CalMatters reporter Robert Lewis interviews Amanda Barrera in Parker, Arizona on Nov. 28, 2022. Photo by Miguel Gutierrez Jr., CalMatters

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CalMatters has carved out a leadership role as a trusted brand and “go-to” hub for in-depth news and information on statewide issues.

Our work has led to changes in policy, new legislation and investigations and discussions at the Capitol, in political groups and beyond — and because of our collaborative approach, people across the state are more engaged in solving the problems California is tackling.

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Awards

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We’re proud that our team and our work have been recognized and honored with many local, state, and national awards.

Northern California Area Emmy Awards

Winner, Criminal Justice

CalMatters reporter Nigel Dear in collaboration with reporter Julie Watts of CBS Sacramento


How California investigates shootings by law enforcement officers of unarmed civilians

National Headliner Awards

Third Place, Staff Photo Portfolio

CalMatters’ visuals team: visuals editor Miguel Gutierrez Jr., assistant editor Adriana Heldiz and photographer Larry Valenzuela


Judges: the award is for “a portfolio of pictures taken throughout the year, judged by the power of its best pictures.”

CalMatters 2023 Photography

Best of the West Awards

First Place, Business and Financial Reporting

Alexei Koseff


Judges: “Alexei Kosoff takes readers on a compelling journey through communities that got caught up in the ‘green rush’ of legalized pot, only to see their hopes dashed by harsh realities. He explains what went wrong with the economics of the industry while weaving in heart-rending tales of numerous people who are losing their livelihoods.”

Emerald Triangle communities were built on cannabis. Legalization has pushed them to the brink

Investigative Reporters & Editors Awards

Finalist, Print/Online – Division III

Robert Lewis, Jeremia Kimelman, Miguel Gutierrez Jr. and Wendy Fry


Judges: “In recent years, nearly half of California’s hazardous waste has left the Golden State, much of it bound for states with weaker regulatory laws. This impressive package drove home how a huge industry has carved out disturbing workarounds of California’s strict environmental laws.”

Hidden Hazards: Toxic Waste in California

California Politics & Public Policy Awards

Sacramento Press Club

First Place, TV California Politics and Policy Coverage Short-Form

Julie Watts of CBS13 in collaboration with reporting by CalMatters’ Byrhonda Lyons


Judges: “This is a good use of a former inmate’s story to illustrate the importance of rehab. The coverage made a good case for why CDCR should be willing to provide information to the legislature and public. The care and preparation that went into the production was evident.”

S.T.O.P.: You’re paying rent and rehab for former prisoners but California isn’t tracking your money

Covering Climate Now Awards

First Place, Long Form Writing

Julie Cart


Judges: “Audiences need to know not only that the planet is on fire but why that’s happening and what can be done about it.”

Trial by fire: The trauma of fighting California’s wildfires

California Journalism Awards

California News Publishers Association

First Place, General Excellence

Staff


Judges: “CalMatters’ digital platform presents insightful political news in an extremely engaging yet digestible way. The reporting dives deep into complex topics while catching the eye with amazing visual content. The headlines are attention-grabbing, the photography is superb and each vertical has extensive, important coverage.”

First Place, Informational Graphic

Jeremia  Kimelman, John  Osborn D’Agostino, Erica Yee


This honor is for the drought and water tracker that  provides a current and historical perspective on water issues facing the state using a variety of publicly available datasets.

Second Place, Coverage of the Environment

Rachel Becker


Judges: “This reporting provides so much context that it is actually a road map to helping fix some of our most vexing issues. The graphics are extremely informative as well. The reporter provides all this information while at the same time telling compelling stories.”

How can California boost its water supply?

Second Place, Coverage of the Business and the Economy

Alexei Koseff


Judges: “Comprehensive reporting that sheds light on multiple players in the cannabis industry, as well as the political implications of Newsom’s support and eventual inattention to the cause. Each story flowed nicely with thorough reporting highlighting personal stories from all over the state.”

Problems facing legal cannabis

Second Place, Feature Photo

Martin do Nascimiento


Judges: “Well lit endearing portrait. Maybe a slightly different crop on the bottom to resolve the pinky finger distraction. Expressions are great for the concern.”

Photo in a story about an infant formula shortage

Third Place, Health Coverage

Kristen Hwang


Judges: “The depth of on-the-ground reporting here is impressive, and the writing stands out. Nice work.”

