The Atlanta Voice newspaper was founded by J. Lowell Ware in 1966 with
a defined vision and mission which has been the publications’ motto and
driving force ever since—“A People Without A Voice Cannot Be Heard.”
The venerable, award-winning publication was born out of the refusal
of the white-owned majority Atlanta media to give fair and credible coverage
to the burgeoning Civil Rights Movement. It was effectively and uniquely
spearheaded by the legendary, and politically powerful, J. Lowell Ware,
who when he died at age 63, had been responsible for publishing seven
newspapers throughout the state of Georgia.
“The paper was started out of the Movement,” reports his daughter and
current Atlanta Voice Publisher, Janis Ware, a dynamic and charismatic
housing expert, business woman and community activist, who assumed the
role and responsibility for fulfilling her father’s vision.
Janis Ware is a University of Georgia Business School graduate whose
career has been steadfast in completing her father’s life long interest
in publishing and community development. She has fulfilled her father’s
vision by continuing the tradition of the Atlanta Voice as the unchallenged
leader; the foremost provider of news and pertinent information to Atlanta’s
African American community. The Atlanta Voice is committed to providing
substance and credibility in the community.
“The fact is black papers probably have more of a need today than ever
before,” Ms. Ware said. “If you start looking at the issues that we are
dealing with, we’re not being recognized. There is the same discrimination
taking place; it’s just being done differently. There is another divide
taking place today. It is a digital divide. Most of us (African-Americans)
don’t even have a computer, or know how to do research on this World
Wide Web. So, our people are going to be left behind again. If we don’t
continue to tell the story about how the issues are going to affect our
community, we will never know why or what is really happening. We must
continue to educate our people."
For years, Janis Ware worked alongside her famous father in the publishing
business (The Atlanta Voice owns the only black-owned print press operation
in the Southeast) learning his style, understanding his dedication to
excellence, and receiving inspiration from his passion for his people.
His legacy has become her mission. She continues in the spirit of the
high journalistic standards and commitment to the community passed on
to her by her esteemed father.
“We’re really trying to serve the masses of our people,” Ware explains.
“We’re not segmenting our market. We are really trying to spread our
distribution throughout the Atlanta, Fulton, DeKalb, and Cobb county
black communities. We’re trying to provide a journalistic service to
a wide array of people—sometimes to our detriment, but in keeping with
my father’s beliefs. My fathers vision was to service the entire African
American Community, regardless of age, income or socioeconomic status.
We are the majority media for our community. “We want to service everyone
who enjoys reading the paper.”
Janis combines her training in the publishing business and her father’s
tradition of unyielding commitment to uncompromising quality. Janis Ware
is the Executive Director of SUMMECH Community Development Corporation,
and the former board president of the Atlanta Housing Authority.SUMMECH
Community Development Corporation, which was actually the brainchild
of Ware’s father, was formally established in 1989.
“When my father died in 1991, I decided to commit myself to his dream
of building affordable housing for the Mechanicsville community,” she
said. “I am doing what he envisioned and conceived. He laid out a roadmap
as to how it should be done, and I am simply following his footsteps
and finishing his plan. We had a lot of adversity, but I decided it was
either going to be my father’s commitment or something I was going to
fulfill.”
While she is an accomplished businesswoman, Ware believes, as her father
did, that “A People Without A Voice Cannot Be Heard.” Her mission as
a new-age publisher remains to improve African Americans, to speak to
and for that community, and to report the news as fairly and as accurately
as we can.
As a publisher, I’m saying “We need to understand that there is another
side to those stories that are routinely produced, published, and presented.
We need to let our readers know how positively or negatively these stories
affect their lives. The one thing we need to concentrate more on is finances,
and telling our readers how to make it in this economic climate. Check
cashing services, for example, are taking as much as 20 percent out of
the checks of folks who can least afford it. That’s a monetary divide
between the have’s and the have-not’s.”
The Atlanta Voice has a unique history. It is a weekly, well-written
publication that has been the undisputed leader in news reporting for
the Atlanta African American community for the past 35 years.
“We’ve served a market that desperately needed to be serviced, and those
readers do have dollars, and they are willing to spend them” Ware said.
“But they need to be invited into your business establishment; they need
to recognize and appreciate the products that you do have; and realize
that your business is also supporting the black community. The conventional
theory is that black folk don’t and won’t read—particularly black weekly
publications. People who ride MARTA, for example, will read the paper
and even pass it on. They will comment and react to the issues and stories
we report. You put advertisements in the paper and people will respond.
So, people are reading The Atlanta Voice newspaper. That’s why small
business enterprises and corporate America alike read this premier paper,”
said Ware.