Site icon Rosalie Rippey

Media Relations & Crisis Communications for CPS

As media contact for Cambridge Public Schools, I coordinated our response to many media inquiries. This meant being prepared to provide a swift, reassuring, and highly-quotable response during crises as well as identifying “good stories” taking place in our schools. Following are a few (non-paywalled) examples.

Wrote
Solicited
Managed
Crisis Communications

Some of our the most high-profile incidents that occurred during my tenure can still be found online – including one that went viral, resulting in a tsunami of hate-filled right-wing messages to our inboxes, phones, and social media. While it was a little exciting to see my name credited, as CPS communications director on CNN, it was a relief when these events eventually passed.

I learned an incredible amount from handling these sensitive and highly-charged incidents. The key was to have a clear crisis communication plan in place, and to revisit it periodically to ensure that all point people were ready to respond.

When a crisis emerged, I would immediately draft a core message and revise it until the Superintendent, Chief Operating Officer, and other key leaders were satisfied with the language. This might involve our legal counsel, department heads or Principals, depending on the situation. Internal communication came first – and I made sure to directly notify school clerks and family liaisons in addition to all school Principals, whether or not they were involved, of the basic facts of the situation so that they could refer questions to me.

In developing this message and sticking to it, my goal was to provide transparency and de-escalate emotions. One measure of success is that many significant health and safety incidents never found their way to the Boston Globe – not because we hid information but in fact because we communicated with appropriate urgency and demonstrated transparency, responsiveness, and integrity.

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