Surging syphilis rates

Third Place, Coverage of Youth and Education

Mikhail Zinshteyn, Julie  Watts, Michaella  Huck


Judges: “Reporters Mikhail Zinshteyn, Julie Watts and Michaella Huck took what could have been routine data analysis and instead uncovered a flaw in how the CSU system reports progress among Black students. The benefit of digging deeper.”

Series on low graduation rates for Black students at California State University

Third Place, Newsletter

Emily Hoeven


Judges: “impressed by the design, quality of writing and wide variety of topics featured in this engaging and useful newsletter. The bullet points help draw a reader in and focus on the most important parts of the day’s news, especially important for readers looking for bite-size information and quick access to California’s top headlines.”

Hoeven’s newsletters at CalMatters, including one featuring legislators’ trips on climate change

Journalism Excellence Awards

Asian American Journalists Association

First Place, Science/Environment/Health Reporting

Kristen Hwang


Judges: “Sexually transmitted diseases are too often a taboo topic, and rates have only worsened during the pandemic as Hwang expertly covers in her reported feature on congenital syphilis rates in California. She takes on the discomfort and sensitivity of the subject with great care and empathy, and captures the heartbreak, uncertainty, and fear in pregnant people’s voices as they hear a positive diagnosis of congenital syphilis — highlighting a growing public health issue in a racially, economically diverse landscape of the Central Valley of California.”

Congenital syphilis rates soar across California as public health funding dwindled prior to the pandemic

Northern California Area Emmy Awards

Winner

CalMatters reporter Julie Cart in collaboration with reporter Julie Watts of CBS Sacramento


Trial by Fire

Finalist

CalMatters’ reporters Jeanne Kuang, Alejandro Lazo and Lil Kalish with project editor Denise Amos in partnership with reporter Julie Watts of CBS Sacramento


Wage Theft: When Bosses Don’t Pay

National Headliner Awards

First Place, TV Business and Consumer Reporting

CalMatters’ reporters Jeanne Kuang, Alejandro Lazo and Lil Kalish with project editor Denise Amos in partnership with reporter Julie Watts of CBS Sacramento


Judges: “Low-wage and minority workers are most likely to be underpaid for their time on the clock, but the CBS Sacramento – CalMatters team uncovers more ways in which California businesses may be shortchanging workers’ paychecks, especially if those workers are unaware of labor laws and employee rights. Even when challenging employers for their due amount, various state systems hinder the process and businesses don’t end up paying out, but the reporting uncovers solutions being piloted with success that could be adopted state-wide, and beyond.”

Wage Theft: When Bosses Don’t Pay

Best of the West Awards

First Place, Growth and environment reporting

Julie Cart


Judges: “An amazing series about the psychological price paid by the California Fire Service because of the escalating intensity and frequency of wildfires caused by climate change. A terrific example of beat reporting that leads to unprecedented access to a group therapy session by Cal Fire firefighters, gasp-worthy stats and quotes, and ability to write with authority about complex topics and take the reader inside a new world as if they were right there in the thick of a forest fire. Beautiful writing. Ryan’s story was gut-wrenching.”

Trial by fire: The trauma of fighting California’s wildfires

First Place, Feature Writing: Long Form

Julie Cart


Trial by fire: The trauma of fighting California’s wildfires

Judges: “A knockout series on a subject on which more people need to be informed.”

First Place, Informational Graphic

Jeremia Kimelman, John Obsborn D’Agostino and Erica Yee

Judges: “The ‘California Drought and Water Tracker’ by CalMatters is a sophisticated presentation of a huge amount of data,” the judge wrote. “The amount of information being conveyed in presentation would be overwhelming if not for the way in which the interface is designed. The presentation includes maps, diagrams, charts, graphs, tables, timelines and data visualizations that help readers understand the complexities of the issues impacting water in California. I particularly liked the sophisticated way in which maps came alive with information throughout the presentation. Really great job bringing a huge volume of data to life!”

Tracking California’s water supplies

2nd Place, Social Justice Reporting

California Divide team


Judges: “The story is a methodical, well-told chronicling of how wages are routinely stolen from some of the state’s hardest workers who keep our society afloat. Labor reporting is too often overlooked, as are low-wage employees who don’t speak English or are vulnerable to exploitation. ‘Unpaid Wages: A Waiting Game’ makes sure these stories are told and has already ensured accountability.”

