
California PR expert Deborah Pacyna learned vital skills through hands-on media experience at WOUB

Deborah Pacyna has been the director of public affairs for the California Association of Health Facilities for 12 years. And even though she is not working in journalism anymore, Pacyna says it was the skills that she learned at 51ĀŅĀ× working as a student at WOUB Public Media that allowed her to move into this role.
āYou can test things there and try different things out. I learned how to write and clearly communicate ideas and concepts. You can take those skills into any profession,āPacyna said.
Pacyna was born near Cleveland but grew up in Pittsburgh. In high school, she had an interest in writing and became the editor of her school newspaper but caught the broadcast bug after taking a class at a local community college.
āAt the time, there werenāt that many women in broadcasting,ā Pacyna said. āPoint Park Community College invited every editor-in-chief of their high school newspaper to take a class on broadcasting. I was praised in the class for my broadcast writing skills, and I thought if broadcast writing came that easy to me than I should pursue it.ā
Pacyna chose to go to college at 51ĀŅĀ× because of the opportunities available for hands-on training and the schoolās stellar reputation as the place to go to study communications.
āI knew that I would have the chance to work in a professional newsroom and that would be a tremendously valuable experience.ā
During her freshman year, Pacyna started working at WOUB. She took every opportunity that was available to her.
āThere were always shifts available on Friday nights or early in the mornings. One Friday night, I had a very humbling experience. I was doing a live newscast and reading stories written by other students. There was one story about a car accident. It said that there was ādebrisā on the road. I read it as āDeb-riss.ā I instantly knew I made a mistake, but I thought nobody was listening on a Friday night,ā Pacyna said with a laugh. āThen when I came into the newsroom on Monday, one of the professional staffers said, āGood morning, Deb-riss!ā and that nickname stuck for the rest of my time in school.ā
After she graduated in 1976, Pacyna worked as a radio and TV journalist in places like Columbus, Dayton, Ohio, Pittsburgh and Sacramento, Calif., before moving into public relations work. She was the communications director for then-California Lt. Governor Cruz Bustamante for two years and then moved on to a public relations firm where she assisted Fortune 500 and locally-based companies with a variety of communication needs. In 2009, she started working for the California Association of Health Facilities.
āIāve really enjoyed all aspects of my career,ā Pacyna said. āWOUB was where it started. I loved the newsroom experience at WOUB. That newsroom is a gift to any student who is serious about a career in broadcasting.ā
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