The Water Desk

The Center for Environmental Journalism鈥檚 newest initiative is 鈥淭he Water Desk,鈥 an independent news organization dedicated to increasing the volume, depth聽and power of journalism connected to Western water issues.

Our focus is the Colorado River Basin, the water source for some 40 million people living in seven U.S. states and Mexico. Climate change, population growth and other forces are posing unprecedented challenges for managing water in a region stretching from Colorado鈥檚 Front Range to Southern California鈥檚 coast, and from the snow-capped peaks of Wyoming to the deserts of Northwest Mexico.

The Water Desk will work with journalists and media outlets to strengthen their water-related coverage and expand its influence. It聽will also produce its own content, help train the next generation of water journalists, engage with the community to inform water reporting聽and pursue innovative approaches to 21st-century storytelling.

Please visit The Water Desk's website, , to see water-related and use free content, including , and . The site also offers for and others who want to about water issues.

An animation of Landsat satellite imagery shows the impact of drought in the Colorado River Basin. The first image shows Lake Mead in 1984, with Las Vegas to the left. In the second image, from 2016, the lake has shriveled while the city has sprawled. Although Las Vegas has conserved, the animation illustrates the challenge of managing water resources in a drying river basin. (Images: NASA Earth Observatory. Animation: The Water Desk)

The Water Desk will strengthen water journalism in a variety of ways, including:

  • Support for journalists: The Water Desk will provide funding, training聽and other resources to journalists and media outlets that cover Western water issues and the Colorado River.
  • Original content: Coverage of water issues produced by The Water Desk itself will have particular emphasis on data, multimedia, explanatory and solutions-oriented journalism.
  • Education and community engagement: The Water Desk will work with 麻豆免费版下载students, its program for investigative journalism, as well others beyond the campus to advance learning and to engage the community on Western water issues.

People in seven states and Mexico depend on water from the upper and lower basins of the Colorado River Basin. (Credit: USGS)

People in seven states and Mexico depend on water from the upper and lower basins of the Colorado River Basin. (Credit: USGS)

The Water Desk launched in April 2019 with support from a two-year, $700,000 grant from the聽.聽A $150,000 grant from the聽聽is supporting our work in 2020. We have also received funding from Bill and Barbara Burgess. We are seeking additional funding to build and sustain the initiative.

As a journalistic effort, the Water Desk will maintain a strict editorial firewall between its content and funders. Likewise, the Water Desk will have editorial independence from CU.

The Water Desk is interested in working across platforms and will be looking for ways to support journalism through newspapers, magazines, websites, radio/podcasts, television, video聽and other media. We鈥檒l be releasing guidelines for applying for funding soon.聽

In short, the Water Desk will operate as a small news organization that also provides resources, training聽and other support to journalists, media outlets聽and students so that the public and policymakers are better informed about Western water issues and the Colorado River.

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Questions? Please contact Mitch Tobin via email or at聽303-330-9487.

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