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Poughkeepsie firms benefit from government grants

The Poughkeepsie Journal used an analysis of federal data to find that “United States government agencies paid $39.4 million through federal contracts to more than 150 local businesses, nonprofits and individuals in the two most recent fiscal years.” While there has been a trend nationally of larger corporations receiving more grants at the expense of…

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Monitoring contractors’ misconduct

The Project on Government Oversight unveiled a new version of its online Federal Contractor Misconduct Database. “The new database, which covers instances of misconduct from 1995 to the present, includes the source documents for each instance, drawing primarily from government documents,” noted a POGO press release. The site reports that the top 50 firms took…

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Dodd outpaces rivals in race for money

Jonathan D. Salant and Kristin Jensen of Bloomberg report that Sen. Christopher Dodd has outpaced his political rivals in the race to raise money for a presidential bid. A third of the $3 million he raised in the last quarter of 2006 came from the financial-services industry — the industry he oversees as chairman of…

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Paper trail of questionable management plagues New Jersey medical school

An article by Josh Margolin and Ted Sherman of The (Newark, N.J.) Star-Ledger uncover new scandals at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ). After a long legal battle with the University, the Star-Ledger obtained documents which “paint a picture of a state institution in which high-paid administrators chased state grants they…

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Surface mines pose unique dangers

The Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette’s Ken Ward Jr. continues his series on coal mine safety with a Sunday article about the dangers of working at mountaintop removal mines in Appalachia. Ward reports, among other things, that Appalachian strip mines account for 20 percent of the nation’s strip-mined coal, but over the last decade accounted for 75…

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Of Note: Interview on Investigative Journalism

John McQuaid, co-author, with Mark Schleifstein, of Path of Destruction: The Devastation of New Orleans and the Coming Age of Superstorms, interviews Charles Lewis, founder of the Center for Public Integrity, on the future of investigative journalism on the Internet. McQuaid is blogging for newassignment.net.

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Medical care under examination

Bill McKelway of the Richmond Times-Dispatch is doing a series of reports on the state of hospitals and medical care in the Richmond area. The latest in the series reports the story of Danielle Moore, a former prison guard who delivered a baby girl with severe cerebral palsy after staff and doctors at the hospital…

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