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Colorado Is Paying For Journalist Getaways To Increase State Tourism, Raising Ethics Concerns

Colorado spent $32,000 of taxpayer money last year on journalists' travel expenses with the hope of receiving coverage encouraging people to travel here.
Scott Franz
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Capitol Coverage
Colorado spent $32,000 of taxpayer money last year on journalists' travel expenses with the hope of receiving coverage encouraging people to travel here.

Officials in Colorado have been spending money to bring travel writers to the state. It's a practice that raises questions for one media ethicist and, as an open records request has revealed, some journalists aren't disclosing to their readers where the money came from.

Updated Oct. 22, 2020 at 5:55 p.m. See end of story for updates.

Three travel writers from Austin, Texas arrived in Colorado with their families in July with action-packed itineraries given to them by Colorado’s state government.

Pam LeBlanc, a freelance writer for some of Texas’ biggest newspapers and magazines, rafted the Arkansas River near Buena Vista and visited an orchard near Paonia. Austin American Statesman travel editor Kristin Finan soaked in the Glenwood Hot Springs Pool. And Statesman freelancer Mauri Elbel and her family ordered beef tartare, halibut and trout at a fine dining restaurant in Breckenridge following a summer dog sledding tour.

Records obtained through an open records request reveal Colorado taxpayers paid most of their travel expenses for their roughly weeklong trips, which occurred when mask mandates were in place after a July spike in coronavirus cases.

The $3,979 worth of reimbursement checks from the state government covered two rental vehicles from Austin ($1,989), a flight to Colorado ($242), meals and snacks ($1,108), and gas to get around the state ($552).

Two of the journalists also received free hotel stays contributed by “industry partners.” The state arranged and paid for campgrounds for LeBlanc.

In return, the state got what it wanted: a series of stories in major publications promoting travel to Colorado, including one in the Statesman with the headline, “Colorado calling: 5 ways to beat the heat while social distancing in Glenwood Springs.”

“The journalist hosting program is how we’re able to keep Colorado top of mind in some of the best travel publications across the country,” said Abby Leeper, a spokeswoman for the Colorado Tourism Office.

The three travel writers from Austin are a small sample of a much broader program, which has used taxpayer money to pay for journalist getaways for several years. Leeper said the program has resulted in articles in major publications ranging from the Wall Street Journal to the Los Angeles Times.

According to the tourism office, the state paid $32,000 through the program last year, resulting in about 120 stories promoting travel to the state.

“And that equates to a media value of about $3 million and 40 million impressions. So to put that in a return of investment term, it’s about 94 to one,” Leeper said.

The state hopes the publicity they are gaining with the subsidized trips ultimately inspires other people to travel here and spend their money.

And Colorado's track record of getting positive stories after subsidizing journalists' trips continued during the pandemic.

The program was halted from March through May, but Leeper said the state felt comfortable bringing journalists back this summer after Gov. Jared Polis started relaxing restrictions.

Days after their trips ended, Texas travel writer Pam Leblanc wrote stories for the Houston Chronicle and the Statesman promoting her trip, and Statesman travel editor Kristin Finan published the piece promoting Glenwood Hot Springs as a place to social distance during the pandemic.

But readers who saw these articles were never told a state government provided the itineraries and paid for the writers' travel expenses.

And newspaper editors who published the stories this summer are now raising concerns about the practice.

‘Outside of the ethics of our craft’

Al Tompkins, a senior faculty member at the nonprofit Poynter Journalism Institute, was surprised to learn about the details of Colorado’s journalist hosting program this month. He said the lack of disclosure in the resulting articles is a problem. He was also critical of reporters accepting reimbursement for travel expenses.

“We don’t let the source that we’re reporting on pay for our reporting,” he said. “And if, for whatever reason — and I can’t even imagine what it would be — we broke that general guideline, then you absolutely would have to disclose it to the public so that the public could know which lens to look through, what to believe and what not to believe.”

Tompkins, who has written ethics codes for journalists, said accepting money from a source is an “aberration.”

