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WABE 90.1 FM
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HOW A NEW TEAM OF FEDS HACKED THE HACKERS AND GOT COLONIAL The Department of Justice on Monday touted the recovery of $2.3 million — about half — of the ransom that was collected by hackers in the Colonial Pipeline attack last month. Experts say it was a surprising outcome to an increasingly frequent and severe crime. “Ransomware is very seldom recovered,” said April Falcon Doss, executive director of the Institute for Technology Law and AS GWINNETT SCHOOL BOARD CHANGES, DIVISIONS CONTINUE As Gwinnett School Board Changes, Divisions Continue. For years, all five members of the Gwinnett County school board were white. Now the board has three members of color and two white members. (Picture from 2020.) For years, the Gwinnett County Public Schools’ student population has been racially diverse. For most of that time though,those
THREE JOGGERS IN BUCKHEAD SHOT BY DRIVER, POLICE SAY A driver shot at three pedestrians in a residential part of Atlanta, injuring one, before crashing into and severely injuring a man at an apartment complex hours later, police said Saturday. The apparent drive-by shootings occurred Saturday morning in Atlanta’s wealthy Buckhead neighborhood, where residents have been GOV. KEMP LIFTS MANY REMAINING COVID-19 RULES ON Saying that Georgia's efforts to control COVID-19 have been successful, Gov. Brian Kemp, shown April 3, is lifting many remaining requirements for social distancing and masked employees at businesses. But public health experts fear another surge, possibly driven by more infectious variants of BOARD APPROVES PAYING $1,000 BONUSES TO Georgia's state Board of Education has approved a plan to pay $1,000 bonuses to teachers and most other education employees, using in $240 million federal coronavirus relief money. The Board of Education voted Thursday to send the money to Georgia school districts, which are in turn supposed to pay teachers before DEKALB PEDIATRIC PRACTICE OFFERING COVID-19 VACCINATIONS A DeKalb County-based doctor, who is leading a pediatric practice that recently started administering the Pfizer vaccine to teens 16 and over, says the emotional impact that the COVID-19 pandemic is having on kids is beyond enormous. “As pediatricians, we’ve seen less and less illness as people are socially distanced THE 17-YEAR CICADAS WILL SOON EMERGE; A GA. PROFESSOR The 17-year cicadas are expected in North Georgia, around Ellijay, Dahlonega and Blairsville, and will likely start appearing and making noise in the next few weeks. These Brood X cicadas emerging this summer likely won’t be in metro Atlanta. But Brood XIX, which is on a 13-year cycle and does appear in Atlanta, is expected to emerge in2024.
ATLANTA LGBTQ ADVOCATE WINSTON JOHNSON DIES AT 79 Longtime Atlanta LGBTQ rights advocate Winston Johnson has died this week after a lengthy battle with cancer. He was 79 years old. Johnson, a Valdosta native, co-founded the annual gala for the Human Rights Campaign Atlanta. He met Coretta Scott King through his work with Eastern Airlines and the two became close FAMILY OF BLACK MAN IN DEKALB COUNTY WHO DIED AFTER POLICE Matthew Zadok Williams called his mother every other day. So Chrys Ann Lewis got worried earlier this week when she didn’t hear from her son. “My son always calls me. He listens to me. He makes me feel like a little girl,” said Lewis, surrounded by four ofWABE 90.1 FM
90.1 FM WABEWhere ATL meets NPR Where ATL meets NPR Where ATL meetsNPR
HOW A NEW TEAM OF FEDS HACKED THE HACKERS AND GOT COLONIAL The Department of Justice on Monday touted the recovery of $2.3 million — about half — of the ransom that was collected by hackers in the Colonial Pipeline attack last month. Experts say it was a surprising outcome to an increasingly frequent and severe crime. “Ransomware is very seldom recovered,” said April Falcon Doss, executive director of the Institute for Technology Law and AS GWINNETT SCHOOL BOARD CHANGES, DIVISIONS CONTINUE As Gwinnett School Board Changes, Divisions Continue. For years, all five members of the Gwinnett County school board were white. Now the board has three members of color and two white members. (Picture from 2020.) For years, the Gwinnett County Public Schools’ student population has been racially diverse. For most of that time though,those
