BUFFALO, N.Y. -- WBFO 88.7 FM, the University at Buffalo's
National Public Radio affiliate, won seven awards -- including
three first-place honors -- at the New York State Associated Press
Broadcasters Association's annual awards banquet held recently in
Saratoga Springs.
Members of the WBFO news team are Mark Scott, news director;
Eileen Buckley, assistant news director and news producer and
reporter; and Joyce Kryszak, cultural affairs reporter and
producer.
"The WBFO news team was recognized for its creativity, great
writing and strong production values. This year, WBFO won more AP
awards than any other station in the Class 2 Radio category, which
includes Buffalo stations, as well as those in Rochester, Syracuse
and Albany-Schenectady," said Carole Smith Petro, associate vice
president and WBFO general manager. "The talent and energy of our
news team allows WBFO to bring first-rate local news reporting to
Buffalo/Niagara and the Southern Tier each and every day."
WBFO won awards in the following categories:
Best News Special/Documentary: First Place, "The Jihad
Next Door," Mark Scott.
Best Interview: First Place, "The Capozzi Family," Eileen
Buckley.
Best Continuing News Coverage: Special Mentions for "The
Bike Path Killer, "Eileen Buckley, Joyce Kryszak and Mark Scott,
and for "The Lynn Dejac Case," Joyce Kryszak, Eileen Buckley and
Mark Scott.
Best Enterprise Reporting: Special Mentions for "Meet
Neil Sanders," Eileen Buckley, and for "Homemade Pet Food," Joyce
Kryszak.
Best Feature: First Place, "The 'Real' Real World," Joyce
Kryszak.
In the past decade, the WBFO news department has received 46
Associated Press Awards, including the 2006 Steve Flanders Award,
named in memory of a New York City radio reporter who died of a
heart attack while on his way to a City Hall news conference in
1983. The Flanders award -- the AP's highest radio honor -- is
given to the station in New York with the most top finishes in the
competition among news stories aired during the calendar year.
WBFO 88.7 FM, a public service of the University at Buffalo, is
Western New York's most listened to National Public Radio (NPR)
station. It reaches an audience of almost 100,000 people through
its main signal in Buffalo and through repeater stations WUBJ 88.1
FM in Jamestown and WOLN 91.3 FM in Olean. The WBFO news department
offers comprehensive coverage of regional and worldwide news. The
station also offers a depth of programming not available elsewhere
in the community, including NPR/PRI news and entertainment
programs, public and cultural affairs programming and jazz and
blues.
The University at Buffalo is a premier research-intensive public
university, a flagship institution in the State University of New
York system and its largest and most comprehensive campus. UB's
more than 28,000 students pursue their academic interests through
more than 300 undergraduate, graduate and professional degree
programs. Founded in 1846, the University at Buffalo is a member of
the Association of American Universities.