Megan Frank
News anchor/producerI’m an Emmy-winning journalist who serves as the afternoon anchor for WLVR during NPR's All Things Considered. I’ve worked on a variety of projects at Lehigh Valley Public Media, including PBS39’s award-winning weekly news program PBS39 News Tonight, the digital literacy series Tech Takeover, the documentary Food Waste in the Valley, and Stop The Violence, an award-winning series about teens and gang recruitment. I also wrote, hosted and produced the Emmy-winning short film, The Future Is Female: Women, Space and NASA, which focused on the role women play in America’s space program.
I previously worked at WHYY in Philadelphia and for two Harrisburg area news stations, WHTM and WGAL. When not reporting, you can find me whipping up plant-based meals or working in the garden. Contact me at meganf@wlvt.org or 215-605-6371.
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This week, PennEast Pipeline said it would stop developing a proposed pipeline from Pennsylvania to New Jersey.
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Almost 250 years ago, a small group of Moravian women walked from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania to Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
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Labor shortages are happening across the country and the problem is hitting home in the Lehigh Valley.
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State stores across Pennsylvania are limiting some liquor purchases to two bottles per day.
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Bethlehem is joining three other international Moravian communities for a once-in-a-lifetime recognition by the United Nations.
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Pennsylvania is a top destination for people who travel to take pictures of fall foliage who are also known as “leaf peepers.”
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Nearly 20% of Americans today are too young to remember firsthand the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
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PALMER TWP, Pa. - Patrick Cartier of Palmer Township said two decades later, he still feels the trauma of 9/11. “I look at it like it’s a part of me,”…
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BETHLEHEM, Pa. - People around the region are still cleaning up from flooding after last week’s severe storms. Joe Kozacheck, co-owner and president of…
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Breakthrough coronavirus cases occur when a fully vaccinated person contracts COVID-19. Though these cases are rare, health experts say some are to be expected.