With Stanton Foundation Grant, CFINR Expands State Journalism Awards to New England
Center’s state-level awards Expansion now covers 20 states

December 4, 2025 — The Center for Integrity in News Reporting (CFINR) announced today that the Stanton Foundation has awarded a $90,000 grant establishing annual Integrity in News Reporting Awards across all six New England states. The funding follows a recent SNPA Foundation grant creating parallel CFINR awards in 14 southern and southeastern states, together extending CFINR’s state-level recognition program to 20 states, representing approximately 43% of the U.S. population and 40% of the nation’s states.
Under the Stanton Foundation grant, CFINR will provide six annual $5,000 journalism awards in Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine, and Rhode Island—all states served by the
New England Newspaper & Press Association. The program will run for three years beginning with the 2026 awards cycle honoring work from 2025. The New England expansion adds a region with a combined population of 15.4 million people, or 4.6% of the U.S. population, to CFINR’s growing awards footprint recognizing impartial journalism excellence
“CFINR is honored by the confidence the Stanton Foundation has shown in our mission and pleased to expand our work to New England,” said Rufus Friday, Executive Director of CFINR. “This grant will allow us to recognize and celebrate journalists across the region who uphold journalistic integrity and a commitment to objective and impartial news reporting."
The Stanton Foundation, founded by the late broadcasting executive Frank Stanton, supports efforts that strengthen an informed citizenry and protect First Amendment values.
The New England announcement comes shortly after the SNPA Foundation awarded CFINR funding to launch 14 state-level journalism awards across the Southeast. Those $5,000 awards will be presented at the annual meetings of press associations in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia.
With populations totaling approximately 128 million, the southeastern awards already represented a significant expansion of CFINR’s mission to honor impartial, objective, and fair reporting.
Gallup polling shows that U.S. trust in news, once nearly 70% in the 1970s, has fallen to 28%. CFINR’s state-level awards are designed to highlight exemplary reporting and reinforce journalistic values that promote fairness, transparency, and objectivity.
Founded in 2024 by Walter E. Hussman Jr., CFINR is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated to improving public trust in journalism and strengthening the standards that once earned broad public confidence. With the addition of New England, the Center’s state-level awards now cover 20 states, home to nearly 144 million Americans, or 43% of the country.











