
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 Holly Arnold, head of the Maryland Transit Administration. Baltimore’s Red Line, an east-west transit project, was canceled 8 years ago. Now, it's back. Will it be light rail, or rapid buses in special lanes? How long til it’s built?
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We hear a Stoop story about the comfort a therapy dog can bring patients and doctors.
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We’ll go On the Record with the Maryland SPCA. Economic stress can put pet owners in a tough spot. We hear about outreach efforts, like distributing pet food and veterinary clinics.
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We’ll go On the Record to mark two civil-rights milestones sixty years ago.The integration of Gwynn Oak Amusement Park inspires a festival this Sunday. And activists in Annapolis plan to re-enact the 1963 March on Washington on Saturday.
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The pleasures and perils of watching your first R-rated movie in a theater.
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Years, maybe decades after someone left high school without a diploma, what could bring them back? What motivation, what kinds of support services? We talk with the CEOs of two non profit high schools for adult students -- and with two women about to embark on becoming students again.
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We’ll go On the Record with the head of Maryland’s Motor Vehicle Administration and a transportation safety expert. Why are pedestrian fatalities so high? How can infrastructure and technology help prevent car crashes?
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We’ll go On the Record with a rehabilitation physician treating patients who have developed what used to be called “chronic fatigue syndrome” - after a COVID infection. Then, two advocates who struggled with that syndrome long before the pandemic share their advice.
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We’ll go On the Record with the head of Baltimore City’s Housing Authority. The waitlist for the Low-Income Public Housing is open for the first time in four years. How will recipients be picked from the thousands who apply? Then: a new approach to inclusionary housing.
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We’ll go On the Record with investigative reporter Justine Barron … to ask what new evidence she presents in her book coming out next week, "They Killed Freddie Gray." Barron contends eyewitness accounts by Gray’s Sandtown neighbors were suppressed.