
Joel McCord
Former News DirectorJoel McCord is a trumpet player who learned early in life that that’s no way to make a living.
He began his reporting career while still a music major at what then was West Chester State College in West Chester, Pa., filing reports for WCSC, the campus radio station. He transferred to the School of Communications and Theater at Temple University in Philadelphia, where he managed to earn a degree in journalism in 1973, despite having spent an inordinate amount of time playing pinochle in the student union.
He worked as a reporter and editor at The Maryland Gazette, America's oldest continuously publishing newspaper, and the Annapolis Capital, where he covered education and county government. He also spent 23 years as a metro staff reporter and occasional editor at the Baltimore Sun, covering local governments, land use issues, transportation and environment before he became one of the old farts who Tribune Company, the paper’s owners, offered a semi-reasonable amount of money to leave.
McCord worked as a freelance writer and editor until joining WYPR as a reporter, where he has covered the Maryland General Assembly and two governors. Joel also reprised his role as an environmental reporter, only this time, he used the sounds one hears on God's green earth to help tell the stories of commercial watermen, farmers, hunters and people who are laboring to save the planet.
He became WYPR’s news director in October 2012 and relinquished that role in December 2022. McCord still contributes as a freelance journalist to WYPR.
And he still plays the trumpet with your occasional big band or small jazz group, just not as often or as well as he would like.
-
The Maryland Energy Administration expects to dole out millions more to expand natural gas infrastructure for organizations from school districts to utility companies.
-
Steuart Pittman’s lead grew as mail-in ballots in Anne Arundel County were processed after Election Day.
-
The future Chesapeake Bay National Recreation Area would fall under control of the National Park Service which opens the door for more funding officials say.
-
Maryland residents should expect the incoming governor Wes Moore to have access to all the information he needs for the new administration, officials say.
-
The Anne Arundel County Executive race and two Maryland state house races are hotly contested with tens of thousands of mail-in ballots that won't be canvassed until Thursday.
-
Republican incumbent Andy Harris won a reelection bid for Maryland's 1st congressional District.
-
There was a hiccup at Bowie State University where President Joe Biden campaigned this week but officials blamed the late start to an issue with the poll books.
-
As mail-in ballots capture a larger share of voter turnout, hundreds of thousands of voters in Maryland are expected to vote on Election Day.
-
Weeks before the Maryland midterm election local officials were desperate for judges to run the polls, now the situation is less dire.
-
Maryland's State Board of Elections officials estimated that early voting turnout was nearly double four years ago statewide.