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High Country News

High Country News

A nonprofit independent magazine of unblinking journalism that shines a light on all of the complexities of the West.

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Nick Bowlin

Nick Bowlin is a contributing editor for High Country News. Email him at nickbowlin@hcn.org or submit a letter to the editor.

Posted inArticles

Repeal of the Chevron doctrine will have profound consequences for federal rulemaking

by Nick Bowlin, Joaqlin Estus, Natalia Mesa, Kylie Mohr and Erin X. Wong July 15, 2024August 8, 2024

Climate, public lands and tribal law regulations are now likely to face legal challenges.

Posted inArticles

Polluted air threatens the health of New Mexico infants

by Nick Bowlin July 3, 2024August 8, 2024

A new study finds a link between air pollution and low birth weight.

Posted inArticles

Colorado’s oil and gas rules put taxpayers at risk, according to study

by Nick Bowlin June 28, 2024August 8, 2024

The report contradicts claims that the new rules are the ‘most robust in the country.’

New homes in Bozeman's Valley West.
Posted inMay 2024: A River Returns

Bozeman’s boom depends on immigrants but struggles to support them

by Nick Bowlin May 1, 2024May 6, 2024

One of the nation’s fastest-growing cities relies on a vulnerable population of workers to fuel its economic explosion.

New homes in Bozeman's Valley West.
Posted inMay 2024: A River Returns

Los motivos ocultos de la prosperidad de Bozeman

by Nick Bowlin May 1, 2024May 6, 2024

El auge económico de una de las ciudades estadounidenses con mayor crecimiento depende del trabajo de un grupo vulnerable de personas.

Posted inArticles

Drilling for oil on public land is about to cost a lot more

by Nick Bowlin April 15, 2024August 8, 2024

Long-awaited Interior Department policy will raise financial assurance and royalty rates.

Pump jacks on a ridgeline in Wyoming.
Posted inArticles

Oil industry profits don’t pay for cleanup

by Mark Olalde and Nick Bowlin February 26, 2024February 23, 2024

A failure of regulation has allowed industry to avoid the true cost of cleaning up its unplugged wells.

A construction crew works at a home in Mount Crested Butte, Colorado. Construction costs have soared across the country in the past few years and are especially high in mountain ski towns.
Posted inArticles

Mountain towns are trying all sorts of solutions to the housing crisis

by Nick Bowlin December 22, 2023January 31, 2024

A new report details the many ways that high-altitude communities are wrestling with ballooning housing costs.

Posted inArticles

New Mexico’s displaced coal miners have gotten the shaft on severance pay

by Nick Bowlin November 7, 2023January 31, 2024

The state’s just transition plans promised by the Energy Transition Act haven’t panned out for many workers.

Pumpjacks along the Animas River north of Durango, Colorado.
Posted inArticles

Private equity gets into oil and gas

by Nick Bowlin August 9, 2023January 24, 2024

A new report warns of bankruptcies and abandoned wells on Western public land.

BLM California manages nearly 600 producing oil and gas leases covering more than 200,000 acres and 7,900 usable wells. Between 80% and 90% of all surface-disturbing activities related to oil and gas activities occur in the San Joaquin Valley on public lands administered by Central California District, Bakersfield Field Office. More than 95% of all federal drilling occurs in established fields within the Kern County area of the San Joaquin Valley.
Posted inArticles

New public-land drilling rules would overhaul the Western oil industry

by Nick Bowlin July 21, 2023January 24, 2024

The potential new rules would hike the amount companies must pay in order to drill, in addition to other changes.

Vail, Colorado, as seen from the gondola that services Vail Ski Resort.
Posted inArticles

Western resort towns risk being ‘loved to death’

by Nick Bowlin May 23, 2023January 24, 2024

A new report details the downsides of tourism and population booms – and what communities can do about it.

Cillian Liam Barrett and Edward Morrison install a heat pump system in the attic of a new accessory dwelling unit in Crested Butte, Colorado. The town recently passed new energy-efficient building codes.
Posted inApril 1, 2023: The Path Forward

The natural gas pushback

by Nick Bowlin March 21, 2023January 24, 2024

Local communities want to electrify, but gas interests have other ideas.

Posted inArticles

Colorado regulators come down hard on troubled oil company

by Nick Bowlin February 2, 2023January 24, 2024

K.P. Kauffman said that penalties could result in a large bankruptcy, leaving well cleanup to the state.

Posted inArticles

Colorado works on an oil and gas well cleanup guarantee, but doubts loom

by Nick Bowlin January 13, 2023January 24, 2024

The state’s financial assurance process called ‘the strongest in the nation.’

Posted inArticles

Feds claim Defenders of Wildlife unlawfully fired union-organizing staffer

by Nick Bowlin October 28, 2022January 24, 2024

The environmental nonprofit’s work environment is under scrutiny after multiple unfair labor submissions.

Posted inArticles

EXCLUSIVE: Investigation confirms Nevada Gold Mines violated safety rules, contributing to miner’s death

by Nick Bowlin and Daniel Rothberg October 10, 2022January 24, 2024

State investigators reveal that the company did not follow basic safety protocols.

Posted inArticles

The feds declined to seriously cut Colorado River water use. Here’s what that means

by Nick Bowlin August 18, 2022January 24, 2024

After Southwestern states failed to cut a deal, the Interior Department took it easy on them.

Posted inOctober 1, 2022: Making Refuge

Workers report feeling unsafe at Nevada’s largest gold-mining corporation

by Nick Bowlin and Daniel Rothberg August 15, 2022January 26, 2024

After a controversial merger put the company in the hands of Barrick Gold Corp, employees say the shift has incentivized production over worker safety.

Posted inAugust 1, 2022: Our Fiery Future

How oil companies endlessly avoid cleanup costs

by Nick Bowlin July 19, 2022January 24, 2024

In Colorado, a sale of 110 low-producing oil wells illustrates a hot potato effect, and how funding remediation eventually comes from the public.

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