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The public comment period that ended this week shows Wyomingites are deeply divided over how to balance environmental protection and recreation with energy development and ranching on 3.6 million acres of land.

For the last 16 years, Joy Bannon has been leading tours of the land near Rock Springs, Wyoming. Usually, Bannon and her cohort mosey through Wyoming’s southwest landscape—home to the sandstone badlands and slithering dunes of the Northern Red Desert, and the Big Sandy Foothills, a sea of sagebrush bordering the Wind River range—in vehicles, chattering over walkie talkies. At a particularly stunning vista, they set out on foot or take to the skies. Flyovers cover more ground, and better showcase the area’s topographical diversity.

A Long-Delayed BLM Resource Management Plan in Southwest Wyoming Pits Conservation Against Resource Extraction

Climate Change

Utah National Monument Survives Attempt to Rescind its Management Plan

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Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument has been targeted for downsizing and protection rollbacks for years. But the latest attempt to overturn its management plan in Congress has stalled.

GRAND STAIRCASE-ESCALANTE NATIONAL MONUMENT, Utah—When Autumn Gillard first visited this national monument in southern Utah’s red rock country, she hiked to the top of a plateau. Her heart was broken there.

Utah National Monument Survives Attempt to Rescind its Management Plan

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Climate Change

‘Sponge Cities’ Are Catching On. But Can They Handle Supercharged Storms?

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Pairing engineered stormwater infrastructure with green spaces can reduce flooding in cities. But wetter storms are pushing these systems to the brink, experts say.

In 2011, a short but catastrophic cloudburst hammered Copenhagen, flooding parts of the Danish city with more than 5 inches of rain in a single day.

‘Sponge Cities’ Are Catching On. But Can They Handle Supercharged Storms?

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Climate Change

Emergency Drawdown at Flaming Gorge Hits Its Recreation Economy

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The drought-induced draw to save downstream Lake Powell is wreaking havoc on Wyoming-Utah’s beloved recreation area.

As campers with boats flocked to Buckboard Marina at the start of Memorial Day weekend, Tony Valdez was busy issuing refunds and repairing broken boat ramps. One older Green River man, who walked with two canes, left with his money refunded for the season after discovering he could not safely make it down to the boat slip. Due to dropping water levels at Flaming Gorge Reservoir, the ramp is now buckled, angling up and down like a pitched roof.

Emergency Drawdown at Flaming Gorge Hits Its Recreation Economy

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