THREE JOGGERS IN BUCKHEAD SHOT BY DRIVER, POLICE SAY A driver shot at three pedestrians in a residential part of Atlanta, injuring one, before crashing into and severely injuring a man at an apartment complex hours later, police said Saturday. The apparent drive-by shootings occurred Saturday morning in Atlanta’s wealthy Buckhead neighborhood, where residents have been GOV. KEMP LIFTS MANY REMAINING COVID-19 RULES ON Saying that Georgia's efforts to control COVID-19 have been successful, Gov. Brian Kemp, shown April 3, is lifting many remaining requirements for social distancing and masked employees at businesses. But public health experts fear another surge, possibly driven by more infectious variants of BOARD APPROVES PAYING $1,000 BONUSES TO Georgia's state Board of Education has approved a plan to pay $1,000 bonuses to teachers and most other education employees, using in $240 million federal coronavirus relief money. The Board of Education voted Thursday to send the money to Georgia school districts, which are in turn supposed to pay teachers before DEKALB PEDIATRIC PRACTICE OFFERING COVID-19 VACCINATIONS A DeKalb County-based doctor, who is leading a pediatric practice that recently started administering the Pfizer vaccine to teens 16 and over, says the emotional impact that the COVID-19 pandemic is having on kids is beyond enormous. “As pediatricians, we’ve seen less and less illness as people are socially distanced THE 17-YEAR CICADAS WILL SOON EMERGE; A GA. PROFESSOR The 17-year cicadas are expected in North Georgia, around Ellijay, Dahlonega and Blairsville, and will likely start appearing and making noise in the next few weeks. These Brood X cicadas emerging this summer likely won’t be in metro Atlanta. But Brood XIX, which is on a 13-year cycle and does appear in Atlanta, is expected to emerge in2024.
ATLANTA LGBTQ ADVOCATE WINSTON JOHNSON DIES AT 79 Longtime Atlanta LGBTQ rights advocate Winston Johnson has died this week after a lengthy battle with cancer. He was 79 years old. Johnson, a Valdosta native, co-founded the annual gala for the Human Rights Campaign Atlanta. He met Coretta Scott King through his work with Eastern Airlines and the two became close FAMILY OF BLACK MAN IN DEKALB COUNTY WHO DIED AFTER POLICE Matthew Zadok Williams called his mother every other day. So Chrys Ann Lewis got worried earlier this week when she didn’t hear from her son. “My son always calls me. He listens to me. He makes me feel like a little girl,” said Lewis, surrounded by four of STATES SCALE BACK PANDEMIC REPORTING, STIRRING ALARM 8 hours ago · As the pandemic calms in the U.S., a growing number of states have started scaling back how often they update their dashboards tracking what’s happening with the virus. The moves are sparking alarm among many public health experts. “One of the most troubling trends recently has been that states MOMENTS YOU MISSED AS THE G-7 LEADERS MEET FOR THE 1ST 1 day ago · For the first time since the pandemic halted face-to-face events, leaders from Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States have gathered for three days of talks in a British seaside town to try to address some of the world’s most pressing issues. Stopping the RURAL COMMUNITIES FALL FARTHER BEHIND IN COVID-19 1 day ago · Rural communities outside America’s cities are falling further behind in the race to vaccinate against COVID-19 as President Joe Biden’s Fourth of July goal to reach 70% of American adults looms over the horizon. Alaska is the sole state where average rural rates of fully vaccinated people have THE OLYMPICS ARE REALLY HAPPENING. FOR ATHLETES, THAT It appears that the Olympics are really going to happen, starting July 23 in Tokyo. But there are big challenges to staging the Games as the pandemic continues in a host city currently under a state of emergency and a country where a recent poll found 80% of residents don’t want the Olympics to happen this summer.. Other major events have been marred in recent weeks by positive coronavirus 5 PRIVATE GEORGIA COLLEGES TO REQUIRE VACCINES FOR Five Atlanta-area private colleges will require students to have received COVID-19 vaccinations before class begins next fall. Emory University, Clark Atlanta University, Morehouse College, the Morehouse School of Medicine and Spelman College made the announcement Monday. The five join dozens of colleges and 3 EXPERTS HAVE RESIGNED FROM AN FDA COMMITTEE OVER 9 hours ago · Three experts have now resigned from a Food and Drug Administration advisory committee after the agency approved an Alzheimer’s drug called Aduhelm against the wishes of nearly every member on the panel. The drug — its generic name is aducanumab —was
