Wyoming Stories
This July, the park tallied 975,109 recreation visits. That’s 2% fewer visits than last year and 10% down from the record-setting year of 2021.
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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.
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Richard Midgette was fired on Valentine’s Day in the first wave of federal layoffs of probationary national parks employees. Just over a month later, he was rehired and then let go again. The first firing especially took a serious toll on his mental health.
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Cameron Wright is suing the University of Wyoming, aiming to be reinstated as the College of Engineering dean. His removal sparked outrage across campus.
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Miguel Uribe was shot three times while giving a campaign speech in a park and had since remained in an intensive care unit in serious condition with episodes of slight improvement.
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President Trump plans to tap an economist from the conservative Heritage Foundation to oversee the Bureau of Labor Statistics. He fired the previous leader after a disappointing jobs report.
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She recorded a magical debut album on Blue Note and was later named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts.
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The Mojave Desert tortoise has long been considered a threatened species, but in June, California declared it endangered.