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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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Colorado

Posted inArticles

Collaborating to create more resources for rural students

by Neal Morton August 21, 2024August 20, 2024

In Colorado, 9 school districts broke down boundaries to prepare students for college and good jobs.

Posted inArticles

Wolverines may return to Colorado

by Christine Peterson August 9, 2024August 12, 2024

But can they survive in the warming southern Rockies?

Cars speed past wildlife fencing just west of Eagle Mountain, Utah.
Posted inAugust 2024: In the Wake of the Floods

How do you protect wildlife from sprawl?

by Ben Goldfarb August 1, 2024July 31, 2024

A fast-growing Utah exurb gets serious about migration corridors.

The Bessemer ditch near Pueblo, Colorado.
Posted inJuly 2024

A new documentary confronts water scarcity in the West

by Natalia Mesa July 1, 2024July 1, 2024

In Mirasol: Looking at the Sun, Colorado farmers fight to save their communities.

Posted inJuly 2024

‘I’m a staple here’

by Micheli Oliver July 1, 2024June 28, 2024

#iamthewest: Giving voice to the people that make up communities in the region.

Posted inArticles

Supreme Court curtails agencies’ ability to enforce regulations

by Erin X. Wong June 28, 2024August 8, 2024

The repeal of the bedrock Chevron doctrine throws climate and conservation laws into doubt.

Posted inArticles

Colorado’s oil and gas rules put taxpayers at risk, according to study

by Nick Bowlin June 28, 2024August 8, 2024

The report contradicts claims that the new rules are the ‘most robust in the country.’

Posted inArticles

When a landslide blocks your commute

by Christine Peterson June 24, 2024August 8, 2024

The Teton Pass collapse highlights the importance — and growing vulnerability — of mountain roads.

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 inJune 2024: The Idea of Wilderness

Elusive elephants, zany zebras and Idaho anti-anthropophagists

by Tiffany Midge June 1, 2024May 31, 2024

Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.

Posted inArticles

Denver’s new immigration plan, explained

by Natalia Mesa May 16, 2024August 8, 2024

The new program caps shelter stays for all new immigrants but expands services for 800 asylum seekers.

Posted inArticles

Denver lanza programa de asistencia para solicitantes de asilo

by Natalia Mesa May 16, 2024August 8, 2024

El nuevo programa busca brindar apoyo a 800 recién llegados, pero cortará recursos para los demas.

Posted inMay 2024: A River Returns

Bird-naming brouhahas, buggy burritos and a goat-milking meetup

by Tiffany Midge May 1, 2024April 30, 2024

Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.

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.

Posted inArticles

Can ice climbing bring life to an isolated Colorado town in the dead of winter?

by Bella Biondini April 18, 2024August 8, 2024

Lake City’s ice-climbing park is transforming the local economy.

Posted inArticles

Could building on public land address the housing crisis?

by Susan Shain March 7, 2024March 19, 2024

The West has a plethora of land and a shortage of houses. Some are wondering if a solution lies within.

Posted inArticles

The good, the bad and the ugly of the state legislative season

by Jonathan Thompson February 29, 2024February 28, 2024

While Congress does nothing, Western state lawmakers pass a flurry of consequential and/or crazy — bills.

Grant Davis walks back to his tiny home at Colorado Village Collaborative’s Native-Inclusive Safe Outdoor Space in Denver, Colorado.
Posted inMarch 2024: Fertile Ground

Can affordable housing for Indigenous communities work?

by Raksha Vasudevan February 27, 2024February 28, 2024

The question looms large as Denver breaks ground on its first affordable housing project for Indigenous people.

Posted inArticles

During climate chaos, a witness and champion of the West

by Jenny Shank February 14, 2024March 6, 2024

A Q&A with author and educator Laura Pritchett.

Posted inArticles

Wild ice: A training ground for rural skaters

by Luna Anna Archey February 8, 2024April 24, 2024

On the Western Slope of Colorado, frozen reservoirs and rivers offer interesting terrain for skating.

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