Thanks to Biden administration policies, the momentum behind the energy transition could be hard to stall.
2024 set the stage for clean energy on public lands
Utah’s coal mines can’t find enough workers
A mine just reopened in eastern Utah, but the industry has changed.
Tribes sue after massive wind farm in Washington gets green light
The Yakama Nation contends that the project, which threatens ceremonial sites and wildlife habitat, is unlawful.
The Supreme Court decisions that gutted environmental protections in 2024
Several major cases destroyed federal agencies’ ability to address climate change and pollution.
The radical act of sharing Native literature
NDN Girls Books Club is more than a big pink truck full of free books.
Legal weed entrepreneurs promised a windfall from tribal lands. Then it fell apart.
The Fort McDermitt Paiute-Shoshone are still picking up the pieces from the failed cannabis cultivation venture.
Wildfire … in winter?
Expect more fires like the fast-moving one in Malibu, scientists say.
How did Native people vote this election cycle?
Accurate data is hard to come by, but one poll suggests many supported progressive priorities and liberal candidates.
Unhoused people pay a disproportionate price for the West’s deadly roads
People experiencing homelessness are more likely to die from transportation-related injuries than the general population.
The Biden administration weighs in on Colorado River management
Amid mounting drought, changing federal leadership and stalled state negotiations, new federal proposals aim to chart a forward path.
Can land repair the nation’s racist past?
California’s approach to Black reparations shifts toward land access, ownership and stewardship.
The aftermath of the Hermit’s Peak and Calf Canyon Fires
Devastation is hard to face, but
turning away is harder.
Can Farmington hide from its legacy of anti-Indigenous violence?
It’s a reservation border town problem, not just a local one.
Get to know the Pacific brant
Tech advances are transforming knowledge and conservation of North America’s favorite goose.
Is your pension fund liquidating Oregon’s forests?
Lax state regulations create a timber bonanza for institutional investors.
2024 was a year of wacky Western weather
When assessing the region, not much was normal but climate change.
The passion of the Mormon feminist
For 50 years, ‘Exponent II‘ has made the LDS Church squirm. It has no plans to stop.
How blue jeans got their sexy reputation
The artist George Quaintance painted some of the first erotic depictions of denim.
Spring of Whirling Omens
A poem by Carolina Hotchandani.
‘We’re all here together’
#iamthewest: Giving voice to the people that make up communities in the region.
