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Is Funeral Home Chain SCI’s Growth Coming at the Expense of Mourners?

By hdcoadmin | November 1, 2013

In the death-care industry, as practitioners call it, SCI casts a long shadow. Based in Houston and publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYX), it operates more than 1,800 funeral homes and cemeteries in the U.S. and Canada. It has 20,000 employees and a market capitalization of $4 billion. For 40 years, SCI has gobbled competitors…

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Waste Lands: America’s forgotten nuclear legacy

By hdcoadmin | November 1, 2013

Seven decades after the Manhattan Project turned the nation into a “factory” frantically focused on building the world’s first nuclear bomb, this Wall Street Journal investigation scrutinizes the government’s efforts – and failures – to clean up nuclear material haphazardly strewn across hundreds of sites in dozens of states.

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Dept. of Veterans Affairs plans to release data delayed by secruity concerns

By hdcoadmin | November 1, 2013

The Dept. of Veterans Affairs plans to release reports on first-time patients in the VA health system after not releasing data since March citing concerns for the “security arrangements for the delivery of the data,” according to their website.  Previously, the VA had released four reports a year.  The most recent data available is for…

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Longtime member pledges debut book royalties to IRE endowment

By hdcoadmin | November 1, 2013

Nancy Stancill, an IRE member for 25 years and a former board member, has pledged royalties from her debut suspense novel Saving Texas, to the IRE endowment.  Stancill, of Charlotte, N.C., has pledged the royalties from the first thousand books she sells to support the Godfrey Wells Stancill Small Newspaper Fellowship. The fellowship, established in 2006 in…

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A Yellow Card, Then Unfathomable Violence, in Brazil

By hdcoadmin | October 31, 2013

Two killings in the Brazilian neighborhood of Centro de Meio over a soccer match gone wrong left the country spinning, the New York Times reports. The killings were widely reported as an extreme example of soccer violence in Brazil, a grisly contradiction to joga bonito, to play beautifully, as the country prepared to host the…

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Ring of Fire

By hdcoadmin | October 30, 2013

Thousands of veretans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are complaining of breathing problems, gastrointestinal disorders, and even rare cancers, the Verge reports. Some have already died of these ailments. A handful of health experts are now concerned that today’s veterans face an emerging epidemic, one threatening the lives of thousands of men and women.…

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Top Seattle parking scofflaws are billion-dollar firms

By hdcoadmin | October 29, 2013

Washington state drivers who don’t pay parking fines in the City of Seattle face hefty penalties, including the “boot,” a tire clamp that immobilizes a car until the owner pays up. But a KING 5 Investigation found that a select group of multi-billion-dollar companies has been permitted to avoid the penalties while piling up more unpaid…

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Spinal fusions serve as case study for debate over when certain surgeries are necessary

By hdcoadmin | October 29, 2013

The rate of spinal fusion surgery has risen sixfold in the United States over the past 20 years, according to federal figures, and the expensive procedure, which involves the joining of two or more vertebrae, has become even more common than hip replacement, the Washington Post reports. More than 465,000 spinal fusions were performed in…

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California agencies gamble on pension bonds to cover debts – and lose

By hdcoadmin | October 29, 2013

Desperate to cover a $40 million shortfall in its pension fund for retired police officers and firefighters, the city of Richmond, Calif., turned to an exotic loan, the Center for Investigative Reporting explains.  Today, Richmond still owes more than $12 million on the bond, plus about $5 million in interest, and its pension fund remains…

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Some non-profits found to keep significant losses quiet

By hdcoadmin | October 29, 2013

Charities and other non-profits often try to keep their losses quiet to avoid spooking donors, but a Washington Post investigation by Joe Stephens and Mary Pat Flaherty used a new IRS tax return checkbox to find more than 1,000 organizations that reported significant diversions of assets. The Post’s online database is being used by news…

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