The U. S. Department of State through Embassy Bridgetown announces an open competition for a project to strengthen independent media’s ability to increase access to objective and quality information in the Eastern Caribbean.
Media outlets across the Caribbean face challenges including declining
revenue sources and expensive operating environments.
These challenges are compounded by the fact that many outlets have been traditionally under resourced.
Media enterprises are suffering loss of advertising revenue and other funding streams.
Many media houses also have gaps in adapting to the financial and editorial challenges of the current age and may lack fully developed business plans, leaving the outlets open to potential malign influence or interference efforts.
Outlets also lack up-to-date equipment, computers, and software, hampering their ability to produce high-quality and timely content.
Further, many operate under austere conditions and struggle to produce enough original, local content, exacerbating their vulnerability to disinformation, propaganda, and co-optation.
Assistance is needed to ensure that journalists, outlets, and other media-related institutions have access to the training, networks, content, and equipment they need to resist false narratives and maintain a free and diverse media ecosystem.
Embassy Bridgetown and partners seek to build the capacity of Eastern Caribbean media outlets using a third-party implementer.
The implementer will scope its approach based on the following lines of efforts:
· Training and capacity building:
training to include but not limited to:
methods to increase content production on a wide range of stories, how to expand reach and advertising revenue, how to develop sustainable business models and plans, fact checking and other core journalistic skills, identifying and countering disinformation, and better educating the general public on how to spot disinformation.
A training centered around World Press Freedom Day and multimedia training will be built into the program deliverables.
· Mentorship and network building:
mentorship on journalism and media production skills building and financial/business practices.
Network building to support joint reporting and fact-checking, and to create a sustainable community of practice that can share best practices beyond the life of this project.
· Content provision:
providing Caribbean media outlets with access to wire service licenses to enable them to run high-quality, independent, third-party content (Associated Press in English, for instance).
Content provision may draw on collaboration with other international wire services to offer an aggregated package to local media partners that they could pull from to disseminate themselves.
· Supplies:
providing up-to-date media equipment, computers, and software on an objectively assessed needs basis to support independent, locally developed news content.
Embassy Bridgetown seeks proposals that will provide financial and technical assistance to small and medium-sized media outlets to strengthen their ability to safely produce and disseminate accurate information to audiences in the Eastern Caribbean.
The goal of this project is to support the independence of regional journalists and media outlets to increase access to information within the domestic and regional media ecosystems.