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And the award(s) go to…WDET

After another year of standout reporting, storytelling and music programming, WDET has earned more than 40 awards from some of the industry’s most respected journalism and broadcasting organizations.

“It’s a great honor for the WDET staff to receive these awards.  We work long hours to bring Detroiters the news, music and conversation that they deserve,” said News Director Jerome Vaughn. “Despite the challenges we face, we will continue providing listeners with the information they need to understand what’s going on in the region and make informed decisions in the voting booth.”

Leading the honors is a Regional Edward R. Murrow Award, one of broadcast journalism’s most prestigious recognitions. WDET also received awards from the Michigan Association of Broadcasters, the Society of Professional Journalists, Public Media Journalists Association and the National Headliner Awards.

The awards reflect the scope of WDET’s work, recognizing excellence in journalism, music programming, digital content and community storytelling.

Station Manager Mary Zatina feels that the awards WDET received reflects the importance of quality local journalism. “I am super proud of the WDET team.  These awards from external experts underscore that the station staff are truly fulfilling our mission of community service and doing so with professionalism and excellence.”

Local-interest series such as “Citizen Vox Project,” “CuriosiD” and the culture-focused “Container on The Metro” were among the recognized projects, alongside award-winning reporting from programs including “The Metro,” “All Things Considered: Detroit” and “Morning Edition Detroit.”

“These awards reflect the talent, diligence and creativity of our entire team. Whether it’s local journalism, music programming or community storytelling, our staff works every day to create content that is distinctly Detroit and deeply connected to the people we serve. It’s gratifying to see that work recognized by our peers,” said Program Director Adam Fox.

Pat Batcheller wins the Region 7 Murrow for ‘Morning Edition Detroit’ newscast

The award-winning 7 a.m. broadcast of “Morning Edition Detroit” on Oct. 16, 2025, featured coverage of Detroit’s mayoral debate and residents’ reactions, city beautification efforts and other local news from across the region.

As in all of his broadcasts, Batcheller navigates seamlessly between news, weather and traffic, demonstrating the skill and versatility of a seasoned host and trusted reporter.

“Our newscasts are a team effort. I’m grateful to work with journalists who go out and get good stories and bring people’s voices into our daily coverage of what’s happening in our community,” said Batcheller.

This marks his first Murrow Award.

Local Awards

Society of Professional Journalist awards

The Society of Professional Journalists honored WDET journalists with first place in several reporting categories, such as arts, auto, investigative, education, sports and more. Stories documenting ICE detention and global conflict from local perspectives spoke to the key issues of today, earning The Metro several awards.

Arts Reporting/Criticism
“Container on the Metro: Elonte Davis”
Tia Graham, Conor Anderson, Jose Llanas, David Leins

Autos Reporting/Reviews
“CuriosiD: Did Automakers Sabotage Public Transit?”
Quinn Klinefelter

Breaking/Spot News Reporting
“Activists gather outside Somerset Mall for ‘Tesla Takedown’ rally”
Alex McLenon

Community/Local News Reporting
“Dearborn brands itself as ‘The Coffee Capital'”
Bre’Anna Tinsley

Consumer/Watchdog/Investigative Reporting
“Windsorites annoyed, disappointed with Trump’s treatment of Canada”
Russ McNamara

Education Reporting
“DSA West African Dance Students Bring Kwanzaa to the Community”
Sascha Raiyn

Feature Reporting
“CuriosiD: What’s the Oldest Bar in Detroit?”
Ryan Patrick Hooper

General News/Enterprise Reporting
“Shustho: Mind, Body, and Spirit”
Nargis Rahman

News/Public Affairs (regular scheduled programs)
“The Metro: Expunged on paper, not in court. A Hmong dad’s detention in Michigan”
Robyn Vincent, Sam Corey, Tia Graham, Cary Junior II, David Leins

Newscast
7:04 a.m. WDET news 10/16/25
Pat Batcheller

Sports Reporting
“Detroit Grand Prix Secures New Contract Despite Uncertainties”
Alex McLenon

