Local News

Young Reporter Has News, Civic Engagement in Her Blood

Renรฉe Morin sports an old-fashioned press hat, a gift from co-workers at the Sanford Springvale News.

Photo: Gail Burnett

By Gail Burnett

Renรฉe Morin understands why many people โ€“ including most people of her generation โ€“ donโ€™t follow the news, or donโ€™t trust what mainstream news outlets tell them. But sheโ€™s OK with being an exception.

Morin, 19, of Sanford, says the stakes are just too high in this election year for citizens to ignore whatโ€™s going on with their government, politics and environment.

โ€œI really believe that if people understand what theyโ€™re voting for, they will tend to vote in the countryโ€™s best interest,โ€ she said.

Her focus on the news โ€“ she follows several news outlets online, including CNN, MSNBC and the Wall Street Journal โ€“ earned her a reputation as the person who knew things at The New School in Kennebunk, where she graduated on June 15.

โ€œMost of my friends donโ€™t watch the news or anything like that,โ€ she said, and have told her they depend on her to keep them informed. โ€œItโ€™s really flattering to be trusted so much, but itโ€™s a lot of responsibility.โ€

The New School requires seniors to spend 200 hours doing something they believe in. Morinโ€™s project was to volunteer as a reporter with the Sanford Springvale News, a job that has involved watching hours of City Council meetings, reporting on public hearings and on election results. She attends biweekly remote meetings of the SSN staff โ€“ meetings at which she is the youngest person present by at least a couple of decades.

She plans to continue with the newspaper this summer, working around her job at Jetpack Comics & Games in Rochester, NH, and then see how things look when she starts attending York County Community College in the fall. Her long-term plan is to attend law school and then work in immigration law. In both these endeavors sheโ€™ll be following the example of her father, Brad Morin, who worked at two newspapers before deciding to study law. He is now a partner at Bourque, Clegg, Causey and Morin in Sanford, where her mother, Stacey Morin, is a paralegal.

Even if school pulls her away from the SSN in the fall, Morin says she fully intends to return to reporting when she has the time. โ€œThatโ€™s the best thing you can do for the community โ€“ to have an informed community,โ€ she said. โ€œI kind of want to be a part of that.โ€

Matty

Im The Digital Content Director here at Seacoast Oldies! I Love great stories about things happening on the Seacoast of New Hampshire and all of New England!

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