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February 2010
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January 25, 2010


Not enough money for Texas roads? Think again.

11:54 AM Mon, Jan 25, 2010 |  | 
Reese Dunklin/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Rest stop along Interstate 35 near SaladoDallas-Fort Worth commuters have begun paying tolls in recent years because, they were told, tax dollars were too few to expand all the congested roadways and build new ones.

The Star-Telegram did a nice job this weekend showing how there has been, in fact, public money to spare. Since 1991, nearly $1 billion has been dedicated to projects that had "little to do with mobility," the newspaper reported.

Two examples: $16.1 million for the Battleship Texas restoration project on the Texas coast and $262 million spent on highway rest stops across the state, including one for $10 million off Interstate 35 with Wi-Fi connections (shown at right).

Who's to blame? Texas transportation officials say the federal government ties their hands by requiring spending on enhancement projects, as these are called, in order to get a much larger chunk of construction change. Once the money is here, state lawmakers then push to use it on pet projects, such as $2 million for a Houston fire museum.

Do you have thoughts on how government is deciding to spend these transportation dollars? Leave a comment or e-mail me.

Use social-networking media to get your news? Follow the blog on Twitter, or join our Facebook group.


December 14, 2009


Hot Links: Government told to pay for traffic-jam alerts, even though taxpayers subsidized system

10:49 AM Mon, Dec 14, 2009 |  | 
Brooks Egerton/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

TrafficJam.jpgA decade ago, federal transportation officials hired Traffic.com to install high-tech sensors that measure freeway speeds and volume. The data can trigger traffic-jam alerts to electronic signs and other equipment.

But state and local governments can't post the alerts unless they pay the contractor a fee, The New York Times reports today, citing a non-yet-public audit by the U.S. Department of Transportation's inspector general.

Never mind that taxpayers have committed more than $50 million to the project.

The transportation department responded to the audit, according to Times, by citing "nine letters from members of Congress -- many of whom had received frequent campaign contributions from executives at Traffic.com -- who demanded, among other requests, that it skip a competitive bidding process and give more money to Traffic.com."

The story does not identify the politicians. It says Traffic.com, a subsidiary of Chicago-based Navteq, didn't respond to a request for comment.

In case you're wondering, yes, Traffic.com alerts do appear on dallasnews.com.

Do you have a tip about traffic? Government contracts? Send me an e-mail and let me know. Or join the conversation by commenting below.

If you're on Twitter, follow our blog at DMNInvestigates. You can also check us out on Facebook.

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The entry "Hot Links: Government told to pay for traffic-jam alerts, even though taxpayers subsidized system" is tagged: alert , dallasnews.com , electronic signs , freeways , government contract , highways , inspector general , message board , Navteq , taxpayers , traffic , traffic jam , Traffic.com , transportation department


October 28, 2009


Hot Links: The bus ride from hell

9:18 AM Wed, Oct 28, 2009 |  | 
Brooks Egerton/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Texas Bus Crash.JPGThere's an astonishingly long list of crimes, errors and other things that went wrong before last year's bush crash near Sherman killed 17 people, Dallas Morning News reporter Todd Gillman details today.

Here's a partial list of National Transportation Safety Board findings, in chronological order:

* Federal authorities ordered the bus company off the road because of safety violations.
* Owner Angel de la Torre re-registered it under a new name, ignored the order, and was operating without a permit or insurance.
* A Houston garage that inspected the bus about a week before the crash didn't notice an illegal retread tire on the front axle and wasn't equipped to inspect heavy vehicles.
* Bus driver Barrett Broussard drank alcohol and used cocaine shortly before departing Houston. He had previously been fired from another bus company after testing positive for cocaine.
* The tire suffered a puncture and operated -- underinflated and undetected -- for many miles. Pressure gauges aren't required for pre-trip inspections, and older buses such as this one don't have pressure warning systems like those in newer cars.
* The bus lacked seat belts, and some passengers were ejected in the crash.