WABE'S LISA HAGEN WINS PULITZER PRIZE FOR NPR'S 1 day ago · The 2021 Pulitzer Prize winners were announced Friday. WABE's criminal justice reporter Lisa Hagen along with Chris Haxel, Graham Smith and Robert Little won the Audio Reporting category for their podcast "No Compromise." "No Compromise" is an investigative series that explores the Second Amendment in America. It DESPITE CDC MORATORIUM ON EVICTIONS, GEORGIA ATTORNEY SAYS The Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month moved to once again extend the nation's current moratorium on evictions, due to the pandemic. "The COVID-19 pandemic has presented a historic threat to the nation's public health," said CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky in a statement. "Keeping WEEK IN REVIEW: THE FUTURE OF GEORGIA'S GOP, ART IN 10 hours ago · Kemp and the Georgia GOP At the Georgia Republican Party convention last weekend, Gov. Brian Kemp faced boos and cheers from the crowd. Since refusing to overturn the state’s 2020 election results, Kemp has been attacked from the right wing of his party by some of his constituents and former president Donald Trump. But in an interview with WABE News, Kemp said he is not swayed by SPRING NUMBERS SHOW 'DRAMATIC' DROP IN COLLEGE ENROLLMENT 1 day ago · Undergraduate college enrollment fell again this spring, down nearly 5% from a year ago. That means 727,000 fewer students, according to new data from the National Student Clearinghouse. “That’s really dramatic,” says Doug Shapiro, who leads the Clearinghouse’s research center. FallWABE 90.1 FM
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THREE JOGGERS IN BUCKHEAD SHOT BY DRIVER, POLICE SAY A driver shot at three pedestrians in a residential part of Atlanta, injuring one, before crashing into and severely injuring a man at an apartment complex hours later, police said Saturday. The apparent drive-by shootings occurred Saturday morning in Atlanta’s wealthy Buckhead neighborhood, where residents have been FRUSTRATIONS MOUNT FOR GEORGIANS EXPERIENCING UNEMPLOYMENT Lucretia Baggett’s husband was laid off from his welding job in May. “He’s not a computer guy,” said Baggett. So she set out to help him file for unemployment. They had trouble logging on at first, but once they were in, they ran into more problems. “It says give AS GWINNETT SCHOOL BOARD CHANGES, DIVISIONS CONTINUE As Gwinnett School Board Changes, Divisions Continue. For years, all five members of the Gwinnett County school board were white. Now the board has three members of color and two white members. (Picture from 2020.) For years, the Gwinnett County Public Schools’ student population has been racially diverse. For most of that time though,those
BOARD APPROVES PAYING $1,000 BONUSES TO Georgia's state Board of Education has approved a plan to pay $1,000 bonuses to teachers and most other education employees, using in $240 million federal coronavirus relief money. The Board of Education voted Thursday to send the money to Georgia school districts, which are in turn supposed to pay teachers before US ENDS USE OF IRWIN COUNTY DETENTION CENTER AFTER US Ends Use Of Irwin County Detention Center After Accusations Of Mistreatment. In this Sept. 15, 2020, file photo, Dawn Wooten, left, a nurse at Irwin County Detention Center in Ocilla, Georgia, speaks at a news conference in Atlanta protesting conditions at the immigration jail. The Biden administration announced on Thursday that federal NEW UNIT AT PLANT VOGTLE NOW DELAYED UNTIL 2022 AS COSTS New Unit At Plant Vogtle Now Delayed Until 2022 As Costs Mount. The additional month will add another $48 million to the cost of the two nuclear units being built alongside two existing units near Augusta. The project is now projected to cost more than $26 billion