• Your Dashboard
  • Features
  • Public Lands
  • Indigenous Affairs
  • Water
  • Climate Change
  • Arts & Culture
  • Subscribe
  • Donate Now
  • The Magazine
  • Jobs & Classifieds
    • Jobs & Classifieds
    • Place a Classified Ad
    • Display Ad Info
  • Your Dashboard
  • Features
  • Public Lands
  • Indigenous Affairs
  • Water
  • Climate Change
  • Arts & Culture
  • Subscribe
  • Donate Now
  • The Magazine
  • Jobs & Classifieds
    • Jobs & Classifieds
    • Place a Classified Ad
    • Display Ad Info
Skip to content
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.

Support

Flooding

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, 2024July 31, 2024

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

An unhoused community lives along a flood-control channel that runs under Interstate 10 in Ontario, California.
Posted inJune 2024: The Idea of Wilderness

California’s homelessness and climate crises leave unhoused communities vulnerable to floods

by Erin Rode June 1, 2024May 31, 2024

Seeking shelter, people are living in flood control channels and other flood-prone places.

Posted inArticles

Disaster disparities in the West

by Natalia Mesa March 4, 2024March 1, 2024

The risk of climate catastrophe is complex, but people of color often face ‘unnatural hazards.’

The Glen Canyon Dam sits on the Colorado River, backed by Lake Powell. In 2022, the dam neared deadpool conditions due  to climate change-induced drought and increasing water demand.
Posted inArticles

Remove dams to fight the climate crisis

by Gary Wockner December 19, 2023January 31, 2024

Ten reasons bringing down these barriers are key for mitigation and adaptation.

Posted inNovember 1, 2023: November 1, 2023

When burn scars become roaring earthen rivers

by Kylie Mohr November 1, 2023June 26, 2024

Geologists in Washington are monitoring scorched forest to help create a better warning system for deadly debris flows.

People pass sand bags to protect homes from the rising flow of Emigration Creek through Wasatch Hollow Park, Salt Lake City, on April 12, 2023.
Posted inArticles

This year’s record-breaking snowpack is pouring into the dried-out Salt Lake

by Hannah Singleton May 15, 2023January 24, 2024

Snowmelt is replenishing depleted ecosystems and flooding communities.

Posted inArticles

As the West’s epic snow melts, flood danger rises

by Chad Hecht April 18, 2023January 24, 2024

How do 2023’s atmospheric rivers compare to past extremes and what can be expected in the future?

Posted inArticles

Displaced by the climate crisis

by Rhoda Feng February 21, 2023January 26, 2024

Jake Bittle’s new book foregrounds the experience of those already affected by a worsening climate.

Posted inArticles

The Salinas River and the foretold flood

by Jeremy Miller February 8, 2023January 24, 2024

Agriculture beat the river into submission. It’s back.

Posted inArticles

How California’s emergency plans fail disabled communities

by Astra Lincoln January 23, 2023January 24, 2024

Kelley Coleman’s 9-year-old son had two days of his medication left. Then the evacuation order hit.

Posted inMarch 1, 2023: Moving Parts

California’s power outages are a life-and-death issue

by Alice Wong January 19, 2023January 24, 2024

A perspective on the impacts of storms for people with disabilities.

Posted inArticles

After June’s floods, will the Yellowstone River be allowed to roam?

by Nick Mott November 2, 2022January 24, 2024

Rock walls called riprap constrain the river to protect property from erosion —but there are other options.

Posted inArticles

When a housing crisis meets a megaflood

by Nick Mott September 20, 2022January 24, 2024

June’s massive Yellowstone-area floods illuminated and worsened housing inequities across southwestern Montana.

Posted inDecember 1, 2022: Beyond Illusion

Rising rivers don’t necessarily follow the lines on a map

by Nick Mott September 12, 2022January 24, 2024

June’s record-breaking flooding in Montana illustrates the importance of risk mapping for people living in the floodplain.

Posted inArticles

What’s it like to live in a tourist town with no tourists?

by Nick Mott August 16, 2022January 24, 2024

After the floods, Yellowstone gateway communities are grappling with what comes next.

Posted inSeptember 1, 2022: Going Under

Flooding could breathe life into Yellowstone ecosystem

by Nick Mott July 14, 2022January 24, 2024

Although destructive for people, high-water events are a natural part of river systems.

Posted inArticles

The funky politics of wildfire right now

by Jonathan Thompson July 7, 2022January 24, 2024

After New Mexico’s record-breaking fires, the politics of wildfire are morphing into weird configurations.

Posted inArticles

In the wake of fires and floods

by Jonathan Thompson June 23, 2022January 24, 2024

Climate disasters across the West wreak havoc on economies and livelihoods.

Posted inArticles

Yellowstone area flooding upends lives and portends a new climate reality

by Nick Mott June 15, 2022January 24, 2024

Unprecedented rain and snowmelt destroyed roads and washed away bridges outside the national park.

Posted inArticles

Why rural communities struggle to bring in much-needed federal grants

by Kylie Mohr and Theo Whitcomb April 25, 2022January 24, 2024

A new analysis suggests that over half of communities in the West lack the capacity to take advantage of infrastructure bill funding. Now what?

Posts navigation

1 2 Older posts

Support nonprofit news

High Country News relies on donations as well as subscription fees to produce independent reporting on the West. Help continue the legacy of reader-supported journalism by making a tax-deductible contribution today.

Make a contribution

Find out more about how we use your contributions in our annual reports and filings.

Subscribe to High Country News

Get access to on-the-ground reporting from across the West and support continued coverage of our region.

Get our newsletters

Sign up to receive news and updates from High Country News.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Most popular stories

  • Lake Mead’s illegal road network is growing
  • Collaborating to create more resources for rural students
  • The New Mexico utility that wants to go all in on green hydrogen
  • Land-grab universities
  • How do you protect wildlife from sprawl?

Featured Stories

Collaborating to create more resources for rural students

Collaborating to create more resources for rural students

After losing his sight, the Tijuana River Estuary offered other ways to see

After losing his sight, the Tijuana River Estuary offered other ways to see

Endurance and the spirit of wrestling in the West

Endurance and the spirit of wrestling in the West

The West in Perspective

Can words help us out of climate despair and toward repair?

by Ruxandra Guidi

Grabbing public land in the name of housing

by Jonathan Thompson

Who is spouting violent rhetoric?

by Jonathan Thompson

About High Country News

  • Our history
  • How to support HCN
  • Submissions

Know the West.

Get 2 free issues ↓

119 Grand Avenue
PO Box 1090
Paonia, CO 81428
(970) 527-4898

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed
  • Contact Us
  • About us
  • Careers
  • Pitch us a story
  • Fellowships
  • Education
  • Support our work
  • Advertise
  • Syndication
  • Subscriber services
Get 2 free issues ↓
Magazine cover: January 11, 2024: The Creatures in Our Midst

Sign up for a free trial of High Country News. Learn what’s happening across the West today and see if becoming a subscriber is for you.

Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

© 2024 High Country News. All rights reserved Powered by Newspack