Rebecca Green
News DirectorRebecca manages the news at WBOI. She joined the staff in December 2017, and brought with her nearly two decades of experience in print journalism, including 15 years as an award-winning reporter for the Journal Gazette in Fort Wayne.
A South Bend native, she is a graduate of a small liberal arts college in the Hoosier State, and has lived in northeast Indiana since the late 1990's.
Rebecca has covered everything from homicides to hurricanes, and the small stories in between that make up the fabric of a community. She is passionate about the importance of local news in guarding a strong democracy, and tries to instill that belief in her students as an occasional adjunct instructor of journalism at Huntington University.
In her spare time, Rebecca trains and handles a human remains detection dog, Helo, as a volunteer with Indiana Search and Response Team, a search and rescue organization.
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The long-time mayor announced late-stage stomach cancer a month ago. Deputy Mayor Karl Bandemer is now serving as Acting Mayor.
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The iconic designer served as a part of the U.S. Army's "Ghost Army" in the last year of WWII. He is to posthumously receive the Congressional Gold Medal next week.
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New data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows the region's population over 809,000 residents.
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With funding packages approved and conditions stabilizing in the existing jail, both sides agree another formal in-person status conference may not be necessary.
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The non-profit organization has focused on an integrative healthcare model, adding primary care services to its existing services in 2020.
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Travis Pope, most recently of Marfa Public Radio in West Texas, will begin at 89.1 WBOI on March 4.
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Attorneys representing the plaintiffs in a federal case challenging conditions at the Allen County Jail say they are “profoundly concerned” by the Allen County Council’s unwillingness to give the Allen County Commissioners the money needed to start the jail project.
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64-year-old Marcia Linsky worked in many capacities in the legal community, most recently as a public defender.
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The artwork was designed by local artist Theoplis Smith III, also known as Phresh Laundry. The bus mural was made possible by SEED Fort Wayne. The mural-wrapped bus will operate across the city for at least two years.