for all its owners, including Georgia Power, electric cooperatives and municipal 5 PRIVATE GEORGIA COLLEGES TO REQUIRE VACCINES FOR Five Atlanta-area private colleges will require students to have received COVID-19 vaccinations before class begins next fall. Emory University, Clark Atlanta University, Morehouse College, the Morehouse School of Medicine and Spelman College made the announcement Monday. The five join dozens of colleges and ATLANTA LGBTQ ADVOCATE WINSTON JOHNSON DIES AT 79 Longtime Atlanta LGBTQ rights advocate Winston Johnson has died this week after a lengthy battle with cancer. He was 79 years old. Johnson, a Valdosta native, co-founded the annual gala for the Human Rights Campaign Atlanta. He met Coretta Scott King through his work with Eastern Airlines and the two became close FAMILY OF BLACK MAN IN DEKALB COUNTY WHO DIED AFTER POLICE Matthew Zadok Williams called his mother every other day. So Chrys Ann Lewis got worried earlier this week when she didn’t hear from her son. “My son always calls me. He listens to me. He makes me feel like a little girl,” said Lewis, surrounded by four ofWABE 90.1 FM
90.1 FM WABEWhere ATL meets NPR Where ATL meets NPR Where ATL meetsNPR
THREE JOGGERS IN BUCKHEAD SHOT BY DRIVER, POLICE SAY A driver shot at three pedestrians in a residential part of Atlanta, injuring one, before crashing into and severely injuring a man at an apartment complex hours later, police said Saturday. The apparent drive-by shootings occurred Saturday morning in Atlanta’s wealthy Buckhead neighborhood, where residents have been FRUSTRATIONS MOUNT FOR GEORGIANS EXPERIENCING UNEMPLOYMENT Lucretia Baggett’s husband was laid off from his welding job in May. “He’s not a computer guy,” said Baggett. So she set out to help him file for unemployment. They had trouble logging on at first, but once they were in, they ran into more problems. “It says give AS GWINNETT SCHOOL BOARD CHANGES, DIVISIONS CONTINUE As Gwinnett School Board Changes, Divisions Continue. For years, all five members of the Gwinnett County school board were white. Now the board has three members of color and two white members. (Picture from 2020.) For years, the Gwinnett County Public Schools’ student population has been racially diverse. For most of that time though,those
BOARD APPROVES PAYING $1,000 BONUSES TO Georgia's state Board of Education has approved a plan to pay $1,000 bonuses to teachers and most other education employees, using in $240 million federal coronavirus relief money. The Board of Education voted Thursday to send the money to Georgia school districts, which are in turn supposed to pay teachers before US ENDS USE OF IRWIN COUNTY DETENTION CENTER AFTER US Ends Use Of Irwin County Detention Center After Accusations Of Mistreatment. In this Sept. 15, 2020, file photo, Dawn Wooten, left, a nurse at Irwin County Detention Center in Ocilla, Georgia, speaks at a news conference in Atlanta protesting conditions at the immigration jail. The Biden administration announced on Thursday that federal NEW UNIT AT PLANT VOGTLE NOW DELAYED UNTIL 2022 AS COSTS New Unit At Plant Vogtle Now Delayed Until 2022 As Costs Mount. The additional month will add another $48 million to the cost of the two nuclear units being built alongside two existing units near Augusta. The project is now projected to cost more than $26 billion for all its owners, including Georgia Power, electric cooperatives and municipal 5 PRIVATE GEORGIA COLLEGES TO REQUIRE VACCINES FOR Five Atlanta-area private colleges will require students to have received COVID-19 vaccinations before class begins next fall. Emory University, Clark Atlanta University, Morehouse College, the Morehouse School of Medicine and Spelman College made the announcement Monday. The five join dozens of colleges and ATLANTA LGBTQ ADVOCATE WINSTON JOHNSON DIES AT 79 Longtime Atlanta LGBTQ rights advocate Winston Johnson has died this week after a lengthy battle with cancer. He was 79 years old. Johnson, a Valdosta native, co-founded the annual gala for the Human Rights Campaign Atlanta. He met Coretta Scott King through his work with Eastern Airlines and the two became close FAMILY OF BLACK MAN IN DEKALB COUNTY WHO DIED AFTER POLICE Matthew Zadok Williams called his mother every other day. So Chrys Ann