Do you have a tip about transportation safety? Send me an e-mail and let me know. Or join the conversation by commenting below.

If you're on Twitter, follow our blog at DMNInvestigates. You can also check us out on Facebook.


October 12, 2009


Local senator questions NTTA's late-fee collection

11:04 AM Mon, Oct 12, 2009 |  | 
Reese Dunklin/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Toll boothOur blog has featured a couple of items on complaints with the North Texas Tollway Authority's billing system. The most common we've received: The agency doesn't keep track of toll payments then assumes drivers haven't made good, levies a stiff late fee and sics a bill collector on them.

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram's watchdog columnist, Dave Lieber, reported this weekend on similar complaints he's hearing. One reader was told he could be arrested if he didn't pay up.

A top NTTA official says the fees -- $25 per toll violation, plus other costs -- are needed to cover its collections operation. But state Sen. Jane Nelson is skeptical.

"It's gotten out of hand," she told Lieber. "What really bothers me is this is not supposed to be a revenue source for the NTTA."

The implication: Funding is tight as NTTA expands with more toll roads. Nelson also told Lieber that when she's made inquiries about this with agency officials, "They've been very defensive."


Do you have an experience with NTTA's billing system? Post a comment.

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The entry "Local senator questions NTTA's late-fee collection" is tagged: administrative , Allen Clemson , collection , collection agency , fees , Jane Nelson , late , North Texas Tollway Authority , NTTA , toll roads , tolls


September 25, 2009


Hot Links: Stimulus money bypasses Dallas roads

10:13 AM Fri, Sep 25, 2009 |  | 
Brooks Egerton/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Pothole.JPGHot Links today make the world seem somehow upside down.

1. The more you need help, the less likely you are to get it. That seems to be the logic transportation officials are using in deciding how to spend federal stimulus money. Reports USA Today: "Dallas trails only Los Angeles in miles of bad roads, yet it has received less than 1% of the $530 million that Texas approved for road repairs." A TXDoT official says our roads are so bad that fixes would cost too much to be eligible for funds.

2. The Dallas Morning News' Victor Godinez has a fascinating back story today about the Perot family confidant who's accused of insider trading. Reza Saleh, it turns out, helped rescue Perot employees from a prison in his native Iran 30 years ago. Now he's adding to the embarrassment facing Perot-affiliated investments this year. My colleagues Gary Jacobson and Brendan Case wrote a few months ago about the multi-billion dollar collapse of a family hedge fund.

Do you have a tip about street repairs? Hedge funds? Send me an e-mail and let me know. Or join the conversation by commenting below.

If you're on Twitter, follow our blog at DMNInvestigates. You can also check us out on Facebook.N


September 22, 2009


Hot Links: Dallas kids endangered on way to class

10:23 AM Tue, Sep 22, 2009 |  | 
Brooks Egerton/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

In today's Hot Links, Dallas-area TV stations show public employees endangering schoolkids on roadways.

1. Channel 8 obtained dash-cam video of a Dallas police response that sped through active school zones and past school buses. Doesn't Chief David Kunkle's strict speeding policy apply here?

Schoolbus.jpg2. Channel 11 reported that a Dallas County Schools bus driver lost a mentally disabled child for about two hours. Happy ending: The Oak Cliff boy apparently was asleep on the bus the whole time. Do drivers not check all their seats at the end of a route? What if this had happened in hotter weather?

Do you have a tip about schools and transportation safety? Send me an e-mail and let me know. Or join the conversation by commenting below.

If you're on Twitter, follow our blog at DMNInvestigates. You can also check us out on Facebook.


September 10, 2009


Hot Links: FBI's local face nailed for DWI crash

10:07 AM Thu, Sep 10, 2009 |  | 
Brooks Egerton/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Thumbnail image for LoriBailey.jpgSometimes the best stuff in The Dallas Morning News is in the briefs. Read on through today's Regional Roundup for three of my favorites:

1. Remember Lori Bailey (top right)? She used to be in the paper all the time as Dallas FBI office spokeswoman. Now she's gone -- and on probation for DWI after a wrong-way crash on the Dallas North Tollway.

goat.JPG2. Remember Jose Merced? Probably not. He's the Santeria priest who sued the city of Euless over its ban on sacrificing goats (lower right) and other critters. And he has won a major round in his freedom-of-religion court case.

