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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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Mark Olalde

Pump jacks on a ridgeline in Wyoming.
Posted inArticles

Oil industry profits don’t pay for cleanup

by Mark Olalde and Nick Bowlin February 26, 2024February 23, 2024

A failure of regulation has allowed industry to avoid the true cost of cleaning up its unplugged wells.

Posted inArticles

States opposed tribes’ access to the Colorado River 70 years ago. History is repeating itself.

by Anna V. Smith and Mark Olalde October 17, 2023January 24, 2024

Records shed new light on states’ vocal opposition in the 1950s to tribes claiming their share of the river.

Housing on the Chemehuevi Reservation. The tribe has about 1,250 members.
Posted inJuly 1, 2023: Waiting for Water

Decades after the Colorado River flooded the Chemehuevi’s land, the tribe still doesn’t have its share

by Anna V. Smith, Mark Olalde and Umar Farooq July 5, 2023January 24, 2024

Nearly all of the tribe’s water remains in the river and ends up being used by Southern California cities.

The Colorado River near Lees Ferry, Arizona. The opposite bank of the river is the Navajo Nation. The Navajo Nation has succeeded in settling water rights in Utah and New Mexico, but the tribe has failed to reach a similar agreement for its land in Arizona.
Posted inArticles

Supreme Court keeps the Navajo Nation waiting for water

by Anna V. Smith, Mark Olalde and Umar Farooq June 26, 2023January 24, 2024

The court case was the Nation’s bid to accelerate decades of fruitless negotiations and secure water for its reservation.

The Navajo-Gallup Water Supply Project pipeline east of Window Rock, Arizona.
Posted inJuly 1, 2023: Waiting for Water

How Arizona squeezes tribes for water

by Anna V. Smith, Mark Olalde and Umar Farooq June 14, 2023January 24, 2024

A High Country News/ProPublica investigation shows that Arizona goes to unusual lengths in water negotiations to extract restrictive concessions from tribes.

Kern County oil fields along California state highway 33.
Posted inArticles

California will need $21.5 billion to clean up its oil sites. Who’s going to pay for it?

by Mark Olalde May 23, 2023January 24, 2024

As industry transitions away from fossil fuels, its profits will fall behind remediation costs.

Posted inArticles

A community sacrificed to uranium mine pollution

by Mark Olalde, Maya Miller and ProPublica August 23, 2022January 24, 2024

A mining company and government agencies repeatedly said they’d clean up waste in Homestake, New Mexico. Instead, they’re buying out homeowners.

Posted inJanuary 1, 2021: No Place Like Home

Will California finally fulfill its promise to fix the Salton Sea?

by Mark Olalde December 21, 2020January 24, 2024

Decades have passed and millions of dollars spent, yet little has been done to restore the lake. California officials say it’s all been leading up to this moment.

Posted inNovember 25, 2019: Forever Mines

While ‘zombie’ mines idle, cleanup and workers suffer in limbo

by Mark Olalde and Joe Yerardi September 4, 2019January 24, 2024

Instead of paying to clean up the mess left by mining, companies are warehousing their operations indefinitely.

Posted inJune 24, 2019: Losing Lake Coeur d'Alene

Sign me up

by Mark Olalde June 24, 2019January 24, 2024

Fine, fine, fine. I just subscribed to a couple years of the magazine, thanks to this story — largely because I should’ve done it a while ago and just never got around to it. Mark OlaldeWashington, D.C. This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline Sign me up.

Posted inArticles

Mining companies pollute waterways. Citizens pay.

by Mark Olalde March 18, 2019January 24, 2024

Nearly 2 billion pounds of toxic waste were dumped into western waterways in 2017, and taxpayers are left to clean up the mess.

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