
Quincy J Walters
Quincy Walters is a reporter and backup host for WGCU.
He started in public radio as an intern at WUSF, the NPR member station for the Tampa Bay area. A year later, he was a production intern for NPR’s Weekend All Things Considered in Washington, D.C. After Quincy’s internship, he returned to WUSF as a reporter.
His stories have aired on Weekend All Things Considered.
Quincy earned a degree in English with a concentration in creative writing from the University of South Florida.
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Laura, a Curious Gulf Coast inquirer, asked: "When we moved to Southwest Florida from the Pacific Northwest we were surprised that Florida doesn't have...
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This summer, an outgoing City of Fort Myers employee revealed that the city used land near downtown as a dumpsite for decades during the 20th century....
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Satellite images this month show a harmful red tide algal bloom festering in the Gulf of Mexico-- mere miles away from the shorelines of Southwest...
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It’s been over two months since Hurricane Irma made landfall in Florida, but Floridians are still dealing with mold and many are just now discovering...
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Hundreds of people flocked to a gun show in Fort Myers this past weekend. Sunday also marked a week since the largest recorded mass shooting in modern U...
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President Donald Trump’s proposed cuts to the Environmental Protection Agency’s budget have some people on edge, especially in Florida. People...
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Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection used ground penetrating radar on several plots of land in a predominantly black section of Fort Myers...
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You may have heard of feral cats, but have you heard of feral chickens? Feral chickens are now the subject of evolutionary research. And the ones in...
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The City of Fort Myers held a workshop this week to inform residents about what kind of testing will be done on a dump site in a predominantly black...
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Toxic algal blooms have been happening more often in the rivers off Lake Okeechobee. One of the main causes is phosphorous runoff from wastewater and...