3. Someone's going to have a doozy of a time explaining how this happened: An Eagle Mountain Elementary School third-grader slipped out of school on a bathroom break, found an unlocked employee's van with the keys inside and went on a five-mile joyride.

Do you have a tip about something wacky? Send me an e-mail and let me know. Or join the conversation by commenting below.

If you're on Twitter, follow our blog at DMNInvestigates. You can also check us out on Facebook.


August 4, 2009


Hot Links: Co-defendants at odds in bribery trial, stimulus funds astray, cheerleaders with ecstacy

8:43 AM Tue, Aug 04, 2009 |  | 
Reese Dunklin/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

investigatelogo.jpgThat's probably a trio of topics you wouldn't have expected to see in a headline. Let's read on:

1. Good news, bad news at the Dallas City Hall bribery trial, The News' Jason Trahan tells us. If you're Don Hill: You probably look more favorable to jurors after you were heard doubting the ethics of your co-defendant, D'Angelo Lee, on phone conversations secretly taped by the FBI. If you're Lee: Your co-defendant is heard doubting your ethics on phone conversations secretly taped by the FBI.

2. Supporters of the federal stimulus package said it was a chance to make $65 billion in repairs to crumbling, aging bridges. Want to guess where I'm headed next after that set-up? The Associated Press found that nearly half of the ones slated for funding are in good shape and wouldn't have qualified for money in normal circumstances. Best use of the stimulus?

3. This isn't our typical watchdog story to highlight: Lewisville High School cheerleaders had illegal drugs, such as Ecstasy, at a weekend clinic, KXAS (NBC-5) reports. As school district officials investigate, they should ask this of themselves: When was the last time they tested cheerleaders for drug use? District policy allows it, and athletes have been subjected to it after reports of steroid abuse.

Do you have thoughts or tips to share? Leave a comment or e-mail me.

Use social-networking media to get your news? Follow the blog or me on Twitter, or join our Facebook group.

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The entry "Hot Links: Co-defendants at odds in bribery trial, stimulus funds astray, cheerleaders with ecstacy" is tagged: administration , bribery , bridges , camp , cheerleaders , corruption , D'Angelo Lee , Dallas City Hall , Don Hill , drugs , ecstasy , ethics , Kathy Neely , Lewisville , Obama , spending , stimulus , testing , trial , wiretaps


July 21, 2009


Hot Links: Why did constables give this guy towing deal? Did agency cover up cellphone data?

9:08 AM Tue, Jul 21, 2009 |  | 
Reese Dunklin/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

investigatelogo.jpgBe careful with your vehicles and what you do inside them, as two stories in the news show us.

1. Wouldn't you like a deal like this? A businessman whose companies have stripped vehicles and sold parts builds a troubled record that includes loads of unpaid taxes. Yet he manages to get exclusive contracts with two Dallas County constables ... to tow vehicles. He and the constables end up doing so at a rate greater than some of the area's biggest suburban police forces. And, as The News' Kevin Krause tells us, he faces no oversight.

2. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration kept private research that showed driver inattention from cellphone use was similar to that of drunken driving. The agency worried Congress would become upset because it wanted researchers simply to gather data, not lobby states for action. Consumer groups now accuse the government of cover up, The New York Times reports.

Do you have a tip these or other subjects? Send me an e-mail or leave me a comment.

Like social networking? Follow us on Twitter at DMNInvestigates and ReeseDunklin. You can also join our Facebook group at DallasNews Digs.


July 13, 2009


Problem Solver: Intersection finally opens

2:21 PM Mon, Jul 13, 2009 |  | 
Katie Fairbank/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Problem SolverFinally, some relief.

