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November 10, 2025 Content deletion. Link rot. Server disconnections. Site moves. Digital decay. The threads that chronicle the stories of your community could vanish without a trace. A 2019 study from the Reynolds Journalism Institute found that “the majority of news outlets had not given any thought to even basic strategies for preserving their digital…
Read MoreThese are trying times for many in journalism, but there is strength in numbers. If you’ve been thinking about joining IRE or renewing your membership, our fall membership drive is the perfect time to take action. Join today! Membership is just $75 per year for professionals, with a discounted rate of $50 for early-career professionals…
Read More(Oct. 15, 2025) — Daniel Thomas Mollenkamp of EdSurge in Richmond, Virginia and Lea Zora Scruggs of KRIS 6/Scripps News in Corpus Christi, Texas have been selectedfor IRE’s Chauncey Bailey Journalist of Color Investigative Reporting Fellowship. The prestigious yearlong fellowship is designed to increase the range of backgrounds, experiences and interests within the field of…
Read More(October 1, 2025) — Journalism has the power to shine a light on the truth no matter how dark it gets. That’s what our membership at Investigative Reporters and Editors, nearly 5,000 journalists strong, prove day after day around the world. From local newspapers and TV stations, to global nonprofit newsrooms, they tirelessly follow leads, question…
Read MoreBy Ronny Rojas, Noticias Telemundo; Brenda Medina, ICIJ; Àngela Cantador, CLIP In 2023, while covering the death of 53 undocumented migrants who were trapped in a cargo truck in San Antonio, Texas, Noticias Telemundo journalists put a call-out in their stories and social media platforms asking immigrants who had traveled in similar conditions to share…
Read MoreBy Jennifer Gollan & Susie Neilson, San Francisco Chronicle Police pursuits are glamorized on television news and in video games. But the causes and aftermaths of these chases receive little public attention. Our investigation shined a spotlight on the reckless decisions that often set pursuits in motion and on the bystanders and passengers they’ve killed.…
Read MoreBy Jeremy Finley, WSMV I have a complicated relationship with tips. When I’m juggling a data project, a documentary, anchoring a nightly newscast and weekly reporting, they seem to spill into my hands like quarters from an old slot machine. And I complain, I can’t keep up with all this. But when everything falls apart—as…
Read MoreBy Amy Davis & Andrea Slaydon, KPRC 2 I’ll never forget watching 95-year-old Ray Dittmar navigate his uneven lawn with a walker, getting down on his hands and knees to read his own water meter. He called me when the city of Houston told him he had used 111,000 gallons of water in one month.…
Read MoreBy Challen Stephens & Ivana Hrynkiw, AL.com It’s not easy to make a dent when reporting on Alabama prisons. The system is jam-packed, cruel and deadly. Reform tends to happen only when the state is forced by the courts. But in 2024, something surprising happened. After we began reporting on the bottleneck at the state…
Read MoreBy Katey Rusch, UC Berkeley’s Investigative Reporting Program Since we exposed the widespread use of secret deals to bury police officers’ misconduct in California, we’ve been asked the same question repeatedly: How did you know these agreements existed when they were designed to evade detection? The honest answer is that it happened by accident. In…
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