Unpaid Wages: A Waiting Game

California Politics & Public Policy Awards

Sacramento Press Club

Public Health

Kristen Hwang


Kristen placed first for her stories including an in-depth look at California’s abortion access policy, a story bringing to light soaring congenital syphilis rates as public health funding dwindled prior to the pandemic, and a first-hand look at street teams working to provide homeless health care.

Judges: “Her work demonstrated solid investigative chops, as well as in-depth, fact-based reporting. The judges described the winners’ work as “terrific public policy reporting that gives Californians clear insights into what is and what is not working in the Medi-Cal program.”

Social Justice & Equity

Jocelyn Wiener


Jocelyn placed first for her gripping tale told the story of Lorenzo Mays, an intellectually disabled man who spent years lost in a criminal justice system in California that too often fails people with developmental disabilities and mental illness.

Judges: “The story is thoroughly reported, and the writing is exquisite. It explains the challenges that face courts and social service agencies when they confront the issue of how to handle mentally incompetent accused individuals, and details both failures and some progress in that arena.”

Daily Capitol Coverage

Alexei Koseff


Alexei was awarded first place, along with Dustin Gardiner of the San Francisco Chronicle, for daily Capitol coverage.

Judges: “Alexei impressed with sharp angles about the people and issues shaping state politics and with his engaging prose. His CalMatters piece on the state’s cannabis industry deftly explored the pressure facing Gov. Gavin Newsrom to address problems with a change he championed.”

AWARD

Alejandro Lazo, Jeanne Kuang, Lill Kalish and Erica Yee with CBS 13 Reporter Julie Watts


The team was awarded first place for short form TV California politics and policy coverage.

Judges: “This piece’s focus on wage theft was well-researched and presented in a clear and interesting fashion. They humanized the issue by profiling individuals such as a fast food employee who had not received a raise in 17 years. The judges called the work “a good example of accountability journalism that pointed to lack of enforcement of state law.”

Excellence in Health Care Journalism

Association of Health Care Journalists

Consumer Feature Reporting

Kristen Hwang


CalMatters placed first for Kristen’s reporting on rising congenital syphilis rates accompanied by dwindling public health funding.

Judges: “Solid data, told with color and emotion. We loved how the reporter covered the on-the-ground, door-to-door campaign to help pregnant women understand the danger their unborn baby is facing; it felt like we were there ringing doorbells with them. Mostly, though, this story won because the work and data were there — this important topic was covered thoroughly and well. Excellent job.”

Eppy Awards

Editor & Publisher

Best Online-Only News Website in the Nation


Judges: “Love the interactive features that immerse the reader into a deeper experience,” the judges said. “Great content that’s specific to a defined audience.”

CalMatters

California Journalism Awards

CALIFORNIA NEWS PUBLISHERS

First Place, General Excellence

CalMatters Staff


CalMatters placed first among the largest California news sites
Judges: “CalMatters stood out for its relentless approach to telling engaging stories from multiple perspectives.”

First Place, Newsom Recall Election Coverage

Laurel Rosenhall, Sameea Kamal, Emily Hoeven, Matthew Reagan


Judges: “Great collection of stories that take a fresh look at common element of an election, voting blocs.”

California Recall Election 2021

First Place, Coverage of Youth and Education

Jocelyn Wiener, Erica Yee, Anne Wernikoff


Judges: “Great use of interactive graphics/maps. Also personalized voices helped bring the struggle home.”

How California kids experienced COVID-19 inequality

First Place, Enterprise News Story

Sameea Kamal


Both in our size category and in the overall “open” category.
Judges: “An excellent series explaining the fine details and overall plan for state redistricting. Clear writing as well as fine graphics make the changes in districts easy to understand.”

California redistricting 101: What you need to know

First Place, Investigative Reporting

Robert Lewis and Jeremia Kimelman


Judges: “The research plus the individual perspectives plus the presentation/organization made for a comprehensive and moving narrative that delved deeply with tangible takeaways.”

Waiting for Justice

First Place, Land Use Reporting

Manuela Tobias


Judges: “This is “the” topic of the day in California, and the CalMatters team showed out here. Stellar in-depth but understandable reporting on a complex and dense topic.”

Why is it so difficult to get housing bills through the California Legislature?

Second Place, Public Service

CalMatters Staff


Judges: “Excellent use of graphics, photos, videos and other multimedia. The recall voter guide component of this project is really eye-catching and user-friendly. I appreciate the straightforward presentation of the ‘what he has and hasn’t done’ coverage. That really spells it out for readers and makes it clear what’s been accomplished and what is still lacking. The illustrated guide to the Newsom recall was one of my favorite parts of this entry: fun, unique and easy to follow while not being patronizing. And while all of this is stand-out public service journalism already, the ‘how to vote in the recall election’ guide really drives that point home. Fantastic work.”

