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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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Sarah Trent

Sarah Trent is a freelance journalist who covers people and ecosystems affected by climate change and environmental degradation, especially in California and the Pacific Northwest. She lives in Vancouver, Washington. Previously, she was a High Country News intern.

Posted inArticles

Mass layoffs can move forward, with devastating impacts for conservation and science

by Sarah Trent July 9, 2025July 9, 2025

‘Shortsighted’ cuts could eliminate bird banding program, federal bee research and much more.

Posted inArticles

USGS’ biological research arm could vanish

by Sarah Trent May 22, 2025June 13, 2025

Trump is on a multipronged mission to eliminate a science agency that conservationists, toxicologists, universities and more call irreplaceable.

Posted inDecember 2024: Land as Reparations

Get to know the Pacific brant

by Sarah Trent December 1, 2024

Tech advances are transforming knowledge and conservation of North America’s favorite goose.

Posted inSeptember 2024: When Migrants Go Missing

Get to know the western bumblebee

by Sarah Trent September 1, 2024

Bombus occidentalis may soon be the West’s new face for insect conservation.

Picoso Farm in Gilroy, California, is still trying to recover from a series of devastating floods.
Posted inAugust 2024: In the Wake of the Floods

After historic floods, the safety net failed small farmers

by Sarah Trent August 1, 2024

Climate disasters are killing the largest subset of California farms. Government programs are too.

Sarah Ferris holds a flyer she received last year from the city of Vancouver informing residents that PFAS had been found in the city’s wells.
Posted inMarch 2024: Fertile Ground

The dangers of PFAS — and of downplaying their ubiquity

by Sarah Trent March 1, 2024

Even well-meaning officials often provide inadequate or misleading information, putting communities at higher risk.

Posted inOctober 2, 2023: The Dark Side of the Sheepherding Industry

To protect wild bumblebees, people have to find them first

by Sarah Trent September 25, 2023May 8, 2024

For six years, hundreds of volunteers have counted bumblebees across the Northwest. Their data is shaping pollinator conservation nationwide.

Cole Benak’s log chart and labels for water samples.
Posted inAugust 1, 2023: In the Line of Fire

Finding a fix for ‘forever chemicals’

by Sarah Trent July 26, 2023January 24, 2024

Tests found PFAS in nearly all the public drinking water in Vancouver, Washington. The city is testing a solution that could take years — and more than $170 million — to build.

Posted inArticles

A quarter of rural water systems likely contain ‘forever chemicals’

by Sarah Trent July 19, 2023January 24, 2024

USGS research confirms widespread PFAS contamination in drinking water — including in rural communities and private wells that are almost never tested.

Posted inArticles

It’s summer. But in the Northwest, spring never showed

by Sarah Trent June 22, 2023January 24, 2024

As spring gets weirder, warmer and less stable, water supplies, ecosystems and agriculture are getting out of whack.

During a heat wave last July, Gabe DeBay, medical services officer with the Shoreline Fire Department, checks the blood pressure of an unhoused man at a tent encampment in Shoreline, Washington. Heat in the Pacific Northwest is already higher than normal this year. Unhoused people and outdoor workers are among those at highest risk in more moderate, early heat.
Posted inArticles

Yes, 90 degrees can be dangerous

by Sarah Trent May 19, 2023January 24, 2024

From a jump in ER visits and gun violence to fears for maternal health, the Northwest’s May heat wave shows the dangers of more moderate, early heat waves.

The northern Pacific Ocean, from the NOAA Bell M. Shimada by Dr. Laurie Weitkamp.
Posted inArticles

Will the new U.N. High Seas Treaty help protect Pacific salmon?

by Sarah Trent April 13, 2023January 24, 2024

In March, conservationists worldwide celebrated the historic agreement, which governs the ocean waters where salmon spend most of their lives.

Snow geese fly away from the Berkeley Pit after a sunrise hazing in 2021.
Posted inApril 1, 2023: The Path Forward

How do you keep migrating birds off a giant toxic lake?

by Sarah Trent March 31, 2023January 24, 2024

Engineers struggled to keep snow geese away from Montana’s deadly Superfund site, but ecologists have a new plan.

A filtration system designed to filter out PFAS from the water supply in Horsham, Pennsylvania. The latest EPA proposal sets enforceable standards that are achievable using filtration technology that some East Coast utilities have used for years.
Posted inArticles

Most drinking water in the U.S. is contaminated by PFAS; here’s what you can do about it

by Sarah Trent March 28, 2023January 24, 2024

The EPA just proposed new rules on toxic ‘forever chemicals.’

Trains, cars, vehicles, homes and farmland are engulfed by floodwaters in Pajaro, California, on March 11th after a levee burst on the Pajaro River.
Posted inArticles

‘There is a whole hell of a lot of water up there right now’

by Sarah Trent March 17, 2023January 24, 2024

A parade of atmospheric rivers dumped historic rain and snow on California and beyond. What happens next?

Posted inArticles

In the once-cool forests of the Pacific Northwest, heat poses a new threat

by Sarah Trent February 24, 2023January 24, 2024

Drought can stress trees to death, but heat’s effects are less known. New research could hold the keys to protecting conifer forests.

Posted inFebruary 1, 2023: The Reveal

This Washington experiment could rebuild eroding coastlines

by Sarah Trent January 27, 2023January 24, 2024

In 2016, David Cottrell dropped $400 worth of rock on Washaway Beach to see what would happen. Now engineers are watching, too.

Posted inArticles

The power of atmospheric rivers, explained

by Sarah Trent January 4, 2023January 24, 2024

Back-to-back storms in California threaten lives, homes, and infrastructure — but will also bolster the West’s water supply.

Posted inArticles

When dams come down, fish come home

by Sarah Trent November 8, 2022January 24, 2024

As dam removal nationwide accelerates, experts are learning just how quickly rivers and fish respond.

Posted inNovember 1, 2022: The Futures of Conservation

How to prevent an anti-government revolution

by Sarah Trent October 26, 2022January 24, 2024

In eastern Oregon, one strategy has proven effective at inoculating communities against extremist ideology.

Posts pagination

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