Aaron Sánchez-Guerra
Aaron Sánchez-Guerra is a recent graduate of North Carolina State University with a BA in English and is a bilingual journalist with a background in covering news on the vast Latino population in North Carolina. His coverage ranges from Central Americans seeking asylum to migrant farmworkers recovering from Hurricane Florence. Aaron is eager to work in South Florida for its proximity to Latin American migration and fast-paced environment of unique news. He is a native of the Rio Grande Valley in Texas of Mexican origin, a Southern adoptee, a lover of Brazilian culture and Portuguese, an avid Latin dancer, and a creative writer.
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Thousands of college-age students come to Florida every year as part of a federal cultural exchange program that has been accused of fostering abuse and...
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When Hurricane Dorian was approaching Florida as a Category 4 storm reminiscent of Hurricane Andrew in 1992, Miamians and South Floridians included some...
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In the weeks before the start of the 2019-2020 academic year, the department of transportation of Miami-Dade County Public Schools has been testing new...
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The City of Miami wants to hear from residents about their concerns over South Florida’s vulnerability to climate change. The Office of Resilience and...
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For the last 12 years, Marisol Blanco has been fighting against numbers. Specifically, she has been hard at work dispelling the notion that dancing...
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In rural Redland, on the frontier of the Everglades National Park, big white letters that read “ROBERT IS HERE” have welcomed visitors for nearly six...
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In a passionate sea of red and blue flags and shirts, hundreds of Puerto Ricans gathered Tuesday evening in front of the Freedom Tower in downtown Miami...
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The Portuguese word saudade [pronounced sau-DAH-jee in Brazilian Portuguese] has no translation in English or any other language. It’s described as a...
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This Fourth of July weekend was one of the few times that Marlins Park has been filled close to capacity in recent memory. Though the park was close to...
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On the eve of the Independence Day holiday, 26 South Floridians became U.S. citizens in Everglades National Park. The United States Citizenship and...