Rhonda Miller
Rhonda Miller began as reporter and host for All Things Considered on WKU Public Radio in 2015. She has worked as Gulf Coast reporter for Mississippi Public Broadcasting, where she won Associated Press, Edward R. Murrow and Green Eyeshade awards for stories on dead sea turtles, health and legal issues arising from the 2010 BP oil spill and homeless veterans. She has worked at Rhode Island Public Radio, as an intern at WVTF Public Radio in Roanoke, Virginia, and at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Rhonda’s freelance work called Writing Into Sound includes stories for Voice of America, WSHU Public Radio in Fairfield, Conn., NPR and AARP Prime Time Radio. She has a master’s degree in media studies from Rhode Island College and a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Boston University. Rhonda enjoys quiet water kayaking, riding her bicycle and folk music. She was a volunteer DJ for Root-N-Branch at WUMD community radio in Dartmouth, Mass.
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As Kentucky continues to recover from the job losses and the unpredictability caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, one of America’s iconic social service organizations is finding many families in the Owensboro region struggling to make ends meet.
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One of the nation’s leading producers of chicken, pork and beef products for customers around the globe announced on Thursday that it’s expanding with a...
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A recent survey by the National Community Pharmacists Association found that the national shortage of workers across most sectors is impacting...
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A strike at one of the world’s largest bourbon producers is entering its fourth week. The stalemate is over a proposed contract at Heaven Hill...
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Kentucky-based manufacturers and global companies with facilities in the Bluegrass State are accelerating production of components for electric vehicles...
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Kentucky towns that depend on tourism revenue from small museums and festivals are being hit again by the recent surge of COVID-19. As a result, one...
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The head of Warren County Public Schools i s telling employees to be prepared for the possibility of a return to virtual learning. There’s a large...
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The COVID-19 pandemic intensified the existing shortage of regulated child care in Kentucky and across America.
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Executives with 11 hospitals and health care systems across Kentucky on Thursday announced they will require all employees to get the COVID-19 vaccine....
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As Kentucky students prepare to return to in-person classes after the past year’s turbulence caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, a western Kentucky school...