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High Country News

High Country News

A nonprofit independent magazine of unblinking journalism that shines a light on all of the complexities of the West.

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HCN has covered the lands, wildlife and communities of the Western U.S. for more than 50 years. Get to know the West better by signing up to receive HCN’s on-the-ground reporting and investigations in your inbox.

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Jonathan Thompson

Jonathan Thompson is a contributing editor at High Country News. He is the author of Sagebrush Empire: How a Remote Utah County Became the Battlefront of American Public Lands. Follow him @LandDesk

California Proposition 4 will continue to help fund projects related to climate change, including beach restoration projects like this one in San Clemente.
Posted inFebruary 2025: Immigrant Stories

The climate fight endures

by Jonathan Thompson February 1, 2025January 31, 2025

Despite a hostile administration, local governments in the West recognize the need to
continue the energy transition, and they have plans.

Posted inArticles

AI on public lands and Biden’s environmental legacy

by Jonathan Thompson January 30, 2025February 3, 2025

The 46th president finished his term in customary contradictory style.

Posted inArticles

Jimmy Carter’s mixed environmental record

by Jonathan Thompson January 3, 2025January 2, 2025

The former president emphasized conservation, protection — and coal mining.

Posted inArticles

Our imperiled public lands

by Jonathan Thompson December 26, 2024December 26, 2024

President-elect Trump, a Republican-dominated Congress and Utah launch an all-out assault on environmental protection.

People wading in Lake Manly at Badwater Basin after a wet winter, Death Valley National Park, California.
Posted inDecember 2024: Land as Reparations

2024 was a year of wacky Western weather

by Jonathan Thompson December 1, 2024December 2, 2024

When assessing the region, not much was normal but climate change.

Posted inArticles

Beautiful Bears Ears is at risk, again

by Jonathan Thompson November 22, 2024November 22, 2024

What are the consequences for the land if the incoming president shrinks the national monument?

Posted inArticles

Montana’s Jon Tester might lose. Here’s why that matters

by Jonathan Thompson October 31, 2024October 31, 2024

What the Senate contest says about the unexpected shift in Western politics.

An unhoused woman pushes her belongings down the street in Scottsdale, Arizona. An Arizona initiative could force local governments to crack down on unhoused people or risk losing property tax revenue.
Posted inOctober 2024: Latino Vote

The downballot issues driving the West’s 2024 elections

by Jonathan Thompson October 1, 2024September 30, 2024

From climate and public lands to shifting political allegiances, the region faces critical choices at the ballot box.

Posted inArticles

Kamala Harris tries to navigate the convoluted politics of oil and gas

by Jonathan Thompson September 26, 2024September 30, 2024

Drill, Democrats, drill?

The living roof of the H2 Hotel in Healdsburg, California, both cools the building and mitigates rainwater runoff.
Posted inSeptember 2024: When Migrants Go Missing

What happens when a concrete jungle becomes a ‘sponge city’

by Jonathan Thompson September 1, 2024August 30, 2024

Engineering for flood resilience can address storms heightened by climate change.

Posted inArticles

Utah wants your public land — for more roads

by Jonathan Thompson August 29, 2024August 28, 2024

The state wants to build a highway through tortoise habitat.

Dusk in Phoenix during July 2023, when the city saw 20 straight days of extreme heat.
Posted inAugust 2024: In the Wake of the Floods

The inequity of heat

by Jonathan Thompson August 1, 2024August 1, 2024

Extreme heat doesn’t discriminate; the ability to escape it does.

Posted inArticles

Grabbing public land in the name of housing

by Jonathan Thompson July 25, 2024August 8, 2024

Have politicians finally found a way to take public land out of the public’s hands?

Posted inArticles

Who is spouting violent rhetoric?

by Jonathan Thompson July 17, 2024August 8, 2024

Reflections on this fraught moment in history.

The Berkeley Pit in Butte, Montana, filled with acidic, heavy metal-laden water after the mine closed in the 1980s. It’s now a Superfund site.
Posted inJuly 2024

Abandoned mines cover the West

by Jonathan Thompson July 1, 2024July 15, 2024

Their legacy is destruction and pollution of lands and waters.

Posted inArticles

Data centers could set back climate progress

by Jonathan Thompson June 27, 2024August 8, 2024

AI, cryptocurrency “mining” and our digital lifestyles imperil the energy transition — and the planet.

Posted inJune 2024: The Idea of Wilderness

Water inequality on the Colorado River

by Jonathan Thompson June 1, 2024June 14, 2024

A new accounting reveals deep disparities in Western water consumption.

Posted inArticles

Trump vs. Biden on the climate

by Jonathan Thompson May 31, 2024August 8, 2024

The next presidential election will have huge ramifications for the planet.

Posted inMay 2024: A River Returns

The West remains cattle country

by Jonathan Thompson May 1, 2024June 14, 2024

Livestock has indelibly altered the region’s land, water and air.

Posted inArticles

Is Biden a public-lands protector? 

by Jonathan Thompson April 25, 2024August 8, 2024

The administration makes the biggest land-management moves in a half century.

Posts pagination

1 2 3 … 31 Older posts

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People brace for impacts on land, water and wildlife after feds fire thousands over holiday weekend

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The West in Perspective

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