Changes coming to Greenville News opinion pages: We'll focus on local voices

Steve Bruss
Greenville News

The Greenville News' opinion pages historically have been the place where our community has gathered, if metaphorically, to talk about issues important to them.

As the way we communicate has changed over the past 15 years, the role of the newspaper opinion page has changed. 

More and more, people have taken to other avenues to voice their opinions. And national voices have begun to dominate our once-local pages.

None of that changes the fact that we still are uniquely positioned to encourage debate on local issues. We can do that by bringing knowledgeable news coverage and informed opinions to you, and then allowing you to debate issues in a civilized way on our news pages and our websites.

Moving forward, that will be our focus in Greenville and in our sister newsroom in Spartanburg.

The Greenville News Regional News Director Steve Bruss.

We'll focus on local opinion content one day per week. We'll hone in on the topics that matter most to you in a way that is intensely Greenville.

We'll deliver local experts' opinions on issues that are important to our community and state.

We'll give local readers the opportunity to weigh in on those issues.

That conversation can then help inform our news coverage. And that coverage can fuel further discussion.

All of this can help to move our community forward.

What that means, is that moving forward, we will publish an opinion page only on Sunday.

Yes, that sounds like a reduction in coverage. But there won't be a reduction in local opinion coverage. What will go away are the national columnists who are writing about national topics that will never be solved at the local level.

The result will be a more reasonable debate on issues that we can address here in Greenville, and where we can compromise and build consensus by learning together and talking together.

Doing that requires your participation, and we look forward to that.

So, beginning Sunday, June 5, we will begin with a new focus: Topic-centered opinion pages where we invite columnists to weigh in on specific issues, and ask letter writers to share their views. Each week we’ll publish a list of the upcoming topics to encourage discussion.

If there’s not enough local discussion on the issues we select, we’ll choose from the best submissions we get on other topics. If those do not meet our standards, we’ll publish strong national columnists from USA TODAY.

Join us in this conversation. Help us to make our community a better place. Engage.

Here is a list of upcoming topics we'd like to focus on for our opinion pages:

June 5: June 14 primary elections. We welcome letters in support of local candidates.

June 12: Unity Park. We welcome letters and will accept proposals for columns about all things Unity Park: the park, its costs, gentrification around the park, the proposed observation tower. Whatever is on your mind.

June 19: Juneteenth Day. Tell us why Juneteenth Day is important to you, what progress we have made in racial equality, and about people who are working hard to make more progress.

June 26: Homelessness.

If you would like to write a letter to the editor on one of these topics, you can send it to letters@greenvillenews.com. The maximum word count for letters is 300 words; if you have questions about submitting an opinion column or would like to write one, please contact us.

Steven Bruss is executive editor of The Greenville News. He is currently reading "The Lincoln Highway," by Amor Towles and "Every Good Endeavor," by Timothy Keller. His email address is sbruss@greenvillenews.com