Alcalde suspende algunas reglas del ‘derecho a refugio’ en pugna por albergar a solicitantes de asilo

El alcalde defendió la medida y dijo que la ciudad tenía pocas opciones mientras lucha por mantenerse al día con una población en refugios en aumento. Pero los defensores dicen que el cambio socava la red de seguridad social de la ciudad y las protecciones para garantizar que las familias sin hogar con niños tengan acceso a condiciones seguras.

Support CLARIFY

CLARIFY is generously supported by the Google News Initiative, The Pinkerton Foundation, The Harman Family Foundation and individual donations from readers.

CLARIFY has emerged as a proven impactful program that is ready to be piloted in local news communities around the United States. We are currently seeking additional investment partners to expand the program in New York City, and to pilot a national program in 2023.  Please join us in building the CLARIFY NEWS CORPS to empower youth and strengthen communities through local public service journalism.

Contact Fran@clarifynews.org to become a funding partner.

Other ways you can support CLARIFY:

Make a tax-deductible donation

Become a CLARIFY guest speaker

Sign your high school up to receive updates on student recruitment and applications

CLARIFY Alumni are invited to apply to be Student Advisors and Teaching Assistants

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CLARIFY Program History and Position for Growth

CLARIFY Program History and Position for Growth

Jeanmarie Evelly

Prior CLARIFY interns attending a press conference at City Hall.


CLARIFY was launched in Fall 2014 in The Bronx to give teens from underserved communities the experience of using public service journalism to improve their communities. The program has grown to include students from all five boroughs and is needed now more than ever before:

  • Only 26 percent of non-charter high schools in NYC have high school newspaper programs and only 15 percent in the Bronx do (as reported in a 2022 survey conducted by Baruch College’s High School Journalism Program)
  • There has been a steady decline in local journalism across the country with an average of two local newspapers closing every week–this leaves communities less informed
  • Lack of diversity in our newsrooms remains a significant challenge
  • Today’s high school students are the first to use social media as a news source. The ability to ensure they have the ability to discern between fake and real news is a growing priority

CLARIFY addresses these issues and more. Alumni report being instilled with newfound confidence, improved critical thinking, and civic awareness.

Upon completion of the program, pre/post surveying has indicated a significant increase in understanding of public-service journalism and the important role it plays in local communities. Students consistently report improved awareness of public officials and their duties, how the local government conducts itself, and an increased willingness to contact public officials and government agencies for information. The CLARIFY Youth Training Program has helped to transform students from hesitant interviewers to bold reporters who have the research skills and knowledge to ask public officials informed questions.

When covering local issues that apply directly to their communities, these students are able to witness the very stories they cover play out in front of them. The benefits of CLARIFY don’t end once the program does. An early comprehension and participation in journalism sets these students up for a lifetime of media literacy and civic engagement.