Nancy Marshall-Genzer is a senior reporter for Marketplace and works from the Washington D.C. bureau.

Marshall-Genzer began working for Marketplace in the spring of 2007, after filing freelance pieces for the program for years prior to that. Covering the daily news from the nation’s capital, Marshall-Genzer has reported many special features.

Marshall-Genzer has a long history in radio. Before joining the Marketplace portfolio, she worked at NPR, where her duties included producing, editing and reporting. Her previous experience also includes stints at WAMU 88.5 public radio in Washington, D.C., Monitor Radio and NBC radio and television, where she served as bureau chief for NBC TV in Tuzla, Bosnia.

In 1999, Marshall-Genzer won an American Medical Writers Association Award for her freelance contribution to the Marketplace series, “Wanted for Questioning: America’s Most Profitable Drug Companies.”

Marshall-Genzer holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Ohio University.

A native of Averill Park, N.Y., she currently lives in Silver Spring, Md., with her family, who recently welcomed twin sons. Describing herself as a nosy person, Marshall-Genzer appreciates that her job fulfills that desire to ask questions and learn something new every day.

Features By Nancy Marshall-Genzer

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President Obama heads to Nevada with plan to improve HARP

Mr. Obama is expected to announce revisions to the Home Affordable Refinance Program today.
Posted In: Housing
6

Buy a house, win a visa

A couple of senators are introducing legislation to grant U.S. visas to foreigners who invest at least half a million dollars in housing.
Posted In: Housing
0

Social Security bennies bump up

Social Security gets its first adjustment since 2009. The average Social Security benefit will rise by $516 to $14,748. Is that a meaningful bump?
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Social security benefits bump up

Social security gets its first adjustment since 2009. The average social security benefit will rise by $516 to $14,748. Is that a meaningful bump?
Posted In: Social Security
5

Goodbye to cell phone bill shock

Within two years, phone companies must text users when they near their limits.
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In high foreclosure areas, sellers aren't paying for extras

RealtyTrac says foreclosures bumped up less than 1 percent in the third quarter. In areas where there are lots of foreclosures, sellers aren't sprucing up as much.
Posted In: Housing
0

Columbus Day sales

If you believe the posters and TV ads, Columbus Day sales bring in the bucks. But plenty of people don't get the day off and lots don't even know it's a holiday.
Posted In: Retail
0

Military jobs hard-hit

As the monthly jobs report is released, the country is facing a new round of the unemployed -- this time from soldiers returning home from abroad.
Posted In: Jobs
0

Congress takes up free trade bills

The administration says trade deals with South Korea, Panama and Colombia would create jobs. How exactly would that work with, say, Panama?
1

Medicaid issue reaches Supreme Court

The justices will be looking at whether Medicaid patients and providers can sue over slashed Medicaid payments.
Posted In: Health

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