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The federal government is evaluating whether to continue funding grants that support schools in recruiting teachers and helping kids learning English, among other priorities
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This comes amid Trump administration cuts to special services on the 988 hotline.
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Basalt Town Council commits to $250,000
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Lots of uncertainty still remains about what the federal government will and won't pay for. But one thing is clear: The feds will pay for toilet pumping on the Bridger-Teton National Forest.
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From the metal for cans to sourcing flavors from Italy, Mexico or West Africa, beer is an international business. And brewers in Utah worry about what Trump's tariffs will mean for their costs and creativity.
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Many said reforms are needed, but are wary of some of the Trump administration's proposals.
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Attorney Steven D. Zansberg describes NPR’s lawsuit against the Trump administration, and how Aspen Public Radio, Colorado Public Radio and KSUT Public Radio represent the interests of NPR-member stations across the country as co-plaintiffs.
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Aspen Public Radio has joined NPR, Colorado Public Radio and KSUT Public Radio in a lawsuit filed Tuesday morning against the Trump administration over its May 1 executive order threatening federal funding cuts to public media.
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Uber threatened to stop operating in Colorado if House Bill 1291 became law. Lyft also urged the governor to veto the measure.
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A Republican representative from the Mountain West led an effort Wednesday to remove a controversial provision to sell 450,000 acres of federal land in Nevada and Utah from the House reconciliation bill.
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The law takes effect in less than a year, but efforts to update it seem to have stalled out, at least for now.
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House leaders are trying to pass the massive package with Republican votes alone. Trump came to the Capitol Tuesday morning to convince the holdouts to back the bill.