Wyomingites prefer free news and trust local journalists, new survey says

A new survey, conducted by the Wyoming Local News Fund, asks Wyoming residents how they use local news and their level of trust.
The new survey is the first of its kind. It comes as many find Wyoming is on the brink of becoming a news desert. (Judy van der Velden / Flickr)

Wyomingites across demographics prefer to get their news online and would rather not pay for it. These are some of the findings in a new wide-ranging survey of 740 Wyomingites, conducted by the Wyoming Local News Fund. Melissa Cassutt, the group’s director, said, in general, there is trust in local journalists.

“An overwhelming percentage of people responded, ‘Yes, I think local journalists are in touch with the community.’ Like 75 percent said that and that’s across all demographics, which I think is an indication of trust,” Cassutt said.

But respondents did have confusion about how money influences news coverage.

“They don’t understand where the money goes, how the money is collected, the difference between the business side of a news organization, the editorial side. Where are those two connected? Who makes the decisions? And I think there’s a real opportunity for the news industry to start to pull back that curtain a little bit,” she said.

Cassutt said the survey is the first of its kind. She said it was important to conduct such a study now since Wyoming is on the brink of becoming a news desert with some counties about to lose their newspapers.

Her group will use the survey to develop a strategic plan for supporting news organizations going forward.

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About Melodie Edwards | Wyoming Public Media

Melodie Edwards is the host and producer of WPM's award-winning podcast The Modern West. Her Ghost Town(ing) series looks at rural despair and resilience through the lens of her hometown of Walden, Colorado. She has been a radio reporter at WPM since 2013, covering topics from wildlife to Native American issues to agriculture. Her civil discourse project called "I Respectfully Disagree" brought together people in the state, modeling how people find compromise to make change. One of these conversations, "Time Heals All Wounds," won a national PMJA award. She is also the recipient of a national PRNDI award for her investigation of the reservation housing crisis and several regional Edward R. Murrow Awards, two for "best use of sound." Melodie grew up in Walden, Colorado, where her father worked in the oilfield and timber industries and her mother was the editor of the Jackson County Star. Later, her parents ran an Orvis fly fishing store there. She graduated with an MFA from the University of Michigan on a Colby Fellowship and received two Hopwood Awards for fiction and nonfiction. She was the first person to receive the Pattie Layser Greater Yellowstone Writing Fellowship through the Wyoming Arts Council and was the recipient of the Doubleday Wyoming Arts Council Award for Women. She's the author of two books, Akoreka and the League of Crows, a young adult novel, and Hikes Around Fort Collins. Melodie and her husband own Night Heron Books and Coffeehouse. She also loves to putz in the garden and backpack and ski in the mountains with her twin daughters, her husband and her dog.

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