Civil Beat Staff

Richard Wiens

Now the Deputy Ideas Editor for Honolulu Civil Beat, Richard Wiens has been helping to run newsrooms big and small for more than 40 years.

He served as news editor at Civil Beat for five years, and has continued to help coordinate its election coverage while editing the Candidate Q&As. Now he is one of the editor/opinion writers involved in the news organization’s Let The Sunshine In project tracking efforts to improve government accountability and transparency in Hawaiʻi.

Before coming to Civil Beat, he was editor and publisher of the Del Norte Triplicate, a newspaper in the far-northern California town of Crescent City, also known as the tsunami magnet of the West Coast.

There, he coordinated coverage that won numerous statewide awards from the California Newspaper Publishers Association, including first place for spot news coverage of a tsunami — spawned by the Japanese earthquake of March 2011 — that destroyed Crescent City Harbor.

Prior to that, he helped run the city desks of the Colorado Springs Gazette, the Spokane (Washington) Spokesman-Review and the Los Angeles Daily News. After graduating from the University of Oregon School of Journalism in 1979, he got his start in newspapering at the Hillsboro (Oregon) Argus, where he advanced from reporter to managing editor during his seven-year tenure.

He has won statewide first-place awards for feature writing and military coverage, and helped direct coverage of the standoff between white supremacist Randy Weaver and federal agents at Ruby Ridge in North Idaho that was the Pulitzer runner-up for spot news in 1992.

Throughout his career, he has pushed for coverage that helps citizens better understand — and hopefully improve — the community they live in.

Contact Richard at rwiens@civilbeat.org.

Suit Challenges How Legislators Turn Blank Bills Into Mid-Session Surprises David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024

Suit Challenges How Legislators Turn Blank Bills Into Mid-Session Surprises

League of Women Voters targets the use of short-form measures that start out as empty shells.

A Targeted Campaign To Register More Voters Comes To Hawaiʻi Kalany Omengkar/Civil Beat

A Targeted Campaign To Register More Voters Comes To Hawaiʻi

The CEO of a national nonprofit says he’s hoping to get more Hawaiʻi voices heard in elections, especially people of color, unmarried women and young adults.

Hawaiʻi Gov. Josh Green Is Walking A Tightrope With The Trump Administration Jacquelyn Martin/AP/2025

Hawaiʻi Gov. Josh Green Is Walking A Tightrope With The Trump Administration

As Trump’s domestic military moves and threats play out in DC and LA, the need to balance legal challenges and relationship-building isn’t lost on Hawaiʻi.

Why Hawaiʻi’s Senators Raise So Much Money, And Give So Much Away Courtesy of Sen. Mazie Hirono

Why Hawaiʻi’s Senators Raise So Much Money, And Give So Much Away

In Congress, it’s not enough to keep getting yourself elected and reelected. Leadership PACs are a must.

Don’t Be Complacent: These Alerts Aren’t False Alarms Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2018

Don’t Be Complacent: These Alerts Aren’t False Alarms

Hawaiʻi’s alert system is warning of real danger as determined by experts and science even if it turns out to be less than worst-case scenario.

Case May Not Always Vote With Dems, But His Fundraising Is Going Just Fine David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024

Case May Not Always Vote With Dems, But His Fundraising Is Going Just Fine

A look at the latest campaign finance filings for Hawaiʻi’s congressional delegation.

House’s New Money Man Talks About His Hopes For Changing The Legislature Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2024

House’s New Money Man Talks About His Hopes For Changing The Legislature

Rep. Chris Todd thinks too many bills in past sessions have been referred to the Finance Committee he now chairs.

Blue State Blues: One-Party Control? In Hawaiʻi It’s More Like No-Party Control Kalany Omengkar/Civil Beat/2022

Blue State Blues: One-Party Control? In Hawaiʻi It’s More Like No-Party Control

Running as a Democrat or Republican says more about political calculation than party allegiance or ideology.