Skip to content

IRE mentors guide journalists’ international investigative projects

By hdcoadmin | November 25, 2011

(Washington) — During the past year and a half, more than twenty experienced reporters and news executives have mentored Fund for Investigative Journalism (FIJ) grantees, lending a hand in the reporting, writing and editing of their work. Wanjohi Kabukuru (left) with New York Times reporter Ron Nixon. The two met through IRE’s mentorship program. Nixon provided guidance…

Read More

EPA releases secret ‘watch list’ that includes chronic polluters

By hdcoadmin | November 24, 2011

Two decades ago, Democrats and Republicans together sought to protect Americans from nearly 200 dangerous chemicals in the air they breathe. That goal remains unfulfilled. Today, hundreds of communities are still exposed to the pollutants, which can cause cancer, birth defects and other health issues. An ongoing investigation by the Center for Public Integrity, with…

Read More

Youths held in adult jails face higher risk of attack

By hdcoadmin | November 23, 2011

ScrippsNews‘ Isaac Wolf found that “for thousands of teens accused of crimes, punishment precedes any conviction in court. While awaiting trial and ostensibly presumed innocent, they can be held for months or even years in county jails for — and sometimes with — adult suspects. Federal Bureau of Justice Statistics data shows, in 2010, roughly…

Read More

Worldwide freedom of information laws widely ignored

By hdcoadmin | November 17, 2011

“A flurry of freedom of information laws adopted over the past decade has given more than 5.3 billion people worldwide the right, on paper, to know what their governments are doing behind closed doors. However, The Associated Press found in the first worldwide test of this promised freedom of information, that more than half the…

Read More

“Retired” NJ budget guru collecting thousands in pension payments

By hdcoadmin | November 17, 2011

NJ Governor Chris Christie hired Louis C. Goetting in 2010 as a budget guru to help trim the cost of government.  But Goetting resembles a problem, not a solution, according to a New Jersey Watchdog analysis of his employment history. Despite the fact that Goetting was hired to help with the budget, he has raked in…

Read More

New York Times’ Abramson to keynote 2012 IRE Conference

By hdcoadmin | November 17, 2011

Jill Abramson, who took over as executive editor of The New York Times in September, will deliver the keynote address at the 2012 IRE Conference in Boston. She is the first woman to hold that position in the newspaper’s more than 160-year history.  More than 800 journalists and journalism educators are expected to attend the four-day conference…

Read More

Welcome to IRE’s new website

By hdcoadmin | November 17, 2011

Welcome to IRE’s new website. All the resources you count on are still available, from tipsheets and the vast story library to our unmatched data collection. Our goal with this redesign is to streamline the site and make our deep reservoir of resources easier to find and use. We’ve also added many new features. Here’s…

Read More

Reaction to ‘fracking’ investigation typifies journalists’ challenges

By hdcoadmin | November 16, 2011

By Charles N. Davis Journalists and journalism advocates rightly focus a great deal of energy on freedom of information law, defending the rights of the press and public to access governmental information. Attempts to control the press through legal means constitute a daily threat to democracy and must be met with systemic pushback. Not all…

Read More

From the IRE Office: Awards, website change with the times

By hdcoadmin | November 16, 2011

This is a season of evolution at IRE We have rebuilt our IRE Awards categories to better reflect the ways in which news is gathered and presented. And we have launched a new website that is easier to navigate, makes it easier for you to take advantage of our resources and gives you more control over…

Read More

Testing on new Bay Bridge could be flawed

By hdcoadmin | November 15, 2011

“A Sacramento Bee investigation has found that the California Department of Transportation technician who conducted key testing on the new San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge has been discipilined for fabricating test results on other projects. The technician, Duane Wiles, also failed to verify that his testing gauge was operating properly, as required by Caltrans to ensure…

Read More

Categories

Archives

Scroll To Top