
Judy Fahys
Reporter, InsideClimate ڱJudy Fahys is the Mountain West reporter for InsideClimate ڱ, an independent, nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that covers energy, climate and the environment. She has reported on the West for decades from Washington, D.C., and Salt Lake City. After covering the environment, politics and business at the Salt Lake Tribune, she fell in love with audio storytelling as the environment and public lands reporter for NPR Utah/KUER. Previously, she spent an academic year as a Knight Science Journalism fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, High Country ڱ and Outside magazine and aired on NPR. She serves on the board of the Society of Environmental Journalists.
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The federal agency overseeing the Lake Powell Pipeline license application issued a key ruling on Tuesday which some critics are saying will delay the...
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Brooks Kelly stopped at a display of smart sprinkler-system controllers.“This 6-station timer — it’s got a rebate,” said Kelly, who works the plumbing…
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Bikes are off limits in the nation's 100 million acres of wilderness. But a few members of Congress want that to change.
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Conservationists from around the country are opposing congressional legislation to allow a four-lane highway through a desert tortoise preserve in fast...
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You’ve probably heard about the GDP or those “best places to live” rankings. The Family Prosperity Index also factors in family life as a measure of...
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The governors of neighboring Western states shared a stage Tuesday to talk about energy . Utah Republican Gary Herbert and Colorado Democrat John...
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The 100 Deadliest Days for car and truck crashes starts Memorial Day and ends on Labor Day. It’s when fatalities spike the tally, leading to more than 1...
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A record number of Native Americans are running for political office this year nationally and in the Mountain West.
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The country's first free-range parenting law goes into effect in Utah May 8. But people in other states are already warming to the idea.
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Too many decisions about the West get made in Washington, D.C. At least, that's what the Secretary of the Interior thinks. Ryan Zinke plans to move...