Trust and accuracy
Corrections Policy
A Jake Team LLC publication
Last Updated: June 30, 2026
The short version
Accuracy matters to us. Our stories are drafted with AI-assisted tools and reviewed by a person before publishing, but mistakes can still happen. If you spot one, email info@jaketeam.com with the article title, the link, and what looks wrong. We review every request, fix what needs fixing, and add a correction note when a change is significant.
Getting it right matters more to us than getting it first. QueenCreek.city is a local news site, and our readers count on us for accurate information about Queen Creek and the surrounding area. This page explains how we handle corrections.
How we work
We are a small husband-and-wife team. We use AI-assisted tools to research, draft, and format our coverage, and a person reviews each story before it is published. That review catches a lot, but no process is perfect, and a mistake can still slip through. When one does, we want to know. You can read more about our process on our AI & Editorial Standards page.
How to request a correction
If you believe something we published is inaccurate, email info@jaketeam.com and include as much of the following as you can:
- The article title
- The article link (the web address, or URL)
- What you believe is incorrect
- A source or documentation that supports the correction, if you have one
- Your name and a way for us to reach you
The more detail you provide, the faster we can review your request and respond.
How we review corrections
Here is what happens after you reach out:
- We review your request and check it against the facts and any sources.
- If a correction is needed, we update the article.
- For a significant change, such as a wrong fact, name, date, or number, we add a correction note to the article so readers can see what changed and when.
- For a minor fix, such as spelling, grammar, or formatting, we may simply correct it without a separate note.
What may not lead to a correction
We are always glad to review a concern, but not every request results in a change. We generally do not change an article for:
- A difference of opinion, or a disagreement with how a story was framed.
- A personal dispute between people or organizations.
- A claim we cannot verify, or that is not supported by evidence.
If we decide not to make a change, we will do our best to explain why.
For more on how we research and review our reporting, see our AI & Editorial Standards and Disclaimer.