Author

Dulce has written for the Nashville Scene and Crucero News. A graduate of Middle Tennessee State University, she received the John Seigenthaler Award for Outstanding Graduate in Print Journalism in 2016. Torres Guzman is a member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists. She enjoys the outdoors and is passionate about preserving the environment and environmental issues.
Funds for summer food program not reaching Tennessee families
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - June 9, 2020
Summer food programs have become a necessity for families experiencing unemployment under COVID-19, but an emergency program approved for Tennessee families hasn’t reached them yet. Lakeisha Johnson has one of those families. The last few months have been difficult for her and her three children. The single mother from Memphis had to console her youngest […]
Updated: Nashville apparel store draws charges of racism from former employees
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - June 5, 2020
After Nashville apparel company Project 615 released a t-shirt design supporting the Black Lives Matter movement, ex-employees weighed in on social media alleging the company fired them for supporting the black community. April Kirby, who worked for Project 615 for 11 months in 2017-2018, spoke out against the company in a heated Instagram post. “I […]
Sixth night of protests in Middle Tennessee stay peaceful
By: Dulce Torres Guzman and Holly McCall - June 5, 2020
Protests stemming from the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis May 25 continued in Middle Tennessee for the sixth night in a row. In Nashville, thousands gathered at Bicentennial Mall for a rally organized by teenagers with the Black Lives Matter movement. The diverse group moved through downtown streets chanting and accepting bottles of water […]
East Tennessee migrant workers at mercy of employers
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - June 4, 2020
Evensville, Tenn. – In April, nearly 200 migrant workers came to Rhea County from Mexico to grow tomatoes, then in May they seemingly vanished. With long, winding unpaved roads leading deep into untouched forest, Rhea County seems disconnected from the rest of Tennessee, and this seemingly innocuous fact is reinforced when some of their population […]
Tennessee faith leaders react to Trump photo-op
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - June 3, 2020
Religious leaders from across Tennessee reacted to a White House tweet showing President Donald Trump’s response to protests that have rocked the country in recent days. The video displayed in the tweet shows President Trump walking toward and standing in front of St. John’s Episcopal Church while holding a Bible in front of the church’s […]
COVID-19 spike in heavily immigrant communities tied to fear of ‘Public Charge’
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - May 7, 2020
A “heat map” released by Metro Nashville officials shows concentrations of COVID-19 cases in two Davidson County zip codes — 37211 and 37013 — that are home to many of the area’s immigrants. Some local advocates for the immigrant community say fear of the federal policy known as “Public Charge” is one reason for the […]