Nora Flaherty
All Things Considered producer/hostNora is originally from the Boston area but has lived in Chicago, Michigan, New York City and at the northern tip of New York state. Nora began working in public radio at Michigan Radio in Ann Arbor and has been an on-air host, a reporter, a digital editor, a producer, and, when they let her, played records.
She holds a BA in Latin American Studies from the University of Chicago and an MA in Anthropology from the University of Michigan. She’s received Associated Press, Public Radio News Directors, Inc., Association of Women in Radio and Television, and Edward R. Murrow Awards for her work.
Nora lives in Portland with her husband, their daughter and their two dogs.
-
Seven years after it closed, the Portland chapter of the Maine NAACP is on the way to reopening.Speaking at the Maine NAACP’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day…
-
Maine’s Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry is asking the U.S. Department of Agriculture to include Maine farmers and food distributors…
-
State regulators have ruled that Central Maine Power will be allowed to continue sending disconnection notices to households with past-due balances during…
-
Nearly a quarter more people died in Maine from drug use in the first nine months of 2020, than the year before.That’s according to a new report by the…
-
Gov. Janet Mills is proposing a two-year budget of $8.4 billion, a spending plan bolstered by federal pandemic relief funding and better-than-expected…
-
Employees at the Portland Museum of Art finished voting in mid-December on whether to unionize — but those votes won’t be counted until the National Labor…
-
A new law goes into effect on Friday that allows employees at many Maine businesses to earn up to 40 hours of paid leave a year, for use as either sick or…
-
When the COVID-19 pandemic began, it shut down Maine’s court system, creating a serious backlog of cases.According to Maine’s Supreme Judicial Court,…
-
Sixty-four people died in Portland while homeless in 2020. That’s according to the human services nonprofit Preble Street, which is holding its annual…
-
Penobscot Valley Hospital in Lincoln says it has emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and is now much more financially viable.CEO Crystal Landry…