We operate by the same guiding principles as NPR and provide our audiences with news and programs that are significant to their communities and their world. Sarah Fenske, Host of St. Louis on The Air. St. Louis Public Radio is a news organization and NPR member station. As community members in the listening areas we serve, the staff of St. Louis Public Radio wants our journalism, programs, events, board, and outreach to give rise to thoughtful and informed actions and solutions to issues that affect us. St. Louis Public Radio is a news organization and NPR member station. Reporter Ryan Delaney interviews a student at an elementary school. Louis on the Air” brings you the stories of St. Louis and the people who live, work and create in our region. Tim Eby is no longer GM at St. Louis Public Radio, a spokesperson confirmed to Current Thursday.

We hope our work expands, enriches, and enhances our collective understanding and connection to each other, to our communities, and to our world. As one of the most trusted brands in America, NPR expects its entire network of listener-supported member stations to provide reporting that is credible, trustworthy and free from any external commercial, political, or financial forces. We operate by the same guiding principles as NPR and provide our audiences with news and programs that are significant to their communities and their world. Eby didn't respond to a request for comment. The group said the station’s newsroom had been composed solely of white journalists until 2013. Home to St. Louis Public Radio, Winners of the Inaugural Photojournalism Prize, Jason Rosenbaum, reporting during the COVID-19 pandemic. As community members in the listening areas we serve, the staff of St. Louis Public Radio wants our journalism, programs, events, board, and outreach to give rise to thoughtful and informed actions and solutions to issues that affect us. Reporter Rachel Lippmann interviews Lewis Reed during the Aldermanic Election. Tim Eby is no longer general manager of St. Louis Public Radio, according to a person familiar with the matter. In an email to staff Thursday obtained by Current, Paul Herring, vice chancellor for advancement at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, the station’s licensee, did not go into detail about why Eby is no longer at the station. On Air Now Playing St. Louis Public Radio KWMU-1 On Air Now Playing Jazz KWMU-2 On Air Now Playing Classical KWMU-3 We hope our work expands, enriches, and enhances our collective understanding and connection to each other, to our communities, and to our world. Home to St. Louis Public Radio, Winners of the Inaugural Photojournalism Prize, Jason Rosenbaum, reporting during the COVID-19 pandemic. “St.

The team behind St. Louis on the Air– (L-R) Alex Heuer, executive producer; Emily Woodbury, senior producer; Charlie McDonald, call screener; Lara Hamdan, producer; Sarah Fenske, host; Aaron Doerr, engineer; Evie Hemphill, producer. — Ryan Delaney Interviewing an Elementary School Student, — Rachel Lippman Interviews Reed for Aldermanic Election. J.B. Pritzker’s Office Tests Positive For Coronavirus, Missouri Voters Will Decide Whether To Further Expand Statewide Office Term Limits. Sarah Fenske, Host of St. Louis on The Air. St. Louis Public Radio provides that to our audiences across the St. Louis Metropolitan region, in Quincy, Illinois, and in Rolla and Lebanon, Missouri. “My mission is to love humanity,” Bush told Fenske during a wide-ranging conversation, capping a week in which “Black Girl Magic” was one of the dominant St. Louis election narratives. Despite St. Louis Public Radio having received a $450,000 grant in 2017 from the Corporation of Public Broadcasting (to be shared with three other public radio stations), with the goal of diversifying the newsroom, the employees said little changed. Reporter Rachel Lippmann interviews Lewis Reed during the Aldermanic Election. As community members in the listening areas we serve, the staff of St. Louis Public Radio wants our journalism, programs, events, board, and outreach to give rise to thoughtful and informed actions and solutions to issues that affect us. As one of the most trusted brands in America, NPR expects its entire network of listener-supported member stations to provide reporting that is credible, trustworthy and free from any external commercial, political, or financial forces.