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Gerald Loeb Award winners for Local
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Gerald Loeb Award is given annually for multiple categories of business reporting. The "Local" category was awarded for business, financial, or economic stories centered in a geographic area intended for consumers in that area from a local newspaper, magazine, television station, radio station, or website.[1] "Local" replaced "Small & Medium Newspapers" in 2015.[1]
Gerald Loeb Award for Local (2015–present)
- 2015: "Misleading March to the Top" by Mike Hendricks and Mará Rose Williams, The Kansas City Star[2][3]
- Article:
- "UMKC’s misleading march to the top",[3] July 26, 2014[4]
- Article:
- 2016: “Payday at the Mill,” by Whit Richardson and Steve Mistler, Portland Press Herald and Maine Sunday Telegram[5][6]
- Articles in Series:
- "Payday at the mill", April 19, 2015[7]
- "Shrewd financiers exploit unsophisticated Maine legislators on taxpayers’ dime", April 26, 2015[8]
- Articles in Series:
- 2017: "Painkiller Profiteers" by Eric Eyre, Charleston Gazette-Mail[9]
- Articles in Series:
- "Drug firms fueled ‘pill mills’ in rural WV",[10] May 23, 2016[11]
- "Drug firms poured 780M painkillers into WV amid rise of overdoses",[10] December 18, 2016[12]
- "'Suspicious' drug order rules never enforced by state",[10] December 19, 2016[13]
- Articles in Series:
- 2018: "The Tax Divide" by Jason Grotto, Sandhya Kambhampati, and Hal Dardick, Chicago Tribune and ProPublica Illinois[14]
- Articles in Series:
- "An unfair burden",[15] June 10, 2017[16]
- "The problem with appeals",[15] June 10, 2017[17]
- "Decades of errors",[15] June 10, 2017[18]
- "Commercial Breakdown",[15] December 7, 2017[19]
- Articles in Series:
- 2019: "Time Bomb" by Cary Aspinwall, Allan James Vestal and Holly K. Hacker, The Dallas Morning News[20]
- Articles in Series:[21]
- "Part 1: How Atmos Energy’s natural gas keeps blowing up Texas homes (while customers pay the tab)", September 23, 2018
- "Part 2: How Texas lets Atmos Energy off the hook", September 23, 2018
- Articles in Series:[21]
- 2020: "Profiting from the Poor" by Wendi C. Thomas, Deborah Douglas, Maya Miller, Beena Raghavendran, and Doris Burke, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism and ProPublica[22]
- 2021: "Deceit, Disrepair and Death Inside a Southern California Rental Empire" by Aaron Mendelson, Rina Palta, Chava Sanchez, Shana Daloria, and Priska Neely, KPCC Southern California Radio and LAist[23][24]
- 2022: "How Pennsylvania's Biggest Pension Fund Squandered Billions, Hurt Taxpayers and Triggered an FBI Investigation" by Craig McCoy, Joseph DiStefano, and Angela Couloumbis, The Philadelphia Inquirer and Spotlight PA[25]
- Articles:[26]
- "FBI probe of massive Pa. pension fund seeks evidence of kickbacks or bribery", May 16, 2021[27]
- "Internal PSERS documents show how Pa's biggest pension fund got key financial calculation wrong", May 30, 2021[28]
- "Facing FBI probe, PSERS backtracks on disclosure that staffers were on both sides of real estate dealings", June 8, 2021[29]
- "In a revolt, dissidents on PSERS board lobby colleagues to fire the fund’s leaders and set a new investment strategy", June 9, 2021[30]
- "Six of 15 board members of embattled Pa. pension fund officially call for removal of its top command", June 10, 2021[31]
- Articles:[26]
- 2023: "Legal Weed, Broken Promises" by Adam Elmahrek, Paige St. John, Robert J. Lopez, Ruben Vives, Marisa Gerber, Kiera Feldman, and Brian van der Brug, Los Angeles Times[32]
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