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Ed Joyce

Former All Things Considered Anchor & Reporter

Ed Joyce is a former Reporter and All Things Considered News Anchor at Capital Public Radio. Ed is a veteran journalist with experience in a variety of news positions across all media platforms, including radio, television, Web and print. 

Ed’s career started as a boy delivering the Sunday L.A. Times. He later had a paper route delivering the Evening Star-News. Before joining the station, Ed worked in two different positions for KPCC in Los Angeles -  One year as the Orange County Bureau Reporter sandwiched around a year as Morning Breaking News Editor. Before working at KPCC, Ed anchored at KPBS-FM, worked as the station’s Environment Reporter producing stories for KPBS-FM and TV and had a stint as the station’s Senior Editor.

In a journalism career that hasn't followed a straight line, Ed has also had stints as a telephone operator for US West and was a USPS mail carrier. He also wrote a column and was the Editor for a weekly newspaper in the U.S. Virgin Islands.  And, he's been a DJ and has taught journalism and radio-TV production at two Seattle-area high schools and the University of Idaho.

Ed has won numerous awards from the Society of Professional Journalists, Associated Press and other organizations for his TV and radio writing, producing, anchoring, editing and reporting. He has been a contributor to NPR, Marketplace and the California Report among other media news organizations. Ed has worked in Northern California before: As News Director at KTHO AM-FM in South Lake Tahoe and in Crescent City.

Born in Los Angeles County, Joyce graduated with a B.A. in Communications from the University of Washington, where he studied broadcast journalism, TV-radio production and sociology. Following graduation he worked at KUOW in Seattle and later as a TV news anchor and reporter in Eugene, Oregon and Spokane.

Ed enjoys cycling and competing in run/bike/run events (duathlon), traveling and bodysurfing.

 

    Stories by Ed Joyce

  • iStock image - UC Berkeley / Courtesy

    Study: Chemicals From Firefighting Foam In Drinking Water

    August 9, 2016

    A new study shows fire-fighting foam containing highly fluorinated chemicals is contaminating drinking water supplies around many of the nation's military bases, airports and industrial sites.

  • USFS R5 State and Private Forestry / Courtesy

    Fewer Wildfires In 2016 On National Forest Lands In California

    August 8, 2016

    It has been a busy fire season across California. But there are fewer fires in the state’s 18 U.S. national forests so far this year, compared to 2015.

  • Cal Fire San Benito-Monterey Unit / Twitter

    Soberanes Fire 'Conundrum For Fire Managers'

    August 5, 2016

    The Soberanes Fire near Big Sur is burning in a rugged area that hasn't "seen fire in decades." The wildfire is 45 percent contained at 57,500 acres.

  • Ringo H.W. Chiu / AP

    The 'New Normal' For Wildfires In California

    August 3, 2016

    The number of acres burned by wildfires in the U.S. is about average for this time of year. But, in California, the 'new normal' includes larger and more frequent wildfires.

  • Wikipedia / Creative Commons

    Sacramento State Gets Grant To Help Migrant Farmworker Students

    August 1, 2016

    A $2.3 million federal grant will be used to help migrant farmworker students at Sacramento State.

  • InciWeb-Angeles National Forest / Courtesy

    Drought Intensifies As Wildfires Grow In Western U.S.

    July 28, 2016

    The drought intensified over the last week in the Western U.S. as the region swelters under a heatwave and firefighters battle major wildfires.

  • Angeles National Forest-InciWeb / Courtesy

    Fire Restrictions In Northern California Counties

    July 27, 2016

    Dangerous fire weather conditions has prompted one federal agency to impose fire restrictions on public lands in northern California.

  • Ed Joyce / Capital Public Radio

    Drought Persists And So Does Water Conservation In Sacramento

    July 21, 2016

    Mandatory statewide water conservation rules have ended in California. But Sacramento-area users conserved 22 percent in June, compared to June 2013.

  • David Slipher / Courtesy UC Davis

    Pigeon 'Whisperers' Use Birds To Track Lead Pollution

    July 20, 2016

    A UC Davis researcher has used pigeons to track lead pollution in New York City and plans to do the same in California cities and agricultural areas.

  • Capital Public Radio / File

    Survey: California School Kids Safer, Depression Risk ‘High’

    July 18, 2016

    Drug and alcohol use dropped among students in California and school safety increased, according to the results of a statewide survey. But the report shows two indicators of depression risk are "at disturbingly high levels."

 

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