In Northern Idaho, a Wealth of Silver Begets a Legacy of Lead, The Daily Yonder
When Barbara Miller was in elementary school, she covered her face while walking to class. “It hurt so bad to breathe. Your neck, your throat, your eyes,” Miller said. Doors that led to a breezeway got jammed with kids “[backing] up like cattle,” Miller said, because no one wanted to exit the school and enter the smog.
From Hell and Bent on Returning, The Oxford American
magine a slimy, speckled tube with four legs that appear to have been attached with spare parts. The toes—four on the front legs, five on the rear—resemble blown-up rubber gloves. The head is bumpy on top with a wide, flat mouth that curves into a smile. Hellbenders, giant salamanders that can reach more than two feet long in adulthood, have lived in Appalachia’s mountain streams for more than 150 million years. No one knows for sure how they earned their name, but folklore says early colonists believed the creatures were “from hell where they’re bent on returning.”
Limited hospital access disproportionately harms people incarcerated in rural areas, Minnesota Post
Nearly 783,200 of the total 1.3 million people who are incarcerated in this country are locked up in rural counties, areas that are more likely to face hospital closures, according to the Prison Policy Initiative, a nonprofit, nonpartisan research and advocacy organization working to expose the harm of mass incarceration.
Climate Disasters Inflict Outsized Harm on Pregnant and Young Families, Climate Central
The howling winds of a tornado jolted Jelessica Monard awake in the early morning hours last fall. She was five months pregnant with her first child when Hurricane Helene struck her rural Georgian town of Swainsboro.
Not Just a Blue Dot in a Sea of Red: April 5th Protests Across Rural America, The Daily Yonder
On April 5th, 2025, people took to the streets across the country to protest the Trump administration’s broad actions aimed at reducing, defunding, and – in specific cases – closing entirely various federal agencies. While there were large protests in cities like New York, Washington D.C., Chicago, and more, rural communities also showed up, sometimes with significant percentages of the local population.
GOP Cuts to Medicaid Could Threaten Rural Hospitals
On April 5th, 2025, people took to the streets across the country to protest the Trump administration’s broad actions aimed at reducing, defunding, and – in specific cases – closing entirely various federal agencies. While there were large protests in cities like New York, Washington D.C., Chicago, and more, rural communities also showed up, sometimes with significant percentages of the local population.
Commentary: The Trump Administration’s Attempt to Wipe Public Data Is Censorship. Here’s Why That’s Dangerous
On the first night of February, I tossed and turned until dawn worrying about my job. I had just seen a Reddit post warning members of a geography subreddit that the federal government was shutting down data portals in 90 minutes.
‘America’s Serengeti’: Oil, Gas, and the Fight for Native Inclusion in Alaska’s Arctic Refuge, The Daily Yonder
On January 9th, the United States Department of the Interior will hold the second of two scheduled auctions for oil and gas leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), a 19-million-acre expanse in Alaska’s North Slope Borough, an equivalent to a county in Alaska’s jurisdictions, that has been a focal point of drilling controversy for over six decades.
A rural Western North Carolina county will keep its public library in the regional system, but not without debate
The high elevation usually keeps things cool here in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, but temperatures were sweltering by mountain standards on July 10, when hundreds of people gathered in a hot courtroom to show support for their regional library system.
‘We are not thought of’: The true impact of Western North Carolina’s maternal desert on rural women
In Western North Carolina, many of the region’s 153,000 childbearing-aged women often must travel long distances for prenatal care and delivery at the area’s eight hospitals. Maternal health experts and mothers discuss the causes, impact and potential solutions to addressing WNC’s “maternal care desert.”
‘Land Rich, Cash Poor’ – How Black Americans Lost Some of the Most Desirable Land in the U.S., Successful Farming
Developers and others have used the complexities of heirs’ property ownership to force the sale of family-owned land, generating wealth for some and a paucity for others.
The Straining of North Carolina’s Chattooga River and the Indigenous Artform that Could Save It, 100 Days in Appalachia
I climb a boulder that juts out into rapids. The rushing water is so loud it drowns out my breath. I’ve come to the banks of the Chattooga River for solitude, for the way water carries away inner noise. I’m here early enough that I get a few moments of peace all to myself. The river works on me like it works on rock. Under the force of a little pressure I am smoothed out.