
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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We’ll go On the Record with Housing Secretary Jake Day to talk about the governor’s plan for Maryland’s housing shortage and eviction crisis. What would make it more likely that affordable homes are built? How to pull in federal money for housing? How to protect renters?
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This week on the podcast, two stories about using art to make change.
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We'll go On the Record with Baltimore City's Chief Administrative Officer Faith Leach to talk about an $18M deal to acquire two downtown hotels for homeless housing.
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We’ll go On the Record with a lawyer pushing to connect eviction prevention funds to community schools. Families with young children are the group most likely to face eviction. Plus, Baltimore’s plan to turn two downtown hotels into housing for the homeless.
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Tami Jacobs shares a Stoop Story about starting over with her mother in America.
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We’ll go On the Record with writer Mako Yoshikawa. Her estranged father’s death - the day before her wedding - set Yoshikawa on a journey to untangle his mental illness, his stalled career as a physicist, and his cruelty. What did she find?
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We go On the Record with historian Edda Fields-Black. Her book “Combee: Harriet Tubman, the Combahee River Raid, and Black Freedom During the Civil War" tells of a crucial Civil War raid. Under cover of darkness, Harriet Tubman and the Union Army, along with Black enlisted men, liberated 700 enslaved people along the Combee River of South Carolina.
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We’ll go On the Record with MIchele Norris, whose “Race Card Project” asks for super-short messages about race. They’re the heart of her new book: "Our Hidden Conversations: What Americans Really Think About Race And Identity."
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We’ll go On the Record with historian David O. Stewart on Presidents Day. He traces George Washington’s skills as a political operator, as well as the first president’s failure to speak out against slavery as he came to realize its evils.
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This week on the podcast, two stories about people navigating mental health challenges with humor.