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Iowa Association of Black Journalists Makes History

The National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) is proud to see our members making history in Iowa! Kudos to Tisia Muzinga and Ty Rushing, and their entire team, for establishing the first-ever NABJ Chapter in Iowa.

“We appreciate the hard work of our chapters and are especially proud of the efforts of Tisia and Ty to create a voice and safe space for Black journalists in Iowa,” said NABJ President Dorothy Tucker. “We look forward to working with them in moving the diversity, equity, and inclusion needle forward.”

We also congratulate these additional NABJ Chapters approved by the NABJ Board in 2021: NABJ Northeast Florida, DePaul University Association of Black Journalists, NABJ – Loyola University Maryland, NABJ – Virginia Commonwealth University.

Muzinga and Rushing were featured in a highlight story written by Linh Ta of Axios. Read the full story below or here: https://www.axios.com/local/des-moines/2022/02/03/iowa-association-black-journalists-ty-rushing-tisia-muzinga.


Black Journalists in Iowa Form State’s First NABJ Chapter

Linh Ta /Axios

When Ty Rushing first moved to rural Iowa for a journalism job nine years ago, the Kansas City native immediately noticed two things.

That experience is why Rushing and other journalists of color have started the Iowa Association of Black Journalists — a local chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists.

Why it matters: The organization provides support and advocates for journalists of color in Iowa — especially as historically white newsrooms try to cover racially sensitive stories like the recent Black Lives Matter protests or book banning in schools.

Zoom in: Tisia Muzinga, president of IABJ, recalled a morning she was anchoring at KCCI.

What’s next: Muzinga and Rushing said they want to show journalists of color that they can work in Iowa and they’ll have a support system if they do.

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