With a third-place honor for Best Column, Insight News has been awarded with a National Newspaper Publishers Association Foundation Merit Award for the fourth straight year.
Insight’s managing editor, Harry Colbert, Jr. was honored on the Emory O. Jackson Best Column Writing category for his June 26 – July 2 commentary, “Journalist by profession, Black by nature,” written in response to the not guilty verdict handed down June 20, 2017 in the manslaughter case of Jeronimo Yanez, the St. Anthony police officer who killed motorist Philando Castile on June 6, 2016. The Los Angeles Wave took first place in the category with the Washington Informer earning second.
The award marks the fourth consecutive year Insight News has been honored by the NNPA (2015, first place, Best Column, 2016, first place, Best Community Service and third place, Best Use of Photography, 2017, second place, Best Special Edition).
Karen Carter Richards, the first vice chair of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) and publisher of the Houston Forward Times, received the highly-coveted Publish of the Year Award during the 2018 NNPA Foundation Merit Awards in Norfolk, Va. Richards, who remained in Houston recovering from an illness, was represented by her associate editor, Jeffrey L. Boney. During an earlier interview, Richards expressed her undying appreciation for the Black Press.
“The Black Press has always been and will continue to be relevant. We are the voice, the true voice of our people,” said Carter Richards. “We have recorded our history for 191 years like no other media could ever do. We have recorded many stories…our celebrations, our injustices and those hidden, treasured stories that came from our communities that we have always found value in.”
The Merit Awards recognizes individual newspapers, publishers and other staff members that have excelled in various newspaper categories such as Best Editorial, Best Column, Community Service, Best Layout & Design, Best Church Page, Best Sports Section and other areas.
The Miami Times took home 12 Merit Awards. The Birmingham Times won the John H. Sengstacke Award for General Excellence Award. The Miami Times also earned an award in the General Excellence category that focused on the number of points earned throughout the ceremony.
The North Dallas Gazette earned first place in the Robert S. Abbott Best Editorial Award while the Washington Informer and Final Call, respectively, took home second and third place awards in the category.
The St. Louis American, a perennial winner at the NNPA Merit Awards, cashed in eight awards, this year, including first place finishes for Best Entertainment Section, Best Use of Photographs, Best Original Advertising, Best Circulation Promotion, and the Miller Coors A. Phillip Randolph Messenger Award for Digital Excellence.
The Philadelphia Tribune won seven awards, including first place awards for Best Church Section, Best Business Section, and Best Sports Section.
Other winners included the Chicago Crusader, the AFRO-American, Seattle Medium, Los Angeles Sentinel, Houston Defender, the New Tri-State Defender, Richmond Free Press, the New Journal and Guide, Atlanta Voice and the Indianapolis Recorder.
“We are all winners even if you didn’t hear your named call,” said Amelia Ashley-Ward, NNPA Foundation chair and publisher of the San Francisco Sun-Reporter. “When one of us wins, we all win.”
For the 2018 Merit Awards, publishers were independently judged in 20 different journalistic categories and Ashley-Ward said it’s all part of the Foundation’s goal of continuing to deliver on its vision to preserve the historical legacy of the Black Press while expanding its reach and impact in the United States and abroad through technology and innovation in today’s marketplace.
“Since the first publication of Freedom’s Journal in 1827, the Black Press has remained on the frontlines of reporting and distributing the news, achievements, challenges, aspirations and ongoing advances in the cause and mission of sustainable development and progress for African Americans and all others who cry out for freedom and justice,” said NNPA President and CEO Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr.
Brenda H. Andrews, the publisher of the New Journal and Guide and host of this year’s convention, said that the Black Press lends an authentic and needed voice to the issues and concerns of continuing racial economic, income and health disparities. The Black Press also highlights the need for quality education for children, who live in inner city and rural communities and are often forgotten.
Andrews said the high mass incarceration rate of people of color and other vital quality of life challenges are highlighted each week on the pages of the Black Press.
“We also offer those feel good stories that enhances our communities’ esteem about who we are, as people of color,” said Andrews.
Stacy Brown is an NNPA Newswire Contributor and co-author of “Michael Jackson: The Man Behind the Mask: An Insider’s Story of the King of Pop.” Follow Stacy on Twitter @stacybrownmedia.