Lewis got worried earlier this week when she didn’t hear from her son. “My son always calls me. He listens to me. He makes me feel like a little girl,” said Lewis, surrounded by four of NEW EVIDENCE SUGGESTS COVID-19 VACCINES REMAIN EFFECTIVE 19 hours ago · The emergence of new and more infectious variants of the coronavirus has raised a troubling question: Will the current crop of COVID-19 vaccine prevent these variants from causing disease? A study out Wednesday in the journal Nature suggests the answer is yes. The research was fairly straightforward 'THIS IS INSANE': AFRICA DESPERATELY SHORT OF COVID-19 18 hours ago · In the global race to vaccinate people against COVID-19, Africa is tragically at the back of the pack. In fact, it has barely gotten out of the starting blocks. In South Africa, which has the continent's most robust economy and its biggest coronavirus caseload, just 0.8% of THE OLYMPICS ARE REALLY HAPPENING. FOR ATHLETES, THAT 16 hours ago · It appears that the Olympics are really going to happen, starting July 23 in Tokyo. But there are big challenges to staging the Games as the pandemic continues in a host city currently under a state of emergency and a country where a recent poll found 80% of residents don’t want the Olympics to happen this summer.. Other major events have been marred in recent weeks by positive coronavirus MONITORS: PLANT VOGTLE REACTOR LIKELY TO MISS JANUARY 14 hours ago · The phrases "over deadline and over budget" have become so synonymous with the Plant Vogtle nuclear expansion project near Augusta that when a new timeline or price tag comes out, many don't even notice. This week, independent monitors declared the January opening of nuclear reactor No. 3 is highly unlikely. Kristi 'THE COURIER' SPOTLIGHTS LESSER-KNOWN TRUE STORY OF SPY 19 hours ago · “The Courier” is a new film starring Benedict Cumberbatch, based on the captivating and lesser-known true story of Greville Wynne. A British electrical engineer and salesman, Wynne became a spy recruited by the United Kingdom’s secret foreign intelligence service, formerly known as MI6. Director Dominic Cookejoined
BIDEN ADMINISTRATION PLANS TO REDO CONTROVERSIAL WATER 15 hours ago · The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are revisiting a Trump-era rule that affects a proposed mine near Georgia's Okefenokee Swamp. Under the current version of the law, the controversial mine doesn't need any federal permits to be built. On Wednesday, the Biden administration said EAST POINT MAYOR DISCUSSES THE CITY’S INFRASTRUCTURE; NEW 18 hours ago · Mayor Deana Ingraham talks about East Point’s response during the pandemic. She also discusses the state of East Point’s infrastructure and ways the city could benefit from President Biden’s proposed infrastructure ATLANTA’S AFFORDABLE HOUSING CRISIS CREDIT MIKE STEWART / ASSOCIATED PRESS Planning experts, researchers, developers and residents agree that metro Atlanta is in the midst of an affordable housing crisis. No matter where in town you live, rents continue to rise while incomes fail to keep pace. In this special series, "Closer Look" asks, “What is WATCHDOG REPORT SAYS POLICE DID NOT CLEAR PROTESTERS TO 16 hours ago · The U.S. Park Police did not clear protesters from a park outside the White House so then-President Donald Trump could take a photo-op at a nearby church, an Interior Department inspector general’s report found. “he evidence established that relevant USPP officials had made those decisions 'THE COURIER' EXPLORES THE HUMAN COST OF ESPIONAGE 1 day ago · Lois Reitzes talks with Dominic Cooke, director of the new film “The Courier”. Plus, we’ll hear from Alesia Johnson, the founder and CEO of Kids Video Connection. Their Virtual Children’s Film Festival starts tomorrow and runs for 2 weeksWABE 90.1 FM
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BOARD APPROVES PAYING $1,000 BONUSES TO Georgia's state Board of Education has approved a plan to pay $1,000 bonuses to teachers and most other education employees, using in $240 million federal coronavirus relief money. The Board of Education voted Thursday to send the money to Georgia school districts, which are in turn supposed to pay teachers beforePOLITICAL BREAKFAST
