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School accountability reports flawed

David Olinger and Jeffrey A. Roberts of The Denver Post examined reports of violent incidents in Colorado schools, finding that “disclosures of school violence vary wildly from one district to another. Some schools report every punch thrown on the playground. Others did not include assaults that police classified as felonies.” The state requires districts to…

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State officials hire relatives

Tim Smith of The Greenville News used state records to show that “relatives of two South Carolina Department of Transportation commissioners have been hired at the agency, but the board members said there was nothing improper about their employment.” The two relatives are part-time employees, but one has worked for the agency since 1999 and…

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Faulty oversight put youth at risk

Jonathan D. Rockoff and John B. O’Donnell of The (Baltimore) Sun analyzed spending by 25 companies that run group homes for foster children, finding “a broad failure by the state to protect the interests of 2,700 youths who live in 330 privately run homes in Maryland. The state licenses and funds the facilities but does…

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State offers big incentives at a large price

Sydney P. Freedberg and Connie Humburg of the St. Petersburg Times wrote about Florida’s attempt to attract business by offering large incentives to help companies create jobs. The incentives were not working with some companies shipping jobs oversees instead of creating them. These economic efforts come at a big price with Florida’s economic development efforts…

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Wildfire risks fail to slow home growth

Diana Hefley and Scott North of The (Everett) Herald used state and local data to show that “the areas of Snohomish County with the highest potential for wildfires are home to more than 5,500 people, most relatively new arrivals. … Since 2000 an average of 100 new houses and mobile homes have sprouted in the…

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Refinery warned about dangerous ventilation stack

Dina Cappiello and Anne Belli of the Houston Chronicle obtained OSHA data on the British Petroleum refinery that exploded March 23. They found that the refinery had been fined and warned about the ventilation stack and given ideas on how to make it safer in 1992. “To correct the problem, OSHA recommended that Amoco reconfigure…

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Recruiting actions put program under investigation

Carter Strickland of The Oklahoman used the state’s Freedom of Information Act to obtain phone records from Oklahoma University’s men’s basketball program showing improper contact with high school recruits. “Coaches are allowed one phone call a week to recruits, parents or legal guardians. But phone records obtained by The Oklahoman show representatives of the OU…

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Lobbyist fail to follow rules

A team from the Center for Public Integrity released LobbyWatch, an analysis of nearly $13 billion spent on federal lobbying since 1998. One story reveals that more than 19 percent of all filings to the Senate Office of Public Records were late and “49 of the top 50 lobbying firms (in terms of revenue) failed…

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Police issue tickets more frequently by the beach

Rick Neale of Florida Today analyzed 2004 traffic ticket data from Brevard County, finding that “beachside police ticket at far higher relative frequencies than their mainland counterparts.” The county’s smaller towns write far more tickets per capita than larger cities. “Melbourne Village issues almost eight times more tickets per capita than Brevard’s biggest city, Palm…

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Legislators took gifts, trips from lobbyists

Nolan Clay of The Oklahoman used state disclosure reports to find that “Oklahoma politicians, their aides and relatives accepted at least $125,000 worth of meals, drinks, football tickets and other gifts last year.” Many of the freebies were associated with the state’s college athletic programs, including season tickets to football games at Oklahoma University and…

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