Caroline Elliott(Journalist) Biography
Caroline is currently a multi-media journalist for KWCH 12 Eyewitness News. She attended Newberry College in South Carolina, where she studied communications and cheered for the Wolves. She transferred to the University of Georgia to pursue a degree in journalism at the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.
Caroline began working in a newsroom as an intern in Charleston, South Carolina. After returning back home to Georgia, she started as an intern in Atlanta at FOX5 Atlanta and later WSB-TV. During her time at UGA, she also worked as an anchor and reporter for Grady Newsource.
Other personalities: Jeff Speegle
When Caroline isn’t working, she enjoys spending time with her cat, Mr. Poe, managing her Fantasy Football team, reading, and going to church.Caroline is passionate about the people in her community and wants to hear more from you. Have a story idea or just want to say hi? You can follow Caroline on her Facebook and Twitter!
Caroline Elliott(Journalist) Early Life
Though born in Florida in the United States, Caroline spent most of her childhood in Istanbul, Turkey, where her affinity for textiles and her interest in photography were developed. In the past, Caroline interned for the Pageant Planet, where she wrote on developing confidence and interview skills. The previous summer, she interned for Ihlas Media in Istanbul where she had the opportunity to produce newsreels, and to produce and edit content for the web. Last year Caroline worked as a Staff Photographer for Flagpole Magazine where she created weekly content for their print publication. In addition to her work as an ESL teacher, Caroline works independently as an editor and content creator. She can be contacted here.
Caroline Elliott(Journalist) Image
Caroline Elliott(Journalist)Education
Caroline R. Elliott is a graduate of the University of Georgia, with a degree in Journalism with a visual emphasis from the Grady college of Journalism and Mass Communication, as well as a minor in Fashion Merchandising and a certificate in New Media. She is currently using this degree in a career in ESL education where she combines her love for writing and for powerful imagery to help people better their lives and careers through learning English. Caroline also uses her love for writing and editing to offer assistance in editing college admittance essays and personal statements.
Caroline Elliott(Journalist) KWCH-DT
KWCH-DT, virtual channel 12 (UHF digital channel 19), is a CBS-affiliated television station serving Wichita, Kansas, United States that is licensed to Hutchinson. The station is owned by Gray Television, as part of a duopoly with Wichita-licensed CW affiliate KSCW-DT (channel 33); Gray also operates Derby-licensed Univision affiliate KDCU-DT (channel 31) under joint sales and shared services agreements with owner Entravision Communications. The three stations share studios on 37th Street in northeast Wichita; KWCH and KSCW share transmitter facilities in rural northeastern Reno County (south-southeast of Buhler).
KWCH serves as the flagship of the Kansas Broadcasting System (KBS), a statewide network of four full-power stations that relay CBS network and other programming provided by KWCH across central and western Kansas, as well as bordering counties in Colorado, Nebraska and Oklahoma.
Caroline Elliott(Journalist)
Kan. Reno County dispatchers are overwhelmed with mental health-related calls, as the mental health crisis is a problem facing the entire country.Now police are trying something different—forming mental health units to respond to mental health emergencies.Local law enforcement agencies in Wichita and Sedgwick County have recently started discussions about mental health and the role it plays in local crime. Just this past month, the city of Wichita started a pilot program to respond to mental health calls.
Now– the Hutchinson Police Department announced it plans to start a mental health unit in the city. The team would be made up of a police officer and a mental health professional, trained to respond to mental health emergencies and connect people with help in the community.”The law has been violated.. a crime has been committed. We get out there and we discover a person that isn’t intending to be a criminal, they aren’t trying to violate the law. They’re just suffering from a mental health crisis, and they’ve become violent and they’ve become destructive,” Chief Jeff Hooper said. “Those are the people that end up in the criminal justice system, because they’ve violated the law and the officers don’t have anything else to do with them typically, except take them to jail.”The idea of the program is to connect people with resources in the community, rather than take them to jail.”My hope is that we could work with both the City Attorney’s office and the District Attorney’s office to say okay this person committed a crime, but they’re suffering from a mental health issue or problem that they have in their life. So the hope would be if we connect them to mental health services, we would not prosecute them for that crime,” Chief Hooper said.
Hutch Police Chief Jeff Hooper says mental health services are disappearing across the country, but this program will have to wait. Right now there’s no money for the program until 2021.The program will cost around $120,000 to start, and about $100,000 to maintain each year. Chief Hooper says the program could save the city some money in return if fewer inmates are in jail as a result.
Caroline Elliott(Journalist) Wichita
Wichita, KS Protests are happening across the country over President Trump’s decision to start immigration raids in nine major cities Sunday. The sweeps were expected to target around 2,000 people who a judge has already ordered to be deported.U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents encounter two groups of immigrants in Lukeville, AZ. (Source: CBP Arizona/Twitter/MGN).As protesters rally around the country in response to conditions at detention centers on the Southern Border and ICE raids expected to begin Sunday, protests in Delano were underway this weekend.
Protesters in Delano slept on the sidewalk Friday night, and plan to sleep on the sidewalk again Saturday night.”Kids are sleeping in cages, how comfortable are they?” one protester said.ICT Indivisible and Sunflower Community Action organized the protest to bring awareness, and help the undocumented community understand their rights ahead of the possible protests.”We want to raise awareness of what is going on and just to let people know that this is not right. People, and just kids and families should not be treated this way. It’s just inhumane to see what they are doing,” Sarahi Aguilera said.
The operation is set to target undocumented immigrants who were ordered to be deported by a judge for failing to appear in court, according to ICE officials.
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