Covering tragedy is a delicate balance of interests

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What’s the hardest part of an editor’s job?

This editor has been asked that question many times.

The answer is easy: Reporting on death and dying.

If something in an obituary is wrong, no matter whose fault it is, the newspaper is responsible.

If someone is upset about information we printed or a photograph we published after a tragic death, the newspaper is responsible.

That’s not a complaint. That’s just a reality in the news business.

Dealing with understandably distraught family and friends in the aftermath of a death is often difficult.

Even writing this column about the subject is bound to make some people uneasy.

But it’s all part of our job.

NEWS ABOUT death and tragedy poses a problem for us because of conflicting interests.

On one hand, the public is extremely interested in details about crime, accidents, fires and other matters that could reasonably be labeled as “bad news.”

Think otherwise? Check the “Most Viewed” news stories on our Web site any day.

This past couple of weeks, the most popular articles have involved a double homicide in Ashton, a fatal car wreck west of Dixon, a double fatality west of Sterling, a one-car accident north of Oregon that killed an Ogle County man, the arrest of a Dixon man on a charge of aggravated criminal sexual abuse ...

That kind of news interests readers and causes newspapers to sell out at vending boxes and convenience stores. Readers know they can turn to us for information about those events.

On the other hand, we want to avoid unduly adding to the pain of family and friends who are grieving. For them, sometimes, any newspaper coverage is unwelcome.

How does a newspaper provide information that readers want and need without offending or upsetting anyone?

Well, it often doesn’t.

AS YOU can see from the news of recent days, this newspaper has reported on several tragic events.

We received some complaints (five e-mails and a phone call) about the front page photograph from the aftermath of the wreck along state Route 2 in front of Sauk Valley Community College.

A woman died when her car ran into the back of a semitrailer. The photo showed how the car’s top had been peeled back as it went under the truck. The photo showed no blood, no gore, in keeping with the practice of most newspapers in reporting at accident scenes.

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