
Paula A. Womack
Newsroom Office ManagerAs the newsroom office manager for KPBS since August 2022, Paula manages the business office of an award-winning newsroom of reporters, hosts, editors, producers, videographers, the newsroom coordinator and part-time SDSU student assistants.
Before joining KPBS, Paula worked as a business office manager in the areas of mental and behavioral health, human resources, training and organizational development, finance, corporate administration, and sales and mortgage lending origination.
Paula has earned a master's degree, summa cum laude, Life Coach certification, and honorary doctorate in counseling. She grew up in San Diego and has lived here for over 60 years.
RECENT STORIES ON KPBS
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NPR has learned that dozens of immigrants across the U.S. have received letters notifying them that their asylum cases have been dismissed because they have not yet received a screening interview.
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Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth reposted the video profiling Christian Nationalist Pastor Doug Wilson, who opposes same-sex marriage.
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Asher Watkins had been tracking a cape buffalo for the kill when the animal instead turned its attack on the hunter.
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NPR's Adrian Ma plays the puzzle with YPR listener Bill Hoffman of Helena, Montana, and Weekend Edition Puzzlemaster Will Shortz.
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It took the capsule 17 hours to make the trip home, experiencing re-entry temperatures of around 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit as it punched through the atmosphere following Friday's ISS undocking.
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The Georgia Bureau of Investigation identified the man who opened fire at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as Patrick Joseph White. White died and a police officer was shot and killed.
- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth reposts video of pastors saying women shouldn't vote
- D.C. mayor defends capital's crime rates after Trump threatens to take over police
- A writer learns to embrace her imperfect recovery from an eating disorder
- Texas big game hunter killed while stalking African Cape buffalo
- Colorado wildfires burn more than 120,000 acres as firefighters await better weather