What are the consequences for the land if the incoming president shrinks the national monument?
Jonathan Thompson
Jonathan Thompson is a contributing editor at High Country News. He is the author of Sagebrush Empire: How a Remote Utah County Became the Battlefront of American Public Lands. Follow him @LandDesk
Montana’s Jon Tester might lose. Here’s why that matters
What the Senate contest says about the unexpected shift in Western politics.
The downballot issues driving the West’s 2024 elections
From climate and public lands to shifting political allegiances, the region faces critical choices at the ballot box.
Kamala Harris tries to navigate the convoluted politics of oil and gas
Drill, Democrats, drill?
What happens when a concrete jungle becomes a ‘sponge city’
Engineering for flood resilience can address storms heightened by climate change.
Utah wants your public land — for more roads
The state wants to build a highway through tortoise habitat.
The inequity of heat
Extreme heat doesn’t discriminate; the ability to escape it does.
Grabbing public land in the name of housing
Have politicians finally found a way to take public land out of the public’s hands?
Abandoned mines cover the West
Their legacy is destruction and pollution of lands and waters.
Data centers could set back climate progress
AI, cryptocurrency “mining” and our digital lifestyles imperil the energy transition — and the planet.
Water inequality on the Colorado River
A new accounting reveals deep disparities in Western water consumption.
Trump vs. Biden on the climate
The next presidential election will have huge ramifications for the planet.
The West remains cattle country
Livestock has indelibly altered the region’s land, water and air.
Is Biden a public-lands protector?
The administration makes the biggest land-management moves in a half century.
What’s going on with natural gas exports?
The U.S. is the world’s largest exporter of LNG, but President Biden just paused new permits.
Cattle are drinking the Colorado River dry
Balancing Western water demand and supply will alter the region’s landscape.
The West’s hazardous highways
America’s car culture kills people
and wrecks communities.
The good, the bad and the ugly of the state legislative season
While Congress does nothing, Western state lawmakers pass a flurry of consequential and/or crazy — bills.
The state of the West’s cannabis economy
A booming industry is reviving communities and suffering growing pangs.
