Goin' to the Lake: Glenwood
Frank Vascellaro, Chris Shaffer and Shayla Reaves are Goin' to the Lake in Glenwood.
Watch CBS News
Shayla Reaves is an engaging, personable Emmy Award-winning journalist with more than a decade of experience in television news.
She joined WCCO in December 2020 as an anchor and reporter, contributing to the morning, mid-morning and noon shows.
Before moving to the Twin Cities, Shayla's career included stops in Louisville, Kentucky, Columbus, Ohio, Tampa, Florida and Greenville, North Carolina.
While in Greenville, she co-anchored evening newscasts for WNCT-TV (CBS), developed a weekly web series called "Let's Craft" and produced half hour specials for television and web.
In Tampa, Shayla served as a field reporter for the market's #1 rated morning show, "Good Day Tampa Bay." She spent four years covering breaking news, hurricanes and news overnight. She delivered numerous live reports for "Fox and Friends" and Fox network affiliates as requested.
In addition to reporting, Shayla fill-in anchored in Tampa and Columbus, Ohio. While in Columbus she earned an Emmy for coverage of a train derailment and explosion.
Her career has also included four years of reporting in Louisville, Kentucky.
A graduate of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, Shayla was named the top broadcast student in her graduating class. She received the university's prestigious Gary Cummings Award, was selected as an Outstanding Woman Journalism Student by the Association of Women Journalists-Chicago, and was recognized for her reporting through the Illinois News Broadcasters Association.
She has also received awards from the Society of Professional Journalists and the Associated Press.
When she is not reporting, Shayla enjoys spending time with her husband, crafting and exploring the Twin Cities!
Frank Vascellaro, Chris Shaffer and Shayla Reaves are Goin' to the Lake in Glenwood.
Shayla Reaves talks with Pulitzer Prize-winning author Robert Samuels about his acclaimed debut book, "His Name is George Floyd."
Whether it's driving to the cabin or hitting the skies for a faraway destination, Minnesotans are on the move for the holiday weekend. The number of those traveling is moving in an upward direction.
Minneapolis is a community still grappling with the murder of George Floyd three years later. For a time, Lachelle Cunningham said it was challenging to step inside CityFoodStudio, because of its location in the space now known as George Floyd Square.
A scholarship program in north Minneapolis is growing bigger and bigger, and more students are getting help thanks to WCCO viewers.
Per the report, 83.6% of Minnesota's class of 2022 is graduating in four years. That's a slight increase from the year before.
It's a special day for fans of the Minnesota Twins: The home opener is finally underway Friday.
On Monday, a bill protecting reproductive freedom is up for a vote on the House floor.
Sims's store on University Avenue became Minnesota's first- Black-owned bookstore in several years when it opened last October.
Her neighbors received the first cake after the COVID-19 pandemic forced the couple to cancel their wedding.
At about 10 p.m. Tuesday, White Bear Lake officers tried to arrest someone at the Lakewood Hills apartment complex. At some point gunshots rang out and a police officer was hit.
A Minneapolis father is putting his pain into words after experiencing a devastating loss.
A local speaker, activist and business owner is crafting a path for other North Minneapolis businesses to grow and be discovered.
Donations are making a difference for north Minneapolis students. Since launching in 2018, Wilson's Image College scholarships have increased from $500 per student to $2,500.
Neda Kellogg is making what seems like the impossible possible for young girls, helping them live out their dreams and reach their full potential.