I’m glad there’s discussion, but I gotta’ add one point of clarity

By Seth Boyes, News Editor

I have to admit I’ve never seen a letter to the editor submitted as part one of three before — never even heard of such a thing. So, by extension, I have to admit I’ve never considered addressing it as part of our opinion page policies. It’s good to know I can still be surprised. Anyway, I’ll be giving it some thought but, for the time being, I’ll let the page-four debate over the city’s proposed municipal electric utility play out as it will, rather than try to shoehorn a new policy into place mid-discussion — and it seems folks have plenty to say.

That kind of public participation on a local issue is greatly appreciated by us here at the newspaper. The opinion page fills a community role the rest of the pages in this newspaper simply can’t. The opinion page has room for subjectivity. It has room for hunches and conjectures. It has room for conclusions based on feelings. The opinion page has sometimes been called the heart of the newspaper, and in many ways the heart of this newspaper is driven by you, dear reader. 

But, because I want there to be no mistake about that concept, I do have one quick point of clarity I feel I must add to this week’s discussion — and then I’ll get out of the way again and let the debate resume.

The word “editorial” can have a few meanings. It can be an adjective referring to an employee’s position within a newspaper, and it can also be a noun referring to a type of written opinion piece. But here’s where I differ from good ol’ Webster’s — in my experience, written editorials don’t get bylines, because they express an opinion that’s shared by the newspaper’s staff as a whole or, in some cases, they convey the publication’s official position on a topic — that is to say, editorials are fairly rare in local newspapers. 

In fact, I went back through our archives, and the last time I could find something marked as an editorial in one of Decorah’s newspapers was in the mid-90s (which, as I often have to remind myself, is a lot farther in the rearview mirror than it seems for those of us who still use the year 2000 as the starting point for our mental math). 

Aside from editorials, there are opinion columns — like this one, of course. And columns have a byline so you know who to take aim at when you have a sharpened rebuttal — maybe I’m joking, maybe I’m not. Opinion columns like this one obviously come from within the newspaper, but they aren’t the opinion of the newspaper as a whole — just one fallible person among many. And then there are letters to the editor, which are obviously opinions from outside the newspaper, written by folks like you, dear reader.

Now, some people use the term “editorial” and the phrase “opinion column” interchangeably, and honestly, while that’s not quite right in my book, it’s no great sin. As far as I’m concerned, it’s an issue on par with my family’s eternal debate over the proper use of “supper” and “dinner,” or what distinguishes a bucket from a pale. What I mean is, despite our linguistic differences, we understand what the other person is getting at. But occasionally, folks will also refer to letters to the editor as “editorials.” That seems to happen more often when the letter in question was particularly lengthy, in my opinion. It’s a common enough mistake in any newspaper market, but it’s one I try to correct more readily because I’d hate for our sharing of outside opinions to be seen as a holistic endorsement one way or the other.

Like I said, it’s no major transgression, and people generally understand which thoughts are coming from where week to week — but I want to be clear now when it’s a relatively small thing so that folks don’t get their wires crossed when it’s truly important. 

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Randy Haugen
Guest
20 days ago

In certain contexts, they mean the same thing, but there is some nuance!