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Mountain State Spotlight is looking for a Deputy Managing Editor to play a key role in providing West Virginians with the information and the accountability journalism they want, need and deserve.
Our Deputy Managing Editor will work with our growing reporting staff and with other editors to conceive, plan and execute stories. A few recent stories include our examination of ICE raids in West Virginia, a deep investigation of connections between a controversial gun manufacturer and our state government, an analysis of how lawmakers stripped local residents of any say over the location of data centers in their communities, and a story about potential solutions to our state’s child care crisis.
We’re looking for someone who can hone a story’s accountability angle, shepherd complicated stories and investigative projects across finish lines, help shape our organization’s editorial strategy and work with our reporters to make their words sing.
This role will evolve and grow, depending on the experience and specific skillset the successful candidate brings to our organization. We’d love to hear from journalists with editing and leadership experience, but we’re open to reporters who are ready to take the next step in their career.
The Role
The Deputy Managing Editor will help our reporters produce more and better stories about crucial topics from public health and economic justice to government corruption and environmental pollution by:
The Deputy Managing Editor will report to our Managing Editor and also work closely with our Founding Editor-in-Chief, as well as our Audience Manager, and our reporting team. We are an expanding newsroom that offers plenty of opportunities to grow and have impact on our organization’s current journalism and future directions.
The Organization
Founded in March 2020, Mountain State Spotlight is filling a void of in-depth reporting on issues critical to West Virginia. West Virginia is undergoing a tremendous economic transition and significant cultural changes. But our state’s legacy media’s ability to focus on major issues in a deep way has been eroded, at just the time when residents most need information.
We went from pitch to publish in less than six months, working remotely in the midst of a raging global pandemic. We’re now based in a newly-renovated office in an energetic part of downtown Charleston, the state capital.
Now five years old, we have just completed a strategic planning process and have a plan to expand our coverage.
Do you love the sound of this job, but you don’t quite check all of these boxes? Do you have skills we haven’t thought of yet? Don’t hesitate to apply and tell us about yourself.
Compensation and benefits
Application process
To apply or to ask questions, email jobs@mountainstatespotlight.org.
Send us:
You’re a good fit if you:
If you have experience reporting and writing and are ready to take this next step in your career, we would consider you if you are otherwise right for our team.
Journalism experience serving West Virginians, Appalachians, or other rural residents is also a plus, but not necessary.
We encourage members of traditionally underrepresented communities to apply, including women, people of color, LGBTQ people, veterans and people with disabilities. We believe that a newsroom that includes a broad range of life experiences will ultimately produce better journalism.
We are not generally considering remote-work candidates for this position. But our Mountain State is a beautiful place to live, is full of wonderful people and exciting news to report on, and faces many challenges that demand our vigorous brand of watchdog journalism.
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