Congratulations to our 2022 Editorial and Advertising contest winners!
March 31, 2023
The results are in! Congratulations to our MDDC 2022 Contest winners! Our winners are below, sorted by contest division and publication. First and second place in each category will be announced via YouTube broadcast the week of May 1. At our IN PERSON conference and awards program May 5th in Annapolis, we’ll recap the winners and announce the Best of Show prize in each category as well as our organization-wide awards.
Register for the conference here.
Are you an award winner? Help us showcase your work by making sure we have your latest headshot, correct title and spelling of your name, and social handles. Click here to complete the form.
Division A
The Baltimore Sun
- Alex Mann
- Amanda Yeager
- Amy Davis
- Andy Knobel
- Andy Kostka
- Baltimore Sun Photo Staff
- Baltimore Sun staff
- Christina Tkacik
- Christine Condon
- Dan Rodricks
- Darcy Costello
- Emily Opilo
- Hannah Gaskill
- Hayes Gardner
- Jean Marbella
- Jeff Barker
- Jerry Jackson
- John-John Williams IV
- Jonathan M. Pitts
- Jonathan M. Pitts
- Karl Merton Ferron
- Kenneth K. Lam
- Kevin Richardson
- Kim Hairston
- Lea Skene
- Lee O. Sanderlin
- Lee Sanderlin
- Lillian Reed
- Lloyd Fox
- Lorraine Mirabella
- Mary Carole McCauley
- Merdith Cohn
- Michelle Deal-Zimmerman
- Mike Klingaman
- Mike Preston
- Nathan Ruiz
- Peter Jensen
- Sabrina LeBoeuf
- Sam Janesch
- Sanya Kamidi
- Scott Dance
- Steve Earley
- Tracie Rawson
- Tricia Bishop
- The News Journal
- Amanda Fries
- Anitra Johnson
- Benjamin Chambers
- Brandon Holveck
- Damian Giletto
- Delaware Online Staff
- Emily Lytle
- Esteban Parra
- Ginger Garrison
- Hannah Edelman
- Isabel Hughes
- Kelly Powers
- Kevin Tresolini
- Meredith Newman
- Patricia Talorico
- Takaki Uda
Division B
The Capital
- Barbara Haddock Taylor
- Bill Wagner
- Brian Jeffries
- Brooks DuBose
- Dana Munro
- Jason Armstrong
- Jeffrey F. Bill
- Lilly Price
- Paul W. Gillespie
- Rebecca Ritzel
The Frederick News-Post
- Alexander Dacy
- Andrew Schotz
- Angela Roberts
- Anna Joyce
- Brittney Hamilton
- Clara Niel
- Connie Hastings
- Graham Cullen
- Greg Swatek
- Jack Hogan
- Jack Murphy
- James Constantine
- Jennifer Gerlock
- Jillian Atelsek
- John Cannon
- Josh Smith
- Kathi Smith
- Katina Zentz
- Katrina Zentz
- Khushboo Rathore, Clara Niel
- Mary Kate Battles
- Mike Santos
- News-Post staff
- Noelle Hallman
- Patrick Kernan
- Ric Dugan
- Samantha Bangh
- Shelby Maly
- Talia Valencia
- Vickie Grinder
The Herald-Mail
- Andy Mason
- Bob Parasiliti
- Dave McMillion
- Dwight Weingarten
- Herald-Mail and USA Today network staff
- Joseph Deinlein
- Julie Greene
- Mike Garcia
- Mike Lewis
- Tamela Baker
- Tim Rowland
Division C
Carroll County Times
- Anthony Maluso
- Brian Krista
- Dylan Slagle
- Cecil Whig
- Carl Hamilton
- Talha Ashrif
- Cumberland Times
- Alex Rychwalski
- John Smith
- Ken Nolan
- Kyle Bennett
- Lindsay Renner-Wood
Delaware State News
- Andy Walter
- Angi Hicks
- Beth Skinner
- Bonnie Mankin
- Craig Anderson
- Craig Horleman
- Delaware State News Staff
- DJ Short
- Joy Ferrio
- Laura Walter
- Staff of Delaware State News
- Tim Mastro
- Tom Maglio
The Daily Record
- Angelyn Nye
- Bryan Sears
- Cammie Collier
- Joy Tyler
- Madeleine O’Neill
- Patrick Brannan
- Sloane Brown
The Daily Times
- Alec Branch
- Cole Johnson
- Dwight Weingarten
- Jesse Kryscio
- Kelly Powers
- Kristian Jaime
- Lauren Roberts
- Matthew Korfhage
- Olivia Minzola
- Stephanie Lindholm
The Star Democrat
- Angela Price
- Connie Connolly
- Jonathan Carter
- Megan Loock
- Mike Detmer
- Natalie Jones
- Sally Covey
- Talha Ashrif
- Tom McCall
Division D
- Bay Journal
- Dave Harp
- Jeremy Cox
- Karl Blankenship
- Timothy Wheeler
- Sussex County Post
- Angi Hicks
- DJ Short
The Aegis
- Brian Krista
- Jason Fontelieu
- Maria Morales
- Matt Button
- Randy McRoberts
- Tony Roberts
The Catholic Review
- ADAM ZIELONKA
- CR Staff
- Gabriella O’Brien
- GEORGE P. MATYSEK JR.
