Current:Home > InvestInside Climate News Freelancer Anne Marshall-Chalmers Honored for her Feature Story Showing California Wildfires Plague Mobile Home Residents -MoneyBase
Inside Climate News Freelancer Anne Marshall-Chalmers Honored for her Feature Story Showing California Wildfires Plague Mobile Home Residents
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-11 05:58:28
The Society of Environmental Journalists announced last week that Anne Marshall-Chalmers, a freelancer for Inside Climate News and former ICN reporting fellow, won first place for feature writing in its 22nd annual awards for Reporting on the Environment for her story on the convergence of California’s wildfire and affordable housing crises.
Marshall-Chalmers, who is based in the Bay Area, made regular trips to the scene of the Cache fire in Clearlake, California to develop relationships with her main subjects, Susan Gilbert and Lorraine Capolungo, who both lost their mobile homes in the blaze. Interviews with government officials, first responders and researchers rounded out her reporting. Her months of interviewing, collecting documents and visiting the scene of the fire culminated in the Inside Climate News story, Mobile Homes, the Last Affordable Housing Option for Many California Residents, Are Going Up in Smoke.
“Anne Marshall-Chalmers investigates a much-overlooked aspect of the human and housing cost of wildfires in California,” the judges wrote. “Her engrossing and beautifully crafted lede engages the reader from the very first line and sets the tone for a narrative that interweaves the personal and universal, as well as thoroughly researched facts about wildfires near mobile home communities.”
In her story, Marshall-Chalmers wrote “mobile homes lay bare a warming planet’s collision with a shortage of affordable housing. Though perceived as a shelter of last resort, mobile homes house 22 million people, and mobile home parks provide three times the number of affordable housing units than the nation’s public housing. Most mobile home residents are low or very low income. Households are disproportionately non-white, seniors and families with small children. Typically, residents of mobile home parks rent the land they live on, leaving them with no claim to growing property value and no right to return should disaster strike.”
But it was her detailed description of the struggles of her subjects before, during and after the fire that the judges found made the story stand out.
“The narrative voice and choices keep the reader captivated until the end and have us all asking questions that we may not have asked before,” the SEJ judges wrote.
Share this article
veryGood! (1)
Related
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- 2 teens shot, suspect arrested at downtown Cleveland plaza after annual tree-lighting ceremony
- 2 more women file lawsuits accusing Sean Diddy Combs of sexual abuse
- 3 men of Palestinian descent attending holiday gathering shot, injured near University of Vermont
- Sam Taylor
- Environmental protesters board deep-sea mining ship between Hawaii and Mexico
- Former UK leader Boris Johnson joins a march against antisemitism in London
- Max Verstappen caps of historic season with win at Abu Dhabi F1 finale
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Texas A&M aiming to hire Duke football's Mike Elko as next head coach, per reports
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- 5, including 2 children, killed in Ohio mobile home fire on Thanksgiving, authorities say
- Giving Tuesday: How to donate to a charity with purpose and intention
- Male soccer players in Italy put red marks on faces in campaign to eliminate violence against women
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Ukraine is shipping more grain through the Black Sea despite threat from Russia
- The Bachelor's Ben Flajnik Is Married
- CM Punk makes emphatic return to WWE at end of Survivor Series: WarGames in Chicago
Recommendation
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Syria says an Israeli airstrike hit the Damascus airport and put it out of service
Man celebrates with his dogs after winning $500,000 from Virginia Lottery scratch-off
A stampede during a music festival at a southern India university has killed at least 4 students
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
Congolese Nobel laureate kicks off presidential campaign with a promise to end violence, corruption
Georgia case over railroad’s use of eminent domain could have property law implications
Israeli military detains director of Gaza's Al-Shifa hospital