The Meyer “Mike” Berger Award

2025 Mike Berger Award Winner

Cecilia Reyes, a bilingual senior reporter for Business Insider, has won the 2025 Meyer “Mike” Berger Award for “Locked Out”, a deeply reported series about illegal evictions, which are on the rise across the country. The moving and ambitious series delves into the illegal housing evictions known as "lockouts." Reyes began with 911 calls in Chicago, Atlanta and Los Angeles, and traced the consequences of these lockouts on individuals and families who bear the brunt of pursuing expensive legal action, often without the resources to do so. In deeply human terms, but without sentimentality, the investigation illuminates the cruelty and inequality that increasingly plague American society. 

Read the full announcement

The Meyer "Mike" Berger Award and its $1,500 prize is awarded for outstanding human interest reporting across platforms. Print, radio, broadcast and digital reporting are eligible for the award. All entries must have been published during 2024 in the U.S., though in the case of a series or ongoing story, work that appeared in January 2025 will be accepted. Journalists who report in a foreign language should submit copies of original stories with an English translation. No entry fee is required.

Enter here.

Members of the faculty of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism judge the entries for the Berger award. The award, which consists of a certificate from Columbia and a $1,500 prize, is conferred annually at the School’s Journalism Day ceremony in May.

Berger won a 1950 Pulitzer Prize for local reporting for his story on a veteran who went on a shooting spree in Camden, New Jersey, killing several residents. He then re­introduced the newspaper’s “About New York” column in the early 1950s, setting the standard for evocative and eloquent human-interest reporting. Berger passed away in 1959. Louis Schweitzer, a New York industrialist who admired Berger’s work, created the Berger Award in 1960.

2024

Sally Jenkins, The Washington Post, "Bitter rivals. Beloved friends. Survivors." Judges: David Hajdu, Alisa Solomon and Alexander Stille

2023

Lynzy Billing, ProPublica, “The Night Raids." Judges: Joanne Faryon, Meg Kissinger and Dale Maharidge

2022

Evan Allen, Boston Globe, “Under the Wheel.”  Judges: Joanne Faryon, David Hajdu and Dale Maharidge

2021

Joe Sexton, ProPublica, "He’d Waited Decades to Argue His Innocence”  Judges: Joanne Faryon, Meg Kissinger and Dale Maharidge

2020

Thomas Curwen and Francine Orr, Los Angeles Times, "The Street Within", an immersive series that followed eight residents of a homeless encampment who were fast-tracked to apartments in South Los Angeles. Judges: Joanne Faryon, Meg Kissinger and  Dale Maharidge

2019

Terrence McCoy, The Washington Post, A series on Americans who were challenged in deeply personal ways by some of the most significant political and social issues of the day including the opioid crisis and immigration: Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Judges: Joanne Faryon, Meg Kissinger and Dale Maharidge

2018

John Woodrow Cox, The Washington Post, A series on children affected by gun violence:  Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Judges: David Hajdu, Meg Kissinger and Karen Stabiner

2017

Eli Saslow, The Washington Post, A series showcasing pockets of suffering in white America: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Judges: David Hajdu, Dale Maharidge and Paula Span

2016

Ken Armstrong and T. Christian Miller, The Marshall Project and ProPublica, “An Unbelievable Story of Rape.” Judges: David Hajdu, Dale Maharidge and Ruth Padawer

2015

Joanne Faryon and Brad Racino, inewsource, “An Impossible Choice: Deciding When a Life is No Longer Worth Living.” Judges: Andie Tucher, David Hajdu and Dale Maharidge

2014

Julia O’Malley, Anchorage Daily News, “The Things that Happen: Two Boys and Cancer.” Judges: Andie Tucher, David Hajdu and Jonathan Weiner

2013

Sheri Fink, Freelance, A series of pieces exploring the catastrophic consequences of bureaucratic, structural, and political failures during the deadly hurricane season of 2012. Judges: David Hajdu, Michael Shapiro and Andie Tucher

2012

John Branch, New York Times, “Punched Out: The Life and Death of a Hockey Enforcer.” Judges: Sheila Coronel, Andie Tucher and Dale Maharidge

2011

Anne Barnard, New York Times, “A Parish Tested.”   Judges: Columbia Journalism School Faculty

2010

Joanna Connors, The Plain Dealer, "The Sheltering Sky.”  Judges: Columbia Journalism School Faculty

2009

Brendan McCarthy, Times-Picayune, "Homicide 37."  Judges: Columbia Journalism School Faculty

2008

Michael Paulson, The Boston Globe, "Ma Siss’s Place: The Birth of a Church."  Judges: Columbia Journalism School Faculty

2007

Abigail Tucker, The Baltimore Sun, 2006 Reporting. Judges: Columbia Journalism School Faculty


See the archived list of winners since 1961.

Judges

The Berger Award is judged by Columbia Journalism School faculty.

Contact

212-854-6468
[email protected]

Sign up for the Columbia Journalism Awards quarterly newsletter to receive information on prize open and close dates, entry requirements and prizewinners. Our newsletter is the best way to stay in the know on all things related to the journalism awards at Columbia University.