No, not from the heat, but the traffic tie-ups at Buckner Boulevard and Garland Road, reports editor Steve Harris.

Steve drives through the Casa Linda Plaza intersection every day to and from work. Today, he found that the new left-turn lanes were finally done after weeks and weeks of promises.

What a difference, he says. There are now double, protected, green-arrow only left-turn lanes at each of the four points of the intersection, which has been one of the worst in Dallas for years.

So, we can finally put this repair job into the completed category. Whew.

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The entry "Problem Solver: Intersection finally opens" is tagged: Problem Solver; Buckner; Garland; intersection



Problem Solver: Another TollTag tale

12:25 PM Mon, Jul 13, 2009 |  | 
Katie Fairbank/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Problem SolverA reader let me know this morning about her issue with the North Texas Tollway Authority. She said I was welcome to post it for the rest of you readers.

"Today's article (DMN Problem Solver) was incredibly timely!

I called NTTA this morning regarding a 'Late Notice' I received for a charge ($6.17) that I knew I had paid on time. The 'Late Notice' assessed me a $2.50 late fee, for a total of $8.67.



Problem Solver: TollTag Troubles

11:16 AM Mon, Jul 13, 2009 |  | 
Katie Fairbank/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Problem SolverRosemary Udell of DeSoto doesn't have a TollTag, but she knows she always pays promptly when a bill arrives from the tollway. That's why she was upset when she got four invoices for 75-cent tolls, each with a $25 fee attached. She called. "They have a phone number, but they never answer it," she said. She wrote, but didn't hear back.

She e-mailed. "The email response said, 'We're too busy to look into this and we'll get back with you later.' The 'later' was a $103 collection agency notice," she said.

The problem was that the North Texas Tollway Authority didn't know Udell had paid her bills.

"The problem is there were no reference numbers on the checks, so they couldn't be cashed," said Sherita Coffelt, public information officer for the tollway authority. "The customer service director called her and worked it out. Everything should be good."

Udell confirmed that things should be fixed. Still, "I don't know why it's so difficult to get to someone," she said.

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The entry "Problem Solver: TollTag Troubles" is tagged: Problem Solver; TollTag; North Texas Tollway Authority;


July 9, 2009


Hot Links: Who are the Texas textbook advisers?

10:31 AM Thu, Jul 09, 2009 |  | 
Brooks Egerton/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

investigatelogo.jpgToday's Hot Links touch on books, religion and traffic.

1. Who are the Texas textbook advisers saying that Thurgood Marshall and Cesar Chavez are not major figures in U.S. history? One is a Massachusetts evangelical named Peter Marshall, whose Web site would be happy to sell you books, DVDs and more. The other is a North Texas evangelical named David Barton, whose Web site would be happy to sell you books, DVDs and more.

2. Most of America lives in major metro areas. But we urbanites and suburbanites aren't getting our fair share of federal transportation stimulus money, a New York Times analysis suggests.

Do you have a tip about textbooks? Stimulus spending? Another subject? Send me an e-mail and let me know. Or join the conversation by commenting below.

If you're on Twitter, follow our blog at "DMNInvestigates."


July 7, 2009


Problem Solver: Intersection still not open

11:32 AM Tue, Jul 07, 2009 |  | 
Katie Fairbank/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Problem SolverReaders are starting to wonder if the Buckner Boulevard and Garland Road intersection work will ever be done.

"Honestly, I'm sure that there's been progress -- but I don't see that anything significant has happened since May," a reader wrote.

The workers didn't make their end of June deadline for the intersection near Dallas' White Rock Lake. But the Texas Department of Transportation assures commuters that an end really is in sight.

"They are in the final stages of staining the asphalt and, hopefully, will be open by the end of the week," said agency spokesman Tony Hartzel.

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The entry "Problem Solver: Intersection still not open" is tagged: Buckner; Garland; Problem Solver; Texas Department of Transportation


June 30, 2009


Hot Links: Dallas County chases worth the risks?

