Company Info




Honolulu Civil Beat
3465 Waialae Ave Ste 200
Honolulu, Hawaii (United States)
Phone:8087372300
Web:www.civilbeat.org

Economic Inequality Reporter

Location: Honolulu, Hawaii
Job Category: Newspapers
Job ID: 10052
Employment Type: Full time
Salary: per year
Posted: 08.19.2024



Occupations:


Job Description:

Honolulu Civil Beat seeks a reporter to focus on the many facets of economic inequality in the islands related to class, race and immigration status. In watchdog and investigative stories, this reporter would seek to expose the hardships of Hawaii that most tourists never see, the shortcomings in the social welfare system the government prefers to keep hidden, and the untold stories – from health care to housing, transportation to jobs – about what it’s like to live poor in paradise.

The job:


Job Requirements:

You’re a good fit if:

​What you’ll get:

Relocation Benefit & Housing Purchase Option:

How to APPLY:

About Civil Beat + Hawaii:

Honolulu Civil Beat is a 501(c)3 tax-exempt news organization dedicated to cultivating an informed body of citizens, all striving to make Hawaii a better place to live. We achieve this through investigative and watchdog journalism, in-depth enterprise reporting, analysis and commentary that gives readers a broad view on issues of importance to our community. Hawaii is an island state, with a population of 1.4 million people spread between the eight main Hawaiian Islands. Oahu, with about a million people, is the most densely populated and holds the capital city of Honolulu. Hawaii is a unique environment, a mix of highly developed urban and sparsely populated rural areas with America’s most multicultural mix of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and mainland transplants including a large military presence. Our mix of investigative, watchdog and deep-dive explanatory journalism has led to fundamental changes in Hawaii law, policies and practices as well as positive social change in the community.

We’re committed to building an inclusive newsroom that represents the people and communities we serve in the nation’s most diverse state. We especially encourage members of traditionally underrepresented communities to apply for this position, including women, people of color, LGBTQ people and people who are differently abled.