The U.S. government hopes to assuage cynicism and begin a new chapter of healing for Native people.
Kate Schimel
Kate Schimel is High Country News’ news and investigations editor. She lives in Bozeman, Montana.
What to read next about Latinos in the 2024 election
Five stories we think you should make time for.
Short-lived or shallow, it’s still water
Notes on what is fluid and flowing, even if ephemeral.
San Carlos Apache call for international intervention over copper mine at Oak Flat
At the U.N., leaders describe the destruction of Indigenous sacred sites as a ‘major human rights violation.’
Fossil-fuel sabotage comes to Hollywood
The director of ‘How to Blow Up a Pipeline’ discusses the value of popular media for environmental ends and whether destroying pipelines is an act of self-defense.
What the heck is the Sonoran Avalanche Center?
A sardonic social media account gains popularity from taking down sacred ski idols and imagining a future without snow.
What comes after the fire?
Friction from the past intensifies in environmentally stressed regions.
The place that coal built and fire burned
Extractive industry laid the infrastructure for the suburban sprawl that fueled Colorado’s destructive Marshall Fire.
In spite of bans, evictions in New Mexico continued during the pandemic
Landlords and property managers filed more than 11,000 eviction notices since April 2020.
The lessons on storytelling that William Kittredge taught
The beloved teacher and writer was preoccupied with the particular.
A runner reimagines his place in a sprawling city
And creates new connections from the details.
Get to know the Green New Deal, by the numbers
The plan would boost the U.S. economy and eliminate fossil fuel use in ten years.
What killed Washington’s carbon tax?
The curious death of 1631 and what it says about the future of addressing climate change.
Ryan Zinke to step down as Interior secretary
Zinke shrunk national monuments, rolled back sage grouse protections and ramped up drilling.
In the West, climate action falters on the ballot
While climate-focused candidates won key races in the region, ballot initiatives to limit fossil fuels’ effects failed.
The lone punk rocker of Paonia
A musician finds a home among a small town’s orchards and fields.
Mining protections lapse on one of Oregon’s wildest rivers
The Department of Interior’s failure to extend restrictions exposes the weaknesses of a key environmental law.
Rural communities look at new ways to fortify mental health
A dearth of professional help leaves small-town residents seeking help from one another.
A hard look at outdoor rec’s influence — and cost
The outdoor industry fills a unique role in the West as a political force and as an entity getting more people outside.
Recreation is redefining the value of Western public lands
Visits to public lands and consumer spending grow, as agency budgets atrophy.