Thursday, May 27, 2010

Jersey pride and punishment

BP British Petroleum Co., Ltd., 1922 Union Jac...Image via Wikipedia














Today's Jersey-centric front page in The Record of Woodland Park even has an authentic whiff of corruption -- another charge against suspended Hackensack Police Chief Ken Zisa. But what about all the other stories the Super Bowl-giddy editors are ignoring?


What about the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico? Has this important environmental story ever been on Page 1? The inability of BP to stop the leak after more than a month has everyone feeling powerless -- including readers who never see news of their towns in the paper. 

Why doesn't The Record ever identify the company as British Petroleum or report it is a foreign company? Are drivers boycotting BP stations, as people of my generation have long boycotted Exxon stations for the Alaska spill? Is this payback for the American Revolution?

What about the Jamaican community in Hackensack, Teaneck and Englewood? Aren't their views on gun violence in their homeland of legitimate concern to head Assignment Editor Deirdre Sykes, who has eaten her fair share of Jamaican rum cakes from an Englewood baker? Have those cakes made her lazy?

I appeal to Sykes, Editor Frank Scandale and others to get their heads out of their asses, and to Publisher Stephen A. Borg to tear himself away from his palatial estate in Tenafly and pay some attention to the many stories that are going unreported out of laziness, incompetence or worse. The Record is dying a slow, journalistic death.


A story on the hunt for a reputed drug lord in the island capital of Kingston -- way back on Page A-19 today -- has an incorrect headline. The Jamaican death toll stood at 48; the head says "reaches 50." And why is the wire editor wasting space on frogs closing a road in Greece (A-15)? Baffling.


Hackensack readers are so bored with coverage in the past year of the police chief's legal troubles, and Staff Writer Monsy Alvarado is such a timid reporter, she can't even get Zisa to comment on the occasions she has seen him. Pathetic. It's Alvarado, likely at Sykes' request, who has ignored just about all other Hackensack news in the past two years. 


Joseph Ax, the Teaneck reporter, has a strong story in Local (L-3) about pay-to-play and the township auditor and an Englewood budget story (all six paragraphs) is credited to Karen Sudol, the Tenafly reporter. It looks like Englewood reporter Giovanna Fabiano was pulled off her beat to help Alvarado with the Zisa story.


In Better Living, it is food-less Thursday.
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4 comments:

  1. Victor E. Sasson wrote:
    "Why doesn't The Record ever identify the company as British Petroleum or report it is a foreign company?"

    British Petroleum became BP Amoco following a merger with the American oil giant in 1998. After a series of further acquisitions, the company formally took the name BP Plc in 2001.

    Sources:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BP

    http://www.bp.com/genericarticle.do?categoryId=2012968&contentId=2001578

    http://www.bp.com/sectiongenericarticle.do?categoryId=9014823&contentId=7027814

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  2. The CEO I saw on TV was English, so was the merger with Amoco a takeover? Seems likely. Dunkin' Donuts also is English-owned. Both companies haven't been good for America. Maybe the U.S. can revoke BP's right to do business here.

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  3. Actually Amoco was bought out by BP. Someone I know who worked his whole career for Amoco said he was devastated, because Amoco was a very safety-conscious company.

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  4. That's interesting, because this morning on radio news I heard BP's CEO deny in his best Oxford English that the company compromised safety. We can only take comfort in knowing that plaintiffs' lawyers will try to cripple BP with negligence judgments of hundreds of millions of dollars. Suits will be filed by the families of the 11 workers killed, the commercial fishing industry, the state of Louisiana and others. Unfortunately, the civil courts work slowly. Maybe, the attorney general in Louisiana will get creative and charge BP with negligent homicide in the workers' deaths.

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