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Globe public editor: Advice from a long-time writer of letters to the editor

For a full year, Esther Shannon tried a little experiment. She wrote a letter to the editor to The Globe and Mail six days a week for 12 months. By Sylvia Stead, public editor of The Globe and Mail For a full year, Esther Shannon tried a little experiment. She wrote a letter to the editor…

For a full year, Esther Shannon tried a little experiment. She wrote a letter to the editor to The Globe and Mail six days a week for 12 months.

By Sylvia Stead, public editor of The Globe and Mail

For a full year, Esther Shannon tried a little experiment. She wrote a letter to the editor to The Globe and Mail six days a week for 12 months. Of those 312 e-mails sent, she had 11 published in the paper, an enviable record given the high number of letters received each day.

At the end of the year, she sent an e-mail to the letters editor explaining that her year-long project had come to an end. “My project was simply about daily writing within certain parameters. While the project began on impulse, I’m pleased that I managed to keep it going for a year and equally pleased that it’s now finished.”

I called her to ask what sparked that impulse. Ms. Shannon, who is a semi-retired writer and researcher, said she cares about journalism and she was concerned when she read that The Globe was no longer selling the paper in some regions of the country.

She said she almost never comments online because she believes that you should be accountable when you are commenting by using your name just as you expect the paper to be accountable for what it publishes. “I have a right as a subscriber to hold the paper accountable and I have to be too. … It was basically an exercise in free speech.”

In her published letters, she wrote about diversity in judicial appointments, world leaders, Canadian politicians, Toronto’s mayor and the piñata, the Olympics, marijuana and oil spills among others.

Here is a sample that shows her deft writing touch and her humour:

Re Neutralize The Threat (letters, Aug. 1): I think we would have been far more reassured about the protection of our privacy if John Foster, the chief of the Communications Security Establishment (CSE), had closed his letter to The Globe by telling us the CSE does not act unlawfully, rather than saying it has “never been found to act unlawfully.” Perhaps it’s time for a Mr. Big sting?

Ms. Shannon is hoping to mount a show of all 312 letters in Vancouver in the coming months.

To continue reading this column, please go theglobeandmail.com where this was originally published.