Top Stories
The National Outdoor Leadership School is a wilderness-focused school that leads immersive expeditions in Wyoming and around the world. Earlier in March, NOLS President Sandy Colhoun shared that the school will be making significant changes to address its financial challenges in a letter posted on the organization’s website.
Recent News
-
Natrona County will continue to have daily Delta Airlines flights between Casper and Salt Lake City. Commissioners voted 4-1 to continue to subsidize the connection despite a hefty price tag.
-
It hasn’t been easy to set up shop in one of the most expensive places in the nation, but the office could come to town this spring.
-
A Teton County judge has asked the high court to rule on the future of reproductive rights in the state. But will it?
-
Changing employment habits and an aging population are creating an acute housing need in the Cowboy State. Wyoming needs to build between 20,700 and 38,600 new rental and ownership units this decade.
-
Wyoming rancher Liesl Carpenter filed an appeal with the United States Supreme Court last week. She claims that a COVID-era loan forgiveness program violated her constitutional rights as an American.
-
A bill that will fund the cleanup of abandoned coal mines in Wyoming was signed into law by Gov. Mark Gordon this month.
-
The coronavirus had been a leading cause of death for Wyomingites ever since 2020.
-
A long awaited federal draft plan for greater sage grouse management in the Western U.S. has been released, and so far, Wyoming is cautiously optimistic.
-
The Wyoming Territorial Penitentiary housed convicts beginning in 1873. Prisoners were required to adhere to a code of silence.
-
Gillette's population will jump by almost 55,000 people during an International, Seventh-day Adventist, youth camping event.
-
Starting your own business has become a much more realistic goal in the past few years, due to increased internet access and economic change. Wyoming has the highest rate of entrepreneurs in the country but Sheridan County has the most in our state. Some 50% of residents own their own business.
-
Wyoming contractors will soon find it easier to bring their skills to a new town or city.
Latest From NPR
-
Experts say it's better to set a goal you can stick to and make reading more of a community affair.
-
The debris that saved Rose's life in Titanic — and sparked a quarter-century of debate — fetched over $718,000 at an auction of iconic Hollywood movie props last week. It's based on a real artifact.
-
Biden officials approved proposals for the U.S. census and federal surveys to change how Latinos are asked about their race and ethnicity and to add a checkbox for "Middle Eastern or North African."
-
The Grand Alliance between Black and Jewish leaders, known largely for shared work on Civil Rights in the 1960s, has a complicated legacy--and an uncertain future between these communities.
-
American artist Richard Serra died this week at the age of 85. Serra was world-renowned for his large-scale metal sculptures.
-
After a fall near the first anniversary of her beloved aunt's death, a writer explored why grief can make us less sure-footed. She found answers, climbing a precarious staircase in Italy.
-
Chevron operates a major refinery in Richmond, Calif. It also owns the city's dominant news site, putting its own spin on events, and runs similar sites in Texas and Ecuador.
-
The sentence marks a stunning fall for the 32-year-old former crypto executive who was once seen as the future of finance.
-
The South African singer brought a homegrown genre, amapiano, to new ears with a viral hit and a Grammy. With her debut album, she wants to prove the world is ready for a full-blown African pop star.
-
Kemmerer, Wyo., is on the front line of America's energy transition, with its coal plant slated to close and a nuclear plant in the works. But some think the rush to quit fossil fuels is impractical.