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IRE announces winners of the 2024 Philip Meyer Journalism Award

(Jan. 21, 2025) The annual Philip Meyer Journalism Award from Investigative Reporters and Editors recognizes the best use of social science research methods in journalism. This year, IRE honors five investigative projects from a pool of exceptionally strong applicants.

Winning projects will be recognized March 7 at the 2025 NICAR Conference in Minneapolis, during the Friday evening Philip Meyer Award Presentation.

The winners are:

  • First place: Bloomberg News for “How Thousands of Middlemen Are Gaming the H-1B Program,” on exploitation of the U.S. specialty worker visa program. 
  • Second place: Center for Public Integrity in collaboration with Reveal, Mother Jones and PRX for “40 Acres and a Lie,” exposing failed promises of reparations to enslaved Americans. 
  • Third place: The Dallas Morning News and the San Antonio Express-News for “Bleeding Out,” a critical accounting of trauma death within the American medical system.
  • Honorable mention: The Wall Street Journal series, “Medicare Inc. How Giant Insurers Make Billions Off Seniors” (see part 1, 2, 3 and 4), on financial impropriety within the Medicare Advantage program.
  • Honorable mention: The Examination and The Houston Chronicle for “Oil Companies Leak Toxic Gas across Texas — Making Local Residents Sick,” exposing pollution danger facing residents.

Judges’ comments on winning investigations

“There was an incredible breadth of work from both large and small newsrooms this year, using a variety of methodologies including genealogical research, automated handwriting recognition and a unique research agreement to access private data,” said Sarah Cohen and Brant Houston, co-chairs of the 2024 Philip Meyer Journalism Award Committee.


First place

“How Thousands of Middlemen Are Gaming the H-1B Program,” Bloomberg News

By Eric Fan, Zachary Mider, Denise Lu and Marie Patino

Judges’ comments: Bloomberg News reporters found a handful of companies that learned to game the American H1-B visa program, which was intended to bring the world's top talent to American businesses. Reporters leveraged statistical analysis to cut through the 1.8 million applications, allowing them to document a story that would have been otherwise impossible. In one instance, reporters found a network of staffing firms linked to an Indian politician that applied for visas for the same people, and took a cut of their salaries when they won the lottery. The reporters used analysis of anomalies to lead them to an algorithm that eventually identified about 3,500 staffing firms registered under multiple names. In all, the effort allowed Bloomberg to document a system that had been previously known only as whispers in the IT community. 


Second place

“40 Acres and a Lie,” Center for Public Integrity, Reveal, Mother Jones, PRX

By Alexia Fernández Campbell, Pratheek Rebala, April Simpson, Jennifer LaFleur, Nadia Hamdan, Cynthia Rodriguez and Roy Hurst

Judges’ comments: The Center for Public Integrity and its partners spent two and a half years unearthing the history and consequences of the United States’ most famous attempt at reparations for American slavery. The project, which includes a narrative podcast, used cutting-edge methods to answer a question few journalists would think to ask. Reporters trained an AI model to search digitized Freedmen’s Bureau records, identifying more than 1,250 formerly enslaved people who received land titles from the federal government. They then pieced together countless archival documents from plantation account books to military records in order to identify descendants and map property which had been distributed and then clawed back by the federal government.


Third place

“Bleeding Out,” The Dallas Morning News and the San Antonio Express-News

By Lauren Caruba, Ari Sen and Smiley Pool

Judges’ comments: A two-year investigation by The Dallas Morning News and the San Antonio Express-News found faster access to blood could have potentially prevented dozens of bleeding deaths each day in rural Texas towns and major cities on both coasts. They partnered with a leading trauma researcher at the University of Alabama at Birmingham to conduct a "first-of-its-kind" demographic and geospatial analysis of areas where access to high-level trauma care is the most difficult. They used categories to classify pre- and in-hospital deaths and excluded patients who were dead on arrival.  


Honorable mention

“Medicare Inc. How Giant Insurers Make Billions Off Seniors,” The Wall Street Journal

By Christopher Weaver, Anna Wilde Mathews, Mark Maremont, Tom McGinty and Andrew Mollica

Judges’ comments: In an extraordinary effort in analyzing billions of records for compelling stories, the Wall Street Journal showed that the Medicare Advantage program allowed corporations to bill taxpayers for illnesses that patients could not have suffered and were never treated. The effort stemmed from a novel use of a research agreement with the federal government, allowing reporters to examine records that had previously been available exclusively to academic and industry researchers. It provided a clear example of responsible use of private data to produce compelling, original stories ignored by the experts. 


Honorable mention

“Oil Companies Leak Toxic Gas across Texas — Making Local Residents Sick,” The Examination and The Houston Chronicle

By Will Evans, Caroline Ghisolfi, Amanda Drane and Amelia Winger

Judges’ comments: An inspiring investigation by a small newsroom, The Examination, partnering with the Houston Chronicle, mapped how oil companies are polluting Texas communities with hydrogen sulfide gas with little or no repercussions and sickening thousands of residents. The investigation not only used data analysis and extensive interviews, but further bolstered the story by reporters placing testing equipment at the residence of one beleaguered family that detected hydrogen sulfide levels frequently soaring past the state limit.


About the Philip Meyer Award

The Philip Meyer Award is named after the author of “Precision Journalism.” Meyer was a longtime journalist and educator who pioneered the use of empirical methods to improve news reporting. Read more about his legacy here.

Judges for the 2024 Philip Meyer Journalism Award are:

  • Sarah Cohen, Knight Chair in Data Journalism at Arizona State University, Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication
  • Emily Corwin, Senior Editor of Investigations at American Public Media
  • Brant Houston, Knight Chair in Investigative Reporting at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • David McKie, Deputy Managing Editor at Canada’s National Observer

The Philip Meyer Journalism Award follows the rules of the IRE Awards to avoid conflicts of interest. Work that included any significant role by a Meyer Award contest judge may not be entered in the contest. This often represents a significant sacrifice on the part of the individual — and sometimes an entire newsroom. The IRE membership appreciates this devotion to the values of the organization.

IRE works to foster excellence in investigative journalism, which is essential to a free society. Founded in 1975, IRE has more than 4,500 members worldwide. Headquartered at the Missouri School of Journalism, IRE provides training, resources and a community of support to investigative journalists; promotes high professional standards; and protects the rights of investigative journalists. The National Institute for Computer-Assisted Reporting was founded by the Missouri School of Journalism in 1989 and became a collaboration between the school and IRE in 1994.

Contact:

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