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Powering Up Newry’s News: AI Tools and Young Voices Lead the Way

  • Columba O'Hare and Kayley Curtis
  • 8 hours ago
  • 4 min read

Columba O'Hare and Kayley Curtis, recipients of the Local News Fund for Newry projects, talk us through how Newry is reshaping community journalism.


Throughout 2022 and 2023, the Public Interest News Foundation conducted public consultations with the various groups, stakeholders and entities that create the community of Newry. The purpose of these consultations was simple: to explore what role the local news media plays in the community, and gauge interest for creating a Local News Fund - the first of its kind in the UK.  

  

Across these consultations, the message was nearly unanimous: local media sits at the heart of Newry. It informs residents, connects diverse groups across the city, and fosters a sense of pride and belonging. Yet, a sense of realism underscored these conversations. There was widespread recognition that, like many large areas across the UK, there is a declining presence of local public interest news, largely due to limited funding and staffing. 

 

Over the last year,  thanks to the generous support of the Paul Hamlyn Foundation, PINF has funded two innovative projects to give local journalism a boost in the area.

 

TransparencyHub: Bringing Local Democracy to Light in Newry 


The first project funded by PINF aims to enhance media and citizen access to local government information. Online news outlet Newry.ie CIC's ‘The Transparency Hub’ is an AI-powered platform that plans to revitalise local public interest news in the Newry area.  

  

Newry has a population of around 27,000 and is the largest city in the Newry, Mourne and Down District Council area. 

  

Newry.ie  Editor, Columba O’Hare sees it as a way of simplifying the compiling of stories about local council. 

  

“Currently researching a topic can involve endless hours of trawling manually through council meeting agendas, minutes and audio. Audio especially can reveal a lot more about what goes on in the Council Chamber than the subsequent minutes but it can take frustratingly long to check.” 

 

While the Hub is incredibly beneficial to Newry.ie, its community ethos means the platform will also be shared with other news gatherers in the Newry area. 


Key features of the platform include:  

  • Automated document downloading, processing, and uploading 

  • AI-powered transcription of council meeting audio 

  • Advanced search capabilities, including semantic search 

  • Visualisations and analytics tools and named entity recognition to track key people, projects, and issues. 

  

The TransparencyHub platform aims to transform how local news organisations, citizens and activists access information about Newry, Mourne and Down District Council (NMDDC). Rather than having to hunt through hundreds of PDF files and audio recordings, the platform automatically collects data from the council website and makes it easily searchable. 

 

AI is used to convert documents and audio recordings into a comprehensive database where users can find specific discussions in seconds. Dashboards reveal patterns that would otherwise remain hidden, enabling users to track how councillors vote, see which committees they serve on, and which issues they prioritise. 

  

For local journalists, investigating council stories becomes faster and easier. Instead of spending hours reading through documents hoping to find relevant information, reporters can search for keywords and immediately see every time a topic has been discussed.  

 

Citizens are finally able to see how their representatives actually behave, rather than relying on campaign promises or occasional news coverage. Like many councils, NMDDC's online information remains practically inaccessible to most people.  

  

TransparencyHub changes that, turning raw data into a tool for effective public interest reporting, genuine accountability and informed engagement.


Watch this space for your chance to try out the tool!

 

Celebrating Young Voices: The Newry Youth Journalism Programme 

 

The second project to be funded came about as local people noted a stark absence of opportunities for young people to pursue journalism, one of the least socially mobile career paths. 

 

In response, Kayley Curtis created the Newry Youth Journalism Programme.  

  

The Newry Journalism-Schools Partnership takes students from local schools and partners them with an established media outlet to create stories written by young people, aimed primarily for other young people. This project met several objectives: 

  1. Support overstretched newsrooms by providing student-generated stories, which are edited by a Youth Journalism Manager — requiring no additional work from already busy editorial teams.

  2. Offer valuable experience to aspiring journalists by helping them build professional portfolios published by respected local outlets — an asset for university applications or entry-level job opportunities.

  3. Reconnect young people with local news, a demographic increasingly disengaged from public interest journalism. 

  

For the pilot, the Programme partnered with St Colman’s College, an all-boys school, who worked with online publication Newry.ie, and Our Lady’s Grammar School, an all-girls school, who collaborated with the Newry Reporter. 

  

Over the course of three months, students learned the value of local journalism, how to find a compelling story, source and interview subjects, and reflect critically on their interview techniques, before putting this learning into practice by conducting and writing up their own interviews. The students sourced interviewees from across the community: politicians, charity founders, actors, community workers and much more, painting a tapestry of the diversity and vibrancy of Newry.  

  

The young journalists involved in the project are phenomenal: positive, passionate and diligent young people who question and analyse everything - all essential traits of a successful journalist.  

 

Their pieces are due to be published on Newry.ie and in the Newry Reporter in late summer – we will make sure to share them here on the blog! 

 

This project, although simple in nature, is highly replicable across the UK by offering a practical response to the ongoing challenges of underfunded newsrooms and limited entry-level journalism opportunities 

 

A well-known Irish language proverb in Newry ‘Mól na óige agus tíocfaidh sí’ - praise the youth and they will flourish - perfectly encapsulates the spirit of this project. By teaching, encouraging and affording opportunities to our young people, we are ensuring the future and prosperity of our public interest news, the lynchpin of our connection and communication, for decades to come. 

 

To hear more from Columba, Kayley and the young journalists, tune into our webinar next week on Thursday 10th July, registration here

 

Sign up to our newsletter for more updates from PINF.   

 

 
 

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Public Interest News Foundation is a registered Charity No. 1191397. Registered as a Company limited by guarantee in England & Wales No. 12320800. Registered office at 4th Floor, 18 St. Cross Street, London, England, EC1N 8UN

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