Energy Keepers Inc. received approval to hold in an extra 2 feet of surface water above its usual Memorial Day limit of 2,890 feet in Flathead Lake.
Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen proposed requiring DNRC to get Land Board approval before claiming co-ownership of water rights used on state leases.
The Clay Studio’s tunnel-shaped anagama kiln sits up in the hills where Sherman Gulch and Big Flat Road meet.
MONTANA UNTAMED: The result is grounded planes, a federal investigation, and questions around how the Forest Service determines what’s safe to use on fires.
Noncitizen voting, already illegal in federal elections, becomes a centerpiece of 2024 GOP messaging
Republicans are introducing legislation and fall ballot measures, ensuring the issue will remain in voters' minds in the months ahead.
The commission forwarded $17.5 million in projects to address shortages and disparities in the coming years.
The statement is the latest development in a contentious back-and-forth between the governor and Lake County officials regarding who's responsible for providing law enforcement services on the Flathead Reservation.
Starting July 1, Browning Public Schools will have a new superintendent. Rebecca Rappold spoke with Lee Montana about the district’s successes and challenges and her vision for the future.
The Missoula PaddleHeads had the most regular-season Pioneer Baseball League wins in 2021 (66), 2022 (69) and 2023 (66). The trend may continue in 2024.
A Billings-based company called Mazevo Coffee is forging ahead with plans to build a new location on Brooks Street in Missoula.
The city would use about $3.78 million in federal and state funds to construct a roundabout at the intersection, which saw 33 wrecks in a five-year period.
The county said in a release Monday that it will hold sessions before, during and after the election to observe equipment testing, ballot processing, tabulation and canvassing.
Local farmers in Montana can register to sell product to people in the low-income Women, Infants and Children program.
Montana's State B-C tennis tournament will start Thursday in Missoula. The event will conclude on Saturday.
In June, the City Council placed a $7 million levy for the fire department on the June primary ballot, which would pay for more additional resources.
In an attempt to get one newborn's health care sorted out, a mom waited on hold for seven hours one day while home alone with her baby.
The Falcons, Broncs and Wildcats captured the trophies in the second year of the state baseball tournament.
While temperatures can fluctuate year-over-year, the average continues to increase as the climate warms
Teams took one step closer to the trophies Friday.
Cody Marble this week testified in his defense for the first time since he was charged in 2002.
With 150 workers in Missoula about to lose their jobs, officials with the Montana Department of Labor and Industry came to give them information this week.
The woman reportedly was at the front of a large group of female gravel-road cyclists when she hit a rock while riding downhill and went over the handlebars.
The app, called PulsePoint, connects citizen responders to public emergencies to help increase survival rates of cardiac episodes like heart attacks.
Here's a roundup of local stories that ran this week.
Starting Monday, Lake County officials say they will no longer accept Flathead Reservation tribal members in their jail, house tribal juvenile defenders or perform autopsies on tribal members.
After 30 years of being run by Missoula Correctional Services (MCS), Missoula’s pretrial program is moving under the umbrella of the county’s Community Justice Department.
A building in downtown Missoula is as old as the state of Montana itself and houses over a million antique, vintage and retro items of all shapes and sizes.
This year, the GOP primary for the Supreme Court clerk has turned a few heads.
The Montana Repertory Theatre is producing "What the Constitution Means to Me," an award-winning play about how the document does and does not protect women.
Three Southwest teams earned quarterfinal wins Thursday afternoon.
The Latest
The production of the second season of '1923,' one of Taylor Sheridan's popular Western sagas, is moving to Austin, Texas, after filming its first season in Butte and vicinity.
Read through the obituaries published today in Missoulian.
Missoula and Western Montana homes with at least five bedrooms.
The Montana Supreme Court decided Monday to hear oral arguments in the climate case that made international news last summer.
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The Montana State AA tennis tournament will be held on Thursday and Friday in Bozeman.
The Florence-Carlton softball team won the Western B-C Softball Divisional title with a 3-2 win over Manhattan Saturday.
Check out divisional results from Saturday.
MONTANA UNTAMED: The result is grounded planes, a federal investigation, and questions around how the Forest Service determines what’s safe to use on fires.
On the Across the Sky podcast, we delve into the complexities of forecasting seasonal trends and the impact of climate change with special guest Jan Dutton, a meteorologist from Prescient Weather.
🎧 Get a recap of recent financial, health and general interest stories through this special edition of our Hot off the Wire daily news podcast.
🎧 The hosts talk about why too few residential units are being built, and what actions are needed to make change at the local level.
Designer Anthony Rubio threw the now-annual fashion fete Monday night, sending 18 dogs down the red carpet at New York's American Kennel Club Museum of the Dog. Each canine donned couture similar to what celebrities wore at the Met Gala just two weeks earlier.
Taken together, recent Department of Transportation rules and the final version of the FAA Reauthorization Act amount to good, but not great news for consumers. First, and this was important, we didn't lose anything. Gains are modest, consisting mainly of provisions under consideration for quite a while, but solid and welcome.
In R.O. Kwon’s second novel “Exhibit” (Riverhead Books), the bestselling author of “The Incendiaries” tackles desire and sexuality with compelling and concise prose. Like Kwon, her protagonists are ethnically Korean. “I had the great luck of getting to visit Seoul a couple of times in 2023, both for work and for pleasure,” she said. “It’s the city of my birth, but I haven’t begun to spend as much time there as I’d like. Part of ‘Exhibit’ – toward the end – takes place in Seoul and that section was colored by my travels. It’s an intensely emotional part of the book – someone my narrator loves very much is in desperate peril. I cried a lot while writing it and still can’t read it without tearing up, which also feels colored by Korea.” Based out of San Francisco, Kwon stays in touch with her readers on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/ro.kwon/) and Twitter/X (https://twitter.com/rokwon). You may learn more about her book at ro-kwon.com.