Posts by hdcoadmin
City program accountability questioned
Toni Coleman of the St. Paul Pioneer Press analyzed data on the city’s Sales Tax Revitalization (STAR) grant program, finding that “accountability under STAR is uneven because of the program’s complicated structure. Most projects go through a structured review process, for example, but individual City Council members circumvent that if they want. In addition, some…
Read MoreWhite coaches lasting longer than black coaches in NBA
David Leonhardt and Ford Fessenden of The New York Times used regression analysis to show that “over the last decade, black NBA coaches have lasted an average of just 1.6 seasons, compared with 2.4 seasons for white coaches … That means the typical white coach lasts almost 50 percent longer and has most of an…
Read MoreLand swap deals net big profits for brokers
Adrienne Packer and J.M. Kalil of the Las Vegas Review-Journal continue their investigation into land swap deals, finding that “on at least three occasions, land broker Scott Gragson traded property to McCarran International Airport and then reacquired it nearly two years later for less than he originally sold it for…That means the properties depreciated hundreds…
Read MoreUtah dams improve, but high hazard conditions still exist
Lee Davidson of The Deseret Morning News used state data to show that “44 percent of such Utah ‘high hazard’ dams meet all minimum safety standards – more than a sixfold improvement” since the paper last examined Utah’s dams in 1988. “At that time, officials rated as safe a mere 7 percent of those dams…
Read MoreFOI requests improve, but some agencies still lag
Colleen Krantz of The Des Moines Register and Janet Rorholm of The (Cedar Rapids) Gazette report that a newspaper audit of public records in Iowa shows that “law enforcement agencies in Iowa provided greater access to their public documents during a recent investigation by Iowa newspapers than the agencies did five years ago, yet police…
Read MoreCity shooting data shows race, location similarities
Nathan Gorenstein, Barbara Boyer and Rose Ciotta of the Philadelphia Inquirer summarized shootings in the city last year: “On average, more than four people a day were struck by bullets. About one in six died. On one day alone – Oct. 22 – 19 people were shot, one fatally. It’s a toll of injury and…
Read MoreChicago recycling program success exagerated
Laurie Cohen and Dan Mihalopoulos of the Chicago Tribune, along with Gary Washburn, used city records to show that “less paper, plastic, metals and other recyclables were salvaged from Chicago’s household garbage in the last two years than at any time since the program’s earliest years.” The paper’s investigation found that the city “has quietly…
Read MoreWealthy schools benefit more from construction money
Steve Chambers and Robert Gebeloff of The (Newark) Star-Ledger analyzed state school construction data to find that “New Jersey’s wealthiest districts have been far more successful qualifying for state money than middle-class or blue-collar ones. And with two-thirds of the state money already spent or committed, affluent districts have landed 24 percent more construction funding…
Read MoreLegislators double salaries with expense checks
Bonna de la Cruz of The (Nashville) Tennessean analyzed state data to find that “twenty-seven Midstate lawmakers double their salaries or better by collecting state expense checks whether they incur the expenses or not. The expense checks – which are taxed by the IRS as income because they are not linked to any documented cost…
Read MoreState officials overspending, despite fiscal crisis
Louis Hansen and David Gulliver of The Virginian-Pilot obtained spending records from Virginia’s Department of Game & Inland Fisheries showing that “officials regularly traveled to conventions, bought expensive sporting goods and routinely exceeded limits on their state-issued charge cards … Oversight of the department’s use of charge cards appeared lax: 19 different employees exceeded their…
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