2 minute read
EDITOR’S NOTE
access to stable housing, nutritious food, quality healthcare and advanced education. They want a world where people with uteruses have the right to choose whether or not they want to give birth. A world where universal healthcare separates the ability to maintain physical wellbeing from full-time employment. A world where free childcare and college education means a single parent can still follow their professional dreams. A world where a physician isn’t committing a felony by providing genderaffirming care to a 25-year-old transgender individual. A world where capitalism doesn’t justify endless extraction.
Community journalism localizes these issues and brings them home, where change can truly begin. When done correctly, journalism does much more than merely inform: It speaks truth to power.
I hope I’ve made some positive changes through my work at Boulder Weekly, even if that’s simply to help people feel seen and heard. I know this job has changed me for the better. I’ve expanded my mind and heart exponentially by engaging with countless people across many walks of life. Thank you for sharing your stories with me. Thanks for calling me out when I was wrong … and when I was right. Thanks for showing me things I never would have seen otherwise. Thanks for reading.
As I close my chapter at the paper, I’m ecstatic to welcome the new editor-in-chief, Shay Castle, whose work with the Daily Camera, and then her own enterprise, Boulder Beat, exemplifies her versatility, resiliency, empathy and dedication as a journalist. She has a fantastic team of reporters behind her: arts and culture editor Jezy Gray, a prolific writer and crackerjack editor whose title belies the weight he carries around the office; reporter Will Matuska, who got his first experience in journalism at Minnesota
Public Radio before bringing his talents to Boulder Weekly; and reporter Kaylee Harter, a journalism graduate from Ohio State who came to Boulder Weekly after dipping her toes in the nonprofit world at Community Resource Center in Denver. It’s a small but mighty staff, and each of them, including Shay, has lifted my spirits when I didn’t think I could do the job. My gratitude to and respect for each of them is boundless.
Thanks to publisher Fran Zankowski for asking me to challenge myself in the role of editor-in-chief. I didn’t always like it, Fran, but I invariably loved it.
My final plea as editor is to ask you to continue to support local journalism — you’re already doing it by reading this. Boulder Weekly is a truly independent newspaper, staffed by people who live in your community. This isn’t “the media,” these are your neighbors. Become a regular donor to the paper at boulderweekly.com/ donate, share BW stories on socials and write letters to the editor (letters@boulderweekly.com).
May your fortune be as rewarding as mine at Boulder Weekly.
Caitlin Rockett was a reporter and editor at Boulder Weekly for 10 years. She has freelanced at alternative newsweeklies across the country, including LA Weekly. She’s now the director of communications at Out Boulder County, which facilitates connection, advocacy, education, research and programming to ensure LGBTQ+ people thrive.