You already know what we do right here at ProPublica: investigative reporting that sparks change and holds energy to account. As we close to the top of February, we wished to share 5 examples of how our investigations have already completed that this 12 months.
From Colorado to Massachusetts to Texas, ProPublica investigations, lots of them printed in collaboration with native companions, led to proposed modifications to legal guidelines and practices. And whereas we report on the small print of how these modifications occur, we purpose to by no means lose sight of how these modifications might have an effect on precise folks. This may increasingly imply, for instance, folks below New York’s guardianship system receiving higher care, or survivors of rape in Massachusetts having the ability to pursue justice with no deadline.
Learn on to study extra about our current reporting that’s making an impression.
Colorado Marijuana Regulators Take into account Main Adjustments to How Labs Take a look at for Contaminants
Greater than a decade in the past, Colorado created the primary regulated leisure marijuana market within the nation. Lawmakers promised the state’s voters that the transfer to legalize marijuana would drive out the black market and create a safer surroundings via regulation. However, as Denver Gazette reporters Christopher Osher and Evan Wyloge revealed in a January investigation in partnership with ProPublica, hemp derivatives have jeopardized that promise.
For years, hemp, which is a detailed cousin of marijuana and is cheaper to provide, seeped into the Colorado marijuana market. Whereas Colorado permits using hemp in some objects similar to clothes and twine, the state banned firms from utilizing it to make intoxicating merchandise offered within the state. Our investigation discovered that regardless of the ban, the Colorado legislature and regulators didn’t undertake important rules that different states have employed to maintain dangerous hemp merchandise off the cabinets. One outcome, some marijuana producers say, is that some firms are sending samples and merchandise that they know will go obligatory testing to labs; dispensaries, in the meantime, may obtain merchandise that could possibly be contaminated with chemical solvents, fungus or pesticides.
However, as Osher and Wyloge reported this month, Colorado’s Marijuana Enforcement Division might now require impartial labs or exterior distributors to gather product samples for testing earlier than they are often offered. That will take away marijuana producers’ means to decide on which merchandise they ship in.
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The Clear Labels Act Would Change What You Know About Your Prescription Medicine
U.S. senators launched laws this month that may require prescription drug labels to establish the place the medicine was made, including momentum to a yearslong marketing campaign to convey extra transparency to the usually elusive generic drug trade.
Present labels usually listing solely a distributor or repackager of a drugs and typically present no info in any respect. The Clear Labels Act, launched by Sens. Rick Scott, R-Fla., and Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., requires labels to reveal the unique producer in addition to the suppliers that produced key components.
A spokesperson for the commerce group for brand-name drugmakers instructed ProPublica that the trade would “welcome conversations about how you can strengthen the biopharmaceutical provide chain.” The generic drug lobbying group mentioned that further labeling necessities would impose “important prices in change for restricted returns,” including that drug producers already disclose nation of origin info below U.S. Customs and Border Safety guidelines.
Our reporters needed to file public data requests and sue the FDA in federal court docket to acquire details about the place generic medication are made and whether or not authorities inspectors had flagged these factories for security or high quality considerations. We in the end created a first-of-its-kind device that enables customers to search out the knowledge themselves.
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Mass. Governor Proposes Eliminating Statute of Limitations for Rape When DNA Proof Exists
Final 12 months, WBUR and ProPublica instructed the story of a girl who, based on a police report, had been raped and stabbed after accepting a journey in 2005 from a person who mentioned he acknowledged her from faculty. DNA testing later related a person accused of a number of assaults to her case, however prosecutors needed to drop costs below Massachusetts’ statute of limitations.
Underneath Massachusetts regulation, prosecutors have solely 15 years to file costs after an alleged rape — and it’s practically not possible to convey costs previous that statute of limitations even when new proof emerges. That locations Massachusetts behind nearly each different state within the nation. Makes an attempt to broaden that window have failed yearly since 2011 partly as a result of protection attorneys have opposed modifications, arguing an extended deadline dangers violating the rights of the accused.
WBUR’s Willoughby Mariano reported that Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey needs to get rid of that deadline for rape instances when DNA proof exists. The availability, which is included in Healey’s funds proposal for the 2027 fiscal 12 months, must go each chambers of the state Legislature. If enacted, it will have an effect on instances the place the statute of limitations has not but expired and future instances, however not older instances.
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We Discovered New York’s Guardianship System in Shambles. Now State Lawmakers Say They Have a Plan to Assist Repair It.
Two years after ProPublica’s Jake Pearson first documented New York’s dire scarcity of guardians — and the substandard care some present — state lawmakers launched laws to spice up spending on the system by $15 million a 12 months. It might be an unprecedented money infusion for a forms that has lengthy struggled to take care of the tens of 1000’s of disabled or aged New Yorkers who can not take care of themselves.
The brand new invoice, referred to as the Good Guardianship Act, goals to assist probably the most susceptible phase of this inhabitants: those that are too poor to pay for a personal guardian and who don’t have any household or mates keen to serve. Advocates say the Good Guardianship Act is probably the most promising step up to now in bettering the system — if it will probably get the assist of Gov. Kathy Hochul.
The proposal follows a 2024 ProPublica investigation that exposed how the state’s guardianship system was failing this group particularly by conducting little to no oversight of guardians, a few of whom supplied substandard care and exploited these they had been charged with taking care of. The tales additionally prompted the state legal professional basic to open an investigation into a number of guardianship suppliers and spurred the court docket system to nominate a particular counsel to enact reforms.
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After Years of Silence, Texas Medical Board Points Coaching for Medical doctors on Methods to Legally Present Abortions
For the primary time since Texas criminalized abortion, the state’s medical regulator is instructing medical doctors on once they can legally terminate a being pregnant to guard the lifetime of the affected person — steering physicians have lengthy sought as ladies died and medical doctors feared imprisonment for intervening.
The brand new mandated coaching for any physician offering obstetric care goes over 9 case research for physicians the place abortion is taken into account authorized to guard the lifetime of the affected person. A number of the eventualities within the coaching are much like cases ProPublica investigated, similar to miscarriages the place a affected person’s water breaks earlier than time period however there may be nonetheless a fetal heartbeat or when somebody is experiencing issues from an incomplete abortion.
ProPublica’s reporting has proven that being pregnant turned much more harmful within the state after the regulation took impact: Sepsis charges spiked for ladies struggling a being pregnant loss, as did emergency room visits by which miscarrying sufferers wanted a blood transfusion; a minimum of 4 ladies within the state died after they didn’t obtain well timed reproductive care. Greater than 100 OB-GYNs mentioned the state’s abortion ban was accountable.
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