Rob Roberts, the National
Post's Toronto editor, got the news within 10 minutes.
He was short-staffed - it was, after all, the day after
Christmas. So he sent in what he had, two reporters and a night
person. He didn't know who was dead - if anyone - but he knew the
story was big.
It's a story we now know all too
well. It's late in the afternoon, and Yonge Street in Toronto's
downtown core is dark and crowded. Families and friends line up
to take advantage of the deep discounts at Sam the Record Man's
Gould Street flagship store. Shoppers also pack the Foot Locker
outlet, a Pizza Pizza and numerous electronic stores. All in all,
it's a typical Boxing Day of bargain hunting, except for one
thing: gunshots are fired. Suddenly, it's chaos. People are
running up and down the street screaming. A stray bullet kills
Jane Creba, a 15-year-old Grade 10 student from Riverdale
Collegiate. Six others are injured in the
attack.
Roberts's plan is to run two stories in
the next day's paper. One will be a straight hard news story,
while the second will provide colour by describing both the scene
and the mood. Siri Agrell, one of his reporters on her day off,
calls in to say she can do the colour story. Her piece, about a
grief-stricken mother, is the first of many that makes Roberts
proud of his paper's coverage.
In the aftermath
of the shootings, one particular phrase, the year of the gun, is
used by Toronto media to assess a quickly fading 2005. Big, scary
headlines and excessive memorial reportage leave the impression
that the city is no longer safe. Reporters and editors, however,
at four Toronto dailies- the Toronto Star,
the Toronto Sun, the Globe and
Mail and the Post - say the
coverage was generally fair and balanced. Sometimes, it seems,
even accurate coverage can't help but ratchet up fear among the
public. Roberts admits he played with a few gruesome headlines
and seriously considered splashing the words "blood bath" across
the front page. But in the end, he says, there was no need to
play the story up - the magnitude of the event was implicit in
the facts.
The Globe, like
the Post, couldn't flood the zone with
coverage either. With only four or five reporters to go around,
it focused three on the shootings. One, Joe Friesen, thought the
calamity would bring endless doomsday headlines. "But," he says,
"the coverage was fair, balanced and
appropriate."
The Star
tested the waters of panic on December 31 with the headline "2005
Year of the Gun: Is This the End?" but didn't wade in any
deeper.
Editors and reporters at the four major
dailies agree that any sensationalizing of the event came from
outside media like CNN, which advised viewers to beware of
Toronto. The network's Miles O'Brien even described the death
toll as evidence of "a whole, you know, crime spree underway."
According to Star crime reporter Bob
Mitchell, CNN portrayed Toronto as a dangerous city. "The
American media made it look as if it was the next SARS," he
says.
In fact, no Toronto story has garnered
this much outside attention since 2003, when Severe Acute
Respiratory Syndrome claimed the lives of more than three dozen
people and quarantined hundreds more. The outbreak made world
news, and tourism plummeted, which hit Toronto's economy hard.
People boycotted Chinatown and were scared to go outside. Deeply
discounted hotel, restaurant and entertainment packages were
offered to entice tourists. The city even held a SARS benefit
concert at Downsview Park in Toronto, which The Rolling Stones
headlined.
Like the acronym "SARS," "the year
of the gun" is the kind of simplistic phrase with negative
connotations that can linger and cause people to lose all sense
of proportion. Although the number of deaths is almost double
that of 2004, which saw 27 victims of gun violence, Toronto is
still safer than many American cities. New York City, for
example, reported 1,454 shootings last year (though not all were
fatal). Toronto is not even the sole Canadian city with a gun
problem. Edmonton saw 13 fatal shootings in 2005, and Vancouver
police have seen a sharp increase in the number of illegal guns
over the past three years.
For Friesen, the
latest scare hasn't modified his behaviour. The Toronto shootings
were on his mind a few days later, when he was back in the area
and thought about stopping by Creba's memorial. But, he says, he
doesn't think people will forgo shopping in the Yonge and Dundas
area the way they boycotted Chinatown during the SARS
epidemic.
While it is undoubtedly true that the
four papers demonstrated sensationalistic tendencies at times,
they were also simply reflecting back to readers the very nature
of the brazenness of the crimes. Strangely, a group that is more
often than not at odds with the media believes the coverage was
fair. Mark Pugash, director of communications for the Toronto
Police Service, thinks the situation deserved as much attention
as it received. "Anybody assessing the media," he says, "expects
that the information will have been researched and checked, and
that it is accurate."
By that definition,
Pugash thinks, the Toronto media upheld their responsibility to
the community.