More than 40 media partners have carried California Watch stories – a pretty extraordinary number given that we haven’t been around that long.

Mark Katches
Mark Katches is a past editorial director for The Center for Investigative Reporting. He is currently editor of the Oregonian and vice president of content for the Oregonian Media Group. Previously, he built and ran investigative teams at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Orange County Register. Mark was the primary editor of Pulitzer Prize-winning projects in both 2008 and 2010 and edited or managed five other stories that were Pulitzer finalists. Projects he edited or directed also have won the George Polk Award, the IRE award and the Scripps-Howard National Journalism Award as well as the Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting, the Worth Bingham Prize, the Sigma Delta Chi Award and the National Headliner Award. Multiplatform projects produced by CIR staff under Mark's guidance won a national News & Documentary Emmy, two Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards, a George Foster Peabody Award and an Edward R. Murrow Award. He has overseen projects or websites that have won four Online Journalism Awards in the last decade, in addition to logging more than a dozen OJA finalists. In 2001, he was part of a reporting team that won the Gerald Loeb and IRE awards for a series of stories detailing the rising profits from the human tissue trade. He completed a Punch Sulzberger Fellowship at Columbia University in 2013 and has taught reporting classes as an adjunct professor at the University of Southern California, UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism and Stanford University. Mark served on the board of directors of Investigative Reporters and Editors for four years and oversaw the IRE mentorship program for six years.
Coming Saturday night: another California Watch barnburner
Freelance reporter and CIR veteran Will Evans looks at stimulus grants and contracts in California.
California Watch site tour: Data Center
The Data Center will be the place to go for searchable databases of interest in California.
Charging for our California Watch content
The mission of California Watch is to distribute high-impact investigative and enterprise journalism. But we won’t last long if we give it away.
California Watch tackles homeland security issues in first project
Our examination of waste and mismanagement in the state’s homeland security grant programs
California Watch helps fill void for investigative journalism
The dramatic decline in resources creates huge challenges for newsrooms that are struggling to fulfill their role as watchdogs.