Skip to content

Promotions and new staff strengthen IRE

State wastes millions to acquire land

By hdcoadmin | July 11, 2005

R.G. Dunlop of The (Louisville) Courier-Journal has a series on the state’s land condemnation system, finding that “Kentucky has squandered millions of tax dollars buying land for highway construction because of an outdated condemnation system that it has refused to fix for decades.” In some cases, the state paid owners much more than their land…

Read More

City denies request for records

By hdcoadmin | July 8, 2005

David Madrid of The Arizona Republic reports on the results of a public records request the paper made asking council members in Surprise, Ariz., “to verify the miles and percentage of driving they do for city business” since the council was set to approve a 289% increase in car allowances. The paper’s request “was denied…

Read More

Analysis shows improvement in schools

By hdcoadmin | July 8, 2005

Krista J. Stockman of The (Fort Wayne) Journal Gazette used state education test data to compare results since the fall of 2000, finding that “the majority of Indiana schools have more students passing standardized tests.” The paper analyzed scores for third, sixth, eighth and 10th grades, because those were the only grades tested in both…

Read More

Loophole endangers drivers in Canada

By hdcoadmin | July 8, 2005

Kevin McGran of The Toronto Star used federal and provincial records to show that “if you rent a U-Haul, you’ve got a 50-50 chance of getting a truck that won’t pass a road safety check.” Ontario police failed nearly half of such vehicles during road examinations between 2002 and 2004, and Ministry of Transportation data…

Read More

Cable barriers fail to prevent deaths

By hdcoadmin | July 8, 2005

Scott North, Diana Hefley and Lukas Velush of The (Everett, Wash.) Herald used Washington state transportation data to show that a stretch of I-5 where a cable barrier separates the opposing lanes of traffic may not be preventing as many accidents as other areas. In one three-mile section, “vehicles went over, under or through the…

Read More

Utah residents use border cities for gambling, lottery

By hdcoadmin | July 8, 2005

As part of a series on gambling in Utah, Lee Davidson of The Deseret Morning News used Idaho state data to show that “the top six Idaho lottery sales sites are on the Utah border – and they sell up to 27 times as many tickets as the average Idaho lottery site.” One store just…

Read More

Human smuggling networks linked to terrorist groups

By hdcoadmin | July 8, 2005

Pauline Arrillaga and Olga R. Rodriguez of the Associated Press reviewed court records from Mexico and the United States as part of an investigation into “the many pipelines in Central and South America, Mexico and Canada that have illegally channeled thousands of people into the United States from so-called ‘special-interest’ countries – those identified by…

Read More

Possible conflicts abound in South Carolina legislature

By hdcoadmin | July 8, 2005

Jeff Stensland of The State reviewed financial disclosure forms from South Carolina state legislators to find that “about 20 lawmakers raked in more than $2.4 million in attorney fees by representing clients in front of state boards and commissions last year.” Many of the cases involved worker’s compensation claims but others were before the state’s…

Read More

Concerns raised over Guard’s possible spying

By hdcoadmin | July 7, 2005

Army investigators and a state senator are examining California’s National Guard after Dion Nissenbaum of the San Jose Mercury News reported the Guard established an intelligence unit that has “been involved in tracking at least one recent Mother’s Day anti-war rally organized by families of slain American soldiers.” The Information Synchronization, Knowledge Management and Intelligence…

Read More

Drug lobby spends millions to influence legislation

By hdcoadmin | July 7, 2005

A team from The Center for Public Integrity reports on spending by the pharmaceutical and health products industry on lobbyists. “The drug industry’s huge investments in Washington — though meager compared to the profits they make — have paid off handsomely, resulting in a series of favorable laws on Capitol Hill and tens of billions…

Read More

Categories

Archives

Scroll To Top