Tumbler Ridge: What Is Newsworthy?

Jesse Van Rootselaar

The question reverberating through news rooms throughout Canada (and perhaps around the world) today is – what is newsworthy? As a practicing journalist with a diploma in Journalism and decades (sigh) of experience I am pondering this today.

While this is a question that is asked everyday by journalists in many ways, today the question takes on special significance due to the recent mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, B.C.

Specifically, is it newsworthy to report on and/or focus/fixate in on the fact that the shooter was a member of the transgender community?

Well, the first thing journalists will do is look at the history of responsible news organizations as it relates to reporting about mass shootings.

What do we know:

Well we know that 98 percent of mass shootings are pepetrated by men. We know that when news agencies report on the perpetrators they follow a very specific formula – John Smith, a 38-year-old male resident of Fiction Town, Canada was convicted of…

In this we see that gender is reported. Why? Mostly because this is the way we have always reported. We want to know things like name, age, gender, place of residence etc. Following this we report details of the incident.

In this tradition a news agency might report the Tumbler Ridge story along the following lines:

“RCMP have released the identity of the suspect in yesterday’s tragic mass shooting in Tumber Ridge, B.C. as 18-year-old woman Jesse Van Rootselaar…etc.”

You will notice this is not how most news agencies are reporting this. There is an addendum to the identity – they mention that Van Rootselaar was a transgender person born as a biological male.

When you see this you know that journalists have decided that the nature of this person’s gender is newsworthy. By choosing to make it so they have implicitly decided that transgender women are not women. What they are saying is they were/potentially are men who identify as women. This distinction is very important. It suggests that news agencies and journalists are not certain where transgender people lie on the male/female/other spectrum of gender identity.

If you were to ask the transgender community they would say that trans-men are men and trans-women are women. In this instance the reporting should simply state that Rootselaar was a woman and leave it at that. But clearly journalism is struggling with this, not unlike others.

Is it newsworthy? It depends. If I were writing a story about the mass shooting I would simply state that Rootselaar was a woman and continue on with the facts of the story. However, myself or a peer would likely have to write another story about how the specifics of the gender of Rootselaar have become a focal point of politicians, people in general and the 2SLGBTQIA+ community. In this sense the nature of her gender becomes newsworthy and one would then write in more detail that Rootselaar’s having identified as a trans-woman has become a focal point of a different story.

Journalism has a resposnibility to report truth. But truth can be slippery because as much as we want it to be objective it is often coloured by human experience, the state of science as relates the subject and much more. Truth can be evasive and bias is everywhere.

I guarantee you that in newsrooms across the country journalists are wrestling with this right now. They are arguing and point/counter-pointing one-another in an effort to determine the most responsible way to report this.

One journalist will say “what if the shooter had red hair…is this relevant? Should we always be pointing out when red-haired people commit mass shootings to the detriment of red haired people everywhere?” To which another would respond “of course not but historically we have always reported gender…” to which the original says “fine – then we report that an 18-year-old woman just perpetrated one of Canada’s worst mass shootings…” and the argument continues.

Part of the discussion is an analysis of bias. Journalists try to be as unbiased as possible…this is the goal. We do not want our stories to contribute to increased bias in society. The question then would be – does adding the fact that Van Rootselaar is a trangender person reflect a bias on the part of the journalist/editorial process when reporting a basic news story about the shooting?

Well, as much as some news agencies want to avoid “choosing the facts” or falling onto one side or another of a currently debated cultural topic it cannot be avoided here. If you report that the suspect is a woman then you have decided that for news purposes a trans-woman is a woman. You have support here in that government policy and law in Canada largely say this and so it would be a reasonable choice.

If you report that the suspect is a woman but was born a biological male you have made a choice to subjugate trans-women to a lesser or different category than cis-women because it is not evidently relevant to the immediate story of the mass shooting (although as we discussed earlier it may become relevant in a more specific story focused on the trans community etc.).

Finally, if you choose to ignore the RCMP’s release that the suspect was an 18-year-old woman and zero in on there reference to the person being trans during a press conbference Q&A and report that it was a man, than you have most definitely shown significant bias in your reporting.

Whatever the case this and similar questions are important to ask, especially in newsrooms.

The Church & LGBTQ+

This is not going to be a theological post about who is right and who is wrong except for these brief opening sentences where I clearly state my own perspective for the record and for the sake of transparency – I do not believe that being LGBTQ+ is sin/open rebellion against God.

Of course I have the benefit of a theology that leads me to believing that all humanity is broken at a foundational level and so focusing in on the details as we are fond of doing sets up a global farce of 7 billion pots calling 7 billion kettle’s black in an often violent and sad cycle of endless brutality.

That being said the Church (Big C global collection of various types of Christian believers in their many and differing contexts) believes it is being confronted with a very specific challenge – how to respond to LGBTQ+.

I say “believes” because it may in fact only be the Church that sees this as a confrontation while those within the LGBTQ+ community and their supporters are simply moving forward with little regard for whether the church comes along or not in the same way that a field of wheat may see itself being confronted by an army of infantry tromping through it whereas the army is completely unaware of the wheat at all as it has its gaze set on more distant goals.

Herein lies the conundrum for the church. Unlike cultural changes of the past that “confronted” the church like slavery and women (which is still being worked through sadly in some corners) the church does not have the luxury of a century or more to mull over and craft its position when it comes to LGBTQ+ concerns…for the most part western culture has already moved on and brought LGBTQ+ with it. There is no more space for “don’t ask, don’t tell”. This is not to say there are still not significant issues of bigotry that face LGBTQ+ – there are…however the momentum of western history is solidly with LGBTQ+.

It is at this point that some in the Church will say – “So what? Just because culture is doing this does not mean we will compromise our Biblical values” etc. ad infinitum, ad nauseum.

To which the rest of the world says exactly the same thing – if they are listening at all.

Do you see what is happening here? The world is rapidly believing the Church is irrelevant and the Church is rapidly starting to believe (or at least act like) the world is irrelevant…at least in areas where they disagree.

Theologically (sorry), that the world feels the church is irrelevant is to be expected…however for the church to act as if the world is irrelevant is perhaps the greatest sin it could possibly commit, as it exists for one reason and one reason only – the world.

I have no idea what the way forward is for the Church (lies! I have some thoughts) but I do know one thing…whatever it is, the world is caring less and less to the point that it won’t matter one day at all and this is the real tragedy.