Crisis Over.
After my brief panic attack in my last blog post I am pleased to say I am no longer crazy.
I am T-5 days until my case study and have filled up one focus group, almost filled up the other, and making good progress on the third.
I hve also decided that finding that research which was similar to mine will actually be a good thing as it wil add some weight and credibility to what I am saying, because it won’t just be me saying it!
Research is now under control.
So you wanna talk about problems?
In reference to an earlier blog post I wrote about feeling like I didn’t have any problems, may I just update that and say that I am now overwhelmed with so many problems I feel like I’m going to have a heart attack.
OF COURSE: the week that I go to Gippsland the ABC staff are moving to a new office and can’t talk to me
OF COURSE: the week that I got to Gippsland it is school holidays and therefore the majority of people I need to talk to are on annual leave
And for those of you who are sitting back thinking, gee…Libby really should have thought about these things before she planned her case study…I KNOW!!!
I have spent the last two days making one phone call after another trying to recruit people to take part in my focus groups and interviews. It’s not that people have been saying no, hell, they are from the country, they love to talk!! It is just the constancy of explaining who I am, what I’m doing and why they really should take part! My ear LITERALLY hurts.
To make matters worse, everyone I talk to LOVES the ABC, its making me feel like my research is so pointless because everyone listens to the ABC anyway! A fireman even told me today that his crew switch to ABC when they are fighting fires because they have better information than the CFA! I mean, COME ON!!!
And…that’s enough of a stressful vent for one day. Stay tuned, there’s plenty more in store!!
Questions Questions Questions…
The predominant question my thesis seeks to answer is…
“How effective is the memorandum of agreement between the ABC and emergency services in Victoria and what can be done to improve this agreement?”
I’ll be exploring this question through a number of methods including focus groups, interviews and other data such as loss of lives, awards won etc etc.
Tomorrow I will be running a practice focus group with our class to prepare for my focus groups in Gippsland. I have prepared a running sheet and some activities to get people talking, but I still think it will be a bit hit and miss with this one as I’ve never run one before. At least this will help me see what I need to work on.
Meeting…
I had a very important meeting with Randal Mathieson (state director of the ABC) yesterday. He was great and gave me some good advice on people to contact. He is also going to contact them himself to ask them to get involved as he thinks it’s an important piece of research.
A short and sweet meeting that had some good outcomes (and hey I got to see the ABC studios where I want to work so that was a bonus!)
Now off to utilise these contacts!
Relevant Resources
I have now organised most of my case study and must say I am rather looking forward to it. Country people are so friendly, so when I’ve been calling round looking for places to have focus groups and interviews everyone wants to help so much!
I will be holding three focus groups of 6-8 people. They will be held in Orbost, Heyfield and Omeo. I chose these three destinations as they cover a wide distance in terms of East Gippsland and they were each heavily affected by the 2006 bushfire season.
To attract participants for my focus groups I will be putting articles or ads in the Heyfield News (800 people per week), East Gippsland Times and the Snowy River Mail. From asking locals where would be best these three came out on top.
Here are some of the most useful sites when thinking about bushfires and the media:
Bushfire CRC www.bushfireCRC.com.au
ABC Victoria http://www.abc.net.au/corp/
DSE Bushfires http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/dse/nrenfoe.nsf/Home+Page/DSE+Fire%7EHome+Page?open
I have a meeting tomorrow with the State Director of the ABC, Randal Mathieson, to discuss my thesis and find out the key objectives the ABC have in terms of the memorandum of agreement with emergency services. This will really kick start my research as it will give me the best direction for an analytic tool.
Updated Draft…
I have now written about 1700 words of my lit review. It is very much in draft mode but coming along nicely. Here it is…
Striving for Joint Goals: The ABC and Emergency Services in Victoria
Topic Question
How effective has the ABC been in fulfilling its role as the official emergency broadcaster in Victoria, and what can be done to improve the relationship between the ABC, emergency services and their stakeholders?
Abstract
Every year throughout the bushfire season in Victoria, difficulties arise surrounding the dissemination of information to the public. 2007 marked the tenth anniversary of the ABC working as official emergency broadcaster in Victoria. It is essential to investigate the effectiveness of the agreement and the way in which the relationship between the ABC and emergency services in Victoria can move forward. A successful policy will not only benefit the ABC, but emergency services staff and residents affected by bushfires in Victoria.
