
Katie Watkins
Environment Reporter for @HoustonPubMedia, Houston's @NPR station / Californian exploring Texas / @RIASBerlin fellow / Email me: [email protected]
Articles
-
Oct 4, 2023 |
houstonpublicmedia.org | Krešimir Josić |Katie Watkins |Michael Hagerty
Related Posted on · Some local beekeepers estimate they lost about 25-30% of their bee colonies this winter, both from the freeze and other issues plaguing the pollinators. Posted on · A series of performances called "Colony" meditates on humanity's relationship with bees.
-
Sep 27, 2023 |
houstonpublicmedia.org | Sara Willa Ernst |Katie Watkins |Jared Counts
This story is part of an investigative series into the impact of extreme heat on Metro riders. You can read part one and part two of the investigation. We also produced a podcast, Hot Stops: How Houston Bus Stops Get Dangerously Hot. Some local officials, METRO bus riders and advocates are calling for change after a Houston Public Media investigation found Houston bus stops reached dangerously hot temperatures.
-
Sep 21, 2023 |
houstonpublicmedia.org | Sara Willa Ernst |Katie Watkins |Jared Counts |Adam Zuvanich
This is the second of a two-part investigation into the impact of extreme heat on Metro riders. Read part one of the investigation or listen to the podcast, Hot Stops: How Houston Bus Stops Get Dangerously Hot. Barbara Quattro has been planting trees in Alief for over 20 years. Down the street from her house is a METRO bus stop — a pole with a sign attached. There was no bus shelter or tree offering shade nearby. She noticed riders waiting in the sun.
-
Sep 20, 2023 |
houstonpublicmedia.org | Sara Willa Ernst |Katie Watkins |Jared Counts |Ashley Brown
This is the second of a two-part investigation into the impact of extreme heat on Metro riders. Read part one of the investigation or listen to the podcast, Hot Stops: How Houston Bus Stops Get Dangerously Hot. Barbara Quattro has been planting trees in Alief for over 20 years. Down the street from her house is a METRO bus stop — a pole with a sign attached. There was no bus shelter or tree offering shade nearby. She noticed riders waiting in the sun.
-
Sep 15, 2023 |
houstonpublicmedia.org | Eddie Robinson |Michael Hagerty |Sara Willa Ernst |Katie Watkins
Houston is home to the most successful musical talent in the world. But decades ago, the city was once the epicenter for the blues genre. Why has the city's blues history been neglected for so long? Stay tuned as host Eddie Robinson chats unguarded with acclaimed filmmaker, Drew Barnett-Hamilton. Her new documentary, When Houston Had The Blues, is currently touring the festival circuit with an astonishing goal of putting the city of Houston on the map as a major music city.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 1K
- Tweets
- 1K
- DMs Open
- No

RT @sarawilla1: NEW: PART 2 of our investigation into the impact of extreme heat on METRO riders. @ktwatkins @HPM_ChristinaL @HoustonPubMed…

RT @Gail_HPM: Our @sarawilla1 and @ktwatkins @HoustonPubMedia hit the streets to find out just how hot it gets at Houston's bus stops. You…

RT @HPM_ChristinaL: We literally sweated through many many shirts (okay more like @sarawilla1 and @ktwatkins did) doing this project. Chec…