Skip to main content

Violence by Rikers Guards Grew Under Bloomberg

By Michael Schwirtz and Michael Winerip The New York Times
During Mr. Bloomberg’s last term, use of force by officers on inmates jumped by 90 percent, according to Correction Department data. Inmates’ advocates and public officials charged with overseeing the jails said they pleaded for the administration to address the issue.

Racism, the Misuse of Genetics and a Huge Scientific Protest

Michael Hiltzik Los Angeles Times
Perhaps unwittingly, perhaps deliberately, Wade has blurred "the distinction between storytelling and science," writes Eisen. The blurring of that line is infecting scientific discussions that have great public implications--it's visible, for example, in the political attack on climate science, the promotion of creationism, and the marketing of California's multibillion-dollar stem cell program.

Labor Ruling Puts Atlanta’s Fast-Food Empire on Edge

Dan Chapman and Leon Stafford The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
A recent National Labor Relations Board ruling means unions could one day organize nationally among all McDonald’s workers, rather than one store at a time. Nowhere perhaps did the ruling reverberate louder than in Atlanta, headquarters for Arby’s, Chick-fil-A, Popeye’s and other fast-food franchises, as well as many hotel, retail and temp agency chains.The ruling could be a huge boost for the Service Employees International Union, which is organizing fast-food workers.

Harassment in Science, Replicated

Christie Aschwanden The New York Times
When women are dissuaded or excluded from even a handful of opportunities, the loss to science is enormous.

Books: Changing the Ed Reform Narrative

Michael Hirsch The Indypendent
A review of two important new books that tell a different story about what teachers do, what parents want and what children need.

‘It’s Going to be War': Quebec Police, City Workers Ditch Uniforms to Protest Liberal Government’s Pension Reforms

Sidhartha Banerjee National Post
The Liberal Government in Quebec is attempting to pass a bill that would mandate a 50-50 split between municipalities and unionized workers on pension contributions and future deficits. Over 122,000 municipal workers and retirees would be affected. The bill would freeze the automatic indexing for current retiree pensions. Unions are fighting back.