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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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Public Lands

Posted inArticles

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

by Christine Peterson February 17, 2025February 17, 2025

Career employees told HCN they were unsettled by the termination email sent by HR, which cited ‘performance issues.’

Anti-fracking graffiti on an abandoned house near Bloomfield, New Mexico, near Navajo Nation, expresses opposition to the oil and gas in the area.
Posted inArticles

Days before Trump took office, Interior approved oil and gas leases for land bought during 2019 public auction

by Chad Bradley February 11, 2025February 11, 2025

Company can begin to issue plans for drilling near Chaco Canyon buffer zone on Navajo Nation allotment.

Posted inArticles

These states use stolen Indigenous land to fund prisons

by Alleen Brown, Clayton Aldern and Maria Parazo Rose February 4, 2025February 4, 2025

State trust lands generate millions of dollars for carceral facilities and programs every year, largely from extractive industries like oil and gas drilling.

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

We must protect our sacred lands

by Clark Tenakhongva January 29, 2025January 29, 2025

To meet the crisis of our time and help address past wrongs, we need bold action from decision makers.

North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum speaks at the Republican National Convention in July 2024.
Posted inArticles

Trump’s nominee for leading Interior attempted to rip up rules governing public lands

by Mark Olalde and Mary Steurer January 27, 2025January 24, 2025

North Dakota sued the Interior Department at least five times under Gov. Doug Burgum. Now he’s set to run the agency.

Posted inArticles

The EXPLORE Act is a blueprint for bipartisan conservation legislation

by Zoë Rom January 13, 2025January 10, 2025

Bipartisan support for the act highlights the outdoor industry’s growing political clout, but questions remain about its cultural and environmental impact.

Posted inArticles

Outgoing Bureau of Land Management director optimistic about public lands

by Kylie Mohr January 10, 2025January 10, 2025

Tracy Stone-Manning discusses the BLM’s achievements and talks about the future as we enter a new political era.

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.

Posted inArticles

How Utah’s Christmas Festival has buoyed a changing coal community

by Brooke Larsen December 25, 2024December 24, 2024

Thirty-five years ago, Helper was nearly a ghost town. Now, art and tourism are providing new paths forward.

Posted inArticles

2024’s biggest conservation wins for the West

by Kylie Mohr December 25, 2024December 23, 2024

There were glimmers of good news across the region, from restored habitats to growing wildlife populations.

Posted inArticles

2024 set the stage for clean energy on public lands

by Erin X. Wong December 24, 2024December 23, 2024

Thanks to Biden administration policies, the momentum behind the energy transition could be hard to stall.

Posted inArticles

The Supreme Court decisions that gutted environmental protections in 2024

by Natalia Mesa December 19, 2024December 18, 2024

Several major cases destroyed federal agencies’ ability to address climate change and pollution.

Posted inArticles

Western monarch butterflies favor private land. Now what?

by Kylie Mohr November 25, 2024December 5, 2024

A new analysis of the butterflies’ migration routes shows the need for collaborative conservation.

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

How a dwindling helium supply is impacting public land management

by Zoë Rom November 18, 2024November 18, 2024

A new BLM plan for western Colorado makes a priority of helium production, worrying environmentalists.

Posted inArticles

Resource production or preservation? Election puts Alaska lands on the line

by Victoria Petersen November 1, 2024November 13, 2024

From oil in the Arctic to the Ambler Road, Alaska’s resource and conservation battles await a new administration’s fate, affecting communities, ecosystems and industries alike.

Posted inJanuary 2025: The West's Most Wanted

What Project 2025 has to say about Native communities

by Anna V. Smith October 29, 2024December 20, 2024

The initiative focuses heavily on resource extraction of tribal lands but lacks detail on other key issues.

Posted inArticles

How another Donald Trump term could dismantle federal agencies

by Mark Olalde October 23, 2024October 22, 2024

Trump moved the BLM’s headquarters from the capital to Colorado in 2020, causing disruption and an exodus of leadership. If elected, he plans to use the same tactic elsewhere.

Posts pagination

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Most popular stories

  • People brace for impacts on land, water and wildlife after feds fire thousands over holiday weekend
  • Trump’s funding cuts leave the nation vulnerable to catastrophic wildfire
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Featured Stories

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

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

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Trump’s funding cuts leave the nation vulnerable to catastrophic wildfire

Trump’s funding cuts leave the nation vulnerable to catastrophic wildfire

The West in Perspective

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