10:04 AM Tue, Jun 30, 2009 |  | 
Brooks Egerton/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

investigatelogo.jpgYou'd better run for your life if you can, because here come today's Hot Links:

1. Another day, another long high-speed chase: This morning a woman eluded Dallas-area police officers for almost two hours. Yesterday a man did it for about 90 minutes. Dallas police themselves stayed out of the way -- their tight restrictions on speeding got even tighter last year after an officer racing to a disturbance without lights or siren killed a 10-year-old boy named Cole Berardi (lower right). Cole Berardi.JPG Dallas County constable Michael Gothard explained in The Dallas Morning News today why he still believes in risky pursuits: "If everybody quits chasing people, then everybody's just going to run."

2. The latest reason to fear Veterans Affairs hospitals: A doctor who treated prostate cancer patients delivered faulty radiation implants in 92 of 116 cases, The New York Times reports. This comes right on the heels of the scandal over dirty colonoscopy equipment, which apparently infected patients with AIDS and hepatitis. Here's a full report from the VA's inspector general.

Do you have a tip about police policy? VA hospitals? Another subject? Send me an e-mail and let me know.

If you're on Twitter, follow our blog at "DMNInvestigates."


June 25, 2009


Problem Solver: D/FW Airport recycles tons

2:02 PM Thu, Jun 25, 2009 |  | 
Katie Fairbank/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Problem SolverA reader asked what D/FW does to recycle. He sees a lot of recycling efforts at other airports, but not as much here. He sent a letter to the Airport Board to try to get the information but didn't get a response.

It turns out they do a lot of recycling. Tons of it.

Specifically, more than 7,813 tons of material since 1996. The airport collects recycling all over the place, too. There are 86 public-use newspaper recycling containers, 76 public-use plastic bottle recycling containers and 80 administrative office mixed paper-recycling bins.

The airport has almost doubled its primary recycling collection from 550 tons to 978 tons annually, Magana said.


June 24, 2009


Problem Solver: Airport overcharging on parking

12:00 PM Wed, Jun 24, 2009 |  | 
Katie Fairbank/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Express parking lot at D/FW International AirportA reader wrote that the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport has consistently overcharged him at terminal rates of $17 a day on his TollTag - even though he was parking in the Express North lot, which charges $10 a day.
He tried to explain the error to the operators at the exit tollbooths, but he couldn't prove that he had parked in the cheaper lot. He complained, but the problem has continued for months.

"That's an extra $7 a day for each person paying this," he said. "There is no incentive to fix their system when you figure how much they've been making on this."

The airport says there is a faulty data connection in its computerized system, so information is not always relayed from the Express North lot to the toll booths at the airport exits. When that happens, customers are charged at the higher terminal rate.

The airport is working on fixing the connection. Airport spokesman David Magana said the problem "should be corrected by the end of the month."

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The entry "Problem Solver: Airport overcharging on parking" is tagged: problem solver; Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport; DFW; parking; TollTag


June 16, 2009


DMN Problem Solver: HOV shut down for a year

3:01 PM Tue, Jun 16, 2009 |  | 
Katie Fairbank/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Problem SolverA caller let Problem Solver know that he was tired of seeing that the southbound High Occupancy Vehicle lane on Central Expressway has been shut down in parts of Allen and Plano for "no discernible reason."

There is a reason why the lane is not being used. It was shut down last October from Bethany Drive in Allen to Park Boulevard in Plano so that a contractor could build a wide center support for a bridge at Parker Road.

The closure is necessary to keep workers safe as they do the work, Hartzel said. "We're hopeful to get this back open by October," he said.

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The entry "DMN Problem Solver: HOV shut down for a year" is tagged: Central Expressway , highway , HOV , Plano , Problem Solver , road


June 15, 2009


DMN Problem Solver: Loop 288 work done in fall

2:30 PM Mon, Jun 15, 2009 |  | 
Katie Fairbank/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Problem SolverSeveral readers frustrated by roadwork have called and written to complain. For instance, Samra Jones Bufkins asked about construction on Loop 288 in the Denton area, saying the process has been "interminable."

