Featured Stories
Volunteers took their love of reading to elementary school students in Billings this week.
Regional News
-
Federal volunteers from across the state are meeting in Helena this week for the annual ServeMontana Symposium, an opportunity for AmeriCorps members and other volunteers to train and network.
-
Montana State University’s library hosted an all day Wikipedia Edit-a-thon. The event brings experienced and new Wikipedia editors together to edit around a selected topic. This year's event focused on women in Montana.
-
Part of a nationwide grassroots campaign , University of Montana and Montana State University both saw ‘Stand Up for Science’ rallies on campus Friday.
-
ZooMontana’s female helps increase the wolverine population.
-
Federal buildings across Montana and Wyoming could close–after the Department of Governmental Efficiency, or DOGE, announced it would be terminating leases.
-
A governmental watchdog agency has ordered the US Department of Agriculture to temporarily reinstate nearly 6,000 probationary workers who were fired suddenly last month.What that means for the hundreds of Montanans fired from the Forest Service is still unclear.
Elections 2024
-
Bozeman will be the first city in Montana to ban plastic bags.
-
The Armory Hotel in downtown Bozeman was lit up red and blue, but inside was all red for a Republican election night event for Greg Gianforte and Tim Sheehy.
-
Political ads flooded mailboxes, TVs and computer monitors in the months and days before polls closed Tuesday night in Montana. Many voters were united in their efforts to ignore them.
-
With less than a week before election day, election officials and employees are powering up machines and comparing test numbers for accuracy.
-
Montanans will elect 100 representatives and 25 state senators to the Legislature this election. It’s the first time candidates are running in districts redrawn with 2020 census data.
National News
-
House Democrats were gathered in Virginia for their annual issues conference when they received the news that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer was planning to vote to advance a GOP-spending bill.
-
A federal judge in Maryland found the Trump administration acted unlawfully in firing thousands of federal employees by not first notifying states.
-
Democratic U.S. Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva of Arizona, who championed environmental protection during his 12 terms in Congress, died Thursday of complications from cancer treatments, his office said.
-
NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with Mahmoud Khalil's attorney, Amy Greer, about her client's recent arrest. Khalil, a green card holder, is currently being detained by ICE officers.
-
An Israeli airstrike targeted a building in an upscale neighborhood, destroying an apartment that neighbors said had been vacant for years.
NPR Headlines
- Big March storm system threatens U.S. with tornadoes, blizzards and wildfire risk
- Mexicans searching for missing relatives uncover possible mass killing site
- The Asian elephant population in Cambodia is more robust than previously thought
- John Feinstein, sports writer and author of 'A Season on the Brink,' dies at 69
- Some acne treatments from brands like Walgreens, La Roche-Posay voluntarily recalled
- Muslim call to prayer can take on an added significance during Ramadan
- Unable to visit playgrounds during quarantine, a family found joy in trainspotting
New Episode Monday, March 17th at 6:30 PM