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Artificial divides

Artificial divides
hcn.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hcn.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Eric-siegel , Luna-anna-archey , எரிக்-ஸீகல் , லூனா-அண்ணா-வில்வித்தை ,

'Land-grab universities' wins Polk Award for Education Reporting — High Country News – Know the West


Texas Observer and then-Indigenous Affairs editor for
High Country News, and Lee, a historian at Cambridge University, located 99% of the nearly 11 million acres transferred to fledgling land-grant colleges by the Morrill Act of 1862 — lands taken from their original Indigenous caretakers through the use of broken treaties, illegal seizures and outright genocide. In addition to the feature published in
High Country News, the project also created a database at landgrabu.org that translates the extensive primary source research into searchable, visual representation, clearly showing the links between nearly 250 Indigenous tribal nations and the 52 institutions that profited (and in some cases still profit) from the transfers. 

New-york , United-states , Cornell-university , Texas , Washington , High-country , California , Robert-lee , Cambridge , Cambridgeshire , United-kingdom , New-yorker

Meet the Gun-Toting 'Tenacious Unicorns' in Rural Colorado


Luna Anna Archey/High Country News
How a transgender-owned alpaca ranch in Colorado foretells the future of the rural queer West.
A year ago, transgender rancher Penny Logue found the dome. Fed up with a hostile landlord in the city and fearful for their safety amid record-high deaths in the transgender community nationwide, Logue and her business partner, Bonnie Nelson, sought refuge in the rural, open rangelands.
The geodesic dome perched on sprawling acreage in the remote Wet Mountain Valley on the eastern flank of the Sangre de Cristo Mountain Range, near the rural ranching hamlet of Westcliffe, Colorado.
They were intrigued. “Domes are funky and cool and a bit against the status quo — and they help the planet,” Logue told me. So they bought it.

Springfield , Colorado , United-states , Australia , Texas , Wet-mountains , Wet-mountain-valley , Custer-county , Westcliffe , Australian , America , American

Second-home owners


Thank you for the excellent January 2021 issue. Every article was pertinent to one or another of the pressing problems here in the West. I especially liked the article and photos by Nick Bowlin and Luna Anna Archey in your feature story, “Second Citizens.” It’s very evident that we need to find a way to bring longtime residents of rural communities together with the newer, wealthier residents or part-time residents. It is not a good thing to see those newcomers using their wealth to impose their agendas on the longtime small business people, the hard-working service workers and the ranchers who have made long-term commitments to the community. We see too much of this all over this country, but it comes out in vivid relief in these small towns.

Nick-bowlin , Luna-anna-archey , நிக்-பவுலின் , லூனா-அண்ணா-வில்வித்தை ,

Local Motion: The Latest from High Country News


Courtesy of High Country News
High Country News, the nonprofit newsmagazine headquartered in Paonia, is kicking off its 50th anniversary this week. Founded in Lander, Wyoming in 1970, the publication relocated to Paonia in 1983 under the leadership of Ed and Betsy Marston. High Country News became well known for its deep dives into the stories of the West’s complex environmental and natural resources issues, and its diverse communities and cultures.
© 2021 KVNF Public Radio
OFFICE: 970-527-4866 | ON AIR: 970-527-4868 | STUDIO M: 970-787-9070 | 1-866-KVNF-NOW

Colorado , United-states , Gunnison-county , Wet-mountain-valley , Nick-bowlin , Eric-siegel , Luna-anna-archey , Gavin-dahl , Local-motion , High-country-news , Tenacious-unicorn

When COVID hit, a Colorado county kicked out second-home owners. They hit back.


How a group of nonresident homeowners tried to influence a rural Colorado election.
Image credit: Luna Anna Archey/High Country News
Jan. 1, 2021
From the
print edition
April 2020, and the novel coronavirus was spreading through the United States. As businesses closed and hospitals filled, Jim Moran found himself sheltering in place in Colorado, at his second home. His mansion has dark wood siding and a jutting patio, and it perches on a bluff above Crested Butte, a small snow globe of a town whose brightly painted cottages huddle at the base of mountains at the north end of the Gunnison Valley, a long thin basin high in the Rockies. Moran is from Dallas, Texas, where he managed private equity firms. From his back door, he can ski directly onto Crested Butte Mountain Resort, one of Colorado’s iconic ski areas. Moran speaks quickly and passionately and has swept-back silver hair. Housing prices in rural towns have surged since the pandemic as well-to-do people flee cities. Moran’s property, which he bought in 2013, has appreciated: Were he to list his house today, Zillow estimates the value at $4.3 million. 

Mount-emmons , Colorado , United-states , Gunnison-river , Montana , Keystone-mine , Oakland , California , Texas , High-country , Colorado-river , Guatemala