Scope
The research will cover time period between 1997 and present, as that was the year the ABC became official emergency broadcaster. The focus will be on Victoria predominantly, with a specific focus on East Gippsland and the fires in 2006.
The study will reach people from emergency services branches, the media (particularly ABC staff e.g. producers, journalists, news chiefs) and residents from the East Gippsland region who may have been affected by the 2006 bushfires.
The four predominant areas the study will cover include:
1. The role of the ABC as official emergency broadcaster
2. The best ways to communicate messages to effected residents during
bushfires
3. A case study on East Gippsland (particularly Omeo, Heyfield, Licola
areas) to evaluate the effectiveness of the media during the 2006 bushfires
4. The most effective ways of communication via the radio during a bushfire
Methodology
The research will involve four methodologies:
1. Secondary reading – bushfire research, ABC bushfire policy, communication during community crisis and recovery
2. Interviews with ABC staff:
- Ian Mannix – ABC bushfires coordinator SA
- Journalists, producers and news room staff at regional stations
3. Interviews with emergency services staff including DSE, CFA and Police
4. Case study on one regional town:
- Meetings with emergency services staff in that town
- Focus Group – with residents in the town, focusing on how they believe information should be disseminated. The best ways for them during a bushfire.
- Meeting with Police staff – what role do they have in dealing with journalists during bushfires?
- Meeting with local journalists
Literature review
Every year throughout the bushfire season in Victoria, difficulties arise surrounding the dissemination of information to the public. 2007 marked the tenth anniversary of the ABC working as official emergency broadcaster in Victoria. It is essential to investigate the effectiveness of the agreement and the way in which the relationship between the ABC and emergency services in Victoria can move forward. A successful policy will not only benefit the ABC, but emergency services staff and residents affected by bushfires in Victoria.
The field of research into media during emergencies is one which is discussed extensively in journals such as the Journal of Emergency Management. Once refined to bushfires, and again to Australia the writing becomes more and more scarce. Three academics who have completed comprehensive research into this field are Erez Cohen, Peter Hughes and Peter White from La Trobe University in Melbourne. The research of these three academics aligns closely with my own research and is excellent in providing detailed analysis of issues included within my scope.
The three academics cover issues including:
• A case study of the perceptions of the media during the Grampians bushfires
• The contentious issue of talkback radio
• Communications methods during bushfires
• Relationships between media and emergency services.
In their article entitled “The Media and Fire Services – Dealing with Conflicting Agendas” the three authors explore the common discourse that the media create myths around bushfires, using language that is exaggerated or hysterical. Through a case study of the media during the 2005 Wilsons Promontory Bushfires in South Eastern Victoria, Cohen, hughes and White come to the conclusion that the relationship between the media and emergency services is quite “complex and productive than earlier literature on this subject suggested.” (Cohen, Hughes and White, p107, 2007) They also conclude that the Australian concept of bushfires must change to aid in emergency situations. Australian’s must stop looking upon bushfires as “terrifying aberrations, an ineluctable, unpredictable act of god” and begin to see them as “an inherently Australian phenomenon that goes with the territory.” (Cohen, Hughes and White, p108, 2007) This notion is founded upon the idea that the media have created this discourse and they must assist in changing it.
Of great assistance to my own research, Cohen, Hughes and White interview many emergency services staff as well as journalists who reported on that particular bushfire. They found that many journalists believed the Country Fire Authority (CFA) to be more professional and of more assistance than the Department of Sustainability and Environment) DSE: “According to this journalist, DSE was manipulating the media on one front, facilitating media access to the fire so that journalists and photographers cojuld generate ‘great pictures’ but had to guess the ‘real story.’” (Cohen, Hughes and White, p112, 2007) This seems to be a recurring theme through my research.
Throughout many of their research articles, Cohen, Hughes and White discuss the role of the radio during bushfires. This information is critical to associate with my on research as my interviews will also be focussing on talkback radio and communications during bushfires. These authors argue that “radio, more than any other medium is considered as the best means for delivering timely safety information.” (Cohen, Hughes and White, p114, 2007) they raise this claim once again in another article entitled “Media and Bushfires: A community Perspective of the media during the Grampians fires 2006” when they argue that although newspaper information was extremely important, it became old news very fast and “in the immediate crisis of a fire emergency, radio is seen as the first place to go for information.” (Cohen, Hughes and White, p89, 2007) In particular, ABC radio is seen as the most credibly media during bushfires; “Local ABC radio is the only one that was doing anything for anybody because it was keeping us up to date…because everybody was busy doing their own things” (Male, small business owner, 45) (Cohen, Hughes and White, p92, 2007)
This particular article explores the use of the media from the community perspective during the bushfires that swept through the Grampians in Northern Victoria two years ago. Through the use of very similar methodologies to my own research such as focus groups and interviews, the authors investigate the importance of local knowledge in delivering effective information, the importance of a clear geographic focus of media coverage and the various effects of media coverage before, during and after the fire. This information will be invaluable to beginning my interviews and creating a position.
