Deep Indigo Collective is a nonprofit visual storytelling resource for news organizations covering the local impacts of climate and environmental threats.
Look at that 👀, we made @insideclimate's visual roundup of 2022.
Thank you @carolinegutman and @k_zeis for representing us in the field and supporting our partner newsrooms with your excellent coverage!
Great job on the solid edit by @katelyn_eliz!
https://t.co/MIdwTpZOW0
Along side @insideclimate, we contributed to reporting from Philadelphia, Atlanta and Virginia on issues from lead exposure to crab population decline. Thank you @MichaelKodas for making sure these collaborations happened!
Links to our collabs below 👇
Part of our 2022 coverage:
To understand the lead exposure in Atlanta's west side, researchers held an event to test blood - as the EPA tries to clean up tainted soil in the area.
More reporting from @aydalicampa and our partner newsroom @insideclimate👇
📸by Lynsey Weatherspoon
Your support makes in-depth local climate reporting partnership possible. Ensure newsrooms have the photojournalism resources they need to tell these stories.
@NewsMatch doubles your donation! Pick up our 2023 photo calendar and custom tote as a thank you.
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This summer, when flooding caused a water crisis in Jackson, Deep Indigo quickly partnered with @KayAnneSkinner and the staff at @MSTODAYnews to deliver crucial visuals to Mississippi readers. Thank you Mississippi Today for your partnership! Coverage provided by @rorydoylephoto.
This summer, when flooding caused a water crisis in Jackson, Deep Indigo quickly partnered with @KayAnneSkinner and the staff at @MSTODAYnews to deliver crucial visuals to Mississippi readers. Thank you Mississippi Today for your partnership! Coverage provided by @rorydoylephoto.
On #GivingTuesday, please do your part by supporting us and ensuring our newsroom partners have the visual resources they need to cover the local impacts of climate change.
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The need for comprehensive local climate reporting is urgent. We are a visual storytelling partner for newsrooms producing this content.
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Maisie Brown realized it was unclear how the state was planning to bring water to elderly and disabled folks. The activist decided to mobilize, asking volunteers to help deliver water.
More from Jackson by @mintamolly/@MSTODAYnews and @rorydoylephoto.
https://t.co/LOSSmt44wh
“If the government could do everything, then there’d be no nonprofit or grassroots organizations,” Maisie Brown said. “The whole structure of government, the way it’s built today, is not enough to help people. That’s the wall people are running into”: https://t.co/SpEMubM9rO
Recent coverage of the water crisis in Jackson, Mississippi for @washingtonpost, @Reuters, @MSTODAYnews and @DeepIndigoCo. A complete infrastructure overhaul is necessary, but there's no timetable for a system-wide fix. So hard to comprehend.