Brandon Hollingsworth
Former News Host and ReporterBrandon Hollingsworth was SPR's All Things Considered host from September 2021-January 2025. He erved public radio audiences for nearly twenty years, primarily in reporting, hosting and interviewing. His previous ports-of-call were WUOT-FM in Knoxville, Tennessee, and Alabama Public Radio. His work has been heard nationally on Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Here and Now and NPR’s top-of-the-hour newscasts.
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SPR's Brandon Hollingsworth and Owen Henderson break down what election results in Kootenai County mean for North Idaho College and the way the state conducts elections.
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Fifth congressional district candidates Michael Baumgartner and Carmela Conroy sat down with SPR News to talk about their policy platforms and more in the final days of the 2024 race.
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The changing state of housing in Spokane with city planner Spencer Gardner; pro-con statements about Washington Initiative 2109 (capital gains tax); Third District state House candidates Tony Kiepe and Natasha Hill in an in-studio forum
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The community college in Coeur d'Alene is trying to avoid losing accreditation. Its 37-page report to college accreditors, NIC argues rough waters in its leadership levels are beginning to settle.
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Democrat Bob Ferguson and Republican Dave Reichert will likely square off in November; Semi Bird and Mark Mullet eliminated.
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Spokane's mayor says the city is doing the best it can to help people endure heat waves, but one local provider says it's not enough.
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Libraries will act as cooling centers and the Trent Avenue shelter will expand its capacity as the city of Spokane braces for a heat wave.
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Spokane Mayor Lisa Brown was reserved in public comment Friday. She said the city will continue to respond to unlawful camping, and that her administration is working with non-profits and outreach organizations that aid unsheltered people.
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An expected warm, dry summer could reduce water supplies and drive up wildfire risk in the Inland Northwest, according to a recent federal drought update.
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Eighty-one-year-old Shirley Grossman and 85-year-old Roz Luther plan to visit sixteen eastern Washington towns this summer on what they call the “Granny Caravan.”