Starting May 29, CIR, California Watch and The Bay Citizen are becoming one: The Center for Investigative Reporting. You can expect the same unique, in-depth reporting but without the confusion of three names.
The Central Valley city went broke last year, the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. Now, Stockton is at the center of an unprecedented legal battle.
After students leave schools of education, and after years of reforms, institutions often have no way of ascertaining if their programs produced high-quality teachers.
Democrats in the California Assembly turned to interest groups with big stakes in state government decisions to finance their campaigns and fund donations to races targeted by Speaker John A. Pérez, a CIR analysis shows.
Schools are working to curb the sale of junk food and tighten their nutritional standards. But those health efforts are undermined when students can leave campus at lunch to eat whatever they want.
The majority of drivers who hit and kill pedestrians rarely are charged, face jail time or have their licences suspended, even when they are found or suspected to be at fault, a review of court and police records found.
The Central Valley city went broke last year, the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. Now, Stockton is at the center of an unprecedented legal battle.
The first woman competing in a Los Angeles mayoral runoff in the city’s history has been unable to make significant inroads with female campaign contributors, an analysis of city campaign finance data shows.
After students leave schools of education, and after years of reforms, institutions often have no way of ascertaining if their programs produced high-quality teachers.
At CIR, we believe journalism that moves citizens to action is an essential pillar of democracy. For more than three decades, CIR has relentlessly pursued and uncovered injustices that otherwise would be hidden from the public eye. Today, we are upholding this legacy and looking forward, working at the forefront of journalistic innovation to produce important stories that make a difference and engage our audiences across the aisle, coast to coast, and worldwide. What drives our work isn't profit – it's impact.
As you know, hard-hitting reporting takes time and nerve – and, of course, citizen support. Every day, our reporters go up against powerful financial, political and bureaucratic forces. They uncover secrets that would otherwise be left untold, exposing injustices so our lives can be better.
But impact, change and progress are achieved only when citizens take action.
One website. One brand. One newsroom. We are now The Center for Investigative Reporting – and only The Center for Investigative Reporting. Although it was tough to cut loose our local and statewide brand names, our commitment to public service journalism remains as strong as ever. And our growth continues.
So how will these branding changes affect our story selection and the scope of our reporting?
RT @mattdrange: Congress says #Apple's tax strategy costs the US gov't billions...Our story on Silicon Valley's biggest tax avoiders: http://t.co/5ncePrf9Ve