Tip of the Hat to Redheaded Blackbelt’s Ryan Hutson and LoCO’s Hank Sims Who Received Awards for Their Reporting
The 40th Award seeks to encourage journalism about problems that affect those whose income is in the lowest 40%. Congratulations to Hank Sims, long time journalist in the area, who took first place with his excellent piece.
But we, here at Redheaded Blackbelt, want to celebrate our Ryan. Ryan, who has also worked for other media outlets such as KMUD and Headline Humboldt, began freelancing for us in October of 2018. She’s a passionate reporter who is often also the face on the street for us with her live video from the scene of protests and important events.
Her three article series required long hours building trust with hospital staff and pouring through hours of interviews to find the right words encapsulating employee’s feelings while they worked through incredibly difficult times. As the press release below states, “Reporting on hospitals is difficult, but Hutson broke through in her work on documenting conditions at St. Joseph’s Hospital. When administrators would not allow access, Hutson gained the trust of nurses and others to get the story about staffing shortages, as well as shortcomings in safety protocols.”
Congratulations, Ryan. We are so, so proud of you!
Links to her articles are here:
- St. Joe’s ICU Full, New COVID Rooms Crafted as Equipment and Staff Shortages Make Situation Desperate, Other Hospitals Facing Similar Situations
- COVID Summer Surge (Mostly Among the Unvaccinated) Brings Humboldt to the Brink of Hospital Capacity as Staffing Crisis Worsens
- Some Traveling Staff Brought in by St. Joe’s Last Week Have Already Quit as COVID-19 Pandemic Exacerbates Employee Shortages
The press release announcing the awards is below: (Note: there are more opportunities for journalists detailed in it.)
Hank Sims of the Lost Coast Outpost and Ryan Hutson of the Redheaded Blackbelt are the first two winners of the Humboldt Journalism Project’s 40th Award, the project announced Wednesday.
Sims won first place for his coverage of local political redistricting, headlined “The County’s Redistricting Process Has Been a Shambles, and the Maps it is Now Considering are Both Measurably Worse than the Status Quo.”
Sims’ article and his follow up coverage examined flaws in the process, including how some voters could lose their voice by being lumped together inappropriately. Amid increasing scrutiny by the Lost Coast Outpost and other media outlets, the county ultimately abandoned the draft maps and kept the original districts almost unchanged.
Judges praised Sims’ “dogged determination” and his ability to explain the topic’s importance.
Hutson won an honorable mention for her three-part series on troubles at St. Joseph Hospital as it struggled with staff shortages amid the summer surge in Covid-19 patients.
The judges lauded Huston’s “deep passion reporting” documenting conditions at the hospital.The contest was judged by Dale Maharidge, a Pulitzer Prize winning author and journalist who for many years lived part time in Petrolia, and Ricardo Sandoval-Palos, public editor at PBS and a graduate of Humboldt State University, before its polytechnic name change.
Sandoval-Palos also sits on the advisory panel of the Humboldt Journalism Project, a nonprofit that supports local journalism relevant to those who are sometimes left behind economically. It is a DreamMaker Project of The Ink People.
This was the first year of its 40th Award, so named because it recognizes work that affects people in the lower 40 percent of the income scale. The Humboldt Journalism Project also gives reporting grants, and it has grant money available now for freelance journalists in broadcast, print and online. To qualify, journalists must find an editor who agrees to publish their piece, and then they can apply for grant funding to report it. For more details, email [email protected].
In their more detailed remarks on the award recipients, Maharidge and Sandoval-Palos wrote: “Local redistricting is a story that many news outlets ignore. Back in the day an editor would have said “can you keep it to twelve inches?” (Very short, some six hundred words.) These days understaffed newsrooms don’t have the person-power even if editors are willing to dig into this vital aspect of democracy.
Hank Sims approached the story with dogged determination and showed the importance of this process. At first look it might not appear to be relevant to those in the lower 40 percent of the income scale, but it most certainly is. If economically stressed communities are broken up into different districts, it means they don’t have a voice. For example, Sims notes that in Humboldt County, home to the two largest native American tribes in California, that population was not identified by the makers of the draft redistricting maps. It was great that he had a journalistic seat at the table with this story.”
Of Hutson, Sandoval-Palos and Maharidge wrote: “In the midst of an event of historic and global proportion — the Covid-19 pandemic — Hutson brought the story home to one hospital in Humboldt County. Reporting on hospitals is difficult, but Hutson broke through in her work on documenting conditions at St. Joseph’s Hospital. When administrators would not allow access, Hutson gained the trust of nurses and others to get the story about staffing shortages, as well as shortcomings in safety protocols. The story reflects deep reporting passion on the part of Hutson, and it provided a valuable insight into a hospital relied upon by many in the lower income bracket in Humboldt County.”
The 40th Award contest will be held again this year, and the deadline to enter work done in 2022 will be Jan. 31, 2023. More details are on the Humboldt Journalism Project’s Ink People page, at https://www.inkpeople.org/dreammaker- data/r13elwey9g5smiq6ostw3qt30d0azc
As with this year’s contest, first place carries a prize of $1,500 and the honorable mention comes with $500. Both prizes are awarded to the individual journalist or journalists, not the outlets they report for.

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Congratulations, Ryan.
Ryan is to be lauded for her gutsy reporting of problems at St Joseph’s.
Congratulations!
Congratulations Ryan. Great articles, and very timely. And thanks Ms Kemp for mentioning the hard work these reporters put into their stories, yourself included.
Good job, Ryan Hudson!,
Good job, Hank Simms!,
Way to shine the lights on the dusky issues, and, “Keep Them Honest”!!!
??Gosh, I wonder if there are any awards for amateur, uncredentialed, pontificating, freelancing, fact-checking, proof-readers, who’ve been doggedly, steadfastly, and unwaveringly uprooting and exposing the ridiculous, unbelievable, statistical errors, and procedural missteps, that have been plaguing and eroding the already dubious credibility and trustworthiness of Humboldt and Mendocino County’s, respective Departments of Public Health, in a super human effort to, “Keep Them Honest”, amidst vain, nearly equal and opposite, unrelenting, disdain, discouragement and disapproval ? ??♂️?♂️
(How are my adjectives)?,
(Any typos)?,
(Punctuation errors)?,
(I didn’t misgender anyone, did I)?
(Too much speculation)?
Probably much too unpopular…
(And not exactly Pulitzer material).
Dishonorable mention, would you believe?
(Send any donations to RHBB, please, earmark them,”Proof-Reader and Fact Checker Fund”), just for kicks.
Hopefully I haven’t compromised any of her extremely well deserved, “Measure S Tax” based funding that they should actually double, at least…
That, I would, unfortunately, regret…
The County wouldn’t stoop that low, would they???♂️?♂️
No. The answer is no
??The first question?
Or the last one?
Or would you be referring to the RHBB donation??♂️?
Good point Guest.
Hank Simms and the lost coast outpost is an embarrassment to this area.
Sir, no more so than you.
Who pissed in your cheerios?
Hank Sims is a pompous asshole. He occasional does good reporting though.
Backdoor of any system (hospital etc) is the best way for reporting the truth. Rarely will admin give it without benefit.
Congrats!
Way to go Ryan
Way to go.Ryan and RHBB,
Wonderful accomplishment Ryan Hutson and Hank Sims. Journalists like you make RHBB my best source for news. I just made a long overdue donation to Kym’s website and I encourage others to do the same.