-
Social Security and Medicare benefits will keep flowing in a government shutdown, but federal employees will be working without pay and delays likely will occur across many services.
-
Attorneys for Rigoberto Hernandez Hernandez argue his rights to due process were violated when immigration enforcement officials arrested him last month.
-
William Simpson wants to deploy the wild horses across public lands, to live and graze — and ultimately, prevent the worst wildfires.
-
Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics claims the agency is violating the Clean Water Act.
-
Scientists are finding that Western wildfires can have far-reaching impacts. If they're burning while Central U.S. thunderstorms are forming, the rain and hail can be dramatically more destructive.
-
In Jacksonville Tuesday night, Oregon State Senator Jeff Golden answered questions about what’s next after the botched rollout of the state wildfire risk map this summer.
-
As wildfires have choked skies in the western United States, turning them vivid orange or sickly ochre, millions of people now live where smoke regularly makes breathing unhealthy, according to new estimates from a team based at Stanford University.
-
This November, Californians will vote on an income tax increase for the state’s wealthiest residents.
-
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has approved a grant to help survivors of the Labor Day fires recover and rebuild, two years later.
-
There are 17 researchers working on the issue of smoke-exposed wine grapes between University of California-Davis, Oregon State University, and Washington State University.
-
The Klamath National Forest has reduced the area under emergency fire closure, effective Oct. 1.
-
United States Forest Service officials have opened a criminal investigation into the cause of the Mosquito Fire, according to a new filing by Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E).
-
After withdrawing a controversial map of wildfire risk on every property statewide, the Oregon Department of Forestry is planning to spend the next year talking with the public and revising the map.
-
Environmental groups and federal agencies seem to be locked in a never-ending fight over how to manage our forests. Can they work together?