Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk expands coverage of local environment and agriculture news with new grant - Mizzou School of Journalism
Skip to Content
By
Austin Fitzgerald
COLUMBIA, Mo. (July 31, 2023) — The Missouri School of Journalism today announced a $2.47 million grant from the Walton Family Foundation in support of the
Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk,
a network of journalists that provides coverage of agriculture, water and environmental issues centered around the Mississippi River Basin to news media nationwide free of charge. The grant extends the foundation’s support of the Desk for three more years and represents a more than $1 million increase over the
Desk’s founding grant
in 2021.
“At a time when local news deserts are a concern throughout the country, the Desk is an oasis of strong, local environmental coverage,” said David Kurpius, dean of the School of Journalism. “We are thankful for the Walton Family Foundation’s expanded support, which speaks to the profound needs the Desk is addressing in the industry and in communities throughout the basin.”
With this support, the Desk will place a second cohort of 10 journalists in newsrooms throughout the basin for up to three years beginning next summer. As before, the journalists will be hired through a partnership with
Report for America
(RFA) and will receive training and mentorship from experts at the School of Journalism and the
Society of Environmental Journalists
(SEJ).
Interested newsrooms
can
apply to Report for America
by the deadline of Sept. 18.
Matt Arthur, the owner of Booneslick Heritage Farm in Midway, Mo., picks a carrot for his daughter. The family-owned flower and vegetable farm in Mid-Missouri uses several regenerative agriculture practices to improve soil health and reduce fertilizer use. Missouri School of Journalism student Maya Bell did a photo story on the farm as part of “The Price of Plenty,” an investigation of the fertilizer industry for the Ag & Water Desk. Photo: Maya Bell | Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk
In addition, reporters from the first cohort that started in 2022 have the option to remain for a third year, which is expected to result in a larger network of reporters next year. A list of newsrooms and reporters already in the program can be found at the
Desk’s website
“Over the last two years, this unique program has proven to be highly successful at increasing and improving environmental journalism in local news deserts,” said Meaghan Parker, executive director of SEJ. “Its comprehensive approach leverages the strengths of each partner to combine three key pillars: sustainable local newsroom capacity, regional collaboration and mentoring, and national networking and convening. SEJ is pleased to continue to be a part of this innovative and important effort to better inform local communities across the basin and leaders across the country.”
“Collaborations like this are helping newsrooms bring greater awareness of the issues that affect the daily lives of millions of people living within the Mississippi River Basin through a local lens,” said Kim Kleman, executive director of Report for America. “With this added funding, we’ll not only be able to expand coverage but provide our corps members with the mentoring and editing support they need to better serve their communities through their reporting.”
Over the last two years, this unique program has proven to be highly successful at increasing and improving environmental journalism in local news deserts.
Meaghan Parker, executive director of the Society of Environmental Journalism
An important economic and environmental region in the United States, the basin covers more than 40% of the continental U.S. and supplies more than 90% of agricultural exports in the country. Sara Shipley Hiles, executive director of the Desk and an associate professor at the School, said issues like flooding, pollution and land use in the basin have consequences for the entire country, a fact that makes deep, well-researched coverage of these issues vitally important. Consequently, she wants to see the Desk’s reach extend even further.
“We’ve done a lot of stories and reached a lot of people, but I think we have even more that we can accomplish over the next couple of years,” Hiles said. “We’re very excited to continue to expand the program.”
Hiles added that one feature of this expansion will be an effort to recruit newsrooms from a wider swath of the basin, which runs from near the Canadian border to the Gulf of Mexico and covers more than 1.2 million square miles.
Frank Glenn operates a tractor while planting corn at Glendale Farm and Stables in Columbia, Mo. The farm uses satellite technology to aid in adding precise amounts of nutrients where the soil needs it. Photo: Maya Bell | Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk
In the year since the Desk began producing content, its journalists have created more than 600 stories. That includes several dozen collaborative and investigative pieces and multimedia projects, such as the five-part multimedia series
When it Rains
and
team coverage of drinking water contamination
. Stories are shared with the Desk’s distribution network, which consists of more than 60 newspapers, radio stations, magazines, television stations and digital news outlets across the country and a total audience of more than 45 million.
“Communities need access to quality, fact-based journalism in order to make informed choices about how to meet the challenges posed by climate change,” said Moira Mcdonald, director of the Walton Family Foundation Environment Program. “Roughly 70 percent of the world’s freshwater is used in agricultural production. We all want solutions so that people and nature can thrive together. Journalism that explores the connections between agriculture and water, especially rooted in the farming communities around the Mississippi River basin, is so important.”