Newsom Recall Voter Guide (Stories 1, 2, 3 and 4)

Second Place, Newsom Recall Election Coverage

Ben Christopher


Judges: “Great idea to take what could’ve been a simple story and instead do in-depth reporting about the overall practice of polling and the specific impact the SurveyUSA poll had. Excellent writing, diverse sourcing and use of graphics.”

Polling error: How one survey changed the Newsom recall campaign

Third Place, Youth and Education Coverage

Ricardo Cano and Elizabeth Aguilera


Judges: “Good use of characters in the story.”

Special-needs children still seek help after year adrift

Third Place, Writing

Robert Lewis


Judges: “Exhaustive research and a heartbreaking story.

Outgunned: The story of a woman, an abuser and California’s failing gun control

Second Place, In-Depth Reporting

Rachel Becker, Julie Cart, Jeremia Kimelman


California’s Drought Crisis (Stories 1, 2 and 3)

Fourth Place, Enterprise News

Byrhonda Lyons and Laurel Rosenhall


Judges: “Strong on writing, research and organization; hits the key point of a lack of training at the core of the problem today and likely in the future without action. Mixes the human toll with the data to show personal impact.”

Is California’s new police deadly force law making a difference?

Fourth Place, Feature Story

Ana Ibarra


Judges: “Until I read this story, I had no idea about this topic. Good writing and good visuals.”

COVID lungs: Transplants are last resort for many California patients

Fourth Place, Infographics

John Osborn D’Agostino


Judges: “This interactive put me in the shoes of a legislator. It’s hard work! Very clean presentation. The titles and descriptions for the options were fun to read and kept me engaged. Also valued seeing how my answers compared to other users on the results page.”

Spend the surplus: This game puts you in charge of California’s budget

Fifth Place, Breaking News

Emily Hoeven


Judges: “As its headline makes explicit, the article makes clear California’s standing in the world’s efforts to combat climate change. Its writing deftly highlights the disparity between what Gov. Newsom has been saying and others with different opinions and the relevant knowledge like Assembly Speaker Rendon. Its publication amid the UN conference on climate change in Scotland also underscores the urgency of the matter.”

Assembly leader: California isn’t leading on climate

Online Journalism Awards

Online Journalism Association

Finalist, Explanatory Reporting

Rachel Becker, Julie Cart and Marla Cone


CalMatters was a finalist with the entry “Lessons Learned: Drought Then and Now” amongst finalists national nonprofit newsroom, ProPublica, and collaborative reporting by ProPublica with WBUR.

Finalist, Feature

Robert Lewis


CalMatters was a finalist with the investigative story “Outgunned” amongst finalists of a collaborative project between ProPublica and Alive in Afghanistan, Univision News Digital, ProPublica and the San Francisco Chronicle.

Excellence in Water Journalism

Water Education Foundation

Rita Schmidt Sudman Award

Rachel Becker


Judges: “We’ve been following Rachel’s coverage of water issues for some time now as they often end up in our weekday newsfeed,” Bowles said. “Her reporting has been thorough. It’s no surprise that she has been honored for her reporting before.”

Silver Gavel Award

AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION

Finalist

Robert Lewis


Finalist (Two of the five finalists in this national competition were by Robert.)

Outgunned
Waiting for Justice

State politics and policy awards

SACRAMENTO PRESS CLUB

First Place: Housing and Homelessness Coverage

Manuela Tobias


For a year’s worth of reporting on housing issues.

Finalist: Impact in Journalism

Jocelyn Wiener


California’s Broken System of Nursing Home Oversight

Finalist: Reporting on Racial Justice

Byrhonda Lyons


In Absentia: No Latino Superior Court judges in these majority-Latino California counties

Excellence in Health Care Journalism

ASSOCIATION OF HEALTHCARE JOURNALISTS

Second Place

Barbara Feder Ostrov


From maggots to sex abuse, nursing homes sue California to overturn citations, fines

Online Journalism Awards

ONLINE NEWS ASSOCIATION

Finalist, General Excellence in Online Journalism, Small Newsrooms


CalMatters was one of four finalists for ONA’s top prize for online journalism.
The OJAs are the only comprehensive prizes honoring excellence in digital journalism.
General Excellence Award

Awards for Reporting on the Environment

SOCIETY OF ENVIRONMENTAL JOURNALISTS

First Place, Outstanding Beat Reporting

Rachel Becker


Judges: “Rachel’s “in-depth, yet easy-to-digest reporting on California’s contaminated air and drinking water resources. Her stories on water, in particular, revealed that a number of unaware communities might be consuming water tainted by industrial chemicals — some left in the aftermath of the state’s many wildfires. Her writing was chock full of helpful statistics and underpinned by science in a way that informed but did not overwhelm.”

