
Ruby de Luna
ReporterYear started with KUOW: 1994
Ruby de Luna is a features reporter at KUOW. She had originally planned to go into TV, but ditched the idea after discovering public radio. Ruby has reported on immigrant communities. She currently covers health care issues.
Ruby is a transplant from Taipei, Taiwan. She holds a BA in communication from Seattle Pacific University.
In the age of computer/digital audio editing, Ruby is proud to be one of the few old–schoolers who can still edit tape with a razor blade. In her free time she practices her knife skills on new recipes.
To see more of Ruby's KUOW portfolio, visit our current site.
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It was standing room only at Seattle’s city hall on Thursday, as councilmembers made changes to a minimum wage proposal. This signals that Seattle is…
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You may have heard of financial literacy or media literacy. But what about health literacy: Are you able to get and understand basic health…
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One of the first signs of spring is when the cherry trees bloom at the University of Washington. The iconic trees on the quad have become a symbol of the…
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David Baty remembers the first time he gave his son Spencer, 10, some peanuts.“He was around three,” Baty, of Seattle, said. “I tried to introduce new…
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Not all health plans are the same, as Washington consumers have learned the hard way.Many who bought health plans in the last open enrollment period…
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This week the White House honored community heroes for their work in educating and signing up Asian American and Pacific Island residents for health…
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State and local officials are celebrating the robust number of people who signed up for health care through Washington’s exchange over the open enrollment…
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One of the goals of the Affordable Care Act is to give access to people who currently don’t have health insurance.Supporters see another benefit — to give…
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The first wave of memorial services honoring the victims who perished in the Oso landslide took place this weekend.In Darrington, residents gathered to…
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For many families of victims of the deadly Oso landslide, getting information about the fate of their loved ones has been agonizingly slow.That's because…