COMMENT
Unfinished
Business
As
the Jayson Blair debate makes clear,
we
still need diversity programs
Jayson Blairs
flameout at The New York Times was the result of many things,
not the least of which was Blairs inability to do his job
honestly, whether because he was out of his depth or sick or both.
By all accounts, Blair is brash and aggressive, a talented writer
with a seemingly endless energy to pursue both stories and career
connections. As such, he fit nicely into the star system of the
former Times editor, Howell Raines.
Blair is also black, and that played a role, too. The Timess
commitment to diversifying its newsroom is well established (The
Wall Street Journals Holman Jenkins, Jr. called it a "nearly
gothic hang-up"), and Raines admitted as much when he told
his staff that, "as a white man from Alabama," he gave
Blair "one chance too many," at least in part because
he is black.
Yet in the polarized debate over diversity that has erupted in
Blairs wake, the issue of race has often been confined to
two extremes. One extreme holds that race had nothing to do with
the Blair affair, and to even bring it up is to somehow imply
that Blair plagiarized and fabricated because he is black (why
wasnt race mentioned, this argument goes, when Stephen Glass,
The New Republics serial fabricator, was exposed in 1998?).
The other extreme holds that race had everything to do
with it, and that Blair is exhibit A in the case against all deliberate
attempts to diversify the workplace.
Both arguments assume a color-blind society that does not exist.
The former because it willfully ignores how Blairs race
surely complicated his bosss attitude toward him; the latter
because it inevitably leads to the shallow conclusion that with
the snap of our fingers we can be free of the weight of a long
racial history. Neither argument helps us move beyond the status
quo, which is unacceptable. U.S. newsrooms are 12.5 percent minority
(against a national population that is 31 percent minority), according
to the American Society of Newspaper Editors 2003 survey.
Less than 10 percent of newsroom "supervisors"
the managerial class are members of minority groups. Meanwhile,
for complex reasons, the pool of young people of color choosing
to enter journalism is actually shrinking, as Wanda S. Lloyd,
who directs the Freedom Forums Diversity Institute, pointed
out in cjr last year. All this as the communities we cover grow
steadily more diverse.
So in addition to the social argument for affirmative action,
there is now, for the media especially, an economic argument for
it.
Last month, the Supreme Court affirmed the use of race in college
admissions, and we in the media must remain similarly committed
to diversity and to the kinds of programs that brought Jayson
Blair to the Times. Such programs crack open worlds that might
otherwise remain closed to so many people. Once inside, they can
thrive and enrich the news report.
What gets lost in the polarized post-Blair debate is a candid
discussion of the challenge of managing diversity within the newsroom.
As David K. Shipler writes in his 1997 book A Country of Strangers:
Blacks and Whites in America: "Although affirmative action
brings people into the same room, it does not teach them how to
deal with one another once they are there. Every workplace is
a warren of unseen walls and barriers." All young reporters
need nurturing. But young minority reporters often face a range
of issues and emotions their white counterparts do not: the pressure,
real or imagined, of white assumptions about their ability to
do the job; pressure to try to represent an entire race or ethnicity.
"When you have more in common, on the surface, with a rap
star than you do with a newspaperman whos got thirty years
in the profession," writes Joshunda Sanders, a twenty-five-year-old
black reporter at the San Francisco Chronicle, "there is
a level of discomfort that is hard to describe."
Whether it is true, as some have argued, that in the post-Jayson
Blair world all minority hires will be scrutinized and questioned
more than ever, the fact that so many seem to believe it only
makes managing diversity all the more challenging.
The other side of this balancing act is that it is a form of racism
not to scrutinize and question, not to hold reporters
hired through diversity programs to rigorous standards. Macarena
Hernandez, the young reporter who briefly served with Blair on
a diversity internship at the Times, and who later busted him
when he plagiarized her story in the San Antonio Express-News,
put it this way in an op-ed piece in the Los Angeles Times: "If
The New York Times was sincerely committed to diversity, Blairs
editors would have chopped off his fingers at the first sign of
trouble instead of helping him polish his claws." Hernandez,
by the way, reports that she received serious and thorough mentoring
during her stint at the Times.
Someday, we hope, the idea of a diversity program will be seen
as a quaint and unnecessary vestige because we will have become
the color-blind society of Martin Luther Kings famous dream.
Were not there yet. Diversity programs are a way to move
in that direction, and thus are worth the complicated trip.