Civil Beat Staff
Kim Gamel
Kim Gamel is Civil Beat’s deputy managing editor. She joined the organization in November 2020. She’s also an accredited solutions journalism trainer.
Kim came to 贬补飞补颈驶颈 after many years abroad, most recently in Seoul covering the Korean Peninsula for the military newspaper Stars and Stripes.
That gave her a firsthand view of the U.S.-North Korea relationship as it evolved from 鈥渇ire and fury鈥 threats of war to Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un鈥檚 bromance.
A Russian major in college, Kim began her career as a reporter with an English-language newspaper in Moscow, the Moscow Tribune, as the Soviet Union was starting to disintegrate.
She later went to work for The Associated Press in Iowa, North Carolina and New York before being posted as the Nordic/Baltic news editor in Sweden.聽A highlight of that period was going reindeer herding with indigenous Sami north of the Arctic Circle.
She was in Stockholm when 9/11 happened. That triggered an intense interest in the Middle East, leading to a posting as AP’s news editor in Baghdad from 2006-2009.
Her portfolio also includes assignments in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya, Turkey, Lebanon and Egypt.
Kim took a break from conflict zones to do a 2014-15 Knight-Wallace Fellowship at the University of Michigan, where she developed an interest in the importance of local news and the need to find innovative ways to produce it.
Kim, a native of Boise, Idaho, has a bachelor’s degree from Bates College in Maine and a master’s degree from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.
She enjoys engaging with the community on important economic, social and environmental issues that impact the islands. Let her know if you have any ideas.
Meet House District 32 Candidates At A Civil Beat Pop-Up
Take the opportunity to hear what Micah Aiu and Garner Shimizu have to say about issues important to voters in central Oahu.
Honolulu City Auditor Resigns Nearly Halfway Through Her 6-Year Term
The City Council has not set a date to start a search for her replacement.
UH Journalism Students Are Back On The Legislative Beat
University of Hawaii students are getting on the job training by reporting on the Legislature.
Maui’s Troubled Emergency Management Agency Has A New Boss
Amos Lonokailua-Hewett will take the helm Monday. He previously served 25 years in the county’s fire department.
Email Threat To Jewish Temples In Hawaii Heightens Security Fears
Honolulu police determined there were no explosives in the Temple Emanu-颅El in Nuuanu but will increase security, officials said.
Human Remains From Lahaina Wildfire Found In Courthouse
Maui police also said the number of people who have not been accounted for since the Aug. 8 fire dropped to seven.
Ex-Maui Rep Pleads No Contest To Campaign Spending Violation
Kaniela Ing says he has no plans to run again and is glad the matter “is finally behind me.”
Two Elderly Lahaina Men Are 1st To Be ID’d A Week After Deadly Fire
Only a few of the remains that have been recovered are identifiable, officials have said.
Hawaii Governor Seeks Moratorium On Property Sales In Lahaina
The search through the rubble continued as the death toll from the wildfires rose to 99.