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Travel regulations don’t touch executive branch officials

By hdcoadmin | August 27, 2007

Ken Dilanian of USA Today reports that many executive branch officials regularly still accept trips from companies and associations which stand to benefit from the agencies’ decisions. Although members of Congress cannot accept these sorts of gifts according to the newly passed ethics bill, the restrictions do no apply to other branches of government. “More…

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Prescription pain med use nearly doubles

By hdcoadmin | August 27, 2007

An investigation by Frank Bass of the Associated Press shows that the use of pain medication has nearly doubled in the U.S. over the past eight years. According to the latest figures from the Drug Enforcement Adminstration, “More than 200,000 pounds of codeine, morphine, oxycodone, hydrocodone and meperidine were purchased at retail stores…enough to give…

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Electric co-op to energy conglomerate

By hdcoadmin | August 27, 2007

Margret Newkirk of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports on Georgia’s Cobb EMC, one of the largest electric co-ops in the nation and described as “an aggressively expanding conglomerate.” “While most co-ops reimburse that invested money to customers over time, Cobb EMC hasn’t returned a nickel of it in more than 30 years: It was sitting on…

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A look at Utah’s mine safety records

By hdcoadmin | August 21, 2007

Following the Crandall Canyon Mine disaster, Lee Davidson of the Deseret Morning News did a couple of quick-hit stories on mine safety in Utah. The stories detail repeated safety violations in Utah mines and those violations specific to the Crandall Canyon Mine, which were fewer than average for Utah mines.

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Critics seek to close tax loophole

By hdcoadmin | August 20, 2007

Palm Beach Post reporter Jeff Ostrowski reports that “trophy properties” in Florida are changing hands, legally, for $10 and costing the state millions in tax revenue. Commercial property deals are being recorded as “transfers of assets” instead of actual sales. In the case of a $600 million property, 70 cents in taxes were collected as…

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Police department plagued by internal discipline problems

By hdcoadmin | August 20, 2007

Top city officials in Denver are calling for a complete overhaul of the discipline system of the Denver Police Department, reports Christopher N. Osher of The Denver Post. “At least 25 officers remained on the force from January 1997 through September 2006 after they were punished for what the department calls “departure from the truth.”…

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Santa Ana block hit hard by subprime lending

By hdcoadmin | August 13, 2007

John Gittelsohn and Ronald Campbell of The Orange County Register looked at one street in Santa Ana, Calif. to see the impact of subprime lending in the community. Seventeen homeowners on this quiet block took out 83 mortgages, most of them subprime, during a six-year frenzy of deal-making. Easy credit helped triple home prices from…

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Ohio bridges at risk

By hdcoadmin | August 13, 2007

The Columbus Dispatch examined each of the 35 bridges over the Ohio River connecting Ohio to neighboring Kentucky and West Virginia. Reporter Randy Ludlow discovered that seven are rated as structurally deficient. That group includes three of the four bridges owned by the Ohio Department of Transportation. The investigation revealed that highway officials have plans…

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Wis. trucking firm fined twice for false logbooks

By hdcoadmin | August 13, 2007

Rick Romell of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel analyzed federal records and reviewed hundreds of pages of documents to find that JDC Logistics Inc., a Franklin, Wis., firm has been among the most heavily fined trucking companies in the country. Logbook falsification by truckers at the 589-driver firm was so widespread, federal auditors discovered last August,…

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Justice Department knew of abuses in Texas juvenile prisons

By hdcoadmin | August 13, 2007

In an ongoing Dallas Morning News investigation, Holly Becka and Jennifer LaFleur found that the private contractors housing juvenile inmates in Texas have lost their contracts in other states after abuse and neglect were discovered. In addition, Steve McGonigle and Doug J. Swanson report that records show U.S Justice Department attorneys have been aware of…

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