Paige Browning
Newscaster
About
Paige Browning is a news anchor and reporter for KUOW Public Radio, covering breaking news and stories of significance in the Puget Sound region. Paige's work is featured on KUOW's airwaves daily, and she is a backup host for KUOW's drive-time shows and Seattle Now podcast.
A native of the Northwest, Paige takes special interest in stories about climate change, our changing culture(s), politics, and law. Paige's work has been featured on the NPR newscast, All Things Considered, Here and Now, the BBC, and local public radio stations throughout the northwest. She has lived and worked in Spokane, Missoula (MT), and Seattle.
Her specialty is writing news under a one day deadline, but she's also stepped onto wildfire scorched land, rappelled from a building, and been to the heart of protests for stories.
Paige likes to run, bike, camp, and linger around at art exhibits and concert venues, and thinks the Seattle Storm are the city's best team to see.
Location: Seattle
Languages: English, beginner Spanish
Pronouns: she/her
Professional Affiliations: SAG-AFTRA Shop Steward, Delta Gamma Alumna
Podcasts
Stories
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Washington bans NRA backed insurance
Washington state is banning certain National Rifle Association insurance policies.
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5 unexpected ways the government shutdown affects Seattle and Washington state
For one, earthquake monitoring. Yikes.
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How the government shutdown is impacting workers in Washington state
Kim Malcolm talks with KUOW reporter Paige Browning about how the partial shutdown of the federal government is affecting workers in Washington state.
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Seattle council members give New York a lesson on what comes with Amazon
Seattle lawmakers are raising warning flags about how Amazon's expansion could affect New York.
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Washington governor to pardon marijuana possession convictions
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Abuse survivors, food banks suffer during government shutdown
Federally-funded food banks in Washington are, so far, holding on.
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These are the changes coming to Seattle paychecks in 2019
Lots of people in Seattle are looking forward to a pay raise in 2019.
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Kirkland man campaigns for baseball bobbleheads that bring civil rights stories to life
Jay Caldwell is raising money to create some of the first-ever bobbleheads of black baseball players who were prevented from joining Major League Baseball by segregation laws of the 1920s and '30s.
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With $100, a Seattle teenager launched the company that would become UPS
If you’ve been on the Seattle Underground Tour, you know that UPS launched here.
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The U.S. government is failing its treaties with Native Americans, Civil Rights Commission says
The lengthy report by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights calls on Congress to put together an action plan.