I am a Boston-based reporter. Before joining Forbes, I covered the environment, local government and the arts for a small-town newspaper on Nantucket. My previous work includes NPR, WBUR, WCAI and Nantucket Today. I am a graduate of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, with a degree in political science. Email me at [email protected]
Hurricane Headed For Mexico’s Puerto Vallarta Will Be Second Storm To Hit Country’s West Coast In As Many Days
Supreme Court Rejects Defamation Case—But Clarence Thomas Still Wants To Make It Harder For Media To ‘Cast False Aspersions’ Grocery Prices Finally Ease In U.K.—Here’s How They Stack Up With Those In The U.S. And Other Countries The Washington Post became the latest major news outlet on Tuesday to reduce its head count, offering a voluntary separation program for 240 employees, according tospread “across all functions” of the company, according to an internal memo that cites an “urgent need to invest in our top growth priorities,announced on Monday it cut 155 employees at facilities in Toledo, Ohio, Lansing, Michigan, and Marion, Indiana—bringing its layoffs since the start of the United Auto Workers strike over 2,300...
marking a major reduction that would affect just over 1,000 of its more than 3,500 employees, according to data from PitchBook.