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Podcast: Curt Guyette, investigative reporter for the ACLU of Michigan, talks with ProPublica senior reporter Abrahm Lustgarten about finding proof that Flint’s water was poisoned.
Companies are increasingly using pay-for-performance to get around a $1 million federal limit on tax deductions for executive compensation.
Is the Gulf Coast prepared for the next big storm? Here's some of the best reporting we've seen on the continuing dangers that hurricanes pose to America's southern coast
Neither the Navy nor the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has a comprehensive list of which ships went where during the Vietnam War. As a result, veterans themselves often have to prove their ships served in areas where Agent Orange was sprayed.
Michigan’s voters decided to scrap the kind of super-empowered emergency managers who made questionable decisions in Flint – but state lawmakers found a way to revive the program.
Workers at big NYC apartment buildings that get a tax subsidy are supposed to be paid a prevailing wage set by the city comptroller. But they don’t always know it – and that can cost them.
ProPublica and Texas Tribune are co-hosting a community forum in La Porte, Texas, to discuss how to break through the state’s political and scientific gridlock in order to protect Houston before disaster strikes.
Houston is the fourth-largest city in the country. It's home to the nation's largest refining and petrochemical complex, where billions of gallons of oil and dangerous chemicals are stored. And it's a sitting duck for the next big hurricane. Why isn't Texas ready?
Houston is unprepared for the danger it faces as a city prone to hurricanes. Today we’re launching a new multimedia project about the region’s vulnerabilities and what’s at stake.
Our interactive story includes a map with seven animated simulations depicting a large hurricane hitting the Houston-Galveston region.
The justices will decide whether the state’s restrictions on clinics and abortion doctors go too far.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states cannot require many large employers to submit health care claims to a massive database. Here’s why that matters.
Neither the Navy nor the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has a comprehensive list of which ships went where during the Vietnam War. As a result, veterans themselves often have to prove their ships served in areas where Agent Orange was sprayed.
“An Anatomy of Doubt,” a young woman’s story of rape and redemption, debuts Friday.
Between 1981 and 1990, five Vietnamese-American journalists were killed in what the FBI suspected was a string of political assassinations. Unlike other violent attacks on journalists, these murders garnered relatively little attention.
8 Stories in the Series. Latest:
How one of the country’s most venerated charities has failed disaster victims, broken promises and made dubious claims of success.
29 Stories in the Series. Latest:
The way lenders and collectors pursue consumer debt has undergone an aggressive transformation in America. Collectors today don’t give up easy, often pursuing debts for years. It’s now routine for companies to sue debtors, then seize their wages or the cash in their bank accounts. For many people, these changes have profoundly affected their lives.
20 Stories in the Series. Latest:
An Oklahoma commission ruled that a state law allowing companies to “opt out” of workers’ comp and write their own plans was unconstitutional while similar bills in other states lose steam.
Total outstanding college debt is estimated at $1 trillion dollars – and with costs still soaring, the burden on students and their families shows no signs of abating. We’re examining how the complicated system of college debt is putting the squeeze on families.
25 Stories in the Series. Latest:
Reporting Recipe: How to Investigate Student Debt at Your College