Pitches/Tips: sherships@gmail.com 718-938-0576 

  • Home

  • Work

  • Honors

  • About

  • Contact

  • More

    Use tab to navigate through the menu items.
    • All Posts
    • BBC
    • Favorites
    • Household Name
    • HowSound
    • Marketplace
    • NPR
    • Planet Money
    • Radiolab
    • Short Cuts
    • Studio 360
    • Tablet
    • The Indicator
    • The New York Times
    • The World
    • Transom
    • WNYC
    Search
    The Five Percent Rule on HowSound
    Sally Herships
    • Aug 24, 2011
    • 1 min

    The Five Percent Rule on HowSound

    The amount of effort Sally Herships put into her first investigative journalism piece….. well, it’s enough to drive you to smoke! “The Five Percent Rule” is Sally’s 10-month-long foray into investigative reporting, a story on the under-pricing of tobacco on military bases. The piece aired on Marketplace in June of 2011 as part of a series on tobacco.On this edition of HowSound, Sally talks about some of her behind-the-scenes work on the project. It’s a bit startling, actually
    13 views0 comments
    Sally Herships
    • Jul 13, 2011
    • 1 min

    Military tobacco - a follow up to our investigation

    Last month on Marketplace, I published a report from my year-long investigation about how Army, Air Force and Coast Guard bases in more than a dozen states sold tobacco at illegally low prices, even as the Department of Defense (DoD) spends more than $1.5 billion a year on tobacco related costs. While reporting this story, one of the big questions nagging at me was this: If a base did adjust its prices for tobacco, raising them to legal levels, how much would be saved on heal
    2 views0 comments
    Military underprices tobacco more than law allows
    Sally Herships
    • Jul 2, 2011
    • 5 min

    Military underprices tobacco more than law allows

    Tess Vigeland: Brown tobacco leaves are costing the military a lot of green. The Department of Defense spends over $1.5 billion a year of taxpayer money on tobacco related expenses. Members of the armed forces are 1.5 times more likely to smoke than civilians. But an investigation by reporter Sally Herships shows the military regularly fails to comply with its own tobacco pricing restrictions. It sells millions of dollars of cigarettes, cigars and chewing tobacco at prices lo
    4 views0 comments
    • Facebook - Black Circle
    • Twitter - Black Circle
    • Google+ - Black Circle