WWD Wins Neal Award

May 3, 2018

Editorial team recognized with ‘Pulitzer Prize of the business press’ 

About the author:

The WWD Staff includes all editors and designers who work on WWD. WWD Staff members can be reached at [email protected].

The Water & Wastes Digest (WWD) team is honored to receive a Jesse H. Neal award for its coverage of Hurricane Harvey. This award is considered the “Pulitzer Prize of the business press,” and the team is excited and grateful for the recognition. After learning about winning, the editorial team wanted to pull back the curtain and give you, our readers, an idea of the team’s experience covering the hurricane and its effects.

Last August, WWD underwent some editorial restructuring. Bob Crossen, Amy McIntosh and Lauren Baltas took on new and greater roles for magazines for the parent company, Scranton Gillette Communications (SGC). They also were taken under the wing of a new editorial director, Bill Wilson. Wilson has almost 20 years of experience in business-to-business journalism covering infrastructure, and when he became part of our team, he pushed us to reach for the next level of content creation and become elite journalists in our industries. The team bought into his mantra, “Elevate the game.”

As soon as our transitions began in earnest, news of Hurricane Harvey was mounting. We scrapped the entire October issue and began calling facilities in Houston affected by the storms. On the website and social media platforms, Baltas posted regular updates on the effects of wind, rain and flooding in Texas, and she also covered the Arkema plant explosions for the print issue. The team also filled eight tabloid pages with photos, informational tables and text in print—more than 6,000 words when all was said and done. 

To add more complications, Crossen was on a trip on the west coast talking to potential authors about editorial content while trying get the issue to the printer. One of those days, he was typesetting his editorial letter from the back seat of a rental car connected to the phone of SGC’s vice president of marketing for internet access.

Then one week after WEFTEC, the team traveled to Houston and visited with the 69th Street Wastewater Treatment Plant in Houston, the Deer Park Water Treatment Plant in Deer Park, Texas, and Homer’s Soft Water in Rosenberg, Texas. All those visits included Facebook live video and social media postings conducted by McIntosh, video footage shot by Baltas and video interviews conducted by Crossen and McIntosh from those sites.

We are grateful for all the individuals who helped us make this coverage possible and for the many people who agreed to be interviewed. Special thanks to our friends in Houston—Sidney Bomer, Tomas Martinez, Raymond Romdeo, Nicholas Cook and Kevin Davitt—as well as their staffs. We could not have covered this event as extensively without your hospitality and the cooperation of you and your coworkers. Thank you sincerely for your time (and restaurant recommendations!).

About the Author

WWD Staff

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