The authors explain in detail the ways in which they went about sourcing participants for local focus groups. They did this in three main ways:
1. Interview on local 774 Radio
2. Advertisements and articles in local newspapers
3. Networking through local emergency services staff and ABC staff
These are three techniques that will help me indefinitely throughout my research process. Issues may arise when participating in an interview on the radio as my knowledge may not be sufficient to appear as an expert on this issue, particularly when trying to connect with farmers who have local knowledge and expertise on handling bushfires.
The focus groups conducted by the authors covered issues such as the media and diverse sources of information, the importance of local knowledge in delivering effective information, the geographic focus of media coverage and the various effects of media coverage before during and after the fires. The authors identified a specific need within emergency reporting and that was the importance for the journalist to have in depth knowledge of the area. The focus group recognized several occasions when the reporter had given incorrect information about an area or person, which reduced the credibility of not only that journalist but that media outlet in general. This also connects to the theme of the geographic focus of a particular area. It was found that an out-of-town journalist might say “the fire is burning in the Anakie area”, but to locals who know the area know that this ‘area’ is very large and encompasses many kinds of terrain, bushland and communities. This information makes reporting bushfires difficult but highly important.
An issue I will be covering in my thesis will be an exploration of the need to cover small fires as well as larger public interest fires. The focus groups in the Grampians found locals to be much in need of this kind of reporting. Residents who are amidst a small local fire are still in need of information. What if the fire has spread in another direction? This is an issue that will be explored further later.
The importance of the radio during a bushfire was a major theme through the research of Cohen, Hughes and White. The radio has long been targeted as the predominant media during emergencies, for its mobility as well as access in remote areas. Radios are in cars, and can be hand held for people to carry them in to the bush; this makes them the ideal broadcasting tool to disseminate emergency information. This relates back to our major topic for this thesis and that is the role of the ABC as emergency broadcaster. It has now been 11 years since the memorandum of agreement was signed by emergency services and the ABC. This involves several key tasks that the ABC has agreed to be part of during not only bushfires, but all emergencies.
Thinking about existing Literature…
Every year throughout the bushfire season in Victoria, difficulties arise surrounding the dissemination of information to the public. 2007 marked the tenth anniversary of the ABC working as official emergency broadcaster in Victoria. It is essential to investigate the effectiveness of the agreement and the way in which the relationship between the ABC and emergency services in Victoria can move forward. A successful policy will not only benefit the ABC, but emergency services staff and residents affected by bushfires in Victoria.
The field of research into media during emergencies is one which is discussed extensively in journals such as the Journal of Emergency Management. Once refined to bushfires, and again to Australia the writing becomes more and more scarce. Three academics who have completed comprehensive research into this field are Erez Cohen, Peter Hughes and Peter White from La Trobe University in Melbourne. The research of these three academics aligns closely with my own research and is excellent in providing detailed analysis of issues included within my scope.
The three academics cover issues including:
· A case study of the perceptions of the media during the Grampians bushfires
· The contentious issue of talkback radio
· Communications methods during bushfires
· Relationships between media and emergency services.
In their article entitled “The Media and Fire Services – Dealing with Conflicting Agendas” the three authors explore the common discourse that the media create myths around bushfires, using language that is exaggerated or hysterical. Through a case study of the media during the 2005 Wilsons Promontory Bushfires in South Eastern Victoria, Cohen, hughes and White come to the conclusion that the relationship between the media and emergency services is quite “complex and productive than earlier literature on this subject suggested.” (Cohen, Hughes and White, p107, 2007) They also conclude that the Australian concept of bushfires must change to aid in emergency situations. Australian’s must stop looking upon bushfires as “terrifying aberrations, an ineluctable, unpredictable act of god” and begin to see them as “an inherently Australian phenomenon that goes with the territory.” (Cohen, Hughes and White, p108, 2007) This notion is founded upon the idea that the media have created this discourse and they must assist in changing it.
