[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 146 (Wednesday, December 3, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6296-S6297]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO SAM HEMINGWAY
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, one of Vermont's longest-serving
journalists, Sam Hemingway, recently retired after a distinguished 37-
year career with the Burlington Free Press. His career at the paper
spans a period of our State's history filled with interesting stories,
and Sam covered so many of them.
During the course of those many years Sam captured the pulse of
Vermont, whether through his personalized columns or his probing
reports. Sam's institutional memory was a rich and vital resource for
the newspaper and for his readers. His writing talents, his reporting
skills and his ability to make personal connections will be sorely
missed.
Marcelle and I join all Vermonters in extending all best wishes to
Sam and his family as they begin a new chapter in their lives.
I ask that this Burlington Free Press article sketching Sam's tenure
and retirement plans be printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the Burlington Free Press, Oct. 7, 2014]
Hemingway To Retire After 37 Years
(By Adam Silverman, Free Press Staff Writer)
Sam Hemingway, a reporter, editor and columnist who is
among Vermont's most well-known journalists, will retire from
the Burlington Free Press after a career of more than 37
years.
``You don't know how much this place means to me,'' he told
the staff in announcing his departure Tuesday afternoon,
``and I will miss you, and I will miss this work, so much.''
A self-described ``generalist,'' Hemingway's award-winning
coverage stretched from the rejection of a controversial
shopping mall development in Williston in 1977, through the
illegal shipping of arms from a Vermont business to South
Africa in violation of the apartheid-era embargo, to a weeks-
long trip to embed with the Vermont National Guard in
Afghanistan in 2010, among numerous examples across portions
of five decades.
``There's a great thrill, if you're into journalism, if
it's in your blood, to be present in moments of great
importance and to write stories that actually make a
difference,'' Hemingway said Tuesday in an interview before
addressing his colleagues.
``When you work for a paper like this, in a state like
Vermont, if you do a story and do it well, with the idea that
this is going to turn the rock over and show something that
people need to know about, there will be results,'' he
continued. ``You can help make something happen. That's a
great feeling.''
Free Press Executive Editor Michael Townsend praised
Hemingway as a colleague and a journalist.
``With his breadth of experience, Sam knew where to find
the information,'' Townsend said. ``He had a great eye for a
hard news story. He was dependable, productive and engaged.
We will miss his unique style.''
Hemingway, 66, wanted to be a newspaper reporter since
boyhood in New Haven, Conn. With the help of a ditto machine,
he produced a newspaper for his neighborhood. Coverage
included missing dogs, families' vacations plans and who
might have been suffering from the measles.
He edited his high-school newspaper and then studied
journalism at Syracuse University in New York before moving
to Vermont in 1971. He helped start the Lamoille County
Weekly in Johnson, spent a year teaching journalism at
Johnson State College, and then began freelancing for the
Burlington Free Press.
He joined the staff in 1977, when he was assigned to
provide full-time coverage of the debate over the Pyramid
Mall proposal percolating in Williston. Hemingway attended 54
night meetings regarding the Act 250 development-control law
over two years before the project was rejected.
Then came the story Space Research Corp., a North Troy
weapons manufacturer that was breaking an international
embargo to sell millions of dollars of artillery and shells
to South Africa--possibly with the backing of the CIA.
Hemingway recalled sneaking onto the military base at Camp
Lejune, N.C., with a colleague and knocking on the door of a
suspected CIA agent said to be involved--and then departing
in a hurry when the agent called base security. Eventually,
two company officials were convicted of related crimes.
As with his more recent coverage, including of teen girls
from the Burlington area lured into working as prostitutes in
New York, of the priest sex abuse claims against the Roman
Catholic Church, of the heroin epidemic sweeping Vermont,
Hemingway's reporting exposed a rarely seen underbelly of
Vermont.
``If you didn't shine a light on it, the cases might or
might not have reached a point where people went to jail,''
Hemingway said. ``But there's more assurance that justice is
going to be meted out.''
Hemingway is perhaps best known for his column, which he
wrote from 1989 to 2005 (with a yearlong hiatus to cover the
presidential campaign of former Gov. Howard Dean).
``It was wonderful to have a voice,'' Hemingway said. ``The
great thing about that column was it wasn't just a political
column, it wasn't just a crime column, it wasn't a slice of
life, it wasn't a feature--it was all of those things. And it
would change. Sometimes it was first-person. Sometimes it was
personal. Sometimes it was investigative. I broke stories in
the column. And it was very well-read.''
The column aimed to give a voice to the powerless,
Hemingway said.
``It was average folks,'' he said, ``and that was the whole
point of the column: to be an outlet for people who weren't
newsmakers who maybe had trouble with government or a problem
or a personal issue, somebody who lost a kid in a traffic
accident.''
Hemingway's work earned him 11 Best of Gannett awards from
the Burlington Free Press' parent company, along with
citations for excellence from the New England Newspaper and
Press Association, the Vermont Press Association and others.
The time is right to step away, Hemingway said. He has been
thinking of stepping away for some time, and he's ready for a
change. He plans to write, travel and spend time with family:
his wife, Lee, his four adult children and his two
grandchildren--and a third on the way.
His announcement came as the Burlington Free Press shared
plans for a newsroom reorganization, a process other Gannett
properties also are undergoing. Hemingway said his departure
is unrelated.
``It's very hard to walk away from this,'' Hemingway said.
``I need to go. It's time for me to go.''
He has yet to decide on the timing of his last day.
``I'll miss my colleagues in the newsroom,'' he said.
``I'll miss the camaraderie of the journalism community at
large in Vermont, which, even though we sometimes compete, we
all for the most part respect each other.''
Hemingway ended with advice for his colleagues:
``Don't just do the stories that you have to do. Try to
keep looking for the stories that need to be done. . . . You
have to push the limits, go after stories that are out there
but aren't waiting to be written, that you've got to go and
dig out.''
``That's what I've tried to do.''
[[Page S6297]]
____________________