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NC state property commission dissolved

In March of 2007, J. Andrew Curliss of The News & Observer in Raleigh, N.C., reported on the failings of the North Carolina Commission on State Property. The commission was created to sell off surplus land owned by the government in an effort to generate quick revenue. But in the three years since its inception,…

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Rural Development grants finding way to urban areas

Gilbert M. Gaul and Sarah Cohen of The Washington Post report that a majority of money from the USDA’s Rural Development program is ending up in urban areas. “More than three times as much money went to metropolitan areas with populations of 50,000 or more ($30.3 billion) as to poor or shrinking rural counties ($8.6…

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On-duty death benefits denied to firefighters, EMTs

Bill Dedman of MSNBC.com reports that more than three years after President Bush signed the Hometown Heroes Act of 2003, no benefits have been paid to families. The act promises federal benefits to the families of firefighters and EMTs who die of heart attacks or strokes on the job. “The U.S. Justice Department has denied…

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Healthcare nonprofits spend millions in federal funds, operate in secrecy

In a two-part series, Clark Kauffman of The Des Moines Register examined the Iowa Foundation for Medical Care, the largest of 53 federally funded Quality Improvement Organizations. The newspaper found that the tax-exempt Iowa foundation, which investigates complaints of poor patient care received by Iowa’s 500,000 Medicare beneficiaries, reviewed only 12 complaints in 2005. That…

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Law firms profit from Empire Zone tax breaks

Michelle Breidenbach and Mike McAndrew of the The Syracuse Post-Standard found some of the state’s biggest and most politically connected law firms cashed in for millions of dollars through a state economic development program that was supposed to encourage new businesses. “At least 70 law firms cost state taxpayers more than $6 million in 2005,…

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Empire Zone tax breaks revealed

Michelle Breidenbach and Mike McAndrew of the Syracuse Post-Standard report on the paper’s victory in a lawsuit that forced New York state to reveal how it distributes $558 million in tax credits to businesses. “The state kept the dollar amounts secret for years, even as the public and state legislators questioned how some of the…

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Response times faster on inner-city fires

John Tedesco, Karisa King and Kelly Guckian of the San Antonio Express-News analyzed six years of San Antonio Fire Department response-time data and found that firefighters reach inner-city structure fires quicker than in the outlying areas where firefighters cover more territory with fewer stations. In response to the Express-News coverage, local officials pledge to address…

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Texas Youth Commission investigation

The Dallas Morning News has posted a page dedicated to its continuing investigation into sexual abuse at Texas juvenile detention centers. Records obtained by the paper showed that young inmates were being sexually assaulted, and nothing was done to stop it, despite complaints and reports by staffers at the West Texas State School. Included on…

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“Shame of the State” uncovers assisted-living horrors in Pennsylvania

Ken Dilanian of The Philadelphia Inquirer found a long list of health and safety violations, a history of substandard care, and a system of state oversight that, until recently, often allowed deficient operators to violate safety rules with virtual impunity in the assisted-living homes of Philadelphia. Since 2000, at least 55 assisted-living residents have died…

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N.C. state rep guilty of taking bribes for legislative favors

In a follow-up to earlier reports, Dan Kane and J. Andrew Curliss of The (Raleigh, N.C.) News & Observer report that former North Carolina House Speaker Jim Black pled guilty in federal court to “taking money for legislative favors.” Black received $25,000 in cash, as well as a $4,000 check, from three chiropractors in exchange…

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