Arts Reporting/Criticism
Container on the Metro: Bev Love”
Tia Graham, Conor Anderson, Jose Llanas, David Leins

Autos Reporting/Reviews
“Ford Motor Company opens new world headquarters building”

Alex McLenon

Breaking/Spot News Reporting
No Kings Protest 06/14/25
Russ McNamara

Feature Reporting
“CuriosiD: What Up Doe?”
Russ McNamara

General News/Enterprise Reporting
“CuriosiD: Why isn’t Lake St. Clair a “Great Lake”?”
Pat Batcheller

News/Public Affairs (regular scheduled programs)
The Metro: A voyage toward Gaza and into custody”
Robyn Vincent, Sam Corey, Tia Graham, Cary Junior II, David Leins

Newscast 7:04 p.m.
WDET News 11/05/25
Alex McLenon

Sports Reporting
“Lions fans struggle to believe team is Super Bowl favorite”
Quinn Klinefelter

News Photography
No Kings Protest 10/20/25
Russ McNamara

Arts Reporting/Criticism
“Container on the Metro: Ijania Cortez”
Tia Graham, Conor Anderson, Jose Llanas, David Leins

Feature Reporting
“WDET Origins: 75th Anniversary”
Jerome Vaughn

General News/Enterprise Reporting
“Former Russian hostage Paul Whelan still feels trapped by Michigan red tape”
Quinn Klinefelter

News/Public Affairs (regular scheduled programs)
“The Metro: They came to America as toddlers, decades later one is detained by ICE”
Robyn Vincent, Sam Corey, Tia Graham, Cary Junior II, David Leins

Newscast
11:04 a.m. WDET news 09/25/25
Amanda LeClaire

News Photography
June No Kings Protest 06/14/25
Russ McNamara

Arts Reporting/Criticism

“Container on the Metro: La Cecille”
Tia Graham, Conor Anderson, Jose Llanas, David Leins

Newscast
8:04 a.m. WDET news 02/18/25
Pat Batcheller

Michigan Association of Broadcasters

The Michigan Association of Broadcasters recognized WDET’s work in the social sphere and gave a nod to music shows like Waajeed’s The Boulevard and Mike Latulippe’s The Detroit Move— a great send off to the latter show, which retired this past winter. 

Special Interest & Cultural Programming
“Detroit to Gloryland”
Credits: Sascha Raiyn

Use of Multiplatform Media – Promotional/Membership Materials
Coney Dog
Credits: Ryan Patrick Hooper, Conor Anderson, Sophia Jozwiak, Jose Llanas

Membership Appeal
Fall OAF 2025 – “The Boulevard”
Credits: Sam Beaubien, Wajeed

Mini-Documentary or Series
“CuriosiD”
Credits: WDET News

Marketing Materials & Promos
WDET Music Show Promo 2
Credits: Sam Beaubien, Conor Anderson, Jose Llanes, Nate Bender

Musical Programming
“The Detroit Move”
Credits: Mike Latulippe

Special Interest & Cultural Programming
“Container on the Metro”
Credits: Tia Graham, Conor Anderson, Jose Llanes, David Leins

Use of Multiplatform Media – Programming Materials
“Container on the Metro”
Credits: Tia Graham, Conor Anderson, Jose Llanes, David Leins

Use of Multiplatform Media – Promotional/Membership Materials
Trust fall
Credits: Ryan Patrick Hooper, Cary Junior II, Sophia Jozwiak

Membership Appeal
Fall OAF 2025 – Protest
Credits: Sam Beaubien, Russ McNamara

Community Involvement
“Citizen Vox Project”
Credits: WDET News

National Awards

National Headliner Awards

Founded in 1934 by the Press Club of Atlantic City, the National Headliner Awards are among the oldest and most respected journalism competitions in the country. Earning national recognition in the contest is an achievement in itself, and WDET received two awards this year.

Radio local documentary or public affairs
“The Metro”
The Metro staff

Radio local news series
“Trump Tariff Effects”
Russ McNamara

Public Media Journalists Association

The Public Media Journalists Association (PMJA) champions journalistic excellence across public media, honoring journalists whose work informs, engages and empowers their communities. The national awards program recognizes some of the best reporting and storytelling from stations across the country. This year, WDET earned five PMJA awards, highlighting the impact of its journalism and community-focused programming.