Every Friday morning on the Political Breakfast podcast, veteran Atlanta political reporter Denis O’Hayer, Democratic strategist Tharon Johnson and Republican strategist Brian Robinson deliver Georgia’s best analysis of local politics.Voted among the Top 20 “Political Podcasts You Must Follow in 2021,” Political Breakfast offers a weekly dose of informed, respectful and lively discussion. AS GWINNETT SCHOOL BOARD CHANGES, DIVISIONS CONTINUE As Gwinnett School Board Changes, Divisions Continue. For years, all five members of the Gwinnett County school board were white. Now the board has three members of color and two white members. (Picture from 2020.) For years, the Gwinnett County Public Schools’ student population has been racially diverse. For most of that time though,those
BOTTOM OF THE MAP
Southern Hip-Hop: Explored. Explained. Exalted. On WABE's Bottom of the Map podcast, music journalist Christina Lee and hip-hop scholar Dr. Regina N. Bradley delve into passionate explorations and paradigm-shifting critiques of the culture that they love, and its undeniable impact on the world that clearly loves it. JAZZ CLASSICS WITH H. JOHNSON Veteran jazzman "H" Johnson spins real, hot jazz classics, Saturdays from 8 p.m. until 2 a.m. over 90.1 and ATLANTA’S AFFORDABLE HOUSING CRISIS CREDIT MIKE STEWART / ASSOCIATED PRESS Planning experts, researchers, developers and residents agree that metro Atlanta is in the midst of an affordable housing crisis. No matter where in town you live, rents continue to rise while incomes fail to keep pace. In this special series, "Closer Look" asks, “What is WHY DOES PFIZER'S COVID-19 VACCINE NEED TO BE KEPT COLDER One of the front-runners in the vaccine race — the one made by Pfizer — needs to be kept extremely cold: minus 70 degrees Celsius, which is colder than winter in Antarctica. Moderna has said that its vaccine needs to be frozen too, but only at minus 20 Celsius, more like a regular freezer. Since there will be limited vaccine doses atfirst
OUT OF WORK, UNDOCUMENTED FAMILIES WITHIN CITY OF ATLANTA Out Of Work, Undocumented Families Within City Of Atlanta Find Few Options For Aid. Many businesses across the country have closed due to the coronavirus outbreak, leaving many workers without jobs. “More recently, in this situation with the COVID-19 virus, it’s become really hard,” said Ofelia of Atlanta. As the coronavirus outbreakJOHNNY KAUFFMAN
Johnny Kauffman. Johnny joined WABE in March, 2015. Before joining the station, he was a producer at Georgia Public Broadcasting, and NPR in Washington D.C. At NPR, Johnny worked as a producer for “ Morning Edition,” “Weekend Edition,” and “Tell Me More.”. Johnny got his start in radio as host and station manager at WECI in RichmondWABE 90.1 FM
90.1 FM WABEWhere ATL meets NPR Where ATL meets NPR Where ATL meetsNPR
BOARD APPROVES PAYING $1,000 BONUSES TO Georgia's state Board of Education has approved a plan to pay $1,000 bonuses to teachers and most other education employees, using in $240 million federal coronavirus relief money. The Board of Education voted Thursday to send the money to Georgia school districts, which are in turn supposed to pay teachers beforePOLITICAL BREAKFAST
Every Friday morning on the Political Breakfast podcast, veteran Atlanta political reporter Denis O’Hayer, Democratic strategist Tharon Johnson and Republican strategist Brian Robinson deliver Georgia’s best analysis of local politics.Voted among the Top 20 “Political Podcasts You Must Follow in 2021,” Political Breakfast offers a weekly dose of informed, respectful and lively discussion. AS GWINNETT SCHOOL BOARD CHANGES, DIVISIONS CONTINUE As Gwinnett School Board Changes, Divisions Continue. For years, all five members of the Gwinnett County school board were white. Now the board has three members of color and two white members. (Picture from 2020.) For years, the Gwinnett County Public Schools’ student population has been racially diverse. For most of that time though,those
BOTTOM OF THE MAP
