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Inspection data shows problems often found with pools

By hdcoadmin | July 21, 2005

Michelle Keller and Kevin Spear of The Orlando Sentinel used county pool inspection data to show that “at least one in eight failed tests for chlorine, meaning they could pose a health risk for swimmers who use them.” The findings roughly mirror an early federal study and the paper’s previous surveys of inspection reports. “This…

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Hospital faces deep problems

By hdcoadmin | July 20, 2005

Julie Bell of The (Baltimore) Sun reviewed documents on the performance of Maryland General Hospital, finding that “from at least the mid-1990s until spring 2004, the hospital’s board and a changing cast of top executives failed to act quickly as oversight systems designed to protect patients failed.” Breakdowns at the hospital’s laboratory in early 2004…

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Power for Jobs program flawed

By hdcoadmin | July 20, 2005

Mike McAndrew of The (Syracuse) Post-Standard investigates the “Power for Jobs” program, finding that more than a third of the businesses receiving state-subsidized electrical power in the program failed to deliver the jobs they promised. Cooper Crouse-Hinds was awarded 5,000 kilowatts of subsidized power; in return they agreed to retain all of its jobs and…

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Illinois police pull over minorities at higher rate

By hdcoadmin | July 19, 2005

Ryan Keith of the Associated Press analyzed the results of a state-mandated study on Illinois traffic stops, finding that “black and Hispanic drivers in large downstate cities are pulled over by police at a rate that far exceeds their share of the local population.” The state legislature had every police agency turn over data on…

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Kentucky residents’ health plagued by bad habits, poverty

By hdcoadmin | July 19, 2005

Laura Ungar of The (Louisville) Courier-Journal spent a year assessing the health of Kentucky’s residents, finding that “Kentucky is one of the sickest states in America, a place where too many people die too soon, and many who live endure decades of illness and pain.” Bad health habits ingrained in the state’s culture, including high…

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School administrators paid big during yearlong leaves

By hdcoadmin | July 19, 2005

Megan Twohey of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel used university documents to show that “the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee has paid four former administrators more than $600,000 in taxpayer dollars for yearlong leaves granted after their resignations.” The college does not track what officials granted such leaves do during that time, when typically they are preparing to…

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Leaders, volunteers used charity money to finance events for themselves

By hdcoadmin | July 18, 2005

John W. Allman and Michael Fechter of The Tampa Tribune investigated the activities of the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Sarasota/Tampa Bay, finding that: “For much of that time, it used money intended for sick children to pay for questionable expenses such as lavish dinners for chapter leaders and volunteers. It permitted and covered up a rogue…

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Company builds silo within 300 feet of school

By hdcoadmin | July 18, 2005

Ken Ward Jr. of the Charleston Gazette investigates a coal company, which has built and begun to build silos outside the companies permit area, within 300 feet of a school. The Gazette used color overlays of hard-copy mine maps produced by a local blueprint shop, so that maps dating back to 1982 could be easily…

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Thousands of home permits issued for fire-prone areas

By hdcoadmin | July 18, 2005

Jim Miller and Ben Goad of The (Riverside, Calif.) Press-Enterprise use mapping software to plot thousands of new home permits issued since the 2003 Southern California fires and then compared the points to state maps showing fire threat. “In the 18 months after the firestorms of 2003, Inland cities and counties issued permits for more…

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Prison chief drove state-issued car, despite suspended license

By hdcoadmin | July 14, 2005

Brad Schrade of The Tennessean uses state vehicle fuel logs to show that Correction Commissioner Quenton White drove his state-issued car across Tennessee while his driver’s license was suspended for not paying a speeding ticket. “White, 45, who had headed the state’s prison system since 2003, turned in his resignation yesterday to [Gov. Phil] Bredesen,…

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