Veteran journalist Tegan Wendland serves as editorial director of the Desk.
Earnest Perry
, associate dean for graduate studies and research at the Missouri School of Journalism, is a project advisor, and assistant professor Kate Rose conducts research.
The Desk’s coverage has been featured in local and national news outlets including the Associated Press, Washington Post, NPR, Science Friday, Indian Country Today and others. Interested news outlets can
sign up here
to receive access to republish the Desk’s stories for free, and members of the public can receive a
with the latest stories twice a month.
Walton Family Foundation
The Walton Family Foundation is, at its core, a family-led foundation. Three generations of the descendants of its founders, Sam and Helen Walton, and their spouses, work together to lead the foundation and create access to opportunity for people and communities. The foundation works in three areas: improving K-12 education, protecting rivers and oceans and the communities they support, and investing in our home region of Northwest Arkansas and the Arkansas-Mississippi Delta.
Report for America
Report for America is a national service program that places talented emerging journalists in local newsrooms to report on under-covered topics and communities across the United States and its territories. By creating a new, sustainable model for journalism, Report for America provides people with the information they need to improve their communities, hold powerful institutions accountable, and restore trust in the media. Report for America is an initiative of
The GroundTruth Project
, an award-winning nonprofit journalism organization dedicated to rebuilding journalism from the ground up.
Society of Environmental Journalists
With more than 1,400 members, the Society of Environmental Journalists (SEJ) is the largest network of professional journalists covering energy and the environment in North America. SEJ’s mission is to strengthen the quality, reach and viability of journalism across all media to advance public understanding of environmental issues. Through its annual conferences, grants, awards, webinars, online forums, and publications, SEJ increases and improves environmental journalism by supporting the people who cover the world’s most important stories.
Updated: July 31, 2023
Related Stories
Expand All
Collapse All
Sep 09, 2025
Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk wins Collaboration Award from LION Publishers
Apr 14, 2025
Ag & Water Desk launches landmark collaborative wetlands reporting project, ‘Down the Drain’
Jan 27, 2025
Ag & Water Desk receives $300,000 grant from MacArthur Foundation
Oct 16, 2024
Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk wins $100,000 grant from Press Forward
Apr 24, 2024
New reporters with Report for America to expand Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk
Dec 07, 2023
Report for America selects 11 newsrooms to expand the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk
Nov 08, 2023
Mississippi River Basin Ag and Water Desk to host webinar discussing research on attitudes toward environment, media in the river basin
Oct 23, 2023
Missouri School of Journalism releases groundbreaking report on attitudes toward environment, media in Mississippi River Basin
Aug 30, 2023
New grant opens the floodgates for Ag & Water Desk
Jul 31, 2023
Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk expands coverage of local environment and agriculture news with new grant
Jun 29, 2023
Sara Shipley Hiles grows science writing programs at Missouri School of Journalism
May 01, 2023
Adam Goldstein earns Smith/Patterson Science Journalism Fellowship
Apr 28, 2023
Twelve Missouri School of Journalism students and alumni chosen as 2023-24 Report for America corps members
Apr 18, 2023
Sky Chadde, investigative ag journalist and J-School alum, to deliver Smith/Patterson Science Journalism Lecture
Dec 21, 2022
The Missouri School of Journalism in 2022
Oct 10, 2022
Ag & Water Desk launches first collaborative project, ‘When It Rains’
May 17, 2022
Thirteen Missouri School of Journalism students and alumni chosen as 2022-23 Report for America corps members
May 10, 2022
Ten journalists join the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk
May 05, 2022
Environmental journalist Annie Ropeik hired as assistant director of Ag & Water Desk
May 04, 2022
13 faculty at Missouri School of Journalism awarded Reynolds Faculty Fellowships
Mar 16, 2022
The Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk selects expert journalists and senior advisors
Dec 21, 2021
2021 at the Missouri School of Journalism: A look back
Dec 08, 2021
Ten newsrooms selected to join the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk
Sep 24, 2021
Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk welcomes Tegan Wendland as editorial director
Jul 08, 2021
$1.4 million grant to Missouri School of Journalism helps create network of journalists focused on Mississippi River basin
Our Stories
Mentioned in This Article
David Kurpius
Dean of Journalism
Sara Shipley Hiles
Professor
Earnest L. Perry
Associate Dean for Graduate Studies and Research
Kathleen Rose
Assistant Professor
Shop officially licensed merch at our J-School Store. All profits go toward our scholarship fund.
Shop now
Share your story
Bluesky
Flickr
US