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Articles by Alesia Fieldberg
- Beat the clock and bad guys: New escape room aims to tackle 'huge problem'
- Homeowners scramble after Calgary tiny home builder folds
- Promising momentum for Calgary's Green Line LRT project
- 'Sharing some inspiration': Neurodivergent dancers head to major performing arts festival
- Alberta students more dialed into class since cellphone ban in schools
- Jeanne Beker, the trailblazer of Canadian fashion and music storytelling, inspires new Calgary exhibition
- Calgary International Film Festival to get $90K in support from province
- Driver and new truck making magic in Monster Jam
- 'The hardest thing is to find a diagnosis': Calgary woman speaks out about neurological condition
- Calgary doctor sanctioned for misconduct faces another hearing
Alesia Fieldberg
ContactAlesia Fieldberg has been sharing Albertans’ stories as a reporter/videographer and anchor with CTV Calgary since 2015.
She specializes in stories on crime, politics and health. She has covered everything from the 2019 provincial election to the Calgary Stampede.
She was co-anchoring the noon newscast when a Calgary Police Service officer was shot in 2018 and CTV Calgary’s coverage led to a Charlie Edwards Award for breaking news.
Calgary-based Alesia was one of the live reporters during the 3.5 hour broadcast of the civic election in 2017 which won CTV Calgary a Gord Sinclair Award for News-Live Events.
Her stories contributed to CTV Winnipeg’s Ron Laidlaw award in 2015 for continuing coverage of the Tina Fontaine murder case.
In 2013, Alesia traveled to Italy to work on the CTV Winnipeg feature series "The Poppy Trail", sharing the story of an international mystery solved by a Manitoba Second World War veteran.
Alesia grew up on a farm in Southeastern Alberta and earned a Baccalaureate of Arts in International Relations from the University of Calgary and a Broadcast News Diploma from Southern Alberta Institute of Technology.
She enjoys hiking and volunteering. She has been a board member for the Further Education Society of Alberta for several years.
She speaks English and can speak and understand conversational Spanish.