Charlotte Keith
Investigative Post ReporterCharlotte Keith joined Investigative Post in September 2014, after graduating from Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, where she was a fellow at the Toni Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism.
Keith, 23, is a native of London. She earned her undergraduate degree in English Literature from the University of Cambridge, where she edited Varsity, the school’s independent student newspaper.
Her work for Investigative Post has included stories on how Yahoo’s Lockport data center received almost half a billion dollars in subsidies, the problems at Erie County’s Child Protective Services, and the lowering of the workforce diversity goals at the state’s Riverbend construction project.
-
The Niagara Power Project in Lewiston generates cheap, clean hydropower, one of the region’s most valuable resources. But for years, there were complaints…
-
The 43North business plan competition had a problem. The Buffalo Billion funded program offers winning startups investments of a quarter of a million…
-
In a city as poor as Buffalo, a lot of people depend on government rental assistance - and that can make it hard for them to find a place to live. There…
-
Bringing IBM to Buffalo was one of the big projects funded by the Buffalo Billion, Governor Cuomo's signature initiative to revitalize Western New York's…
-
Investigative Post: 43North competition brings companies to Buffalo, but struggles to keep them hereCory Rosenfield knew the deal: in exchange for up to a $1 million state investment in his fledgling company, he would have to move the business to Buffalo…
-
The possibility of extending the Metro Rail to Amherst is as close as it’s been in 40 years. But there are still major hurdles as the next stage of…
-
New York State spent more than $600 million building a factory for SolarCity at the RiverBend site in South Buffalo. You might be surprised at what some…
-
When it comes to Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s Buffalo Billion initiative, SolarCity isn’t the only project experiencing problems. State officials had high hopes…