Keep those clean and tasteful letters coming
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“Don’t you know those letters are all just part of a write-in
campaign?” the city official asked me at breakfast one morning.
He was referring to a string of letters that he said was written
by several members of one particular group.
Then there was the phone call from a local activist who said he
doubted that a letter writer who appeared in the paper a couple days
before actually did exist.
I was pretty sure we had called to verify the name as per our
policy, I told the caller, but could I be absolutely sure?
Unfortunately not.
Deliberate write-in campaigns to fool or confuse our readers are
typically easy to spot, but it’s not so easy when a handful of
people, who all share the same point of view, write letters to
express their displeasure with a certain person or with our news
coverage. Or if someone claims to be someone they are not and manages
to keep the charade going, even when we make the phone call.
Just to be clear, we do have some rules of the road here.
There are a couple of ways to get your commentary in the paper in
a couple different forms.
Letters to the editor and Readers Hotline calls are smaller and
concise, about 250 to 500 words. Community Commentaries or Rebuttals
can be longer, usually 500 to 750 words.
In all cases, though, we require that the letter writer provide a
name, first and last, address, city of residence and phone number for
verification.
And we will call to verify a letter writer’s existence or to
double check the spelling of their names, especially when our
suspicions are high or if the writer has never written to the paper
before.
Do letters to the editor get edited?
Yes, they do. That is often a common misperception that since it
is the writer’s opinion, we don’t have to edit the letters or
commentary on the page.
But that’s not true. Letter writers don’t always stick with just
their opinions. Letters are often peppered with the writer’s version
of the facts, facts that we need to verify and, if we can’t verify,
we edit out of the letter.
We typically edit letters for other things as well. If a letter is
mean-spirited, or is full of name-calling, or is laced with racist or
bigoted language, we will either edit out the offending words or kill
the letter.
We require decorum and taste and decency on our editorial pages.
Of course, I’m only speaking for the Daily Pilot. Not every newspaper
has the same rules on letters.
But for the most part, if someone wants to get their opinion
across, it really is a very simple: Don’t make up names, don’t make
up facts, don’t become part of a write-in campaign and don’t stoop to
name calling.
Keep those letters coming.
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