Author

Dulce Torres Guzman
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.
Labor leaders and workers address inequality in workforce
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - June 18, 2020
Essential workers held a press conference Wednesday following events in several Tennessee cities in an effort to draw the attention of lawmakers to systemic racism and inequality in the workforce. The Tennessee American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) organized a car-caravan rally before labor leaders and workers held a press conference […]
Middle Tennessee’s art community on hiatus
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - June 17, 2020
Tennesseans who rely on performing arts for relaxation will have fewer options in the coming year, as many organizations suspend programming and many performers face unemployment. Nashville will be having a quiet summer this year as arts communities scramble for ways to survive the pandemic and the suspension of most live performances. The Nashville Symphony […]
Food assistance now available to families
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - June 16, 2020
The Tennessee Department of Human Services (TDHS) announced on Monday that Pandemic-EBT (P-EBT) is now available for families needing financial support to meet their children’s nutritional needs during the COVID-19 pandemic. TDHS in partnership with the Tennessee Department of Education (TDOE) began providing P-EBT to families on Friday through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) […]
Tennessee’s Hispanic community absorbs a third of COVID cases
By: Anita Wadhwani and Dulce Torres Guzman - June 15, 2020
Manuel Caló, a 56-year-old Nashville construction worker from Guatemala, fell so ill so quickly that, although he took the test for COVID-19, he couldn’t wait for the results. Friends took him to Vanderbilt University Medical Center, where he was placed on oxygen and hospitalized for four days. Even feeling so sick, Caló had to overcome […]
BREAKING: Nashville Symphony cancels 2020-2021 season
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - June 12, 2020
The Nashville Symphony announced Friday the suspension of all concerts through summer of next year, furloughing many musicians and staff members. The decision comes despite projected losses to reach $8 million while 79 musicians and 49 full-time staff have been furloughed. “This was an extremely difficult decision to make,” said Board Chair Dr. Mark Peacock. […]
Teachers concerned budget cuts will cause strain in school reopening plans
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - June 11, 2020
School officials have begun to work out details to reopen school for the fall, but many educators worry that education budget cuts will put a greater strain on teachers and students alike. Districts across Tennessee currently have task forces composed of members of the community and most have released few details about reopening schools for […]
Legislature to vote on updating lead testing for public school buildings
By: Dulce Torres Guzman - June 10, 2020
The Tennessee House of Representatives will vote Wednesday on a bill to revise a 2019 law enacted to minimize potential sources of lead contamination from public school drinking water and child-care programs. Introduced by Rep. London Lamar, provisions require officials to notify parents within 24 hours when lead levels exceed legal limits, to retest within […]
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 J. 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 […]