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As the Colorado River agreement inches toward expiration, the head of the Colorado River Authority of Utah announces that the states have yet to agree to anything.
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Proponents say the land would be used for much-needed housing, but environmental groups say eligible areas could include those treasured by communities in the Mountain West.
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As the former manager of the Central Arizona Project, the region's water experts regard Ted Cooke as a qualified expert.
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Due to the level of difficulty surrounding land permits, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has opened the Endangered Species Act to suggestions on how to better streamline these permits.
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Our hosts discuss the domestic deployment of U.S. Marines, weakening public health institutions, and the logic behind trickle-down economics.
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Job Corps is the latest federal program caught in a tug-of-war between the Trump administration, lawyers, congresspeople and participants.
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It would be called the U.S. Wildland Fire Service, according to budget documents from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of Interior. The agency would consolidate the wildland fire programs of the USDA and Interior within the latter.
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With very little news on Colorado River negotiations, top policymakers chose to skip an annual water conference this week, leaving the discussion to other experts.
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In an effort to make life after sentences easier, the Utah County Jail has created a program to allow inmates to earn food handlers permits while incarcerated.
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Our hosts discuss what they hope to see in the Senate budget, SCOTUS siding with Utah on an oil rail line, and how Utahns navigate Pride month.
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The proposed railroad would transport crude oil from Utah through the Colorado Rockies to refineries in the Gulf of Mexico. The Supreme Court has ruled in the railway developers' favor.
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Native American tribes, including one from Nevada, want the U.S. government to explain how it funded boarding schools for Indigenous children.