“It’s outside of the ethics of our craft, not embraced by it,” he said, noting that even journalists who are required to fly on Air Force One as part of their coverage of the president pay for those flights.

He added money can be seen as an outside influence in a story, and compromises a reporter's independence and reputation.

Meanwhile, editors of the Austin American Statesman and the Houston Chronicle refused interview requests to talk about the travel stories they published as a result of Colorado’s journalist hosting program.

But when provided with public records showing the journalists had accepted payment for their travel expenses from Colorado taxpayers, the editors issued statements condemning the practice.

“We weren’t aware of this practice, and it doesn’t meet the standards we’ve established for our staffers,” Chronicle editor Steve Riley wrote. “We’ll be looking further into this issue to ensure freelancers follow the same standards.”

The Chronicle's published ethics policyexplicitly states the paper should pay for all travel expenses. "We don't accept junkets," it reads. "If a staffer is assigned to cover an inaugural flight, hotel opening, cruise or other press excursion, we should ask for and pay a fair rate for the travel."

Austin American Statesman editor John Bridges said reporters must “remain free of potential conflicts of interest and financial relationships that might compromise the credibility of our reporting.”

“Accepting free lodging and/or reimbursements is a violation of our principles of ethical conduct,” he wrote. “We are investigating this matter and taking appropriate action.”

But the Texas journalists, including the Statesman’s travel editor, see things differently.

“A non-story”

All three travel writers who recently participated in Colorado’s journalist hosting program also declined interview requests. But after they learned of the statements from the Texas editors criticizing the practice, they sent their own statements defending it as common and necessary practice in the industry.

“As a freelance writer writing about family travel for a newspaper which pays between $250-$300 per travel feature, it's not financially feasible to visit multiple destinations throughout the year traveling with a family,” Statesman freelancer Mauri Elbel wrote. “The same applies to newspaper travel writers/editors on staff who have zero travel budget.”

She added that she views travel writing as different from investigative reporting and other beats, and she thought the investigation into Colorado’s journalist hosting program was a “non-story.”

Statesman travel editor Kristin Finan said her newspaper approved the practice.

“Media discounts are standard practice in travel journalism, and their use was approved in a meeting held with my managers several years ago,” she wrote. “I have never promised coverage or written about anything I didn’t truly believe would be of value to our readers, and I stand by my reporting, my stories and my ethics, as well as those of our freelancers.”

And freelancer Pam LeBlanc said without the reimbursements, newspapers like the Statesman couldn’t afford to get the access they needed for “first-hand coverage.”

She added she got approval to accept the reimbursements from an editor.

But Al Tompkins, the faculty member at Poynter, says dwindling budgets at newspapers should not be used to justify reporters accepting reimbursements.

“I understand these freelancers will say, you know, come on, I make next to nothing and there’s no possible way I could pay for it,” he said. “To which I would say, OK, I get that, but that still doesn’t answer the issue of independence. I understand this is something you couldn’t afford to do. Then maybe we just don’t do it. We don’t give away our reputation.”

A common practice

Colorado Tourism Office director Cathy Ritter said the state does not get involved in the editorial decisions that are made after the journalists get home.

“Any journalist who participates in our journalist hosting program has complete editorial freedom to convey whatever opinion they have of their experience and to report it in the manner that they believe is true,” she said. “And so there is never any interference from our office and trying to influence the way a journalist reports looks in experience they have.”

She also said she was not aware the Chronicle and Statesman have ethics policies that prevent their writers from accepting the types of reimbursements that Colorado pays out.

“As a former journalist myself, I would never ask a journalist to do something that is not ethical,” she said.

Ritter said journalist hosting programs are common and have rules in place to ensure they are ethical. She pointed to other states, including Florida and Michigan, having their own journalist hosting programs that are similar to Colorado’s.

But it isn’t clear how many other publications like the Houston Chronicle are unknowingly publishing articles in violation of their ethics codes from writers who have had their travel expenses paid for by a government.

And the recent revelations appear to put the future of an unpublished story resulting from Colorado’s journalist hosting program in doubt.

