Missing Lead Tests, an Underground Economy in NYC and More

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Top Cops Made Bank on Rank and File, WNYC

Millions of American children missing early lead tests, Reuters

Photo published for Millions of American kids are going untested for lead poisoning
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

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention set a goal of eradicating lead poisoning in American children by 2020. But the lack of testing for many children in the U.S. makes measuring success in that effort all but impossible. This Reuters investigation found that across the country, states are under-testing, or failing to test children at all. In fact, only 11 states require tests for lead levels in children’s blood.

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
Photo published for Inside the underground economy propping up New York City's food carts
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

Mobile food vending permits (MFVPs) in New York City cost $200 and are typically valid for two years. Because regulations stipulate that only 3,000 permits can be issued, they have become extremely valuable on what amounts to a black market. Brokers acting as middlemen charge as much as $20,000 to illegally obtain some of those 3,000 permits, according to this investigation. Indeed, it is estimated that “70 to 80 percent of permits are illegally in use by someone other than the permit holder.”

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The siege downstairs, Austin American Statesman

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