- Gerry Jackson
- Kevin J. Parks
- MARY K. TILGHMAN
- Todd Karpovich
Towson Times
- Staff
Division E
Baltimore Jewish Times
- Ebony Brown
- Selah Maya Zighelboim
Business Monthly
- Emily Calkins
- George Berkheimer
- Len Lazarick
- Pantea Tofangchi
- Susan Kim
Cape Gazette
- Aaron Mushrush
- Abby Workman
- Chris Flood
- Dan Cook
- Kathy McGinty
- Kristin Sinnott
- Lauren Zaniewski
- Mallery Galaska
- Melissa Steele
- Nick Roth
- Ronald MacArthur
- Tara Marks
Coastal Point
- Butch Comegys
- Chris Aube
- Coastal Point Staff
- Darin J. McCann
- Kerin Magill
- Mike Smith
- Mike Stern
- Shaun M. Lambert
- Susan Canfora
Howard County Times
- Jacob Steinberg
- Sherry Greenfield
- Staff
Salisbury Independent
- Susan Canfora
Southern Maryland News
- Caleb Soptelean
- Darryl Kinsey Jr.
- Jesse Yeatman
- Marty Madden
- Ted Black
The Dundalk Eagle
- Ben Terzi
The Washington Informer
- Brenda Siler
- Dan Olds
- Micha Green
Washington Business Journal
- Caitlin Lyons
- Dan Brendel
- Daniel Sernovitz
- Hannah Denham
- Maggie Lynn
- Sara Gilgore
- Tristan Navera
Washington Jewish Week
- Art Department
- Lisa Traiger
- Staff
- Suzanne Pollak
Division F
Baltimore Business Journal
- Amanda Yeager
- BALTIMORE BUSINESS JOURNAL STAFF
- Carley Milligan
- Garrett Dvorkin
- Holden Wilen
- Jessica Iannetta
- Joanna Sullivan
- Matt Hooke
- Melody Simmons
- Stephanie Redding
Bay Times/Record Observer
- Doug Bishop
- Megan Loock
Catonsville Times
- Jeffrey F. Bill
- Staff
Crisfield Times
- Angi Hicks
Delaware Business Times
- Emma Reilly
- Jacob Owens
- Katie Tabeling
- Sabrina Gonzalez
Dorchester Banner
- Dave Cannon
- Tom Maglio
Kent County News
- Mackenzie Brady
Laurel Star
- Brittany Passon
- Chris Elliott
- Greg English
- Mike McClure
- Star staff
- Tede Griffith
- Tony Windsor
Seaford Star
- Brittany Passon
- Carol Kinsley
- Karen Cherrix
- Lynn Schofer
- Mike McClure
- Rebecca Jones
- Star Staff
- Tony Windsor
The Afro American (Baltimore & DC)
- Aria Brent
- Courtney Alexander
- Dana Peck
- Denise Dorsey
- Diane Hocker
- Frances Draper
- Kevin Peck
- Kofi Tyus
- Lenora Howze
- Mylika Scatliffe
- Nicole Batey
- Tashi McQueen
The Avenue News
- Ben Terzi
- Demetrius Dillard
- The Dorchester Star
- Angela Price, Natalie Jones
- Connie Connolly
- Mike Detmer
The Newark Post
- Jon Buzby
- Josh Shannon
- Newark Post staff
Division O
Baltimore Brew
- David Plymyer
- Fern Shen
- J.M. Giordano
- Mark Reutter
Baltimore Fishbowl
- Adam DeRose
- Carl Schmidt
- Charlie Herrick
- David Nitkin
- Ed Gunts
- Ed Schrader
- Josh Sisk
- Karen Nitkin
- Karuga Koinange
- Latrice Hill
- Marcus Dieterle
- Marion Winik
- Matthew Liptak
- Nicole Allen
- Susan Dunn
Capital News Service Wire
- Abby Zimmardi
- E.A. Breeden
- HANNA ZAKHARENKO
- Howard Center
- Josh Casazza
- Kyle Russo
- Logan Hill
- Matthew Wynn
- Povich Center
- Shannon Clark
- Stephen Neukam
Maryland Matters
- Alanah Davis
- Danielle E. Gaines
- Elizabeth Shwe
- Josh Kurtz
- Rosanne Skirble
MoCo360 (formerly Bethesda Beat)
- Akira Kyles
- Anne Tallent
- Bethany Rodgers
- Caitlynn Peetz
- Christine Zhu
- Em Espey
- Erin Roby
- Ginny Bixby
- Julie Rasicot
- Steve Bohnel
- The Bay Net
- JJ Atchison
- Tony Ciarleglio
- Zach Hill
Division S
SPJ-MD, SPJ-DE or SPJ-DC members
- Adam Willis
- Al Drago
- Alissa Zhu
- Ben Conarck
- Brenda Wintrode
- Brenna Smith
- Christina Tkacik
- Dylan Segelbaum
- Emily Sullivan
- Hallie Miller
- Jacob Baumgart
- Jessica Calefati
- John-John Williams IV
- Julie Scharper
- Kaitlin Newman
- Karina Serio
- Krishna Sharma
- Kristen Griffith
- Leslie Streeter
- Liz Bowie
- Nick Thieme
- Pamela Wood
- Penelope Blackwell
- Ryan Little
- Scott Serio
- Sophie Kasakove
- Sue Kopen Katcef
- Taylor DeVille
- Tim Prudente
Recent Posts

May 27, 2026
By Rebecca Snyder Executive Director, MDDC Press Association Governor Wes Moore’s veto of SB 459 is a disappointing and misguided decision that overlooks both the capabilities of Maryland’s local news organizations and the urgent need to strengthen the state’s local information infrastructure. The legislation was straightforward and practical: require Maryland state agencies to prioritize local news organizations (print, digital, radio and broadcast) for a portion of their advertising spending. It was revenue-neutral. It did not create a new tax, a new program, or a new bureaucracy. It simply ensured that more Maryland advertising dollars stayed in Maryland communities. Lawmakers across the political spectrum understood