-
The company at the center of a controversial green energy project connecting New Mexico and Arizona has changed plans for a key component: A much-debated pipeline that would have carried climate-friendly hydrogen will instead carry natural gas, and possibly a natural gas-hydrogen blend at a future date.
-
A new podcast by journalists Andy Lyman and Laura Paskus aims to keep New Mexico news and people front and center. On their inaugural episode of 鈥淟esser Known New Mexico,鈥 the two spoke with Source New Mexico鈥檚 Patrick Lohmann about his recent coverage on the potential restart of uranium mining in the state.
-
Since President Trump issued numerous executive orders last month related to immigration enforcement, some Native American communities have raised concerns over the safety of tribal members, with reports of some being detained and being misidentified as immigrants.
-
A Navajo citizen describes being questioned by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
-
Local Indigenous communities that have been impacted by long-term uranium exposure will be traveling to Washington D.C. on Sunday to demand that Congress pass a bill that will compensate those exposed to radiation.
-
It鈥檚 been 45 years since the largest radioactive release in U.S. history occurred at Church Rock New Mexico. Members of the Navajo Nation will gather on Saturday to commemorate the anniversary of the uranium spill.
-
On Tuesday, Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren spoke for the first time about sexual harassment allegations by his vice president that became public last month. He denied any wrongdoing and said accusations are not true.
-
An oil and gas firm planned to convert a New Mexico water well into a disposal site for toxic wastewater. A familiar face stood in its way.
-
In this encore episode, we hear from the curators of the exhibit 鈥淣othing Left For Me: Federal Policy and the Photography of Milton Snow in Din茅 Bik茅yah,鈥 which looks at the brutal impact of the Navajo Livestock Reduction imposed upon Din茅 communities and homelands by U.S. Indian Commissioner John Collier starting in the 1930s.
-
Navajo Nation citizens have spent decades in need of new and improved housing across their reservation. In response, Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren is working with ZenniHome in a public-private partnership to bring sustainable and affordable factory-made housing to its citizens.