Of great assistance to my own research, Cohen, Hughes and White interview many emergency services staff as well as journalists who reported on that particular bushfire. They found that many journalists believed the Country Fire Authority (CFA) to be more professional and of more assistance than the Department of Sustainability and Environment) DSE: “According to this journalist, DSE was manipulating the media on one front, facilitating media access to the fire so that journalists and photographers cojuld generate ‘great pictures’ but had to guess the ‘real story.’” (Cohen, Hughes and White, p112, 2007) This seems to be a recurring theme through my research.
Throughout many of their research articles, Cohen, Hughes and White discuss the role of the radio during bushfires. This information is critical to associate with my on research as my interviews will also be focussing on talkback radio and communications during bushfires. These authors argue that “radio, more than any other medium is considered as the best means for delivering timely safety information.” (Cohen, Hughes and White, p114, 2007) they raise this claim once again in another article entitled “Media and Bushfires: A community Perspective of the media during the Grampians fires 2006” when they argue that although newspaper information was extremely important, it became old news very fast and “in the immediate crisis of a fire emergency, radio is seen as the first place to go for information.” (Cohen, Hughes and White, p89, 2007) In particular, ABC radio is seen as the most credibly media during bushfires; “Local ABC radio is the only one that was doing anything for anybody because it was keeping us up to date…because everybody was busy doing their own things” (Male, small business owner, 45) (Cohen, Hughes and White, p92, 2007)
This particular article explores the use of the media from the community perspective during the bushfires that swept through the Grampians in Northern Victoria two years ago. Through the use of very similar methodologies to my own research such as focus groups and interviews, the authors investigate the importance of local knowledge in delivering effective information, the importance of a clear geographic focus of media coverage and the various effects of media coverage before, during and after the fire. This information will be invaluable to beginning my interviews and creating a position.
Updating my topic…
After much research and discussions with various supervisors, my thesis topic has been narrowed down, which has created a better scope for the project and a much more manageable timeline.
Rather than looking at the relationship between emergency services and the media, i will simply be analysing the effectiveness of the ABC in their role as victorian emergency broadcaster. This will include things such as looking at the actual policy and working with the ABC to create key objectives with which to analyse. I will also still be looking into the best forms of communication during a bushfire, which will help benefit the key stakeholders and affected residents during bushfires.
I am really looking forward to completing my case study in East Gippsland, but I really need to get a start on organising contacts and writing articles for the local newspapers to encourage people to come to foucs groups.
I have also decided to cancel my online survey methodology as now it has become apparent that I need quality research rather than quantity of research.
Public to be quizzed over bushfire media coverage – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
Don’t you hate it (or secretly love it as it means someone might be able to help you) when you get a completely original idea for your thesis, start researching…and someone else has done the exact same thing? Check this out…it’s my idea! Done and dusted…
Public to be quizzed over bushfire media coverage – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
ABC wins approval for Wednesday’s storm!
Jess Noske-Turner experienced first hand the way ABC radio handled their role as official emergency broadcaster on Wednesday and had some interesting things to say about it in her blog so go and check it out!
Jess raised a couple of issues that are significant in the discussion of the role of the ABC during emergencies. Firstly, the tool of ‘talkback’ radio. While for many people not directly affected, talkback radio brings an interesting and unique perspective on the situation, it can also often give assistance to people such as when Jess texted in to find out the situation with Connex. Problems arise when the talkback callers are misinformed and spread information that could potentially be fatal. Not that the information on Jess’ train could have been, but certainly in bushfires.
Take for example a talkback caller who is distressed and in the midst of a bushfire. He frantically calls up ABC radio and tells all the listeners that the fire is out of control and anyone in the Licola district should flee because there isn’t much time left. What this man is seeing is one perspective, and one small geographical area. After this, three families flee their homes and lose everything, only to find that they could have easily stayed and been quite safe.
Talkback radio is a great tool for interesting comment and discussion, but where does the onus lie when giving false or misleading information?
The second issue raised in Jess’ blog to do with the ABC, not that I was able to hear it, but Jess mentioned that they were pretty much in emergency mode on the station, which leads me to think they had started one of the key parts of the agreement with the emergency services, whereby in the event of an emergency, certain members of the CFA have the power to call up and override any radio programming to distribute information. I think this is an extremely important and beneficial aspect of the agreement and one which I hope to see continue.
Well I think it is really interesting the way that the ABC handled the programming on Wednesday during the storm in Melbourne, did anyone else hear it and want to comment?