I know my friends in Bloomsburg, PA aren't going to give up. What I really hope is that the town finds ways to come together to fix what the root cause of the problem is -- there just may not be a way to do that. In a lot of ways even this video can't tell the story of what is happening in Bloomsburg, but at the moment it is one of the few I have seen.
This morning, while I was in an active online debate with folks about the need for open access to Bloomsburg Flood news at the Press Enterprise, I got an email from a producer at AccuWeather asking if she could use some of the Creative Commons marked photos I had posted from last weekend. These are the same photos that have gotten over 75,000 views in the last few days. While the Press has decided to close access, AccuWeather decided that they would seek assets from wherever they could on the open web -- and all they had to do was ask and give attribution.
Up until today I hadn't seen a professionally produced piece focusing on the stories of the people in Bloomsburg. And this one is built on the back of open content. This is why we need to find a way to make the news of this event open -- so others with a much wider audience than any of ours individually can share them. Sure, I love they used my pictures ... but what I am most happy about is that they are using them to expose what has happened and have now built an open resource for someone else to use in the future to learn about these events. That is why open needs to win and this is why I've had enough of closed news ecosystems.