Thought this might be interesting to some folks on this list.


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John Bohannon <john.bohan...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Sep 15, 2015 at 3:21 PM
Subject: Fwd: [NICAR-L] Hiring a Data and Visual Director at Wisconsin
Center for Investigative Journalism
To: Katy Huff <katyh...@gmail.com>



If you know any data viz types looking for a job in Wisconsin...



--
John Bohannon, PhD
Contributing Correspondent, Science Magazine
617 910 0739 | johnbohannon.org <http://www.johnbohannon.org/>

Begin forwarded message:

*From: *Andy Hall <ah...@wisconsinwatch.org>
*Subject: **[NICAR-L] Hiring a Data and Visual Director at Wisconsin Center
for Investigative Journalism*
*Date: *September 15, 2015 at 2:49:45 PM PDT
*To: *<nica...@po.missouri.edu>
*Reply-To: *Discussion Forum <nica...@po.missouri.edu>

The Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism (WisconsinWatch.org
<http://wisconsinwatch.org/>) has a rare opening for a newly created
position: Data and Visual Director.

We're looking for some combination of the following skills:

   - Data analysis and visualization
   - Experience in conceiving and producing ambitious multimedia
   investigative news projects
   - Website management and posting
   - Supervisory experience

More details are posted here and below:
http://wisconsinwatch.org/2015/08/data-and-visual-editor-opening-at-the-wisconsin-center-for-investigative-journalism/

Deadline: September 27, 2015

*Data and Visual Director opening at the Wisconsin Center for Investigative
Journalism*

We have a rare opening at the Wisconsin Center for Investigative
Journalism, as Kate Golden, our beloved and multitalented multimedia
director, exits to Australia. If you’re interested in succeeding her, we
want to talk with you about our newly fashioned position: Data and Visual
Director.

The Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism punches way above its
weight. See WisconsinWatch.org <http://www.wisconsinwatch.org/>. We are a
nonpartisan nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization that focuses on government
accountability and quality of life issues. In five years we have won 32
regional Milwaukee Press Club awards and the first Associated Press Media
Editors Innovator of the Year for College Students award for collaboration
with the University of Wisconsin-Madison journalism school. And our student
reporters are three-time finalists in the Investigative Reporters and
Editors Awards.

Perks of working at WCIJ include reporting on a state with astonishingly
divided politics and a presidentially inclined governor with no end of
surprises. We’ve reported recently on alleged prison abuses
<http://wisconsinwatch.org/2014/07/waupun-prison-guards-accused-of-abusing-dozens-of-inmates/>
, the use of students as confidential drug informants
<http://wisconsinwatch.org/2014/09/undercover-students-used-in-drug-busts-at-some-uw-campuses/>and
— in the number-one state for old-fashioneds — why drunken driving is still
a misdemeanor
<http://wisconsinwatch.org/2014/11/in-wisconsin-statehouse-laws-on-drunken-driving-seen-as-tough-enough/>
offense
here. Also, nearly half the private drinking water wells are unsafe, and a dead
zone appears in Green Bay
<http://wisconsinwatch.org/2015/04/farmers-vow-to-reduce-phosphorus-bane-of-green-bay/>
each
year.

Still, it’s awfully nice here in Madison. The bike paths are numerous, the
rent relatively cheap and the farm produce plentiful. Our office bar is the
famed Memorial Union Terrace
<https://mediafluency.journalism.wisc.edu/buckylist/295/>, over Lake
Mendota.

The rest of the staff includes an executive director, an associate director
who focuses on the business side, a managing editor, a part-time veteran
environmental reporter, three paid reporting interns and one paid public
engagement and marketing intern. We also are hiring a radio reporting
fellow in conjunction with Wisconsin Public Radio.

We’re a flexible, fun workplace that still manages to do some hard-core
work. It’s not unusual for homemade pie or guacamole to show up at the
“world headquarters” in Vilas Hall. We communicate by Slack (also in person
– yo!) and are willing to experiment with new techniques
<http://wisconsinwatch.org/series/frac-sand/> and technologies. (Ask us
about our wooden cow!
<http://wisconsinwatch.org/2015/04/investigative-reporting-art-the-spring-2015-wisconsin-tour/>
)

Interested in working with us from a remote location? You’ll miss out on
the pie and guacamole, but we’ll consider your application. Preference
given to someone who can be here at least once a week, to facilitate our
work with student journalists.

We’re looking for some combination of the following:

High-priority skills:

   - Data analysis and visualization. Whether you call yourself a coder or
   not, you should know how to find and learn the tools you need to find
   answers in structured data. We want someone who is skilled in the gray arts
   of acquiring data, in assessing its flaws and possibilities, and in making
   beautiful data visualizations.
   - Bulletproofing your work. We use a fact-checking system and we’re
   obsessive about accuracy.
   - Website management and posting. Familiarity with the world of HTML,
   CSS, Twitter Bootstrap (for landing pages, special features, staff pages).
   Design chops and good taste.
   - Photography: Shooting and editing.
   - Experience in conceiving and producing ambitious multimedia
   investigative news projects.
   - Interpersonal skills, like flexibility, kindness and a sense of humor,
   suited for working in small teams on intense projects.
   - Supervisory experience. We work with student journalists, who bring
   great energy into the newsroom but whose limited experience can be perilous
   for complex projects.
   - A sense of mission that aligns with our guiding values: Protect the
   vulnerable. Expose wrongdoing. Seek solutions.


Lower priority skills:

   - News reporting.
   - Radio writing and production. We work regularly with Wisconsin Public
   Radio and aim to get more on the radio.
   - Video shooting, writing and production. We have done web features and
   worked with Wisconsin Public Television as collaborating producers.
   - Programming.


Target start date: Flexible, around Dec. 1, 2015.

Expected salary range: $45,000-$70,000, commensurate with skills and
experience.

Benefits: Generous paid vacation. We don’t offer health insurance yet but
are willing to subsidize health-care premiums.

Deadline: The initial application window will be open until Sept. 27, 2015.
Applications will be accepted until the position is filled.

To apply: Please send a cover letter, resume, a list of references and
examples of your work to Executive Director Andy Hall at
ah...@wisconsinwatch.org. If you’d like to chat about the job before
applying, contact Andy at 608-333-2333.

-- 
Andy Hall
Executive Director
Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism
ah...@wisconsinwatch.org
cell 608-333-2333
o 608-262-3642
www.WisconsinWatch.org <http://www.wisconsinwatch.org/>

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-- 
http://katyhuff.github.com
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