an editor in chief from outside our community who asures us that “I need to learn a little more before I can write anything intelligent.” What? An editor in chief should have a decade or so of experience with our issues. Surely, a local editor could have filled this job–and hit the ground running.

  9. Thanks for the welcoming attitude, EAP 6:29, but you could have just said, “Gee, she sounds thoughtful.”

  10. Hi Buzz,

    I think you misread. The comment written at 6:29 am was DIRECTED at E.A.P.’s insistence that the hiring should have been local & specifically at the comment “hit the ground running!”

    Please read the posts to which you are responding carefully so as not to waste everyone’s time.

    Speaking of wasting people’s time, I’m sorry I don’t know how to embed links, so to see the two hilarious mash-ups, you’ll have to cut & paste the links which I’ve provided.

    Thank you.

  11. To Whom It May Concern:

    I am finished commenting on this thread & only made a second comment to clarify the misinterpretation of my original post. My primary purpose was to share two links which I find to be fantastically funny, in case someone else could appreciate the digital masterpieces which I believe them to be.

    Thank you & Have a Nice Day

  12. I’d also like to thank Ryan for a great job as acting editor (and am glad to hear he wasn’t considered for full editor because he wants to continue his reporting and writing – which are quite valuable I believe). Also a welcome to Carrie – I think it is an asset to get someone with her experience and outside views. I just don’t understand the concept of “too many books”…

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