Posts by hdcoadmin
NY boat operators without training increase risk
John Ferro of the Poughkeepsie Journal analyzed the Coast Guard’s recreational boating accident database and found that “the rate of boating accidents in New York involving operators who never received any kind of formal safety training has consistently exceeded the national average.” In 2004, the rate was 57 percent, the highest since 1996. New York’s…
Read MorePolice break into six-figure club
Thomas J. Dolan of The Buffalo News analyzed police contracts and 2005 payrolls for seven towns and the City of Buffalo and found that “47 officers from Buffalo and the near suburbs broke the $100,000 mark in 2005, the last year for which complete figures were available. And nearly three dozen more are poised to…
Read MoreFla. officials profit from weak ethics laws
Bob Mahlburg of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune reviewed state financial disclosure records to show Florida’s weak ethics laws and how state and local officials with real estate investments walk a tightrope between their public posts and personal profits. “State Sen. Mike Bennett has made more than $2 million renting office space to a state agency he…
Read MorePlanes dangerously close in Canadian skies
Robert Cribb, Fred Vallance-Jones and Tamsin McMahon of The Toronto Star analyzed the aviation data and found that “more than 80,000 passengers have been put at risk over the last five years when airplanes they were travelling in came dangerously close together in Canadian skies.” Between 2001 and mid-2005, there were more than 800 incidents…
Read MoreRating communities’ performance
Michael Mansur and Rick Montgomery of The Kansas City Star used Data Envelopment Analysis to analyze the budget and performance numbers from 18 area cities and rank how efficiently they provided eight municipal services. “Four cities tied in police services: Belton, Grandview, Liberty and Prairie Village. Three cities tied in fire and fire-and-ambulance services: Belton,…
Read MoreCampaign fund paid for trips to Super Bowl, Vegas
Brad Bumsted and Debra Erdley of The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review compiled records from 2,300 receipts filed by Perzel’s chief of staff and found that House Speaker Perzel, Pennsylvania General Assembly’s top fundraiser, “used campaign cash to treat his chief of staff and both men’s sons to Super Bowl trips the past two years.” Campaign money also…
Read MorePain drug can kill when taken as prescribed
Scott Finn and Tara Tuckwiller of The Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette analyzed death certificates and found that “patients could die if they take the “usual adult dosage” on methadone’s package insert — information that comes with the prescription and was approved by the federal government.” Methadone, once given mostly to heroin addicts to ease their cravings,…
Read MoreCongressional travel adds up to $50 million
An analysis of more than 25,000 travel disclosure documents over a 5½-year period by the Center for Public Integrity, American Public Media and Northwestern University’s Medill News Service found that “members of Congress and their aides took at least 23,000 trips — valued at almost $50 million — financed by private sponsors, many of them…
Read MoreSome Minn. schools doing well at teaching poor students
Megan Boldt, MaryJo Sylwester, Meggen Lindsay and Doug Belden of St. Paul Pioneer Press analyzed three years of test scores from all 731 Minnesota elementary schools and found that 13 high-poverty schools were “doing better than predicted and seem to have found a way to overcome education’s biggest challenge — teaching high numbers of poor…
Read MoreFarm subsidy payments in Denmark go up
Farmsubsidy.org has released new data on farm subsidy payments, with an analysis by Nils Mulvad, co-founder of farmsubsidy.org and director of the Danish International Center for Analytical Reporting, analyzed new data on farm subsidy payments in Denmark in 2005 and found that “the new Single Farm Payment Scheme has dramatically increased the number of farm…
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