Excellence in Journalism Awards

SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS NORCAL CHAPTER

Best Scoop

Laurel Rosenhall


Exclusive: California wires mask dealer half a billion dollars, then claws it back

Explanatory Journalism

Jackie Botts, Lo Bénichou and Kate Cimini


Close Quarters: California’s overcrowded homes fuel spread of coronavirus among workers

National Headliner Awards

NATIONAL PRESS CLUB

Online Beat Coverage

Laurel Rosenhall


Judges: “Laurel Rosenhall’s coverage of the California statehouse should be required reading for all statehouse reporters in the country. Her beat coverage this year offered several sure-to-outrage-citizens stories, including how politicians are allowed to set up nonprofits to accept unlimited donations.”

Sigma Awards

Finalists, World’s best data journalism

Jackie Botts, Lo Bénichou and Kate Cimini


Judges: “One of the first stories to link overcrowded housing to the spread of coronavirus.”
Close Quarters

State politics and policy awards

SACRAMENTO PRESS CLUB

Journalist of the Year

Laurel Rosenhall


Laurel also won first place for Beat Reporting, and the Press Club named a scholarship in her honor.
Judges: “Laurel Rosenhall uses tenacious reporting and public records to hold politicians and other powerful people accountable for their decisions and actions.”

Finalist, Impact in Journalism

Jackie Botts, Kate Cimini, Laurence Du Sault and Manuela Tobias


COVID In the Workplace

Finalist, Capitol Enterprise

Lauren Hepler and Stephen Council


How Bank of America Helped Fuel California’s Unemployment Meltdown

Finalist, Environmental Reporting

Rachel Becker


Legacy of a Clean Air Czar

Finalist, Best Multimedia Package

CalMatters Staff


California Election Guide, November 2020

Greater Bay Area Journalism Awards

SAN FRANCISCO PRESS CLUB

First Place, Photo

Anne Wernikoff


Reflections: Bernie Backers

First Place, General News

Jocelyn Wiener


How BofA Fueled California’s Unemployment Meltdown

First place, Investigative

Lauren Hepler and Stephen Council


How BofA Fueled California’s Unemployment Meltdown

First place, Environmental

Rachel Becker and Rebecca Sohn


California’s Toxic Legacy

Second Place, Columns

Ben Christopher


Post-It 2020 Election Coverage

California Journalism Awards

CALIFORNIA NEWS PUBLISHERS

First Place, Public Service

CalMatters Staff


2020 Election Guide

First Place, Pandemic Coverage

CalMatters Staff


Year of Loss series profiling families of COVID victims.

First Place, Data Journalism

Ben Christopher


2020 election data analysis

First Place, Writing

Jocelyn Wiener


Mental health tsunami looms: Can California prevent a surge in suicides?

First Place, Features

Nigel Duara


Judges: “Duara captures the uncertainty from inside, nailing the voices of the frustrated owners frantically looking for answers [and] the servers struggling to make the rent and feed their own families.“
12 Hours in an L.A. restaurant

First Place, Enterprise

Laurel Rosenhall


Judges: “This is true enterprise springing from a reporter who noticed patterns that seemed not to make sense. The conflict of interest was staggering.”