Arts Feature
First Place
“Container on the Metro – Bevlove”
Tia Graham, Conor Anderson, Jose Llanes

Audience Engagement
First Place
“CuriosiD”
WDET

Second Place
“Detroit to Gloryland” (Yosemite)
Sascha Raiyn

Human Interest Feature
First Place
“CuriosiD: What is the origin of “What up doe?””
Russ McNamara

Interview
Second Place
“Former Russian hostage Paul Whelan still feels trapped by Michigan red tape”
Quinn Klinefelter

Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

The post And the award(s) go to…WDET appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Crossing the Lines: Highland Park resident wants to see more schools open in the city

As part of Crossing the Lines WDET is speaking to Highland Park residents about the city and upcoming state elections.

Highland Park has only two K-8 charter schools and has not had its own high school since 2015. The city also has many transient residents, which makes it hard for the schools to retain students.

Angela Fleming is a born and raised Highland Park resident. She says quality education for children is her top concern for the city.

Fleming spoke with WDET’s Bre’Anna Tinsley.

Listen: Highland Park resident wants to see more schools open in the city

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Angela Fleming: Well, I’m a long-time homeowner in Highland Park, and my main concerns are our school systems. You know, when I was raised and brought up in the school system, we had very beautiful school systems. Now that I see, you know, the children going to schools now they’re being very deprived of education. And I say that because we have one school. I’m a tax paying citizen. I would like to see more schools open in the city of Highland Park.

Bre’Anna Tinsley, WDET:  Do you feel that the current state administration is providing enough resources to the city?

AF:  I think they could do better, or even if they are providing the money, where is he going? Why don’t we as taxpayers see what they’re actually really doing in Highland Park? Rather than fixing the roads – which the roads need to be fixed also— but what about the kids education? Can our kids get educated on levels that will allow them to be competitive in the world we live in or the times we live in? So that’s what I would love to see change.

Let our kids get some education, let them have the opportunity of living healthy, normal lives, which I’m sure we all as parents would like to see our kids go to good school systems, our kids getting the education that we got when we came up. And then, not only that, being in healthy, normal environments.

BT: Do you have someone in mind for governor the governor’s races coming up this year?

AF:  I can’t really say, because there’s a lot of competition, and it also has some good people, but I’m not going to pass judgment on that. The voters will decide who they think the best contender is.

BT: You mentioned education, do you have any specific ideas or things that you will like the next governor to do towards education that might help the city of Highland Park?

AF:  Well, I think when it comes to education, that is one of the most areas that we need to focus on, as it relates to your you know, your crime level. Also, I think if kids get more education, get into the right areas as it relates to your recreation centers, after school programs that they have a better opportunity at being better citizens. In order to be a better citizen, you have to do things that require for you to be brought up in a way that would show a direction as to how you getting trained, or how you getting taught, or how you even getting educated. You know what I’m saying?

BT: Okay, well, I have one more question. Is there anything about Highland Park that you would like the next representative or the next governor to know.

AF:  I think the next governor should understand that Highland Park is just a small community, and we as homeowners or residents of the city of Highland Park should possibly have more meetings that will allow the government to be able to make making better decisions that would be more beneficial to the residents and the children, or even just the residents of that city.

This piece is also a part of WDET’s on-going series, Citizen Vox, where reporters ask residents about their priorities ahead of local elections.

Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

The post Crossing the Lines: Highland Park resident wants to see more schools open in the city appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Crossing the Lines: Highland Park resident says smart planning can reduce poverty

Highland Park is a small city that once had a relatively large population for its size. At the height of Detroit’s automotive boom, more than 50,000 people lived within Highland Park’s 2.9 square miles. Today, the population is less than 9,000.

WDET’s Crossing the Lines series features conversations with and stories about Highland Park’s people, culture, and history.

