| Investigative Reporting: Story Ideas
Creating time for projects
    View yourself as a cook. Dailies are on the front burner, mid-range stories in the oven and long-term projects on the back burner.Try to spend some time each day working on each category. Don’t let projects sit without stirring them.Keep a running list of tasks to accomplish on your mid-range and long-term projects. When you’re waiting on phone calls or other actions for daily stories, work on those items.   Don’t forget about human sources
    People lead you to documents and documents lead you to people. Use both to “triangulate.’Cultivate sources regularly. Have a system for saving business cards, contacts etc.Spend at least some time checking out tips from sources, even those that seem unlikely to pan out.   Is it worth a project or just a daily story?
    Is the issue important? Are there real victims?Has the story been done before?Can you break new ground by obtaining records that haven’t been released?Will it make a good human story with characters and drama?What results will likely follow?   Questions to ask when you get a tip …
    Has the caller exhausted all avenues of appeal?Are there documents to back up the story?Who can you get to go on the record about the story?Is it just a problem for one person or possibly many?What is the caller’s motivation?   Coming up with good ideas
    Sources are keyRead agendas, ask for the full packet of info that the board getsRoutinely ask for the documents: tort claims, personnel actions etc.Localize big national storiesLook for larger issues in anecdotal storiesCreate email alertsUse Facebook, Twitter other social media   Investigative story ideas
    Run a background check on all key public officials you cover:
     
    Criminal, civil issues?Lies on their job apps or resume?Public disclosure forms, campaign contributionsCheck the environmental record of major industries in your town (DEQ, EPA)Ask for payrolls, line-item expenditures 
    Use your city’s pet license database to find favorite pet names or breeds. Or: do your city officials have their animals licensed?Use traffic ticket data to find members of the “100-mile-an-hour club” or to find speed traps.Use voter registration data to find the most faithful voters, or to find elected officials who can’t make it to the polls.Use day-care center inspection data to find centers most often cited.Use jail blotter data to find people most frequently arrested or to analyze arrests by race.Who is cited most often for code violations in your city?How often does your state environmental agency waive fines?Which city employee claims the most overtime?Who are the highest paid city (or school or county) employees?Examine teacher turnover, pay and experience at low-performing schools.  
		
	
	
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