Journalists
Receive Awards from NYSSCPA for Financial Reporting
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Lois Whitehead, Public Relations Manager
212-719-8405
lwhitehead@nysscpa.org
NEW YORK, NY, March 31, 2009 – The
New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants (NYSSCPA)
has announced
winners for its Excellence in Financial Journalism Awards that
recognize reporters from the national and local press who contribute
to a better understanding of business topics. Twelve judges,
representing the NYSSCPA and the New York Financial Writers Association,
selected winners. Journalists will be presented with their awards
at a luncheon at the Yale Club in New York City on May 5th.
This
year’s winners are:
BOOKS:
Business/Financial:
Fran
Hawthorne, Bloomberg Press, Pension Dumping: The Reasons,
the Wreckage, the Stakes for Wall Street, a hard look
at the practice of terminating pension plans which has become
a problem
with broad implications for companies, employees and retirees.
General
Audience:
Byron
Acohido and Jon Swartz, USA Today, Zero Day Threat, a remarkable
body of investigative work that has
set them
apart as national
experts on data theft and Internet-enabled financial scams.
PRINT – Business/Financial – Magazine,
under 1,500 words:
Alexei
Bayer, Research Magazine, The Global Economy, a series of articles
analyzing economic trends
that affect
both the
fate of nations and the contents of investors’ wallets.
PRINT – Business/Financial,
Newspaper, under 1,500 words:
Tom
Herman, The Wall Street Journal, a series of tax columns designed
to improve public
awareness and understanding
of individual income-tax issues and tax-efficient
investing strategies.
PRINT – Business/Financial,
Magazine, over 1,500 words:
William
Selway and Martin Z. Braun, Bloomberg Markets
Magazine, Broken Promises, a series of articles
about how JPMorgan
convinced school districts, counties and cities
to use interest-rate swaps, complex derivatives that
were supposed
to provide
low-cost
financing
to the public. Instead, taxpayers lost millions
of dollars as JPMorgan reaped profits.
PRINT – Business/Financial – Newspaper,
over 1,500 words:
Jonathan
R. Laing, Barron’s, The
Next Government Bailout?, an analysis of the decline
and fall of the government-sponsored
mortgage entities Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac.
PRINT – General
Audience, Newspaper, over 1,500 words:
Kevin
McCoy and Erik Brady, USA Today, Rx for Errors, a series of
articles showing
that major
pharmacy
chains’ corporate
policies play a role in prescription
errors that kill some patients, injure
others
and threaten the health of many more.
ELECTRONIC
MEDIA – Business/Financial:
Jonathan
Weil, Bloomberg News, When
Numbers Mislead, a series of articles
with valuable
insight on
Fannie Mae
and Freddie
Mac, written six weeks before the
government placed the world’s
two largest mortgage buyers in a
conservatorship, ousted their chief executive officers
and eliminated their dividends.
ELECTRONIC
MEDIA – General Audience:
Keith
Naughton, Newsweek, a series of articles about the auto industry
offering
deep reporting
and intelligent
analysis
of
the industry.
WIRE
SERVICE – Accounting:
Michael
Rapoport and Dawn Wotapka, Dow Jones Newswires, Lurking
on the Balance
Sheet,
a series of articles
warning readers
of the dangers lurking on
the balance sheets of homebuilders,
insurers,
Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae and
others.
WIRE
SERVICE – Business/Financial:
David
Evans, Bloomberg News, Way Ahead of the Curve,
a series of
articles that foresaw
in
detail how
and why the
varied
elements of the global
financial meltdown
would occur, months before
they happened. The U.S.
House and Senate used these articles
to prepare
for hearings to question
top finance executives about the
economic collapse.
WIRE
SERVICE – General Audience:
Eric
Carvin and staff, The Associated Press,
Meltdown 101, a daily
series of articles
explaining some
aspect of the
economic crisis in
terms the average reader could
understand.
RADIO – News
Segment:
Chris
Arnold, National Public Radio, Fraud
and Greed in
the Mortgage
Crisis, segments
on interviews
with
current and
former employees
who described
the missteps, temptation
and outright
fraud that led
the mortgage
industry into the
biggest financial
melt-down
since the great
depression.
RADIO – Feature:
Alex
Blumberg and Adam Davidson,
This American
Life and
National Public Radio,
The Giant
Pool of Money,
an hour-long
radio
documentary
that explains how
the
housing boom
inflated
and then
burst to
send the world into
economic
crisis.
TELEVISION:
Gary
Matsumoto, Bloomberg
Television,
401(k):
Hidden
Fees, a sixteen
month
investigation uncovering
how secretive
billing
practices enable 401K
plan
administrators
to
skim
tens
of billions
of
dollars
from workers’ plans.