
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 preservationists working to recruit and train the next generation of historic trades professionals. We hear about a national apprenticeship pipeline to meet the growing need for carpenters, masons, and other highly skilled workers.
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We'll go On the Record with the head of the Maryland Writers' Association to discuss what networking and critique mean for those who write alone.
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We’ll go On the Record with the novelist who spins into one day--Ana’s 60th birthday--all the joys and stresses of Ana’s complex life.
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We’ll go On the Record to ask the dean of the University of Maryland’s public-health school what he learned this month on a visit to Ukraine, the country his parents left after World War II. Plus we ask Congressman Steny Hoyer the outlook for more U.S. aid for Ukraine.
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What does expanding state-funded pre-K mean for the private child care industry? We talk to a board member overseeing implementation of the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future and the head of a state association of childcare providers.
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This week on the podcast, we kick off the holiday season with two tales of holiday hijinx.
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A Stoop Story from Kim Worthington about the painful dimming of a relationship.
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We’ll go On the Record with the co-editor of a new anthology of short stories by Indigenous authors, and one of the contributors. What is dark fiction? And what power do scary and unsettling stories have to transfix readers?
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We’ll go On the Record with a look at Baltimore nonprofits working to keep kids on a positive path.
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We’ll go On the Record with the Maryland Secretary of Juvenile Services. Reported youth crimes have dropped over the past decade, but a recent rise-- especially handgun violations--raises alarm.