Wyoming Stories
Wyoming is set to lose about $50 million a year because of new federal breaks for the coal industry. This has state lawmakers looking for ways to recoup the revenue loss.
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Artemis Langford, whose induction into a University of Wyoming sorority chapter thrust her into the national spotlight, is “a daughter of Wyoming” who no longer feels safe in the Equality State.
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An all-female trail crew maintains trails in the wake of federal firings. Is the worst still to come?
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This spring, the VA mandated telework and remote employees to return to the office. A nurse who coordinates home health care shares her thoughts on that transition and its impacts.
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But it isn’t easy since she never knows when she could lose her job again. The Supreme Court recently approved the mass firings.
Latest From NPR
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Residents across Washington have different takes on crime in their communities. Overwhelmingly, however, people opposed President Trump's takeover with federal agents and the National Guard.
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World Photography Day is Aug. 19. To celebrate this day that recognizes the significance of pictures, NPR asked readers and listeners to share the story behind their favorite photos they have taken.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin has praised Donald Trump's "energetic and sincere" efforts to end the war in Ukraine. But on the streets of Moscow while many hope for an end to the war, they disagree on how to get there.
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A lawsuit challenging construction and operations of an immigration detention center in the Florida Everglades known as 'Alligator Alley' has wrapped up with several key questions unanswered.