Pebble Mine Threatens One of the Last Great Salmon Rivers Corporate gold diggers pan for profit where millions of salmon spawn By Brendan Jones March 2, 2018 In this story: saving wild places
The Trump Administration Throws the Greater Sage-Grouse Under the Bus Instead of collaborative conservation, we're all headed to court By Dashka Slater December 14, 2017 In this story: birds, endangered species
A Gold Mine on Yellowstone's Doorstep? Montanans side with outdoor recreation over gold mines in Paradise Valley By Aaron Teasdale October 13, 2017 In this story: national parks
Pro-Housing Urban Millennials Say "Yes In My Backyard" Housing—dense, near transit, and green—can be a climate solution By Jonathan Hahn August 23, 2017 In this story: climate change
Oil Drilling Is—Literally!—Shaking Up Oklahoma Oil drillers duck and cover to avoid responsibility for the earthquakes they're causing By Dashka Slater June 15, 2017 In this story: fracking, fracked gas
Eight Mile Is Alabama's Chemical Katrina Residents of this community have lived with a noxious smell for over six years By Matt Smith April 17, 2017 In this story: health, fracked gas, pipelines
The Legal Marijuana Industry Needs to Be Regulated It's time to address the environmental consequences of legalized pot By Dashka Slater March 10, 2017 In this story: agriculture
Are We Stuck with Corn Ethanol Forever? (Big Ag Would Like Us to Think So.) It's crazy to use 40 percent of the U.S. corn crop to fuel our cars and trucks By Dashka Slater January 10, 2017 In this story: renewable energy
Coal-Country Scam Coal companies devastate landscapes, go bankrupt, and stick taxpayers with the cleanup By Dashka Slater November 1, 2016 In this story: coal
Unlike its neighbors, North Carolina has a soft spot for toxic coal ash North Carolina is worried about bathrooms. Toxic coal ash, not so much. By Tristram Korten July 28, 2016 In this story: coal ash, coal, activism