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Bridge data adds context to collapse

Following the collapse of an I-35 bridge spanning the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, journalists turned to the National Bridge Inventory database, available from IRE and NICAR, to check the bridge’s inspection history. The Saint Paul Pioneer Press. and The Star Tribune reported that inspection data from 2005 showed that the Minnesota Department of Transportation deemed…

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Overtime tops $500 million in California state prisons

Inmate overcrowding and the increasing number of staff vacancies in California’s prisons are spiking overtime costs for the state’s corrections department, which spent more than half a billion dollars last year on overtime pay, according to analysis of payroll records by the San Francisco Chronicle. Tom Chorneau and Todd Wallack report that the surge —…

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Abuses at Texas state schools go unpunished

A Dallas Morning News investigation into disciplinary records of employees at state schools for the mentally retarded “ found hundreds of cases of abuse at the hands of those charged with caring for the mentally retarded

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Fresno suffers more power outages than neighboring communities

California and other states require investor-owned utilities to publish reliability statistics, including the number of minutes the average customer goes without power each year. Brad Branan of the Fresno Bee looked at those numbers to find that “customers in the Fresno division of Pacific Gas & Electric Co. go without power longer than those in…

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Attendance discrepancies skew economic impact figures

Josh Robbins of the Orlando Sentinel reports that inaccurate attendance reports could be skewing the economic impact that sports venues have in the community seeing as though turnstile counts are often lower than the published “official attendance” numbers. As the County Commission in Orange County, Fla. prepare to consider a $1.1 billion plan for a…

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Chicago’s drug war toughest on minorities

A Chicago Tribune analysis of federal data shows that enforcement efforts in the the war on drugs hits minorities far harder than whites. Darnell Little reports that inner-city dealers are hit much harder than the more discrete dealings in suburban areas. Prison populations also reflect harsher penalties for minorities. Analysis of Chicago’s predominantly African-American neighborhoods…

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Cities liability records expose wide disparities

A quick-hit investigation by Marc Davis of The Virginian-Pilot looked at city liablitiy records and found “Virginia Beach paid 84 homeowners and businesses a total of $457,000 to fix damages or repay plumbing fees for sewer backups in 2004, 2005 and 2006. Among the other four cities – Chesapeake, Norfolk, Portsmouth and Suffolk – none…

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Without limitations, campaing cash spent freely in Oregon

The Oregonian‘s Ryan Kost reports that Oregon lawmakers chose not to place limitations on how campaign money could be spent despite promised campaign finance ethics reforms. Two proposed laws limiting how campaign contributions could be spent were never passed, thus it remains legal to spend campaign monies on other things – from candy to airfare.…

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Computer security issues plague Boeing financial records

Andrea James and Daniel Lathrop of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer investigated security problems with Boeing’s computer system which leaves it vulnerable to manipulation, theft and fraud. The issues relate to Boeing’s failure to comply with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, “a wide-ranging law aimed at preventing stockholder rip-offs such as the Enron scandal from happening again.” For the…

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