Category: Government
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 Two senators short-circuit Legislature’s plan to audit troubled Hallandale Beach CRABy William Gjebre 
 BrowardBulldog.org
 A Florida Legislature’s joint auditing committee is dropping its inquiry of Hallandale Beach’s questionable use of local redevelopment funds at the urging of two area state senators, one a long-time acquaintance of Mayor Joy Cooper.
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 / 6467 SEEN/ Governor’s choice for Broward Health board got immunity to testify in Jenne caseBy Dan Christensen 
 BrowardBulldog.org
 Gov. Rick Scott’s recent choice to serve on the governing board of Broward Health testified under a grant of immunity before the federal grand jury that investigated disgraced former sheriff Ken Jenne.
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 / 7318 SEEN/ In big win for defense industry, Obama rolls back limits on arms exportsBy Cora Currier 
 ProPublica
 The United States is loosening controls over military exports, in a shift that former U.S. officials and human rights advocates say could increase the flow of American-made military parts to the world’s conflicts and make it harder to enforce arms sanctions.
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 Lagging in South Florida, Broward County has no on-demand video of public meetingsBy William Hladky 
 BrowardBulldog.org
 Unlike most local governments, the Broward County Commission limits the amount of sunlight that shines on its meetings. Broward is the only county in Southeast Florida, and the only major government in Broward County, that does not archive its recorded commission meetings for later on-demand viewing online by the public.
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 / 6023 SEEN/ Security clearance lapses stemmed from Washington’s emphasis on speed over qualityBy Rebecca LaFlure 
 Center for Public Integrity
 Efforts by the government to fix a notable problem sometimes create a new mess that turns out to be as insidious and troublesome as the first, or even worse. This is what happened when Washington attempted to improve the way its security agencies vetted hundreds of thousands of workers needed suddenly after the 9/11 attacks to pursue counterterror tasks and oversee heightened secrecy requirements.
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 The impact and echoes of the Wal-Mart discrimination caseBy Nina Martin 
 ProPublica
 When the U.S. Supreme Court issued its 5-4 decision in Wal-Mart v. Dukes in June 2011, no one needed a Richter scale to know it was a Big One. In throwing out a mammoth lawsuit by women employees who claimed that they’d been systematically underpaid and underpromoted by the world’s biggest corporation, the ruling upended decades of employment discrimination law and raised serious barriers to future large-scale discrimination cases of every kind.
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