that value. SB 459 passed unanimously in the Senate and with overwhelming bipartisan support in the House. Legislators from both parties recognized a simple truth: local news matters. In vetoing the bill, Governor Moore expressed concerns about costs and suggested that Maryland’s local news organizations could not effectively deliver advertising to the audiences state agencies need to reach. That rationale fundamentally misunderstands today’s local media landscape. Maryland’s local news organizations include digital-first outlets, public media organizations, commercial broadcasters, radio stations, community publications, and multimedia news platforms serving audiences across every region of the state. Many operate full service advertising agencies that can place any type of advertising needed, including national platforms. 0020Collectively, they provide sophisticated advertising and communications services that rival — and often outperform — national platforms when it comes to reaching Maryland audiences. Our members regularly execute highly targeted advertising campaigns using digital audience segmentation, programmatic advertising, email marketing, video, social amplification, sponsorships, direct mail, broadcast, radio, and event-based outreach. They work with businesses, nonprofits, healthcare organizations, universities, tourism agencies, and government entities every day to connect messages with precisely the audiences they intend to reach. In fact, local media outlets often have a far deeper understanding of Maryland communities than national advertising platforms ever could. That matters because this debate is about more than advertising dollars. It is about whether Maryland will invest in the civic infrastructure that keeps communities informed and connected. Local journalism remains one of the few institutions dedicated to covering school boards, county governments, public safety, elections, housing, economic development, and the daily issues that shape residents’ lives. When local news organizations disappear, communities lose accountability, civic participation declines, and misinformation fills the vacuum. SB 459 recognized that state government advertising can serve two purposes at once: effectively communicate with Maryland residents and strengthen the trusted local institutions that help those residents stay informed. The bill also acknowledged another important reality: local media outlets are often best positioned to reach underserved communities. Community publications, local radio stations, ethnic media outlets, and regional digital publishers have built trust with audiences that are frequently overlooked by large national advertising buys. Supporting local media is not only smart economic policy; it is smart communications policy. And economically, the argument is equally compelling. Every year, Maryland spends taxpayer dollars on advertising campaigns intended to reach Maryland residents. SB 459 simply sought to ensure that more of those dollars circulate through Maryland businesses, support Maryland jobs, and strengthen Maryland-based organizations rather than flowing almost entirely to out-of-state tech platforms and national advertising networks. That is not protectionism. It is common sense. Other jurisdictions across the country have already adopted similar approaches because they recognize that government advertising dollars can help sustain local media ecosystems without expanding government spending. Maryland had the opportunity to join them with a balanced, bipartisan solution. Instead, the Governor chose to veto it. We respect Governor Moore’s commitment to innovation and economic growth. But on this issue, the administration appears to have underestimated both the sophistication and the reach of Maryland’s local media organizations. This conversation should not end with a veto. Marylanders benefit when they have access to strong local journalism. Communities benefit when trusted local outlets remain financially sustainable. And taxpayers benefit when state communications are delivered through organizations that understand Maryland audiences and communities. Support for local news should not be partisan. The General Assembly understood that. Maryland residents understand that. We hope the administration will reconsider its view of what local media can accomplish and recognize that investing in Maryland journalism is also an investment in Maryland communities.