Travel writer Mauri Elbel, who accepted $2,091 in reimbursements for her recent trip to Colorado, said she submitted her story to the Austin American Statesman, as the tourism office expected she would. But the executive editor’s statement against reimbursements suggests it may not be published in the newspaper as planned.

The state tourism office said Colorado has hosted about a dozen journalists since the start of the pandemic, and the trips are important because they are part of an effort to boost the tourism economy.

The state declined to provide a full list of the journalists they have hosted since February. It also said it would cost $606.25 to do the research to fulfill an open records request seeking all of the invoices for those dozen trips. They provided three itineraries and invoices at a cost of $6. They said they host up to 50 journalists per year.

A review of recent stories resulting from the program shows that like the Texas pieces, most do not include disclosures to readers about Colorado's financial involvement.A 2018 Lonely Planet article promoting Telluride as a destination was a rare exception, telling readers the writer accepted financial support from Colorado. It also included the following note to readers: "Lonely Planet contributors do not accept freebies in exchange for positive coverage."

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Colorado Tourism Office receipts and schedules:

Copyright 2021 KUNC. To see more, visit KUNC.

A receipt provided by the Colorado Tourism Office shows a sample of the expenses the state paid to a freelancer for the Austin American Statesman as part of the journalist hosting program.
Colorado Tourism Office /
A receipt provided by the Colorado Tourism Office shows a sample of the expenses the state paid to a freelancer for the Austin American Statesman as part of the journalist hosting program.
Journalists who accepted travel expenses from Colorado's state government wrote stories with these headlines following their trips. The stories did not disclose to readers Colorado paid for the trips and provided itineraries.
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Journalists who accepted travel expenses from Colorado's state government wrote stories with these headlines following their trips. The stories did not disclose to readers Colorado paid for the trips and provided itineraries.
A sample itinerary from the Colorado Tourism Office shows the schedule for Austin American Statesman travel editor Kristin Finan during her trip to Colorado. A story published about the trip did not disclose to readers the state paid for expenses and provided an itinerary.
Colorado Tourism Office /
A sample itinerary from the Colorado Tourism Office shows the schedule for Austin American Statesman travel editor Kristin Finan during her trip to Colorado. A story published about the trip did not disclose to readers the state paid for expenses and provided an itinerary.
Scott Franz /
A receipt provided by the Colorado Tourism Office shows a sample of expenses the state reimbursed to Austin American Statesman Travel Editor Kristin Finan in Snowmass and Glenwood Springs.
Colorado Tourism Office /
A receipt provided by the Colorado Tourism Office shows a sample of expenses the state reimbursed to Austin American Statesman Travel Editor Kristin Finan in Snowmass and Glenwood Springs.
Freelance journalist Pam LeBlanc traveled around Colorado in a camper van this summer and wrote several stories about her adventure. Colorado paid for her flight to the state and covered gas, meals and other expenses, including campground fees.
Scott Franz /
Freelance journalist Pam LeBlanc traveled around Colorado in a camper van this summer and wrote several stories about her adventure. Colorado paid for her flight to the state and covered gas, meals and other expenses, including campground fees.

Scott Franz is a government watchdog reporter and photographer from Steamboat Springs. He spent the last seven years covering politics and government for the Steamboat Pilot & Today, a daily newspaper in northwest Colorado. His reporting in Steamboat stopped a police station from being built in a city park, saved a historic barn from being destroyed and helped a small town pastor quickly find a kidney donor. His favorite workday in Steamboat was Tuesday, when he could spend many of his mornings skiing untracked powder and his evenings covering city council meetings. Scott received his journalism degree from the University of Colorado at Boulder. He is an outdoorsman who spends at least 20 nights a year in a tent. He spoke his first word, 'outside', as a toddler in Edmonds, Washington. Scott visits the Great Sand Dunes, his favorite Colorado backpacking destination, twice a year. Scott's reporting is part of Capitol Coverage, a collaborative public policy reporting project, providing news and analysis to communities across Colorado for more than a decade. Fifteen public radio stations participate in Capitol Coverage from throughout Colorado.