Good local journalism always informs and sometimes entertains. It keeps communities up-to-date on the good and awful to help us better understand where we live. Day after day after day.
Among our highest callings is publishing fair, accurate and timely investigative and accountability reporting. That journalism holds powerful people and institutions to account for their actions and inaction — challenging work long embraced by The News & Observer.
Sometimes the reporting develops into multi-story packages exploring complex problems. Hopes Foreclosed, a recent investigation by McClatchy NC I-team members David Raynor and Ames Alexander, exposed the toll taken by NC HOAs, which can seize and sell homes for any amount of unpaid dues, no matter how small.
Other reporting is propelled by recent news, such as Teddy Rosenbluth’s discovery that some obstetricians, a group already in short supply in rural parts of this state, are fleeing North Carolina due to new abortion restrictions. Even some who did not put abortion at the core of their work or studies.
Throughout 2023, N&O reporters across beats delivered public service journalism, always deepened by collaborations with N&O visual journalists Robert Willett, Ethan Hyman, Travis Long, Kaitlin McKeown and Kevin Keister.
Below are more examples, focused on issues relevant across North Carolina. On Dec. 29, look for samples of N&O accountability reporting focused on the Triangle and nearby communities.
POLITICAL POWER & INFLUENCE
Dawn Baumgartner Vaughan, Luciana Perez Uribe Guinassi and Alexander, a Charlotte Observer reporter, explored the lobbying power of prosecutors, showing how a powerful group wields its influence.
A powerful state lawmaker was unusually candid with NC McClatchy congressional correspondent Danielle Battaglia about how state money is steered to the districts of those with influence.
On another topic, Battaglia documented how common it was for power players to get around rules meant to keep federal pandemic relief money from going to lobbyists and political consultants.
Dan Kane revealed how Republican Insurance Commissioner Mike Causey hired political allies and friends and organized parts of his agency to accommodate them.
Kyle Ingram and Kane brought sunshine to a new decision by state lawmakers to keep their own records secret. Kane also fact-checked a leader’s reason cited for dramatic move.
Vaughan and Perez Uribe explored how the state budget added new powers for legislative leaders.
Ingram and Rosenbluth gave a full accounting of how the budget steered public money to churches and faith-based groups.
Vaughan revealed a provision in the budget that was a surprise to some lawmakers, and led to lawmakers removing it.
Avi Bajpai examined what was happening behind the scenes in a secretive effort to legalize casinos.
GOVERNMENT STUMBLES
Tyler Dukes investigated the rollout of a new digital records system in state courts, showing it was linked to multiple problems — mistaken arrests included, lawyers say. District attorneys asked for an independent review but none came.
Virginia Bridges revealed that the state continues to lock kids up in small rooms, an isolating practice long deemed risky, due to administrative problems such as staff shortages and detention center overcrowding.
Kane detailed a spike in deaths of people locked up in county jails. In all cases, state investigators concluded that detention officers weren’t checking inmates as frequently as state rules require.
In their Burdened After Death series, Alexander and Raynor revealed big delays by state officials on completing state-mandated death investigations. In nearly 1,400 cases since 2020, they took more than a year, burdening families financially and emotionally.
HEALTH & ENVIRONMENT
Dukes, Rosenbluth and Charlotte Observer editor and reporter Lisa Vernon Sparks detailed the toll of the NC maternal death rate being higher than the country overall. Dukes discovered that the one state group tasked with understanding why is years behind other states in studies.
Rosenbluth showed how for a brief few weeks, NC State Health Plan members had a rare window into the secretive world of drug pricing. But documents were removed due to pressure from a company.
Battaglia followed up on a law that aimed to secure long-delayed justice for families and explained why delays were continuing despite the rules.
Perez Uribe, Alexander and Rosenbluth found on-the-ground examples of how important Medicaid expansion could be. For some, it was potentially the difference between life and death.
UNC & HIGHER EDUCATION
After the daytime killing of a faculty member at UNC-Chapel Hill, Korie Dean uncovered gaps in the campus’ active shooter training, and how the university had missed a chance to fill those gaps.
In her coverage of changing rules governing the public UNC System, Dean also revealed what was happening to diversity efforts despite assurances that a new policy did not target them.
Public figures in hot water
Vaughan questioned state House Speaker Tim Moore about an “alienation of affection” lawsuit filed against him.
Bajpai used public records to deepen his reporting on evolving details linked to former State Auditor Beth Wood’s car crash.
Politics and government editor Jordan Schrader contributed to this report.
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