Aubri Juhasz
Editor, Education ReporterAubri Juhasz covers K-12 education, focusing on charter schools, education funding and other statewide issues. She also helps edit the station’s news coverage.
Previously, she was an education reporter for WHYY Public Radio in Philadelphia and hosted the station’s award-winning podcast Schooled. Before that, she covered education in New Orleans for WWNO.
A graduate of Barnard College, Juhasz got her start as a producer for NPR’s flagship news program, All Things Considered. She is from New York and lives in the Marigny. You can reach her at aubri@wwno.org.
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According to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ latest projections, released Thursday, the “saltwater wedge” isn’t forecast to reach New Orleans’ west bank until late November — a month later than earlier projections suggested.
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Exactly which steps schools will need to take — and when — is still unclear, as city, state and federal agencies race to get ahead of the saltwater wedge.
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Communities in southeastern Louisiana are bringing fresh water — by barge and by pipeline — to their local water treatment plants, to dilute the briny water brought in by the saltwater wedge.
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As salt water moves up the Mississippi River from the Gulf of Mexico, residents across the greater New Orleans area have been left with many questions.
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The school board in Terrebonne Parish sold a former elementary school campus, which the district closed in 2021, to the Pointe-au-Chien Tribe last week.
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In two rapid-fire rounds, candidates were allowed only to give yes or no answers, though not everyone stuck to the rules.
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Louisiana is experiencing the largest wildfires in the state's history. At least 2 people have died. The state is in a severe drought and continues to experience record heat.
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This weekend, BE NOLA — which stands for Black Education for New Orleans — is hosting its fourth annual Black is Brilliant Summit on Bayou Road.
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Louisiana gubernatorial race is picking up as candidates released their first campaign ads this week since officially qualifying.
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Here’s what you should know about education bills that passed — and failed to pass — at the State Capitol as schools reopen across the state.