Top Cops Made Bank on Rank and File, WNYC
In New York City, municipal workers are restricted from conducting business or having a financial relationship with subordinates unless a waiver is issued. But in the New York Police Department, several high-ranking police officials moonlight for, or have stake in, a for-profit test prep company for rank and file officers seeking to gain promotions, according to this investigation. The NYC Conflicts of Interest Board, which issues the waivers, considers things as simple as selling Girl Scout cookies to employees a conflict of interest. But this investigation asserts that these top cops made “thousands, sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars, off subordinates seeking promotions.”
Millions of American children missing early lead tests, Reuters
Millions of American kids are going untested for lead poisoning
It isn’t just Flint: Many states and Medicaid rules require lead tests for young children, but millions are falling through this safety net. A Reuters exclusive
Kill bill: How Illinois’ temp industry lobbying quashed reform, Reveal
Illinois Senate Bill 47 was first-of-its-kind legislation meant to prevent temp agencies from shutting out black workers in favor of Latinos who some employers believed worked harder and whom they could more easily exploit. But the bill faced stiff opposition from a Latino lawmaker who believed his constituents benefited from the jobs they got through the agencies. This is how the bill meant to limit both discrimination and exploitation came to be born – and then killed..
Inside the underground economy propping up New York City’s food carts, Crain’s New York
Inside the underground economy propping up New York City’s food carts
Once a way to work towards the American dream, hot dog vendors and coffee carts are caught in a spiral of low wages and turning to a black market operating in plain sight to buy permits and licenses
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The siege downstairs, Austin American Statesman
Are Austin police overusing no-knock, full-SWAT warrant searches? http://specials.mystatesman.com/no-knock-warrants/ …