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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Slightly more people are looking for work than this time last year. But Wyoming’s rate trails the national 4.1%.
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A second federal judge ruled the vocational program can keep going, for now.
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Fire departments across the state have responded to several other new blazes.
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A new report shows the Mountain West needs to prepare for data centers, which are expected to demand massive amounts of energy and water. Experts say communities should adopt policies that prevent energy bills from rising and water supplies from shrinking.
Latest From NPR
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Scott Simon remembers former longtime NPR colleague Ted Clark, who passed away last week at the age of 79.
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While atomic bomb survivors warn the catastrophic risks, leaders of nuclear-armed states and self-proclaimed 'realists' argue that the deterrence of nuclear weapons is what keeps them from being deployed.
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The housing crisis is requiring creative scrambling and new partnerships from health care organizations to keep older patients out of expensive nursing homes as homelessness grows.
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Documents with sensitive details about the meeting between President Trump and Russian President Putin were left behind on a public hotel printer.