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Monday April 12, 2021
KZMU News
English - April 12, 2021 18:55 - 9 minutes - 8.94 MB - ★★★★★ - 25 ratingsNews Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Today on the news, a conservation group in San Juan County is suing the Bureau of Land Management over land it leased to oil and gas developers in 2018. The lawsuit claims drilling between Bears Ears and Hovenweep national monuments could cause irreparable damage to cultural sites. And, to better understand how the COVID-19 pandemic affected Utah women and girls, the Women’s Leadership Project at USU surveyed 3,500 women across the state. Plus, Wyoming lawmakers passed several bills aimed at protecting the state’s coal interests this legislative session despite the industry being in the midst of a steady decline. Our partners at KHOL report on the state legislature’s efforts to fight economic trends impacting Wyoming’s coal communities.
Show Notes:
Photo: The area between Bears Ears and Hovenweep national monuments is rich in archeological sites, according to retired Bureau of Land Management archeologist Don Simonis. Courtesy Friends of Cedar Mesa.
KUER: Conservationists Sue Federal Government To Protect ‘Archeologically Rich Area’ In San Juan County
https://www.kuer.org/health-science-environment/2021-04-09/conservation-group-sues-federal-government-to-protect-an-archaeologically-rich-area-in-san-juan-county
UPR: Survey Results Show Utah Women Disproportionally Affected By Pandemic-related Hardship
https://www.upr.org/post/survey-results-show-utah-women-disproportionally-affected-pandemic-related-hardship
KHOL: Wyoming Lawmakers Cling Tight to Declining Coal Industry
https://891khol.org/wyoming-lawmakers-cling-tight-to-declining-coal-industry/