Multidisciplinary collaboration between California Polytechnic State University and University of Miami will use Knight Foundation support to create AI-driven wire service for statehouse coverage.

A $200,000 investment from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation will help Cal Poly Institute for Advanced Technology and Public Policy (IATPP) develop an artificial intelligence system that will strengthen news coverage of state and local governments, the IATPP announced.

Researchers aim to build a prototype news wire service where narrative content covering state legislatures is automatically generated from primary data sources, and can be distributed to local and regional news organizations for publication. The ambition is to empower hometown media to receive articles specifically covering the activities of their state representatives and issue of local/regional significance that are currently absent because of limited reporting resources and/or being overlooked by traditional wire services.

“An informed citizenry is crucial to a healthy democracy, but the public is rapidly losing access to this type of information,” said Dr. Foaad Khosmood, Primary Investigator on the grant. “Our approach is to use semi-structured primary source data from state legislative proceedings in California and Florida to automatically generate quality, relevant and factual news content as a service to local news organizations.”

AI For Reporters is a multi-institutional collaboration between California Polytechnic State University, and the University of Miami School of Communication. Other strategic partners include Graz University of Technology Institute of Interactive Systems and Data Science(ISDS) and Google.

“This project represents an unprecedented partnership between the engineering strength of Cal Poly and the journalism prowess of the University of Miami for the benefit of supporting state-level journalism,” added Professor Lindsay Grace, Knight Chair at University of Miami and co-PI on the project.

The collaboration comes at a time when statehouse reporting is at an all-time low. According to a report by PEW Research Center, full‑time newspaper newsroom staffing declined by 30% between 2003 through 2012, and less than one-third of U.S. newspapers assign any reporters — full time or part time — to statehouses. The result is that the media — the primary entity the public relies on to monitor and report important issues — is no longer able to effectively serve this important function.  As the “watchguard” function of the press is diminished, so too is the ability of a well-informed public to engage with and impact the decision-making process and outcomes of their government.

The project is also partnering with real newsrooms to test and verify the solution. “Among the exciting changes in media today are the new tools and technologies available for creative and compelling stories,” said David Lesher, editor and co-founder of CalMatters, a nonprofit, multimedia news organization based in Sacramento. “AI, in the hands of an experienced, independent journalist, can broaden a reporter’s sources for information and make stories more relevant to a specific audience.”

“Many local new organizations no longer have the necessary resources to cover state legislative hearings, press conferences and other state and municipal government proceedings,” said Paul Cheung, Knight Foundation director for journalism and technology innovation. “This collaboration will explore the viability of using AI as an alternative reporting tool for local news organizations to enhance coverage.”