Wyoming Stories
They say extreme heat and other climate impacts should be considered in monetary policy-making.
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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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Congress has confirmed a longtime leader of Wyoming wildlife to oversee the nation’s, as director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Latest From NPR
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One of the goals of controversial wolf hunts in the Western U.S. is to help reduce the burden on ranchers, who lose livestock to wolves every year. A new study finds that those hunts have had a measurable, but small effect on livestock depredations.
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Erik and Lyle Menendez will get their first-ever parole hearings on Thursday and Friday, after spending more than three decades in prison for their parents' murders. Here's what to expect.
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Israel gave final approval for a settlement project in the occupied West Bank that would effectively cut the territory in two, which Palestinians say could dash hopes for a future Palestinian state.
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Two Russian cruise missiles hit a U.S. electronics plant in the far west of Ukraine. The strike was part of an overnight barrage of more than 600 drones and missiles.