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Education, Inc. series

By hdcoadmin | November 3, 2009

A three-day series by The Journal Gazette (Fort Wayne, Ind.) examined the local charter schools run by national, for-profit Imagine Schools Inc., the largest charter school management company in the nation. The series found that the idea of local, independent control – demanded by IRS rules governing non-profits – is non-existent, as the hired management…

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Felon awarded $1 million to supply AIDS/HIV services

By hdcoadmin | November 3, 2009

In the third part of “Wasting Away,” an investigation of D.C.’s AIDS program,The Washington Post found the city awarded a $1 million AIDS contract to a woman who had just been convicted in federal court for a mortgage fraud scheme that bilked lenders out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Over three years, the city…

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Jobs linked to aircraft production complicate attempted budget cuts

By hdcoadmin | November 2, 2009

The Boeing C-17 is a $250 million aircraft used by the military to transport troops and supplies. Despite the Pentagon asserting it has plenty of C-17s in its fleet, Congress continues to approve funding for additional planes, according to a report by Ben Elgin and Keith Epstein of BusinessWeek. The 2010 budget has $2.5 billion…

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Gambling with state pension plan may cost state jobs, services

By hdcoadmin | November 2, 2009

Mackenzie Ryan of the Statesman Journal (Salem, Ore.) recently investigated a new and controversial financial strategy in Oregon that attempts to lower a public agency’s pension system. The arbitrage strategy – where cities, school districts and the state issued bonds and then invested the money – made pension costs more volatile because “an agency’s pension…

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Clean energy stimulus funds ending up overseas

By hdcoadmin | October 30, 2009

The latest report from the Investigative Reporting Workshop at the American University shows that the majority of clean-energy grants paid out from stimulus funds have gone to overseas companies. “Of the $1.05 billion in clean-energy grants handed out by the government since Sept. 1, 84 percent – a total of $849 million – has gone…

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Democratic donors rewarded with White House access

By hdcoadmin | October 29, 2009

“During his first nine months in office, President Obama has quietly rewarded scores of top Democratic donors with VIP access to the White House, private briefings with administration advisers and invitations to important speeches and town-hall meetings,” reports Mathew Mosk of The Washington Times.  Additionally, according to internal Democratic National Committee documents, access to top…

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Cost of U.S. Army aviation accidents on the rise

By hdcoadmin | October 29, 2009

A report by Michael Fabey shows that aviation accidents have been much costlier in 2009 according to an Aerospace Daily analysis of Army Combat Readiness/Safety Center data.  “The average cost per accident or incident for this calendar year was about $220,178 as of July 28, the last date for which data were provided, compared to…

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The Rise and Fall of Denny Hecker series

By hdcoadmin | October 27, 2009

A special report by the Pioneer-Press (St. Paul, Minn.) explores the dealings of failed businessman Denny Hecker. Hecker’s business empire collapsed over the last year, and he filed for bankruptcy. Hecker is $767 million in debt. Many claim he “used his businesses as a personal piggy bank, siphoning money from his dealerships and rental-car companies…

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Nonprofit a source of ready money for city officials

By hdcoadmin | October 26, 2009

A Baltimore Sun investigation reveals that a little-known private nonprofit group formed to primarily benefit city programs for the underprivileged is a source of money-on-demand for city government officials with almost no oversight. City employees wield broad discretion over how money is spent from the Baltimore City Foundation and the foundation asks few questions. The…

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Activist tackles Miami’s housing woes

By hdcoadmin | October 23, 2009

Paul Reyes, with support from the Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute, reports on housing issues in Miami, Fla. where over 70,000 are on a waiting list for public housing.  Additionally, Miami ranks fourth in foreclosure rates in American cities.  Reyes followed community activist Max Rameau, founder of the organization Take Back the Land, as…

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