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Renters caught in middle of foreclosure crisis

By hdcoadmin | August 11, 2008

A report by Dina ElBoghdady of The Washington Post reveals that renters are becoming unwitting victims of the mortgage crisis as property owners lose houses to foreclosure. “Several localities around the country, as well as some members of Congress, are pushing to give renters more time before the new owners, usually banks, can evict them.…

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Labor exploitation rampant in Chinese-owned mining companies

By hdcoadmin | August 11, 2008

In China in Africa and China in Peru, parallel investigations for Bloomberg Markets, Simon Clark, Michael Smith and Franz Wild report on the exploitation of indigenous peoples by Chinese-owned mining companies in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The authors report that “hundreds of workers have been injured or killed since 2005 working for Chinese companies.”…

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Homeless used for fraud at three California hospitals

By hdcoadmin | August 7, 2008

An FBI raid at three Southern California hospitals uncovered “a massive scheme to defraud taxpayer-funded healthcare programs of millions of dollars by recruiting homeless patients for unnecessary medical services,” according to a report in The Los Angeles Times. The chief executive at one hospital faces criminal charges, while executives from two other facilities have been…

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Population growth impacting dam safety issues

By hdcoadmin | August 7, 2008

A report by Jim Getz of The Dallas Morning News looks at the impact of population growth on dam safety. The investigation “found that suburban sprawl has encroached on hundreds of dams in Texas that were once in remote locations – including dozens in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.” Development upstream from a dam increases runoff…

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Big donors, bundlers boost Obama’s fundraising

By hdcoadmin | August 6, 2008

Records show that one-third of Barack Obama’s campaign donors have made donations over $1,000, reports Michael Luo and Christopher Drew of The New York Times. While Obama claimed to forgo public financing due to his lucrative grassroots fundraising from small donors, he has a robust stable of “bundlers” — more than 500 — who have…

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Gas price secrets revealed

By hdcoadmin | August 6, 2008

A series by The Cincinnati Enquirer analyzed a daily price database of gas prices at 716 stations in the Greater Cincinnati region, including northern Kentucky and southeastern Indiana, to better understand the many aspects of retail gas pricing. Rising gas prices and stiff competition are causing many major oil companies, like BP and Shell, to…

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Loopholes in hiring practices leave kids at risk

By hdcoadmin | August 5, 2008

Flaws in how the city of Columbus handles background checks for street peddlers has created loopholes that allow child predators behind the wheels of ice cream trucks, reports Paul Aker of WBNS-TV. Prospective employees submitted their own background checks, and one ice cream truck driver simply omitted his history of child pornography charges. As a…

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U.S. hospitals deporting invalid immigrants

By hdcoadmin | August 4, 2008

“Many American hospitals are taking it upon themselves to repatriate seriously injured or ill immigrants because they cannot find nursing homes willing to accept them without insurance,” reports Deborah Sontag of The New York Times. Hospitals are deporting these patients without any government assistance or oversight. While immigration rights advocates see this as international patient…

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City’s wildfire clean-up exceeded estimates

By hdcoadmin | August 4, 2008

Following the October 2007 wildfires, the city of San Diego contracted with two companies for demolition and clean-up of homes destroyed in the fire. Original estimates for the service was around $28,000 per home, but the final costs surpassed the original estimate by more than 68 percent according to a watchdog report by Dana Wilkie,…

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EPA investigation shows “safe” pesticides now top list of poisonings

By hdcoadmin | August 1, 2008

Through a FOIA request, The Center for Public Integrity obtained the Environmental Protection Agency’s internal pesticide incident database, called one of the “Ten Most Wanted Government Documents” by a watchdog group. Their analysis of the more than 90,000 “adverse-reaction” reports filed by manufacturers to the EPA found that the supposedly “safe” pesticide compounds now in…

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