Krissy Clark is the senior reporter for Marketplace’s Wealth & Poverty Desk. Prior to joining Marketplace, Clark was the Los Angeles Bureau Chief for KQED public radio’s California Report, a syndicated show where she explored how people’s everyday lives intersect with Southern California’s economy, changing demographics, crime, justice and education systems. Clark is an award-winning public radio journalist and documentary-maker and her work has been featured regularly on NPR's Morning Edition and All Things Considered, the BBC, Marketplace, and Freakonomics Radio. She was formerly a documentary producer for American RadioWorks, and on the founding staff of APM's news and culture show Weekend America. She spent her early career in a small town in Colorado, covering the rural American West for High Country News. Clark was one of a team of reporters from KQED and California Watch to receive a rare IRE (Investigative Reporters and Editors) Medal for a 2011 investigation into the seismic safety of California's elementary schools. The series also won a Scripps-Howard Award. Clark’s radio documentary Foreclosure City, about Las Vegas and its role as the epicenter of the nation’s foreclosure crisis, was a finalist for the Livingston Award in 2009. She was a finalist for a Third Coast Award in 2009 for a story about California's ban on same-sex marriage. In 2004, her documentary on the legacy of nuclear weapons development in the American West won Best Documentary from PRNDI (Public Radio News Directors Inc.). In 2009 Clark earned a Knight Journalism Fellowship to spend a year at Stanford University researching location-aware technologies as tools for story-telling. She is the founder of Storieseverywhere.org, a location-based, mobile-phone storytelling project whose audio installations have been exhibited by The New Museum’s Festival of Ideas in NYC in collaboration with StoryCorps and at San Francisco’s Gray Area Foundation for the Arts. Clark graduated cum laude from Yale University, earning a B.A. with honors in The Humanities. She grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area thanks to her great-great grandfather, who immigrated there on a mule.

Features By Krissy Clark

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Dress Code: Is every day 'Casual Friday' at your office?

What should, or shouldn’t, be allowed in a company dress code? Send us your photos or stories about the crazy or questionable outfits you’ve rocked -- or caught coworkers rocking -- at work.
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Back-to-school already in swing at stores

Department stores try to get school shoppers in the doors earlier.
Posted In: Retail, back to school
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Eliminating debt, all in a day -- and night's -- work

A banker doesn't listen to her own advice and falls deep into credit card debt. She takes on a blue collar job to get herself back in the black.
Posted In: debt, white collar, blue collar, employment
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From banker to janitor -- all in a day's work

To get herself out of debt, one banker had to take a very different kind of job.
Posted In: janitors, Bankers, Money Matters
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Houston janitors fight for fair pay in economic boom

Janitors who clean the offices of some of the world's richest corporations in this Texas city are among the lowest paid in the country. They have been on strike this summer trying to raise the definition of a low-level wage.
Posted In: Houston, Janitor Strike, Income Gap, JP Morgan
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The Fed's new tool: Negative interest rates?

The Federal Reserve meets again this week, and the buzz is that Chairman Ben Bernanke could be considering some "new tools," for stimulating growth -- perhaps using interest rates to encourage banks to take some risks with their money.
Posted In: Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, negative interest rate
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Election ads depict a lost America

In the 2012 presidential election race, both parties focus on images of factories and hard hats.
Posted In: 2012 election, ad campaign, Barack Obama, Mitt Romney
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Safeway feels the supermarket squeeze

Tradition chains like Safeway are stuck in the middle between "experience" stores like Whole Foods and Trader Joe's, and discount grocers like Walmart.
Posted In: supermarket, Safeway
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The shape of the jobs economy

Economists call it "U-shaped" as jobs in the middle grow fewer.
Posted In: Jobs
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America's wealth gap -- in 1776

Why one founding father thought a narrow wealth divide was good for the new country.
Posted In: Thomas Jefferson, Founding Fathers, 1776, Declaration of Independence, wealth gap

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