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Speakers » Tsuyoshi Oshita

Oshita
  • Doctoral Student

  • Michigan State University

  • United States


Tsuyoshi (Yoshi) Oshita is a doctoral student in the Media and Information Studies program at Michigan State University. Prior to pursuing Ph.D., Yoshi spent more than 10 years working in advertising and public relations, as an advertising media planner at one of the major publishers in Japan, Recruit, and as a senior PR consultant at Burson-Marsteller Tokyo. His areas of expertise extend to media relations, internal communication development, crisis communications and interview skill trainings.

Yoshi earned his M.A. with distinction in International Public Relations in 2005 from Cardiff University in Wales, UK. He also holds a master’s degree from the University of Tokyo (2001) in Socio-Information and Communication Studies, where he studied community newspaper business in Tokyo. He has a bachelor’s degree in Sociology from Hitotsubashi University (Japan) in 1998.

 

 

2014

Breakout Session: Nuclear Energy Preparedness and Crisis Communication in the Midwest. News Media and Corporate Perspective Analysis.*

This study explores nuclear emergency preparedness in the Midwestern state of Michigan and the characteristics of the current media coverage and reporting on the readiness for crises.

The presentation focuses the emergency systems of three nuclear stations in the state: Donald C. Cook, Palisades, and Fermi. The three nuclear facilities are by Lake Michigan and Lake Erie on the Great Lakes Region. Cook nuclear plant is located on Lake Michigan southeast coast by the border with the State of Indiana, close to about 25 miles from South Bend, Indian (University of Notre Dame University) and just 55 miles from Chicago, Illinois. Palisades is only 30 miles north of the Cook facility, which in case of any emergency, the impact on each plant could be catastrophic for the large urban areas close to the plants. Fermi nuclear plant is located in south of Detroit (30 miles) and only 25 miles north from Toledo Ohio, on the Northwest section of Lake Eerie. This plant is in direct straight line to the city of Cleveland and its Metro area at approximately 85 miles. On the areas close to these nuclear plants, there is a significant number of Hispanics, who are, in many cases, solely monolingual and barely functional in English to follow emergency instructions.

In the presentation, we will report initial findings from our study. Our research on the local news media shows that the local news media report about the nuclear plants on a regular basis; however, their coverage on preparedness is scarce. Likewise, we found that the energy companies use traditional and online media (including social media) to disseminate information about readiness and preparedness, but only in a very limited fashion.  The presentation will also show the analysis of communication tools used by nuclear plants and key messages which they are trying to be conveyed with them.  Finally, the presentation also includes interviews with state emergency communication officials, newsroom staff of Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio.  The initial findings show that despite efforts to update communication systems in the cases of nuclear crisis communication, the issue of protection in communities and surrounding population areas are still only marginally informed and neighborhood communities of the nuclear stations will be still at critical disadvantage in cases of a large-scale nuclear accident (such as radioactive leaks).

Examining the connection of the news reports and the corporate emergency efforts to any type of nuclear crisis, is crucial to academics, government officials, first responders, and the nuclear energy industry. It also provides light on the weak coverage of the press that lacks comprehensive understanding of the potentials of a large-scale accident and how it needs to be communicated to the public.

*Manuel Chavez and Tsuyoshi Oshita co-authored this paper. Manuel Chavez and Tsuyoshi Oshita will be presenting.