NYC: Here’s where lead has been found in school water fountains recently (tested in November 2016 or later). We’re looking for more data, especially from Queens schools - school buildings marked as grey had at least one elevated sample but we don’t have a copy of the results letter (looks like this) to see how many water fountains, if any, had lead. If you have a copy of a letter to share, send it to us at [email protected].
Thu Mar 30 2017
Fri Feb 17 2017
NYC metro area: Congress is on its first weeklong recess since President Trump’s inauguration (February 18 - February 26). This is traditionally a time for representatives to host town hall meetings with constituents, but we found that less than half of the tri-state region’s Congress members are hosting meetings. Use our Town Hall Tracker to see if your representatives are hosting a public meeting, and if you attend a meeting, share your experience with us using the hashtag #TownHallTracker.
Fri Feb 03 2017
Notes on Building a Judicial Election Tool
In 2016, WNYC set out to help New Yorkers “Judge Your Judges.”
The plan was to help increase access to nonpartisan voter information about judges by prototyping data aggregation tool that makes information about judicial candidates easy to find and navigate.
Or, in other words, give people a sense of all those unfamiliar names on the judicial ballot – who could affect policing, divorces and everyday life for everyday people.
The Knight Foundation supported this effort with a prototyping grant.
Our Premise
Judicial elections are the one of the least understood, least voted-in contests on the ballot, despite the fact that judges have a direct impact on individuals and communities. Few voters know the candidates, their purviews, a court’s history or the problems it faces.
We hoped that increasing voters’ local knowledge and participation in these life-impacting elections might get them more civically involved by showing concrete effects of their votes - how their vote impacts them.
In the end, I often brought us back to this scenario: “Imagine a voter standing in line at the poll and with no idea about the judicial elections. What can we give her to help make an informed choice?”
Areas of Inquiry
So many questions. We needed to dig, and fortunately we had the help of a bunch of investigators. They were Alex Gerald, Charles Innis, Gonzalo del Peon and Caitrin Sneed – students at the New School University’s Journalism + Design program, who were in a class taught by journalist Sarah Ryley specifically for this project. That class was made possible with a grant from the Revson Foundation.
The class set out to answer several questions:
- What would help people make their judicial election choices?
- What is each court supposed to do? What are they actually doing?
- What impact does a judge have on the outcome of a case? Can we quantify it?
- How does the judicial selection process work?
- What are its faults?
- Who were the delegates in the most recent races?
- How much influence do voters have on the outcome?
- Have there been any efforts to reform the process? What came of them?
- Which seats are up?
- Which races would make the most sense to focus on?
The students conducted surveys at the courthouse, shadowed reporters who cover the courts, interviewed attorneys, interviewed judges, called judicial delegates, talked to lawyers groups and got as much information online and on paper as they could.
Among their findings were that people at the courthouse would like information on candidates’ resumes and backgrounds before they go to the polls.
The class also found out that the New York State judicial election process is so complicated that even seasoned lawyers didn’t fully understand it.
Results
The work of these students provided the base for reporting of a series of stories by WNYC reporter Kat Aaron leading up to the primary and general elections in New York City.
The WNYC Data News team, joined for the summer and fall of 2016 by student Alex Gerald, to build an address-based voter guide. The guide, for what we believe was the first time, included names and information about delegates – the folks who ultimately decide who the New York judicial candidates will be.
WNYC has openly published the code and base data for the voter guide so that others may use it in future guides. In the near future – and certainly before the next election season – we hope to make it more plug-and-play and easier to repurpose.
Room for Improvement
The hope of our original grant was to create and test methods for getting this information out to people beyond our listening audience, including non-listeners who face arrest, eviction, foreclosure, collections, custody fights and divorce proceedings. Our prototype allowed to do some user testing on paper and cardboard models, and we did extensive user testing on our site. But we weren’t able to explore as far as might be possible with a project devoted to only that – something that may be easier now that we have prototyped building resources in general.
Sat Nov 05 2016
New Yorkers, Trump and Clinton won’t be the only ones on your ballot on Tuesday. Use our New York ballot guide to learn about candidates running in your district for everything from State Senator to Civil Court Judge.
Tue Sep 13 2016
Polls in New York are open until 9 p.m. tonight for the state and local primary. Here’s our guide with information on the candidates running. After polls close, we’ll have live results here.
Tue May 17 2016
In 2000, there were 1,394 Section 8 voucher households in Williamsburg’s nine census tracts where 40% or more of the population over 5 years old spoke Yiddish at home. By 2014, there were 12 such tracts housing 3,296 voucher households.
In Part 2 of our series on Section 8 in New York City, WNYC reporter Cindy Rodriguez and freelance investigative reporter Lisa Riordan Seville look at how Section 8 has helped the Hasidic community grow in Williamsburg.
Mon May 16 2016
More than 80% of Section 8 tenants in NYC now live in high-poverty areas, up from 2009. WNYC reporter Cindy Rodriguez and freelance investigative reporter Lisa Riordan Seville look at how the pressures of a heating housing market may be a reason why.
Mon May 16 2016
Last year, Housing Choice Vouchers (Section 8) provided rent assistance to 123,000 New York City households. Section 8 in New York City has grown by more 50% since 2000, but budget cuts and rising rents raise questions about the stability of the program. Listen to Part 1 of our series with our interactive map and read the story in the New York Daily News.
Wed May 04 2016
New York bird species endangered by climate change
Yesterday we published a story on a little brown bird struggling to hang on, the Saltmarsh Sparrow, at risk of extinction because of rising sea levels. We contacted the National Audubon Society and received data on all the New York bird species at risk of losing their ranges during the Summer nesting season. We were surprised to see so many ducks, including the Mallard, and birds like the Common Raven that we didn’t know were at risk. We made a graphical chart showing which birds have lost the most range, the birds at the top being those with the most loss.
Wed Mar 16 2016
Nailbiter Bot returns for March Madness
Nailbiter Bot tweets whenever a NCAA men’s or women’s basketball tournament game is close near the end. Never miss a game that is going down to the wire!
A game counts as close if:
* The score is within 8 points with between 1:30 and 3:00 left on the clock
* The score is within 6 points with between :30 and 1:30 left on the clock
* The score is within 4 points in the last 30 seconds
You can follow along on Twitter, but if you use the Twitter app for iOS or Android, you can also get mobile notifications whenever Nailbiter Bot tweets:
If you’d like to learn how we created Nailbiter Bot in 2014, check out our Source blog post here.