Ryan Delaney
Ryan Delaney is WFYI's city beat reporter. He covers Indianapolis, with a focus on city government, neighborhoods and public safety.
Ryan joins WFYI from Syracuse, N.Y., where he was an award-winning reporter with WRVO Public Media and the Innovation Trail reporting project. He has previously worked for WAER in Syracuse and WAMC in Albany, N.Y. Prior to that, he filed stories for The Allegheny Front in Pittsburgh. His reporting has been heard on NPR, The Takeaway and WBGH’s Innovation Hub.
Ryan grew up in Burlington, Vt. and has a degree in broadcast journalism and international relations from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and Maxwell School at Syracuse University.
Contact Ryan: 317.489.4491 | rdelaney@wfyi.org | Follow @rpatrickdelaney
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Two big early efforts from Mayor Joe Hogsett, a Democrat, won approval from the city-county council Monday night. As did a long-pushed for change to Indianapolis police recruiting policies, but not without some pushback and changes.
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The patrol areas for Indianapolis police officers is getting smaller.
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As a follow-up to a lawsuit the state attorney general filed last month, the Legislature passed a bill aiming to protect homeowners from tax sale fraud.
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For our latest submission to Curious Indy, we find out why Pogue's Run seems to disappear when the creek reaches downtown.
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Mayor Joe Hogsett's administration is working on a major restructuring of public safety services in Indianapolis.
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Indiana has the highest rate of black homicide victims in the United States, according to a new study from the Violence Policy Center.
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The Indianapolis Fire Department has plans to consolidate operations and save money by closing two firehouses.
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Muslim leaders in central Indiana are treating vandalism at an Islamic center as a teaching moment.
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A new indoor farm is sprouting up on Indy's Near Eastside.
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The risk of floods along Marion County's 400 miles of streams and rivers has been reanalyzed for the first time in three decades, changing requirements for thousands of properties that have to pay for expensive flood insurance.