Southern Hip-Hop: Explored. Explained. Exalted. On WABE's Bottom of the Map podcast, music journalist Christina Lee and hip-hop scholar Dr. Regina N. Bradley delve into passionate explorations and paradigm-shifting critiques of the culture that they love, and its undeniable impact on the world that clearly loves it. JAZZ CLASSICS WITH H. JOHNSON Veteran jazzman "H" Johnson spins real, hot jazz classics, Saturdays from 8 p.m. until 2 a.m. over 90.1 and ATLANTA’S AFFORDABLE HOUSING CRISIS CREDIT MIKE STEWART / ASSOCIATED PRESS Planning experts, researchers, developers and residents agree that metro Atlanta is in the midst of an affordable housing crisis. No matter where in town you live, rents continue to rise while incomes fail to keep pace. In this special series, "Closer Look" asks, “What is WHY DOES PFIZER'S COVID-19 VACCINE NEED TO BE KEPT COLDER One of the front-runners in the vaccine race — the one made by Pfizer — needs to be kept extremely cold: minus 70 degrees Celsius, which is colder than winter in Antarctica. Moderna has said that its vaccine needs to be frozen too, but only at minus 20 Celsius, more like a regular freezer. Since there will be limited vaccine doses atfirst
OUT OF WORK, UNDOCUMENTED FAMILIES WITHIN CITY OF ATLANTA Out Of Work, Undocumented Families Within City Of Atlanta Find Few Options For Aid. Many businesses across the country have closed due to the coronavirus outbreak, leaving many workers without jobs. “More recently, in this situation with the COVID-19 virus, it’s become really hard,” said Ofelia of Atlanta. As the coronavirus outbreakJOHNNY KAUFFMAN
Johnny Kauffman. Johnny joined WABE in March, 2015. Before joining the station, he was a producer at Georgia Public Broadcasting, and NPR in Washington D.C. At NPR, Johnny worked as a producer for “ Morning Edition,” “Weekend Edition,” and “Tell Me More.”. Johnny got his start in radio as host and station manager at WECI in Richmond WABE 90.1 FM DAILY RADIO SCHEDULE Daily Radio Schedule. In response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, WABE has made temporary changes to our broadcast schedule to provide listeners with more live news programming. We’re committed to being metro Atlanta’s trusted source for up-to-date and accurate information about coronavirus, its spread, and its local impact. WHAT THE GLOBAL PANDEMIC MEANS FOR THE U.S. Julie Rosenberg, with the Global Health Delivery Project at Harvard University, says the spread of the coronavirus around the world could have major implications for the future of the pandemic in the U.S CARBON DIOXIDE, WHICH DRIVES CLIMATE CHANGE, REACHES 13 hours ago · The amount of carbon dioxide in Earth’s atmosphere reached 419 parts per million in May, its highest level in more than four million years, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced on Monday. After dipping last year because of pandemic-fueled lockdowns, emissions of TRUMP IMPEACHMENT LAWYERS ARE NOW REPRESENTING CAPITOL Attorneys Michael van der Veen and Bruce Castor defended former President Donald Trump at his Senate impeachment trial for allegedly inciting the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol insurrection. Even as van der Veen, Castor and the Trump defense team called the impeachment “political theater” and ultimately AS TEMPORARY PROTECTED STATUS SHIFTS, ONE ACTIVIST DEALS 13 hours ago · On June 7, 2021, a Supreme Court ruling found that many TPS holders are ineligible to apply for permanent residency. César Magaña Linares is a committed immigration activist, whether he’s attending rallies or in his law school classes studying to become an immigration lawyer. His personal 'BRING YOUR GUNS': PROBE UNCOVERS MORE ALARMING 13 hours ago · A bipartisan probe led by two Senate committees has found that U.S. Capitol Police and other authorities were in possession of more alarming intelligence clues ahead of the Jan. 6 attack on the complex than previously documented. The findings arepart
SUPER FLY: THE UNEXPECTED LIVES OF THE WORLD'S MOST 5 hours ago · Biologist Johnathan Balcombe joins Lois Reitzes to talk about his new book and the fascinating ways flies are very useful allies for humans.Pluse, Senior Producer Kim Drobes talks to Damon Hare, the main talent buyer for the indie music venue the BIG OIL'S TRANSITION: 3 TAKEAWAYS ON HOW THE INDUSTRY IS Big Oil is standing on the precipice of something.But no one can agree what it is. A long, slow decline? An abrupt collapse? A remarkable reinvention? Mounting urgency about climate change has finally reached the boardrooms of Exxon Mobil, BP, Shell and other international oilcompanies.
