Interesting Blog:
Media Commentary & Analysis by Multimedia Consultant, Kent State University Prof. Karl Idsvoog
Karl
Idsvoog is a highly versatile and cost-effective multimedia
trainer/consultant.
Having worked as an investigative reporter/producer/manager in local, network, syndicated television and online journalism, Idsvoog moved into training/consulting and education following the bankruptcy of APBnews.com in New York where he got a “superb education” in the online world.
Having worked as an investigative reporter/producer/manager in local, network, syndicated television and online journalism, Idsvoog moved into training/consulting and education following the bankruptcy of APBnews.com in New York where he got a “superb education” in the online world.
Whistleblower = Truth Teller (Reporters Need Them)
"GM
concedes it knew in 2004, before launching the 2005 Chevrolet Cobalt,
that the ignition switch might inadvertently move from "run" to
"accessory," stalling the engine and cutting power to safety systems."
It
wasn't the fault of the engineers. They suggested solutions. None
was adopted. What else could they have done?
They could have been a
truth teller, a whistle-blower, and it would have been a whistle that
would have saved lives. This country, any democracy, needs
whistleblowers. But it's getting harder for those who want to tell the
truth.
For reporters, the GM recall gives them an easy question for their members of Congress. Should corporate executives be punished, should they be prosecuted, for knowingly selling a product with a known safety defect? In most cases since we have the best Congress money can buy, the answer will be no. But ask the simple follow-up question: why?
Read the articles on the North Carolina coal ash spill. Three paragraphs from the New York Times article demonstrate again why public safety so requires whistleblowers.
From the NYT: Last year, the environment agency's budget for water pollution programs
was cut by 10.2 percent, a bipartisan commission that approves regulations
was reorganized to include only Republican appointees, and the governor
vastly expanded the number of agency exempt from civil service protections
to 179 from 24.
The effect, said midlevel supervisors who now serve at the pleasure of
the governor, is that they are hesitant to crack down on polluters who
might complaint to Mr. Skvarla or a lawmaker, at the risk of their jobs.
Several spoke anonymously out of fear of being fired.
"They want to have a hammer to come down on anybody who hinders
developers by enforcing regulations," said a supervisor whose department
is supposed to regulate businesses under laws devised to protect water
quality. "We're scared to death to say no to anyone anymore."
Think of that. Employees are afraid to do what's right to protect public safety out of fear of losing their jobs. A whistleblower may have prevented the North Carolina disaster. We'll have a safer and more honest world if we encourage and reward whistleblowers and enact mandatory prison time for corporate executives who make decisions that intentionally put public safety at risk.
No comments:
Post a Comment