This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Schools

LTHS Welcomes María Inés Zamudio to speak to students

​This presentation will be part of a lecture series for Lyons Township High School students.

This presentation will be part of a lecture series for Lyons Township High School students. The aim of this series is to introduce students to a range of issues, communities, and voices. The focus of this presentation will be issues affecting Latinx communities in Chicago.

María Inés Zamudio is an award-winning investigative journalist. Prior to joining CPI, Zamudio was a radio reporter covering racial inequalities for WBEZ, the Chicago NPR station. Her coverage of the city’s water affordability crisis led to a moratorium on water shutoffs, the creation of a city-wide program to help low-income homeowners, and a state-funded $42 million water emergency assistance program for homeowners who can’t afford their water and sewer bills.

Zamudio has spent the last decade investigating racial inequalities and the policies behind them. Her coverage has received multiple awards, including the National Press Foundation’s Poverty and Inequality award, and multiple regional Edward R. Murrow Awards. In 2019, she was named the best radio reporter at the Peter Lisagor Awards held by the Chicago chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. And in 2022, her body of work and her commitment ensuring her reporting is accessible to the affected communities was recognized with the Studs Terkel Award, which recognizes excellent coverage of Chicago's diverse communities.

Find out what's happening in La Grangefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Earlier in her career, Zamudio and a team of reporters from NPR’s Latino USA received a Peabody National Award for their coverage of Central American migrants. Zamudio’s story was reported from the Mexico-Guatemala border and it focused on the danger women Central American women face while traveling through Mexico as they try to reach the United States.

Zamudio, who lives in Chicago, has also led efforts to increase the number of journalists of color in the industry. In 2020, Zamudio co-created a first-of-its-kind FOIA mentorship program to support Chicago journalists of color working on projects with public records.

Find out what's happening in La Grangefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?