Alia Wong
Alia Wong previously covered education news for Civil Beat.
A Honolulu native, Alia returned to the islands in May 2012 after graduating from Boston University with degrees in journalism and Latin American studies.
Alia was a longtime intern at Civil Beat before landing her position as a reporter-host. One of her stories, 鈥淎 Lost Child of Kalaupapa,鈥 won her the 2011 Society of Professional Journalists Hawaii Chapter award for best online feature writing.
But not all her intern assignments at Civil Beat have been as glamorous. During the summer of 2012, she had to tour (read: smell) some of Oahu鈥檚 nastiest bathrooms for her story The Dirty Dozen: The State of Honolulu鈥檚 Public Restrooms.
She sincerely hopes her editors remember she鈥檚 no longer an intern.
Before the birth of Civil Beat, Alia wrote for Honolulu Weekly. She also had a number of jobs while in Boston, including as a fellow in Boston University鈥檚 writing center and a research assistant on a long-term project that analyzed the relationship among the Mexican Revolution, international cinema and transnational politics.
Alia is a self-proclaimed globetrotter and will do anything she can to travel to new places. She developed a fascination with Latin America while in high school and hasn鈥檛 been able to keep herself away since. Most recently she traveled to Ecuador, where she lived and studied for six months.
You can follow Alia on Twitter at @aliaemily
Statewide Measures: Voters Solidly Reject Money for Private Preschools
Hawaii voters decide against raising the retirement age for judges but narrowly approve bonds for ag and overwhelmingly approve making public the names of judicial nominees.
Preschool Measure: Big Spending by Just a Few Groups
Question No. 4 asks whether the state should change the constitution and allow public money to be used for private preschools.
Teachers Blast TIME Mag for Cover Portraying Them as ‘Rotten Apples’
As of Wednesday afternoon, the American Federation of Teachers had garnered more than 90,000 signatures on a petition asking TIME’s editors to apologize for this week’s “misleading” cover.
New York-Based Education Super PAC Registers in Hawaii
“Education Reform Now Advocacy” is affiliated with the national nonprofit Democrats for Education Reform.
New Hope’s Evangelism Has a Political Flavor
The megachurch is becoming a force to be reckoned with in Hawaii civic affairs. It recruits candidates, registers new voters and organizes political events.
Schatz Endorses Preschool Ballot Campaign
The campaign is advocating for Question No. 4, which would allow the state to spending public funding on private preschool programs.
Watch: HPD Releases Cachola Surveillance Videos, 911 Tape
The department’s internal investigation is wide-ranging, and includes everyone from the 911 dispatcher to the officers who responded.
Windward Community College Gets $9.9M for Native Hawaiians
The federal grant will support childcare and science, technology, engineering and math education.
New Report Finds “Testing Overload in America’s Schools”
The report from the Center for American Progress found that schools test students once per month on average.