Mallory Noe-Payne
Richmond ReporterMallory Noe-Payne is a Radio IQ reporter based in Richmond. She's covered policy and politics from the state capital since 2016. She was a 2020-2021 recipient of the Fulbright Young Journalist Award. She spent a year in Munich, Germany researching memory, justice, and how a society can collectively confront its sins, then creating the acclaimed podcast Memory Wars. Her Virginia-based coverage of home healthcare workers, voting rights, and Richmond’s Slave Trail have all won national news awards. Mallory is a graduate of Virginia Tech with degrees in Journalism and Political Science. You can contact her at noepayne@vt.edu.
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To see what the impact of that closure was, Mallory Noe-Payne visited three women in Chesapeake Virginia. Together they tell the story of what’s possible when families are given an alternative to institutionalized care.
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A Dominion official tells RadioIQ they expect SMR’s to become an important part of the grid in about a decade. He says the company is currently considering locations and designs.
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BWXT Advanced Technologies is a leader in nuclear design and manufacturing. And some day that expertise may just help an astronaut make it to Mars.
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Last week the world’s leading climate scientists released another grim report: climate change is worsening. In the face of this uncertain future, Virginia ski resorts are working hard to still provide snow in varying conditions.
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A unique program in Richmond is helping adults with dementia get out of the house, make friends, and do art.
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For more than a decade Virginia’s Museum of History and Culture in Richmond has offered teacher training seminars. This summer the museum is paying teachers to participate.
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The Mighty Pen is a program that supports and helps Virginia veterans write their stories. Now some of those stories have been adapted for the stage. War in Pieces is a production made up of four one-act plays.
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In 1901 Jennifer McClellan’s great-grandfather was forced to take a literacy test before he could register to vote in Alabama. In 1947 her father had to pay a poll tax in Tennessee. Now she will represent Virginia in Congress.
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It may not be November, but Tuesday is an election day in some parts of the state. Voters in Virginia’s 4th Congressional District will be choosing a new representative.
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When Enrichmond dissolved, community groups lost access to their money. They estimate hundreds of thousands of donated dollars just disappeared. Months later they still haven’t gotten answers.