13 results
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Mean Streets
Getting rid of those folks with buckets equals getting rid of one of the county's better homeless-assistance programs.
By Paul Belden
Toxic Justice
Investigators caught Manuel E. Rojas and his company attempting to dump toxins in the Everglades. Sounds like a simple case to prosecute. It wasn't.
The People's Republic of Area A
A group of neighborhood leaders prepares to declare independence and start Broward's first black-majority city
Chute to Kill
In October a skydiver named Mike McDonald made a fatal leap. He was the third client of Skydive Palm Beach to die in a year.
Emerging Elitism
American Heritage School survives despite near financial collapse, angry neighbors, and a questionable relationship with a Plantation politician
The Fear of Living Dangerously
Victory Living Programs is supposed to teach mentally disabled clients how to live independently -- not to live in terror.
Cutting the Healing
The emotional triage performed by therapists for the severely disabled is being eliminated by budget cutbacks
Waging War Off the Port Bow!
Port Everglades pilots are fighting to retain power and a first-class wage
United They Fall
The effort to unionize Kitchens of the Oceans drove the company out of town and Haitian employees into unemployment lines
Biting Back
A K-9 took a huge chunk out of Rusty Samarco's leg. The crippling bite was worse than the crime.
Guilty by Reason of Insanity
Henry Wallace insists he wasn't insane when he stabbed his landlord seventeen times. And he thanked his jury for agreeing with him.
Islands in the Mainstream
Broward schools are determined not to separate disabled students from the general population. But how do you teach inclusion?
That's Why They Called It XS
The sad, sordid story behindthe shakeup at City Link: sexual harassment allegations, infighting, and vengeance