MediaNews Group
Walnut Creek, California, United States • Founded in 1874 • Trust Project news partner since
Winner of the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting for Ghost Ship fire coverage, the East Bay Times is a daily print and digital newspaper with a full range of state, national, international and sports news that covers and serves the San Francisco East Bay Area, including Contra Costa and Alameda counties
Previously published as the Oakland Tribune and Contra Costa Times, East Bay Times has roots going back to its first publication date of 1874. It served as the community’s information pipeline during the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and won a Pulitzer Prize in 1989 for photography documenting the Loma Prieta earthquake.
Today, the publication aims to inform, educate, engage and tell the critically important stories that matter most to the community.
East Bay Times inherits best practices policies from its parent news organization Bay Area News Group.
The Bay Area News Group is focused on informing Bay Area communities through accurate and compelling stories to make an impact in Bay Area communities.
The Bay Area News Group's policy states it is committed to the highest ethical standards, with fairness and accuracy among its core values.
The Bay Area News Group’s ethics policy covers fairness and accuracy in reporting; use of unidentified sources; quotations and attribution; bylines, datelines and credit lines; meals, tickets and travel and gifts and sample products.
The ethics policy also addresses credibility and conflicts of interest. Its policy is that staff members should avoid online and real-world activities that could conflict with their jobs. The policy covers financial holdings, freelancing, use of company property while freelancing, radio and television, honorariums, connections and relationships.
The Mercury News and East Bay Times are part of the Bay Area News Group (BANG). In April 2016, Bay Area News Group consolidated its several major daily newspapers into two regional publications: The Mercury News, which serves Silicon Valley and the Peninsula, and the East Bay Times, which serves Oakland, Alameda County and Contra Costa County. Further coverage is provided by additional Bay Area News Group publications including the Marin Independent Journal and dozens of community weeklies.
All of the Bay Area News Group publications are owned by MediaNews Group, which is based in Denver, Colorado. MediaNews Group is a privately-owned company. The majority owner is Alden Global Capital, a a privately held investment firm based in New York City. As a private company, MediaNews Group makes business decisions that keep shareholders in mind, but it says editorial decisions are independent.
The company’s largest properties include The Orange County Register, The Denver Post, The Mercury News, East Bay Times, Riverside Press-Enterprise, Los Angeles Daily News and St. Paul Pioneer Press. Other MediaNews Group publications are listed at http://www.medianewsgroup.com/our-brands/.
The Bay Area News Group says that inclusiveness is at the heart of thinking and acting as journalists, and that the complex issues society faces requires respect for different viewpoints — with race, class, generation, gender and geography all affecting points of view. Its policy is to reflect these differences in the reporting of its newsrooms, with the aim of creating better, more nuanced stories and a better-informed community. The group says it is interested in hearing from different ethnic, civic and business groups in the communities it serves.
The Bay Area News Group's policy is that it corrects all significant errors that are brought to the attention of the editors.
The group says that a correction will include the date of the error and the location of the article, if it appeared in print. The policy is for material errors to be acknowledged promptly in a straightforward correction. The group explains that it may repeat the error in a correction if doing so helps to provide clarity.
The group says it does not generally “unpublish” content or remove details such as names from its websites and archives other than for legal reasons, but says it does correct and update articles as necessary if there is a significant factual error.
The group's policy is that unnamed sources are to be used only when the news value warrants it and the information can’t be obtained any other way. When forced to rely on them, the group's newsrooms policy is to not rely on them as the only basis for a story, and does not allow them to make personal attacks. It asks that its newsrooms describe them with as much detail as possible and tells readers why the source requested or was granted anonymity. The group tries to apply these standards when using unnamed sources cited by other news organizations, wire services, blogs or independent journalists. When using information distributed via social media, the newsrooms are asked to verify the identity of the person posting the information.
The Trust Project is an international consortium of news organizations building standards of transparency and working with technology platforms to affirm and amplify journalism’s commitment to transparency, accuracy, inclusion and fairness so that the public can make informed news choices. It was founded and is led by award-winning journalist Sally Lehrman.
Craig Newmark, founder of craigslist, was our original funder, through the Trustworthy Journalism Initiative of Craig Newmark Philanthropies. Google followed with their financial support. Our funders also have included Democracy Fund, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and Facebook. Funders. Trust Project policies and the Trust Indicators are shaped and enforced independently from our funding sources.