Uncovering Texas’ Strategy to Slash Much-Needed Special Education Services
by Charles Ornstein .player_box { display: none; } div.article-inline-image.Right.demobbed {display: none;} Federal law mandates that school districts provide special education services to students...
View ArticleDonald Trump and the Return of Seditious Libel
by Richard Tofel A Closer Look Examining the news Richard Tofel In 1733, New York printer John Peter Zenger began publishing the eighth newspaper in the American colonies, and the first willing to...
View ArticleUncommon Contract Holds Promise for California Group Home’s Too Familiar Ills
by Joaquin Sapien Last year, the Edgewood Center for Children and Families in San Francisco became the scene of a rare struggle: a bid to unionize workers who provide care and oversight to some of...
View ArticleBreaking the Black Box: What Facebook Knows About You
by Julia Angwin ProPublica Machine Bias Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Comment Donate Episode 1 Facebook Episode 2 Coming Oct. 5 Episode 3 Coming Oct. 12 Episode 4 Coming Oct. 19 Breaking the...
View ArticleIn Wells Fargo Case, News Really Did Happen To An Editor
by Stephen Engelberg Several years after I returned to New York from Oregon, I made a strange discovery. Bank accounts I was certain I had closed were inexplicably racking up service charges. It...
View ArticleNew Jersey Commission Calls for Reforming State Loan Agency
by Annie Waldman A New Jersey state commission focused on college affordability unveiled a report yesterday urging the state’s controversial student loan agency to offer better protections for...
View ArticleSRSLY: I Say Tomato, You Say Schematic to Steal the Moon*
by David Epstein SRSLY The best reporting you probably missed David Epstein Welcome to SRSLY, an (experimental) newsletter highlighting under-exposed accountability journalism. We’ll distill the...
View ArticleIn Major Settlement, States Gang Up to Strike Deal with Soldier-suing Company
by Paul Kiel A coalition of attorneys general representing 49 states and the District of Columbia announced a settlement today with USA Discounters, requiring it to pay $40 million in penalties and...
View ArticleHow the Nation’s Opioid Epidemic Is Morphing — and Growing
by Charles Ornstein .player_box { display: none; } div.article-inline-image.Right.demobbed {display: none;} The nation’s opioid epidemic shows no signs of abating—and in fact may be headed in a far...
View ArticleRed Cross ‘Failed for 12 Days’ After Historic Louisiana Floods
by Derek Kravitz, ProPublica, In August, the country’s worst natural disaster since 2012’s Superstorm Sandy hit Louisiana. Flooding killed 13 people and left more than 80,000 homes severely damaged....
View ArticleVoting Has Started, and Electionland Is on the Case
by Derek Willis Election Day is still a month away, but some Americans are already casting ballots. About 20 states and the District of Columbia have early voting programs, several of which have...
View ArticleU.S. Labor Department: States Are Failing Injured Workers
by Michael Grabell This story was co-published with NPR. A U.S. Department of Labor report released today details the bleak fate facing the nation’s injured workers, noting that those hurt on the job...
View ArticleBreaking the Black Box: When Algorithms Decide What You Pay
by Julia Angwin , Terry Parris Jr. and Surya Mattu ProPublica Machine Bias Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Comment Donate Episode 1 Facebook Episode 2 Prices Episode 3 Coming Oct. 12 Episode 4...
View ArticleComing Soon From ProPublica and Frontline: ‘Terror in Europe’
by Stephen Engelberg In 2015 and 2016, terrorists linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State unleashed a series of deadly attacks in Europe that killed nearly 200 people and injured hundreds more....
View ArticleSRSLY: Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day At Blue Apron Facility
by David Epstein SRSLY The best reporting you probably missed David Epstein Welcome to SRSLY, an (experimental) newsletter highlighting under-exposed accountability journalism. We’ll distill the...
View ArticleNew Jersey’s Student Loan Agency Has Started Getting Good Reviews — By Giving...
by Annie Waldman Over the past few years, dozens of borrowers have written devastating reviews of the New Jersey state agency whose student loans, as we have detailed, have strikingly onerous terms....
View ArticleIntroducing the ProPublica Data Store 2.0
by Celeste LeCompte We work with data a lot at ProPublica. We request it. We create it. We analyze it. We use it to tell stories. We design with it. We teach with it. We share it. And, since 2014,...
View ArticleFor Mexican Towns Attacked by Cartel, Few Answers and No Justice
by Ginger Thompson and Alejandra Xanic, ProPublica, It was a brazen attack. Some 60 gunmen linked to the brutal Zetas cartel descended on a quiet cluster of towns just south of the Mexican border in...
View ArticleHow Trump Allegedly Ensured His Golf-Course Employees Were ‘Pretty Enough’
by Robert Faturechi .player_box { display: none; } div.article-inline-image.Right.demobbed {display: none;} Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has disparaged “flat-chested” women, mocked a...
View ArticleThe American Way
by Justin Elliott ProPublica Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Comment Donate Cameron Cottrill, special to ProPublica The American Way President Obama promised to fight corporate concentration. Eight...
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