'ENERGY JUSTICE' NOMINEE BRINGS ACTIVIST VOICE TO BIDEN'S 13 hours ago · Capitol Hill lawmakers Tuesday question one of President Biden’s top picks for the Department of Energy, a woman with a history of activism who will help shape the administration’s focus on environmental justice. Shalanda Baker already works at thedepartment in a
ATLANTA'S ADAIR PARK NEIGHBORHOOD SAYS NEW MURAL WILL PUT 14 hours ago · Thinking of how to capture the essence of his neighborhood and the park itself, George F. Baker III summoned some childhood memories. “The inspiration behind the design pretty much came from all my experiences growing up here and being around this park,” Baker said. “And playing basketball, seeing people play* Play
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DESPITE CORONAVIRUS, SOON-TO-BE TEACHERS FINISH TRAINING — USING VIDEOS, CASE STUDIES, AVATARS*
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COBB COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY TAKES OVER AHMAUD ARBERY CASE*
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IMMIGRANT RIGHTS ATTORNEYS ASK JUDGE FOR MORE REMOTE ACCESS TO GEORGIA DETAINEES DURING PANDEMIC*
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DESPITE CORONAVIRUS, SOON-TO-BE TEACHERS FINISH TRAINING — USING VIDEOS, CASE STUDIES, AVATARS*
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COBB COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY TAKES OVER AHMAUD ARBERY CASE*
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IMMIGRANT RIGHTS ATTORNEYS ASK JUDGE FOR MORE REMOTE ACCESS TO GEORGIA DETAINEES DURING PANDEMIC*
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DESPITE CORONAVIRUS, SOON-TO-BE TEACHERS FINISH TRAINING — USING VIDEOS, CASE STUDIES, AVATARS* 1
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LOCAL NEWS
IN FLIP, DEKALB SCHOOL SYSTEM NIXES EX-LEADER OF NEW YORK CITY, MIAMISCHOOLS
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GEORGIA’S STRESSED HEALTH CARE ‘SAFETY NET’ COULD SWAY VOTERS*
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CORONAVIRUS UPDATES: MORE WAYS FOR GEORGIANS TO GO OUTSIDE ASCOVID-19 RULES EASE
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NONPROFIT EXECUTIVE SPEAKS OUT ON TRUMP’S ORDER THAT BANS SOME IMMIGRATION DURING PANDEMIC*
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WITHOUT RESTAURANTS, GEORGIA FARMERS COME UP SHORT ON CUSTOMERS*
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MAP: WHERE TO GET TESTED FOR CORONAVIRUS IN METRO ATLANTA*
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NPR NEWS
TWITTER NOW LABELS ‘POTENTIALLY HARMFUL’ CORONAVIRUS TWEETS*
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IN CORONAVIRUS WAR OF WORDS WITH THE U.S., CHINA PULLS NO PUNCHES*
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COVID-19 HAS CREATED A LEGAL AID CRISIS. FEMA’S USUAL RESPONSE ISMISSING
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WILL FILING FOR UNEMPLOYMENT HURT MY GREEN CARD? LEGAL IMMIGRANTS AREAFRAID
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UNEMPLOYMENT NUMBERS ‘WILL GET WORSE BEFORE THEY GET BETTER’MNUCHIN SAYS
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TRENDING STORIES
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1 Despite Coronavirus, Soon-To-Be Teachers Finish Training -- Using Videos, Case Studies, Avatars*
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4 Georgia Gig Workers Find Long, 'Stressful' Wait For UnemploymentPayments
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5 Closer Look Special Report: A Look Into The Many Layers Behind Ahmaud Arbery's Shooting Death*
6 Immigrant Rights Attorneys Ask Judge For More Remote Access To Georgia Detainees During PandemicMy List
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