Detroit Public Radio’s Citizen Vox project gives residents a chance to express how they feel about their communities and the issues that matter to them.

WDET’s Pat Batcheller spoke with Highland Park resident Ken Bates at a coffee shop on Woodward Ave. on April 10, 2026.

Listen: Highland Park resident says smart planning can reduce poverty

Bates was born in Detroit but moved to Highland Park with his wife more than 25 years ago. They bought a Craftsman-style bungalow in a historic district of the city. Voters elected Bates to the city council in 2018, where he served until 2022. He chairs the board of an energy nonprofit called Soulardarity. Its mission includes installing solar-powered streetlights in Highland Park’s neighborhoods.

Bates shares his thoughts on housing, poverty, community pride, and development.

Ken Bates: We know that there’s a housing crisis, a housing shortage nationally, affordable housing. Highland Park has an abundance of land that is underutilized, that really could be put forth in terms of development. So, we could look at land trusts. We could look at affordable housing, low-income housing, market rate housing, duplexes to grow the population because that’s what we have in abundance.

Manufacturing? I doubt that will ever come back to the extent that Henry Ford and Chrysler and some of the other manufacturers had here. That’s a bygone era.

And so, we have to look into the future as to what will help Highland Park become sustainable. What kind of industries should we count on?

You have to get education on board. You have to get private development. You have to get your government funding all in order, and you have to have a plan and a vision and the expertise in order to do it.

If not, you’re just maintaining the status quo. And year after year, you’re just one disaster away from some financial calamity, whether it be a natural disaster or something like the Great Lakes Water Authority suing us for $19 million and threatening to put it on our tax rolls.

Pat Batcheller: What do you like about being in Highland Park?

KB: Highland Park is centrally located. It’s convenient. There’s a sense of—like with my block, I never expected it to be so diverse. And yet you’ve got immigrants, you’ve got people of different faiths. You’ve got people who are ascribed to different lifestyles. I mean, it just it goes on and on, different political beliefs, and we all live together in the same community, and we’re able to communicate and talk and look out after each other.”

PB: From the conversations I’ve had with you and some of the other folks I’ve talked to, it isn’t really the borders that define Highland Park, it’s the people. Would you agree with that?

KB: Well, yeah, I would say the people do define Highland Park because, because again, they’ve been here. Most have been here quite a long time. And even if you travel outside of Highland Park and talk to people that formerly lived here, many people will tell you, ‘Yeah, my grandparents lived here.’ They remember it as a great city. They’ve had fond memories.

The historical district is obviously something that has gained attention. People are looking at those homes and, if they have the means to renovate them, are coming in and deciding, “well, let’s renovate this home.” Because you can’t rebuild those anywhere for anything that I would consider reasonable.

Highland Park has just had its own identity for a long, long time. And so, I can’t see that changing because it would be so difficult to incorporate us into the Detroit culture. We’re not Detroit. We’re not Hamtramck. We’re Highland Park.

PB: What’s the most pressing issue facing Highland Park right now?

KB: It’s poverty. You’ve got to figure out how to raise people’s incomes up, so to speak, their standard of living. So, whether it be through employment, homeownership, because poverty impacts everything around us. For example, ALDI is usually out of shopping carts because people abscond with them. If you’re running a business, that’s not helpful. We were fortunate in that Foot Locker moved into the old CVS building because CVS, Rite-Aid, and another drugstore left.

Convincing businesses to come here is a real challenge because the landscape has changed. Brick and mortar stores aren’t necessarily how people are going about retail experiences. You would think that we would have a thrift shop or something of that nature in a community like that. We don’t.

So, trying to look at trends that will allow people to be gainfully employed, increase home ownership, educate their children are things that should be made priority.

The appearance of the city has to change because we have a lot of blight. We had a press conference celebrating the announcement of Highland Towers on Woodward being torn down. We’ve got to have news that is uplifting, that is showing progress now. Yes, the building should be torn down because it’s caught on fire sixteen years ago. But we need to be announcing opportunities for growth projects that will bring about change.

Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

The post Crossing the Lines: Highland Park resident says smart planning can reduce poverty appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

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