Idle oil and gas wells are dangers for tribes and people while the operators and regulators stand by.
*Runner-up SPJ’s Northwest Excellence in Journalism Award for Social Issues Reporting
When Indigenous women are harassed at work, gaps in tribal law can leave them in a precarious gray area.
Read MoreOnce considered illegitimate, Native American peacemaking courts offer a model for criminal-justice reform.
*winner of SPJ’s Northwest Excellence in Journalism Award for Social Issues Reporting
Read MorePunitive discipline, inadequate curriculum, and declining federal funding created an education crisis.
*winner of SPJ’s Northwest Excellence in Journalism Award for Social Issues Reporting
*runner-up for SPJ’s Northwest Excellence in Journalism Award for Government & Politics Reporting
Read MoreNative Americans say the law protects their children. The Goldwater Institute claims it does the opposite.
*winner of SPJ’s Northwest Excellence in Journalism Award for Social Issues Reporting
*2nd place winner for Best Feature Article, Print/Online from NAJA
Read MoreEach year logging companies drop thousands of pounds of herbicides onto Oregon forests; sometimes, the people living nearby get sprayed and sick.
Read MoreWhat happens when your garden, your kid’s school, the playground sits on top of former farms and orchards? What chemicals are living in the soil?
Read MoreA broken system leaves immigrant workers invisible - and in danger. Reprinted in Utne Reader.
*winner of the 2010 Hillman Prize for Magazine Writing
Read MoreNorthwest tribes utilize traditions and religion to stem a health care crisis.
Read MoreWhen civilization coughs up its final death rattle, one of the last bastions of mankind’s survival will lie near Corvallis behind a modest sign touting a simple mantra: “Preserving plant genetic resources for all time.”
Read More“It’s absolutely shocking what’s going on,” say insiders. Secretive changes have diluted science and jeopardized public health.
*Winner of Salon.com’s Best Story of the Year
Read MoreFresno County growers apply pesticides an average of 273,000 times per year; they don’t always stay in the fields for which they’re intended; they may lace the air and drift throughout town onto, say, the playground or people’s homes.
Read MoreIf hybrids are driving a revolution, it's a televised road trip to marketing heaven.
Read MoreAn investigation into the shadow world of sex and labor trafficking in the United States.
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