Krista Langlois

Meet the protectors of British Columbia’s coast

In the Great Bear Rainforest, Indigenous guardians enforce tribal and environmental laws

Park fee proposal reignites questions about funding open spaces

When Kitty Benzar bought her house in Colorado’s San Juan National Forest 30 years ago, federal law prohibited land-management agencies from charging people to use undeveloped public lands, ...

Alaska’s gas pipeline dreams remain in purgatory

A decades-long plan to deliver the state’s gas reserves to the market remains in purgatory

Grand Canyon plan divides tribal members

Escalade bill leaves opponents scrambling for support

How one Utah county silenced Native American voters

A series of lawsuits could help counteract decades of racist practices

Scientist hopes to restore West’s degraded grasslands

A scientist with ranching roots is trying to restore balance to degraded grasslands

Developers look to cash in on Grand Canyon

In 1903, Theodore Roosevelt stood on the South Rim of the Grand Canyon, infinite layers of sunset-colored rock unfolding into the earth behind him. “I hope,” he later said, “you will not hav...

Grand Canyon village set back

Rejection is latest in push to develop rim

‘Grand bargain’

After decades of stalemate over protecting red rock landscapes, bill gets mixed reactions

Where private land meets public interest

A group of landowners in the Southwest aims to conserve a contested landscape