NAACP president aids corporate prop campaigns

Second Place, In-Depth Reporting

Jackie Botts, Lo Bénichou, Kate Cimini and Marla Cone


Judges: “This was an extremely strong entry that could win first place in many years.”
Close Quarters

Second Place, News Photo

Anne Wernikoff


Haight Ashbury Shutdown

Second Place, Informational Graphic

John Osborn D’Agostino and Lo Bénichou


Judges: “ … daily virus tracker loads instantaneously and is packed with useful information.“
Coronavirus Hospitalization Tracker

Second Place, Land-Use Reporting

Julie Cart


Battle at the Beach

Third Place, Feature Story

Elizabeth Aguilera


Judges: “… important and under-told story about the pandemic’s stunting effect on migrant students’ education.”
For some California teens, school closures led to work in the fields

Fourth Place, In-Depth Reporting

Rachel Becker and Rebecca Sohn


Judges: “Excellent examination of contaminated wells that provide drinking water … [showing] how the low rate of well testing left many Californians with no idea what the true extent of contamination is.”
California’s Toxic Legacy of “Forever Chemicals

Fifth Place, Enterprise News Story or Series

Jocelyn Wiener


Judges: “This is journalism with impact, with lawmakers and advocates citing this story before they passed a law to expand mental health parity.“
Why Californians with mental illness are dropping private insurance

Fifth Place, Investigative Reporting

Laurel Rosenhall


Judges: “Sweet Charity made an immediate impact. California’s political ethics commission is now investigating this growing trend. Nice work.
Sweet Charity

Poverty and Inequality Awards

NATIONAL PRESS FOUNDATION

Poverty and Inequality Reporting

Nigel Duara, Orlando Mayorquin, Jackie Botts, Laurence Du Sault and Kate Cimini


Judges: “… highlighted not only the struggles but also the resourcefulness of renters throughout the Golden State. … “The human stories take the reader beyond the policy debates.”
Staying Sheltered

Best of the West

Investigative Journalism, Second Place

Jackie Botts and Kate Cimini


Judges: “Their work changed policies that certainly saved some lives and it was a real work of public service journalism.“
COVID rips through motel rooms of guest workers who pick nation’s produce

Price Child Health and Welfare Journalism Awards

UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO SCHOOL OF LAW CHILDREN’S ADVOCACY INSTITUTE

Price Child Health and Welfare Journalism Award

Elizabeth Aguilera


Pandemic coverage including:

National Headliner Awards

NATIONAL PRESS CLUB

National Headliner Award

Jocelyn Wiener


Breakdown: Mental Health

Local Public Radio News Awards

PUBLIC MEDIA JOURNALISTS ASSOCIATION

Second Place, Podcasts

Laurel Rosenhall


Force of Law

Awards for Reporting on the Environment

SOCIETY OF ENVIRONMENTAL JOURNALISTS

First Honorable Mention

Julie Cart


Judges: “In Cart’s clear, zingy style, she rips into the state’s climate goal playbook and lets readers know what’s working and what hasn’t yet worked.”
Road to Zero

Edward R. Murrow Award

CORPORATION FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTING

California Dream collaboration among KQED, KPCC, KPBS, CapRadio and CalMatters
Graying California

Best of the West

First Place, Project Reporting

Julie Cart, Judy Lin and Byrhonda Lyons


Judges: “May others learn from this supreme example of sharp exposition.“
California’s Worsening Wildfires, Explained

Capitol Weekly

Top 100

Laurel Rosenhall


Judges: “Sacramento has no shortage of great reporters, but Laurel Rosenhall of CalMatters is in a class by herself.”

Excellence in Journalism Awards

SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS NORCAL CHAPTER

Excellence in Journalism Award, Explanatory Journalism

Matt Levin, Ben Christopher and John Osborn D’Agostino


Californians: Here’s why your housing costs are so high

California Journalism Awards

CALIFORNIA NEWS PUBLISHERS

First Place, General Excellence

CalMatters Staff


Judges: “… easy navigation, good art, superbly written stories and even interactivity.“

First Place, In-Depth Reporting, Second Place, Enterprise News, Third Place, Investigative Reporting

Jocelyn Wiener


Judges: “It is clear that much time was devoted to in-depth research; great reporting with diverse sources that add the human element to the issue.”
Breakdown: California’s Mental Health System, Explained

First Place, Investigative Reporting, Second Place, Public Service Journalism, Third Place, Writing

Ricardo Cano, Mohamed Al Elew and John Osborn D’Agostino


Judges: “This series armed lawmakers to make informed decisions. … [It] shows how journalists can take numbers and turn them into something useful, not only for the general public but also for the government.”
Disaster Days

First Place, Land-Use Reporting

Elizabeth Castillo and Matt Levin


Judges: “Great enterprise reporting of a huge conflict-of-interest issue that could affect all Californians.”
Lawmakers and landlords: More than a quarter of California legislators are both

Second Place, Coverage of Local Government

Ben Christopher


Judges: “Such an important topic, and one that hasn’t received enough attention.”
Will state crack down on predatory lending?

