Editor & Publisher

THE HARVEY WORLD HERALD

A small newsroom, staffed by just one reporter, fills a gap in local coverage

By Victoria Holmes

A small newsroom, staffed by just one reporter, fills a gap in local coverage

The Harvey World Herald is a neighborhood newspaper covering the community of Harvey, Ill., south of Chicago. The publication was started in October 2021 by Amethyst J. Davis, a Harvey native.

She’d noticed a lack of local hometown coverage on important topics affecting the community.

“I got to Harvey, and the community center’s closed up. … A lot of businesses have started to close up because of the pandemic. … And I had the hardest time figuring out anything about anything because a lot of information isn’t on the city’s website,” said Davis.

Davis studied policing and public policy while attending New York University. She decided to veer into journalism when she moved back home.

“Harvey has really, especially in the 21st century, become shorthand for political corruption,” said Davis.

She cited examples, such as federal agents raiding both City Hall and the police department on the same day. Fifteen years ago, elected officials also came under fire for mishandling federal money. These incidents have led to distrust in the community and are the backdrop to Davis’s life.

“While I knew that, like, life in Harvey wasn’t perfect, I think my mother and my family did a great deal to keep all of us involved in the sort of beacons of hope in the community,” said Davis. Her “beacons of hope” were the community and youth programs.

“If you’re 25 or 35, you grew up in the midst of gang violence, but you also grew up in the middle of that sort of golden era of youth programming — the gymnastics program, the baseball team,” she said.

Political corruption, dying businesses and nostalgia for her youth fuel what Davis does at the Harvey World Herald.

The name itself is a nod to the high school, which called itself

“Harvey World” to give it a sense of identity separate from Chicago. The publication aims to provide readers with information about education, business, public safety, health, politics and entertainment. Although there’s been a steady increase in subscribers and strong readership among youth, there have been challenges — namely, staffing.

“2022 has been nothing short of an emotional roller coaster for a litany of reasons. Yeah, it’s just me,” she said. She’s wearing all the hats.

“[In 2020,] I quit my job in New York City to move back and do this. This is my full-time gig at this point,” said Davis.

Davis hopes to build a sustainable business model, relying on grants, digital advertising and subscribers.

The Harvey World Herald received a $15,000 stipend from the Tiny News Collective.

Advertising has been a hard sell because marketers don’t consider the community of Harvey to be strong or lucrative consumers.

“How do you build advertising if you’re in a community where a third of the community lives at or below the poverty line? How do you build a reader revenue model?” she asked.

Even with those issues, Davis plans to expand the publication and bring on more people.

“So, I’m trying to actually do a better job of something that I wasn’t able to do…which is covering school board meetings and really telling more education stories. That’s definitely a big priority. And, we’re also in the midst of elections,” she said.

Although there’s been plenty of support from other journalism organizations, Davis has gotten some pushback from her own community — notably from its older residents and by way of their social media comments.

“The misinformation and the drama, if anything, has come from those 45+, and that’s just wild to me because that’s the generation that often will say that my generation in Harvey doesn’t care for the community and doesn’t do anything,” she said.

Davis said, if anything, that’s fuel for what she does as a community news publisher. And she plans to help the next generation of journalists.

“[Our older] generation is largely behind why the Harvey [World Herald] exists. … Harvey needs local news,” said Davis. ■

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2022-10-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-10-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

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