Posts by hdcoadmin
Virginia investment company profits off blight
Meghan Hoyer and Matthew Jones of The Virginian-Pilot investigated the purchase of over 250 houses and lots in depressed areas of cities such as Portsmouth, Norfolk and Newport News by a Virginia Beach-based company and its investors. Five years later, half the properties still sit in disarray with thousands owed in back taxes. “Since forming…
Read MoreOn-duty death benefits denied to firefighters, EMTs
Bill Dedman of MSNBC.com reports that more than three years after President Bush signed the Hometown Heroes Act of 2003, no benefits have been paid to families. The act promises federal benefits to the families of firefighters and EMTs who die of heart attacks or strokes on the job. “The U.S. Justice Department has denied…
Read MoreLaw firms profit from Empire Zone tax breaks
Michelle Breidenbach and Mike McAndrew of the The Syracuse Post-Standard found some of the state’s biggest and most politically connected law firms cashed in for millions of dollars through a state economic development program that was supposed to encourage new businesses. “At least 70 law firms cost state taxpayers more than $6 million in 2005,…
Read MoreSold a Nightmare
A four-part series by Binyamin Appelbaum, Lisa Hammersly Munn and Ted Mellnik of The Charlotte (N.C) Observer profiles Beazer Homes USA and the failure of starter-home neighborhoods in the Charlotte area. As it sold homes and arranged mortgages, the company crossed the line between selling to people who could barely afford homes and selling to…
Read MoreDrug abuse, crime on rise among paramedics
A special report by Andrew McIntosh of The Sacramento Bee reveals problems with paramedics and EMTs in the state of California. Substance abuse is on the rise among paramedics, including theft of morphine on hand to treat patients in the field. Additionally, lax oversight of the paramedic and EMT licensing systems have led to fired…
Read MoreHealthcare nonprofits spend millions in federal funds, operate in secrecy
In a two-part series, Clark Kauffman of The Des Moines Register examined the Iowa Foundation for Medical Care, the largest of 53 federally funded Quality Improvement Organizations. The newspaper found that the tax-exempt Iowa foundation, which investigates complaints of poor patient care received by Iowa’s 500,000 Medicare beneficiaries, reviewed only 12 complaints in 2005. That…
Read MoreBroken Trust
In an investigative series by the Sarasota (Fla.) Herald-Tribune staffers Matt Doig, Tiffany Lankes and editor Chris Davis expose an epidemic of misconduct in Florida schools. In the past ten years, more than 750 Florida teachers have been punished for misconduct toward students, and at least 150 are still teaching today. It’s possible that the…
Read MoreVirginia vanity plates elicit complaints
Aaron Lee of the Lynchburg (Va.) News & Advance used FOIA to obtain complaints to the state department of motor vehicles about vanity license plates that had been issued to Virginia drivers, as well as subsequent correspondence between the DMV and the plate holders. The story reveals a host of complaints against many of the…
Read MoreRecognition of judicial inequities lead to man’s release
Brooks Egerton of The Dallas Morning News covered the release of Tyrone Brown “17 years after a single positive marijuana test while he was on probation led a Dallas judge to sentence him to life in prison.” Brown’s story drew national attention last year after The News ran a story on the inequity of justice…
Read MoreMotorcycle fatalities increasing in Brevard County
Jeff Schweers and Sarah Okeson of Florida Today looked at motorcycle fatalities in Brevard County and found that more than twice as many people were killed in 2006 as in 2000, and the county could top that this year. There are now twice as many bikers on Florida highways as there were five years ago.…
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