Second Place, Story Presentation

Julie Cart and Judy Lin


Judges: “Many strong layouts. The tone of the subheads … made the dry subject more engaging.”
California’s on Fire, unplugged and out of easy answers. So why don’t we…

Third Place, Coverage of Youth and Education

Ricardo Cano


How far will California schools go on charter schools?

Third Place, Home Page Layout & Design

CalMatters Staff


Judges: “The site is attractive and simple, without a lot of invasive ads and pop-ups adding clutter. Headlines are strong and compelling.”

Fourth Place, Feature Photo

Anne Wernikoff


Judges: “The photos helped tell the story of this doctor and what he means to the community.”
Paging more doctors: California’s worsening physician shortage

In-Depth Reporting

Ben Christopher


Judges: “Good lead, excellent news value with good infographics, subtopics and video. Shows a considerable degree of research and investigation.”
How California got tough on guns

Video Journalism

Byrhonda Lyons


California’s new laws in 1 minute series

Awards for Reporting on the Environment

SOCIETY OF ENVIRONMENTAL JOURNALISTS

Third Place, Outstanding Beat Reporting

Julie Cart


Judges: “This series of reports brings the topic of climate change down to Earth, as it offers multimedia coverage of related issues such as cap-and-trade, adaptation of the electrical grid and the real challenges of abandoning fossil fuels.”

Online Journalism Awards

ONLINE NEWS ASSOCIATION

Finalist, Visual Digital Storytelling

John Osborn D’Agostino


Gimme Props

Excellence in Journalism Awards

SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS NORCAL CHAPTER

Winner, Data Visualization

John Osborn D’Agostino


Gimme Props

Features Journalism

Dan Morain


A Capitol Crime: How a 16-year-old murder reached California’s highest offices

Ongoing Coverage

Felicia Mello


Cost of College

Science, Environment and Health Reporting

Jocelyn Wiener


Breakdown: Mental Health

National Headliner Awards

NATIONAL PRESS CLUB

National Headliner Award

CalMatters Staff


Californians: Everything you need to know before you vote

California Journalism Awards

CALIFORNIA NEWS PUBLISHERS

First Place, Public Service Journalism

Ben Christopher, Byrhonda Lyons and John Osborn D’Agostino


Judges: “An absolute wonderful example of public service.”  
CalMatters 2018 Election Guide

First Place, Homepage Design

John Osborn D’Agostino, David Lesher and Marcia Parker


Judges: “Solid, effective layout, design and headline use. Good variety of photos and colors. It’s the best for both desktop and mobile versions.”

First Place, Investigative Reporting and First Place, Coverage of Youth and Education

Felicia Mello


Judges: “The writer did a great job pushing ahead with this story despite state regulators refusing to cooperate.”
California’s for-profit college watchdog fails to police

First Place, Coverage of Local Government

Laurel Rosenhall


Judges: “This is a powerful piece of journalism that vitally serves the public interest in two ways: explaining Kinney’s cozy relationship to California’s new governor and how relatively unknown people exert great influence behind the scenes.”
A Capitol fixer is poised to ascend with Gavin Newsom—and legal weed

First Place, Feature Story

Laurel Rosenhall


Judges: “Easy to read (clear) writing. Well organized. Huge relevance (a major story with focus on key element).”
No legislator has confronted the effects of wildfire like this forensic dentist

First Place, Enterprise

David Gorn


Judges: “Great balance of stories about people and data.”
Stories on wellness

First Place, Video Journalism

Byrhonda Lyons and Julie Cart


Judges: “Explaining California’s war on climate change in fewer than five minutes is no easy task. But this video does so in an engaging, effective way.”
CalMatters explains California’s war on climate change

First Place, Land-Use Reporting

Matt Levin


Judges: “The stories gave context to complex issues and used a variety of digital layers to connect readers with the information.”
2018 Housing/Zoning Coverage

Second Place, General Excellence

CalMatters Staff


Judges: “Rarely does a non-profit, community funded news website rise to the level of what CalMatters offers. … You get the sensation that you are visiting a large news organization.”

