Civil Beat Staff
Jessica Terrell
Jessica Terrell is the projects editor for Civil Beat.
Jessica joined Civil Beat in 2015, after reporting stints at the Orange County Register in California and Tribeca Trib in New York City.
She served as the lead reporter and then editor of Civil Beat’s Offshore Podcast, which launched in 2016. The podcast received 2020 and 2018 Eppy awards, as well as recognition from the Asian American Journalists Association, Best of the West, and Religion News Association.
Her 2015 series, “The Harbor,” about life in Hawaii’s largest homeless encampment, garnered a first place Online News Association award for small newsroom feature. The project also received an honorable mention from the Ancil Payne Award for Ethics in Journalism. She is a member of ONA’s 2018 Women’s Leadership Accelerator cohort.
As a reporter, Jessica has investigated everything from school safety concerns to faulty public works projects and military recruitment irregularities. She’s covered two national political conventions, and filed stories from the White House during President Barack Obama’s first summer in office.
Other memorable reporting assignments include camping out overnight in Manhattan’s Zuccotti Park for a story on Occupy Wall Street, visiting the National Sept. 11 Memorial before it opened with members of Manhattan’s Community Board 1, and climbing 36 flights of stairs in the dark after Hurricane Sandy to find her editor and start reporting on the impacts of the storm in lower Manhattan.
Jessica spent much of her childhood traveling around North America. She wrote her first newspaper article at the age of 12 for a small paper in Massachusetts, where her family was living aboard a 50-foot raft built out of materials collected from New York City dumpsters.
When her family wasn’t building rafts, they were performing together in circuses and busking on the streets as a family jazz band. Spending her early years wandering from town to town imbued her with a passion for discovery that she tries to translate into work as a journalist.

West Oahu Has A Domestic Violence Crisis. The Cost Of Living Makes It Worse
Addressing the problem will take more than an increased police presence.

Data Dive: Hawaii Has The Oldest Farmers In The U.S.
There are twice as many farmers over 75 as there are farmers under 35.

Huge Gaps Persist In Details About Police Support For Westside
The Honolulu Police Department has declined to share basic information about crime fighting resources in the area.

Gun Violence Data In Hawaii Is Incomplete – And Unreliable
Data collection and sharing is so limited that the Attorney General's Office says researching ways to prevent firearm violence is "virtually impossible."

The Mother Teresa Of Hawaii Had An Important Lesson For Us All
Homeless activist Twinkle Borge, who died in August, is being showered with public honors this week. She'd like it better if we would take meaningful action to address the struggles of our neighbors.

Oahu’s First Island-Wide Plantation Strike Ended In Failure. But It Changed Hawaii Forever
Japanese laborers were unable to sway powerful plantation owners and hysterical English-language newspaper editors in 1909, but they set changes in motion that would dramatically shape modern Hawaii.

The DNC Is A Highly Controlled Pep Rally. Hawaii Delegates Say It’s Still Important
The Democratic convention is no longer a place for hammering out party values and selecting candidates, but attendees say it still holds value — even for states with little political sway.

Activists In Chicago: Addressing War In Gaza Can ‘Restore The Soul Of the Democratic Party’
Democratic organizers and activists made their case Monday for the Democratic Party to take up the suffering of Palestinians as part of a unifying embrace of social justice issues.

Their Senior Center Burned And Their Friends Died. But These Kupuna Are Moving Forward
More than two-thirds of Maui's fire victims were over the age of 60. Kupuna are also facing additional challenges in the aftermath of the disaster.