May 8, 2026
Reporters, editors and other media professionals gather for conference and awards program remotely and in person (5/8/26 - Annapolis, MD) – Members and supporters of the Maryland | Delaware | DC Press Association came together this week to highlight news with integrity and excellence in journalism by recognizing the winners of the Contest, which celebrates print and online work completed in 2025 . The contest, governed by the Association’s Editorial and Advertising Committees, admitted over 1,594 entries among 86 categories . There are six divisions in the contest, which group member publications into categories governed by total audience numbers, combining print and digital readership. One Best in Show award is given in each category across all divisions. These entries were judged by news media professionals at the Florida State Press Association. There are several top awards given across all divisions to the publication. These include the James S. Keat Freedom of Information Award for demonstrating use of public information act requests in its reporting, Courage in Journalism, honors acts of courage in journalism and strength in adversity while uncovering truth, and Best Moves, which highlights the most important thing MDDC member organizations did in 2025. The contest also honors top personnel in design and sales and honors new journalists. Members of the MDDC Press Foundation board of directors and journalism academics judged the top awards and the video audience voted on the Best Moves. New for 2025 was the A-Mark Prize for Investigative Journalism, which provides first, second and third place cash prizes for work in Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia. The capstone award, one per division, is News Organization of the Year. The Banner won the James S. Keat Freedom of Information Award for a wide-ranging portfolio of substantive projects that used public records in reporting. From investigations into child deaths from abuse and neglect to reporting on public officials’ use of Google Chat that auto deletes messages after 24 hours, Banner reporters were persistent in their pursuit of public records. Their groundbreaking investigation into the public transit times endured by Baltimore City’s schoolchildren was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. The award is named for Jim Keat, a retired editor and foreign correspondent for the Baltimore Sun, who was a long-time advocate for public information access. Keat is also a member of the MDDC Newspaper Hall of Fame. Read more . The Star Democrat was awarded the Best Move of 2025 for its new daily emailed newsletter which combined strong data analytics and local content to create a useful product with clear revenue gains. The winner was determined by audience vote. Read more . The Association recognized a new journalist with the Rookie of the Year award. This award honors a new journalist with less than 18 months' experience in the field. Six nominations were received from five member publications. Nick Stonesifer of Spotlight Delaware is the 2025 Rookie of the Year for his “well researched, well written and important work” teamed with a drive and determination to use public records in his reporting. Read more . Gabriella Ferraro O’Brien won Designer of the Year , which honors a body of work over the contest cycle. O’Brien’s portfolio of work was noteworthy for her “impressive submission of imaginative and creative design with sophisticated use of white space that allows for typographic hierarchy. The variety of typefaces, font sizes, typeface weights, and colors contribute to the hierarchy while the page designs feel unified.” Read more . The Baltimore Beat (baltimorebeat.com) and Baltimore Fishbowl (baltimorefishbowl.com) share Best of Show for MDDC’s Website of General Excellence category, which honors a news organization’s ability to connect with readers through social media and engagement, and local news coverage. The judges noted “Baltimore Beat stands out with bold, hyper-local links that are interesting and useful.” “Baltimore Fishbowl’s presentation offers a wonderful array of information with attractive, user-friendly design.” The award was judged by journalism instructors at Loyola University of Maryland. Read more. The News Organization of the Year awards represent the best publication in each division. These awards are chosen based on the points accumulated for first and second prizes in each category. The Baltimore Banner won the award in Division A; The Frederick News-Post was named News Organization of the Year for Division B; and Catholic Review won in Division C. Baltimore Beat and Spotlight Delaware shared the award in Division D; Coastal Point was named News Organization of the Year for Division E; and Morning Star Publications won in Division F. For a full listing of winners and their award-winning work, view our presentation episodes at https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRxzvJD4IXLBvNkmcUfFUogmBCw35XKUa&si=EAww-G0KFMx6V67w ### ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Maryland | Delaware | DC Press Association is a vibrant, influential association representing over 100 member news media organizations in our region. We believe a strong news media is central to a strong and open society. We help our members succeed through advocacy efforts, revenue generation, professional development and industry recognition. Learn more at www.mddcpress.com .