Second Place, Feature Writing

Matt Levin


Judges: “A story that needs to be told that can help lead to answers of a serious problem.”
California housing costs create harsh reality for refugees

Second Place, Breaking News

Dan Morain, Laurel Rosenhall, Ben Christopher and CalMatters Staff


Judges: “Impressive wall-to-wall coverage of the statewide general election (that) reflected well-thought-out planning and the team’s deep knowledge of the candidates and the issues.”
2018 Election Night Coverage

Second Place, Investigative Reporting and Second Place, Local Government

Ricardo Cano, Shawn Hubler


Judges: “The story is reader- friendly because it isn’t drowning in numbers, and Cano effectively mixes in interviews with officials trying to get facilities built.
California’s School Bonds: the Rich Get Richer and the Poor, not so Much

Third Place, Writing

Felicia Mello


Staff: “A great lead and a well-written and heartbreaking story about a talented young man’s struggle to go to college.”
California Campuses Confront a Growing Crisis: Homeless Students

Third Place, In-Depth Reporting, Third Place, Local Government and Fifth Place, Youth & Education

Jessica Calefati


Judges: “Great reader service of identifying how ballooning teacher pensions are going to spell financial disaster for schools down the road.”
Teacher Pension Debt Swamps School Budgets

Third Place, Enterprise News

Matt Levin, John Osborn D’Agostino


Judges: “Very nice graphics. Lots of data. Solid reporting.”
Digging into the data: California Dream

Fourth Place, In-Depth Reporting

Julie Cart


Judges: “Top-notch series that shows climate-change regulations are shortchanging taxpayers.”
Climate Change coverage

Fourth Place, Writing

Ben Christopher


Judges: “It’s hard to stand out when writing a profile about Gavin Newsom since there are so many written already. But this well-written one did provide a lot of unusual quotes and facts that gave a bigger more nuanced picture of California’s governor.”
Gavin Newsom Profile

Fourth Place, Feature Story

Laurel Rosenhall


Colusa County welcomes Jerry Brown

Fourth Place, Video Journalism

Byrhonda Lyons, Laurel Rosenhall


Judges: “Alternating between chilling shooting video, and the highlighting of legal documents, this video tackles a crucial topic.”

Online Journalism Awards

ONLINE NEWS ASSOCIATION

First Place, Feature

Matt Levin, Ben Christopher and John Osborn D’Agostino


Californians: Here’s Why Your Housing Costs Are So High

EPPY Awards

EDITOR & PUBLISHER

Best Feature Story

Matt Levin and Ben Christopher


Californians: Here’s Why Your Housing Costs Are So High

Best Innovation Project

CalMatters Staff


California Election Guide

California Journalism Awards

CALIFORNIA NEWS PUBLISHERS

First Place

For a collaboration with the Los Angeles Times and Capital Public Radio


An 18-month project about the devastating financial impact from the state’s unfunded pension liability

Jack Bates Award

CALIFORNIA PRESS ASSOCIATION

Marcia Parker
Honors distinguished service to the California press through effective leadership in addressing newspaper challenges and assisting journalism education.

Most Influential Latina Journalists

CALIFORNIA LATINO JOURNALISTS NEWS MEDIA ASSOCIATION

15 Most Influential Latina Journalists of the Year

Elizabeth Aguilera

Special Projects

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California legislators applaud Gov. Gavin Newsom as he delivers his first State of the State speech. Photo by Andrew Nixon, Capital Public Radio

California Legislator Tracker

Californians elect 120 legislators to make important decisions. Our tracker gives residents their representatives’ background, profile and policy priorities based on voting records analyzed by software written by political scientists at UCLA, USC and the University of Georgia and Rice.

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A canal flowing through orchards west of Fresno on June 3, 2022. Photo by Larry Valenzuela, CalMatters/CatchLight Local

California Drought Tracker

An in-depth look into the state’s drought as we experience the second driest year on record. We investigate what’s improved, what’s worsened since the last drought, the current statewide situation and what’s impacting California’s people and places as a result.

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Francisco Rios, 91, has his own room in his daughter Cristina Hernandez’s house in Pomona. Photo by Sean Havey for California Dream project

California Dream Project

For two years we partnered with Capital Public Radio, KPBS, KPCC and KQED to tell stories of the new California dream: issues of economic opportunity, quality-of-life and the future of success. Support came from The James Irvine Foundation and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

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Poll workers prepare the voting center at Lake Forest Sports Park for Friday’s opening on Wednesday, October 28, 2020. Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG

Votebeat

In 2020 CalMatters participated in a collaborative nonpartisan reporting project covering local election integrity and voting access across eight states. We hosted the collaboration along with the Fresno Bee, the Long Beach Post and the UC Berkeley Investigative Reporting Program.

Learn More