"Stores and restaurants have gone out of business because the access was impossible, and traffic backed up horribly," she said. "In fact, it looks complete, but orange barrels and barricades block off up to two lanes in each direction. It's a finished road, but we can't drive on it. Why has this been allowed to go on so long?"

The $39 million project has been underway for more than three years, according to the Texas Department of Transportation.

"We understand motorists' desire to use the new section of Loop 288, and we hope to have the portion from Interstate 35E to McKinney Street open by the Fourth of July weekend," said spokesman Tony Hartzel. The entire project should be completed by September.

He said that even when roads look finished, there can be additional work items to complete. "In this case, contractors are working to finish irrigation work and safety-related issues such as pavement striping and signal light timing before the road can open

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The entry "DMN Problem Solver: Loop 288 work done in fall" is tagged: Denton , highway , Loop 288 , Problem Solver , streets


June 5, 2009


DMN Problem Solver: Intersection still closed

1:55 PM Fri, Jun 05, 2009 |  | 
Katie Fairbank/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Problem SolverIt turns out there are still some delays to opening up the left turn lanes at Buckner Boulevard and Garland Road.

Mark Titus, program manager of traffic management systems for the city of Dallas, had thought that the work at the intersection would be done at the beginning of June.

Five days later, frustrated drivers are anxious to know what is going on, noting that there has been "minimal progress" and that they're still sitting for what-seems-like-forever at the traffic light.

"Can you post an update? This construction has been dragging on FOREVER," wrote one reader.

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The entry "DMN Problem Solver: Intersection still closed" is tagged: Buckner Boulevard , Garland Road , Problem Solver


June 3, 2009


Investigates Hot Links: Wednesday, June 3, 2009

8:37 AM Wed, Jun 03, 2009 |  | 
Reese Dunklin/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

investigatelogo.jpgHere's a look at some of the public-interest stories in The Dallas Morning News and around the Web-o-sphere:

1. More public servants in legal trouble: News broke late last night that two Dallas police officers are under criminal investigation for allegedly beating up a prisoner in the city's drunk tank, Tanya Eiserer reports. They were apparently caught on video, too.

2. Transportation officials blame the increase in wrong-way driving deaths on the Dallas North Tollway primarily on drunks behind the wheel, Scott Goldstein tells us. They're taking safety measures, but a MADD rep says it's not enough. What do you think?

3. The Texas Department of Transportation is a frequent whipping boy of residents and politicians frustrated over congestion and construction. Sometimes it's deserved, sometimes it's not. But Michael Lindenberger's story raises the question: What happens if the agency can't be rescued from closure?

Did I miss a good story? Or do you have a tip? Send me an e-mail and let me know.


June 2, 2009


Investigates Hot Links: Tuesday, June 2, 2009

8:28 AM Tue, Jun 02, 2009 |  | 
Reese Dunklin/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

investigatelogo.jpgWe start today with questions, as we look at some of the public-interest stories in The Dallas Morning News and around the Web-o-sphere:

1. What's leading to all the fatal wrong-way crashes on the Dallas North Tollway? Overnight we had yet another one. Police say alcohol may be a factor in what The News' Scott Goldstein counts as the fifth such crash since October.

2. Are some homeowners' associations getting a little overzealous? One in Lake Highlands threatened to tow the vehicle of a Vietnam vet if he didn't remove military decals that he had displayed on his ride, News columnist James Ragland tell us. The HOA likened it to advertising.

Did I miss a good story? Or do you have a tip? Send me an e-mail and let me know.


June 1, 2009


Citizen Watchdog: Stimulus fueling road work

4:39 PM Mon, Jun 01, 2009 |  | 
Reese Dunklin/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Road constructionHere's a sign that the federal stimulus package is reaching into North Texas: Funding for local transportation projects.

