Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Public Radio Richland Correspondent Wins Two Gracies

Anna King and Craig Vejraska traveled up into the high mountains outside of Omak to search for his cattle amid the fires.
Ian C. Bates
Anna King and Craig Vejraska traveled up into the high mountains outside of Omak to search for his cattle amid the fires.

Our Richland Correspondent Anna King has won two Gracie Awards, the Alliance for Women in Media Foundation announced Monday. Anna has won the Gracie for outstanding correspondent and the Gracie for crisis coverage in the award's public radio division.

The Gracies recognize exemplary programming created by women, for women and about women in all facets of media and entertainment, as well as individuals who have made contributions to the industry.

Anna won the Gracie for crisis coverage in recognition of her wildfire reports in 2015. Anna reported from areas near Omak, Wenatchee, Twisp and Walla Walla, bringing memorable sights and sounds to our audience: apples baked on the tree, ranchers looking for their cattle through thick smoke, and women rescuing their horses and caravaning them to safety. Anna filed her stories from the field and appeared on regional and national shows including "The Record," "Think Out Loud," "All Things Considered," "Here & Now," "The Takeaway" and "To the Point."

Anna's Outstanding Correspondent Gracie recognizes her body of work from December 2014 through November 2015. In addition to her live reports from the wildfires during that time Anna covered an outbreak of avian flu, a milky rain that fell in eastern Washington, a dam explosion, a deadly police shooting, and the history of women and the Hanford nuclear reservation in her "Daughters of Hanford" series and multimedia installation.

On Tuesday Anna will be presented with the Woman of the Year award from Washington State University in Pullman.

Again, Anna: Congratulations.

Copyright 2016 Northwest News Network

Phyllis Fletcher managed our regional collaborative journalism service for three years before accepting a bureau chief post with NPR. She is sought as a news analyst for live broadcast, and as a writer and speaker on racism, inclusive sourcing and breaking news production techniques.