Vermont television station WCAX has deleted the online version of a news story that garnered national attention and provoked a barrage of transphobic messages toward a transgender Randolph student and her family.
Links to the original story from Sept. 28 on the website for WCAX now turn up an error message and related social media posts have disappeared. The storyโs deletion was first reported by Seven Days.
WCAXโs story quoted a Randolph Union High School volleyball player who objected to a transgender teammateโs use of a school locker room. The story was then cited in media reports by Fox News, the New York Post and Britainโs Daily Mail tabloid.
Roger Garrity, WCAXโs news director, said in an email that he made the decision to pull the story โso that others could not continue to use our reporting to attack people in the transgender community.โ
While the story is no longer available online, Garrity said that WCAX had not retracted it, which generally happens when a news outlet no longer stands by the veracity of its reporting. The 2-minute, 41-second report, he said, was โintended to examine an apparent gap in state education policy that pits students against each other.โ
โWe do hope to further explore that issue in the future,โ Garrity said.
Garrity also said that WCAX is โworking on a messageโ to its viewers that acknowledges how the story has been used to attack the transgender teen. โWe strongly condemn anyone who uses our journalism to cause harm to others,โ he said.
VTDigger reported last week that the family of the transgender student disputed elements of the story and faced significant transphobic messages and online posts following the national media reports. The website for the Orange Southwest Supervisory District was hacked and subsequently disabled by the district.
Layne Millington, superintendent of the Orange Southwest Supervisory District, which includes Randolph Union High School, called WCAXโs story โprobably the most irresponsible story Iโve ever seenโ in more than three decades working in education.
โIt was very one-sided and, unfortunately, when things are one-sided and only presenting one view, itโs predictably going to lead to misunderstanding and misinterpretation in terms of how people react to it, which is kind of what happened,โ Millington said Wednesday.
Millington estimated that about 150 people had gathered at the high school Tuesday night for the first of two community forums about the issue.
โIt was civil,โ Millington said. โAnd I appreciated that an awful lot. I think there were some good ideas that were shared and, hopefully, if nothing else, that got people to think about the broader implications of everything thatโs happened here.โ
The decision to remove a story, rather than to update or correct it, can be a difficult one, according to Dan Kennedy, a media critic and professor of journalism at Northeastern University.
โWhen you have a story thatโs causing a lot of harm and has very little news value, you donโt really want to leave it in place so that it continues to do harm,โ Kennedy said in an interview, โeven if most of the harm that that story can do has already been done. So how do you handle it?โ
Still, he said, โI donโt think a complete deletion is the right way to go.โ
Kennedy also referred to the Society of Professional Journalistsโ Code of Ethics, which has a directive to โminimize harm.โ Kennedy points out to his students that, contrary to popular belief, โit doesnโt mean โdo no harm.โ โ
โBut what it suggests is you donโt harm people, unless thereโs a public service component to it (or) unless it serves the public interest,โ Kennedy said. After learning the facts of the WCAX story, he said, he didnโt believe there was a โgood reasonโ for the harm caused to the transgender student.
