Western United States

a navajo woman in new mexico

On the 150th anniversary of the Navajo Treaty, young Navajo grapple with their traumatic history

On June 1, 1868, the Navajo Nation treaty was signed and almost immediately, the Navajo at Fort Sumner began the long journey home.

White Mountains — Pines

Tree species are leap-frogging up mountains in reaction to climate change

Environment
Grand Escalante

US interior secretary recommends altering some national monuments for commercial use

Environment

US border fence skirts environmental review

Environment

Border Fence Skirts Environmental Review

Conflict & Justice

Mexican journalist urges U.S. to act cautiously when beefing up border security

Global Politics

Immigration reform is closer to reality with a proposal in the Senate to beef up border security and win Republican support for the entire package. But one Mexican journalist says not so fast. He says all the money in the world won’t seal the border — and will come with high costs of their own.

Loved ones separated by the U.S.-Mexico border meet at Friendship Park

Fence along U.S.-Mexico border near San Diego represents a barrier and a bridge

Global Politics

For families separated between Mexico and the United States, the border fence can seem insurmountable. And it often is. But in a park near San Diego, the fence has become a place where those divided families meet and catch glimpses of one another — through the fence.

Obama administration bans new uranium mines near Grand Canyon

Environment

In an effort to stop mining near one of the United States’ most well-known landmarks, the Obama administration is banning new mining claims from being made in and around the Grand Canyon — a practice previously allowed.

Valdez, Alaska, turns to outside help to dig out from 10+ foot snow drifts

Environment

The Pineapple Express jet stream from Alaska is meeting up with a Siberian cold air mass over Alaska and it’s dropping foot after foot of snow on top of many Alaskan communities.

Racial migration, desegregation underway in America

New data from the 2010 U.S. Census shows that America’s Blacks are leaving the cities in northern areas and moving back to the Sun Belt, often to cities their parents and grandparents fled decades ago. Plus, more minorities are moving into suburbs, desegregating historically white areas.