In the latest installment of our Citizen Watchdog column, Jennifer LaFleur shows us a new online tool that we can use to keep track of the $2.2 billion in funding for new roads, bridges, bike paths and walking trails due to Texas.

The Texas Department of Transportation is operating the site. The information is organized by county. After clicking on a particular project, you can pull up a construction schedule, location map, funding breakdown and construction company in charge.

Jennifer used the TxDOT site to find that Harris County leads the state so far in the number of projects with 18. Tarrant County has the highest dollar amount, more than $1.2 billion.

Did you find the TxDOT site helpful? Did you spot an interesting trend? Leave us a comment and let us know.


May 26, 2009


DMN Problem Solver: Stuck in traffic

6:54 AM Tue, May 26, 2009 |  | 
Katie Fairbank/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Problem SolverA reader who drives to work on Garland Road gets stuck at the intersection of Buckner Blvd. every morning and afternoon.

"Yesterday, for example, it took me seven minutes to get through the intersection (no kidding, I checked my clock)," he wrote. After timing the lights, he saw that drivers on Buckner were getting a far longer green than the drivers on Garland. In addition, he said, a red light at a shopping center parking lot was backing traffic up even further.

"Is there a way to have the city set up an evaluation for this intersection? By the way, I have e-mailed the city a couple times about this over the last year or so and nothing ever comes of it."

Mark Titus, program manager of traffic management systems for the city of Dallas, went out himself to check out what was going on with the intersection.

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The entry "DMN Problem Solver: Stuck in traffic" is tagged: construction , red light , roads , street


April 9, 2009


Check the health of bridges across North Texas

3:09 PM Thu, Apr 09, 2009 |  | 
Ryan McNeill    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

News reporter Sarah Perry tells us that a "bridge over State Highway 114 near the Texas Motor Speedway could be closed for nearly two months for emergency repairs."

"The bridge on FM 156 was closed Wednesday after crews discovered a damaged beam on its underside, said Keith Nabors, a maintenance supervisor for TxDOT."

Bridge and roadway quality was thrust into the national spotlight when the I-35W bridge across the Mississippi River collapsed Aug. 1, 2007, killing 13. The collapse was caused by design flaws.

More than 1 in 4 of America's bridges are structurally deficient or functionally obsolete, according to the American Society of Civil Engineers.

So take some time and check the bridges near where you live and drive on our new searchable database.


Do you see something interesting in the data? Send us an e-mail.

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The entry "Check the health of bridges across North Texas" is tagged: bridges , collin , dallas , denton , infrastructure , north texas , rockwall , tarrant , texas


April 5, 2009


Investigates Hot Links: Sunday, April 5, 2009

9:24 AM Sun, Apr 05, 2009 |  | 
Reese Dunklin/Reporter    Bio |  E-mail  |  News tips

investigatelogo.jpgIf you're new to the blog today, welcome. Here are some of today's interesting stories from The Dallas Morning News and around the Web:

1. Our 2006 "Road Hazards" investigation of Texas truck safety found that a fourth of the 953 drivers faulted in fatal crashes earlier this decade had been previously convicted or sentenced to deferred adjudication probation. Now the FBI has linked long-haul truckers to serial killings claiming 500 victims across the U.S., the Los Angeles Times reports. Grapevine police are pursuing one of the truckers.

2. Gas wells tapping into the Barnett Shale have grown by the thousands in D-FW's western counties. Proposed Senate Bill 686 would try to lessen safety risks for residents by letting energy companies run pipelines along state highways rather than through neighborhoods, the Star-Telegram reports.

3. Talk about sticker shock. The Congressional Budget Office estimates the federal bailout of the financial sector will be about $356 billion, nearly twice as much as previously stated.


Did I miss a good story? Or do you have a tip? Send me an e-mail and let me know.

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The entry "Investigates Hot Links: Sunday, April 5, 2009" is tagged: bailout , big rigs , gas drilling , pipelines , Roads , safety , serial killings


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