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Income not checked for emergency food stamps

By hdcoadmin | May 25, 2006

Kathleen Chapman of The Palm Beach Post investigated the emergency food-stamp program in Florida after Hurricane Wilma and found that nearly 700,000 Floridians, many of whom were not really too poor to buy food, got in line for the stamps. “Florida didn’t require proof of income to get the payments, and the state hasn’t completed…

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School districts don’t know who drives the buses

By hdcoadmin | May 25, 2006

Karen Eschbacher of The (Quincy, Mass.) Patriot Ledger found that most school districts on the South Shore hire private contractors to provide bus service for students. “Several South Shore communities fail to run background checks on school bus drivers, and others can’t even produce the names of people allowed behind the wheel.” “While state laws…

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Sleepy truckers cause crashes, don’t get ticketed

By hdcoadmin | May 25, 2006

Nancy Amons of WSMV-Nashville analyzed truck accident reports statewide over the past five years and found that “64 crashes where a trucker who was listed as ‘apparently asleep’ injured or killed someone. In 70 percent of those cases, the trucker never got a ticket.” Analysis of another database of Department of Safety inspection reports found…

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Lawyers market to potential silicosis victims

By hdcoadmin | May 17, 2006

Mike Tolson of the Houston Chronicle examined lawsuits related to silicosis, an occupational lung disease caused by exposure to silica which is used by industry in dozens of ways. He found that “To attorneys who had earned millions from asbestos settlements, it represented the next potential windfall.” The lawyers did not need sick people, only…

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Utility district spent ratepayers’ money on sports

By hdcoadmin | May 17, 2006

Andrew McIntosh of The Sacramento Bee found that “the Sacramento Municipal Utility District has spent more than $1 million in ratepayers’ money on partnership deals with the Sacramento Kings and Monarchs since 2002.” The public utility’s contracts with Maloof Sports, disclosed under the state’s Public Records Act, offer a rare glimpse into an NBA team’s…

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Prisoners paroled early despite lifetime sentences

By hdcoadmin | May 17, 2006

Robert Patrick of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch used court records and Department of Corrections data to show that prisoners who were sentenced to prison terms of double their lifetimes or more have been quietly released after doing only a fraction of their time in Missouri and Illinois. “In all, at least 189 murderers and 40…

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High-interest payday loans increase in N.H.

By hdcoadmin | May 17, 2006

Karen Spiller of The (Nashua, N.H.) Telegraph found that payday loans with high interest rates — as high as 500 percent or more — are increasing in New Hampshire, the only state in New England not to regulate them. “Last year alone, more than 100,000 payday loans were written in the state for an average…

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Troops kept on duty while mentally unfit

By hdcoadmin | May 17, 2006

Lisa Chedekel and Matthew Kauffman of The Hartford Courant used military investigative records to show that unsuitable practices handling troops mental health “have helped to fuel an increase in the suicide rate among troops serving in Iraq, which reached an all-time high in 2005 when 22 soldiers killed themselves — accounting for nearly one in…

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Fighting eminent domain mostly a losing battle

By hdcoadmin | May 12, 2006

Steve Kemme and Gregory Korte of The Cincinnati Enquirer analyzed real-estate sales records and found that those who sold their homes for an urban renewal project in suburban Norwood made more than twice what their homes were worth — while those who had their properties taken by eminent domain made three times their appraised value.…

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Spy agency collects data about Americans’ phone calls

By hdcoadmin | May 12, 2006

Leslie Cauley of the USA Today found the “National Security Agency had been secretly collecting the phone call records of tens of millions of Americans, using data provided by AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth.” Cauley’s sources say the agency uses the call data to “analyze calling patterns in an effort to detect terrorist activity” but that…

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