Susannah Bryan writes about
news and politics for the South Florida Sun Sentinel. She joined the Sun Sentinel in 1997. A graduate of the University of Florida, Susannah has written about the pandemic, hurricanes, record-breaking floods and sewage spills, government waste, land giveaways, development booms, crime, courts, City Hall and election recounts. She has played an important watchdog role covering cruelty cases involving
dogs, cats, ducks,
iguanas and horses. She has also penned exposes on
controversial practices at the county-run animal shelter, including one that resulted in dogs being
turned away from the shelter unless they were sick or injured. After extensive coverage, the practice ended. Award Winner Susannah has won numerous top-place awards from the
Florida Press Club and the
Society of Professional Journalists for in-depth stories on environmental disasters
made worse by crumbling or
ineffective infrastructure; boondoggle spending by local government; and compelling profiles on people of note, including the
“Miracle Boy” who survived the Surfside building collapse. Susannah was part of the staff that won the
Pulitzer Prize in 2019 for coverage of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland. Susannah was part of an investigative reporting team honored with an
Esserman-Knight Journalism Award in 2022 for its coverage of the Surfside condo tragedy. In 2018, she was part of an investigative team honored with a
Florida Society of News Editors award for its coverage of the nation’s deadliest airport shooting.