Maureen Harvie
Senior Supervising Producer, On The RecordMaureen Harvie is Senior Supervising Producer for On the Record. She is a graduate of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and joined WYPR in 2014 as an intern for the newsroom. Whether coordinating live election night coverage, capturing the sounds of a roller derby scrimmage, interviewing veterans, or booking local authors, she is always on the lookout for the next story.
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Since 2010, cargo vessels have lost engine power, electricity or steering in the Chesapeake Bay or Patapsco River at least 103 times, a Baltimore Banner review of Coast Guard records shows.
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Through community clinics, Maryland Legal Aid guides people through the expungement process. We speak to an attorney with the nonprofit.
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In “Dream Refuge for children imprisoned,” artist Na Omi Shintani connects three groups who have experienced unjust incarceration in the United States.
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In her latest novel, “Saint Seducing Gold,” author Brittany Williams depicts the courage and complexity of sword-wielding teenager Joan Sands.
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Maryland hospitals rank as the worst in the nation for emergency room wait times, specifically for how long it takes to admit a patient. Why? What solutions are being explored?
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This week on the podcast, two stories about boys who’ll do anything — and everything — to get kicked out of boarding school.
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We go On the Record with the co-founder of SquashWise. The nonprofit uses the lightning-speed court sport to foster personal growth and high academic standards for middle and high school youth. Then we stop by the facility and hear from the students.
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We’ll go On the Record with the director and the historian behind a film that tells the story of the enslaved couple Mary and Daniel Bell, who fought in court for their family’s freedom, were thwarted, saw their children sold south, and were at last connected again.
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Erica Rimlinger shares a story about her childhood hijinx.
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From schools and parks to fire hydrants and sidewalks, historian Andrew Kahrl finds numerous examples over the 20th century of how African American taxpayers have been denied the benefits of their dollars. His new book is titled, “The Black Tax.”