Anna King
Podcasts
Stories
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Oregon joins Washington in having a full time tribal affairs director on governor’s staff
Oregon has created the fresh tribal affairs director position, while Washington has had a similar official in place since the early 80s.
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Hanford managers and watchdogs hold first in-person cleanup dialogue meeting since before pandemic
Hanford managers and watchdogs hold public meeting to discuss current cleanup and future plans at the site
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With dogs and radar, volunteers search for remains at Mool-Mool, or Fort Simcoe State Park
Since time immemorial, Native Tribes in the Columbia Basin met at a village crossroads called Mool-Mool. In the wake of the Yakama Treaty of 1855, the site was of continual use as a U.S. military outpost, and for decades, the grounds included a boarding school operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, where children from the Yakama Nation were forced to attend. Today, volunteers and Yakama descendants are searching the 200-acre park for their relatives' remains.
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As families take to the road with their pets, a mysterious disease is sickening hundreds of dogs
It starts like a mild case of kennel cough, then develops into pneumonia-like symptoms. Some animals have died. And scientific labs aren’t sure what they’re dealing with yet – bacteria? A virus? Something else?
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Yakama descendants search for relatives’ remains at Mool-Mool, or Fort Simcoe Historical State Par
Cadaver dogs, ground-penetrating radar and high-tech computer mapping are all employed to help reveal suspected unmarked graves at Fort Simcoe Historical State Park on Yakama Nation lands.
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‘Vintage Year’ for apple crop, experts say the weather was just right
Great weather and increasing international trade are putting a shine on the Northwest apple industry
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A glut of French fry potatoes means a big spud dump across Northwest
Farmers in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Alberta are all dumping potatoes
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Energy Northwest fined over incident that exposed workers
Twenty-two workers exposed, three took in most of the dose
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Big trouble on the Columbia: EPA studies river’s toxic algae spread
Federal government studies Columbia River in Washington, Shenandoah River in Virginia, Escalante National Monument in Utah and the American River in California for toxic algae.
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Early morning ag chemical release frightens many in Finley, Washington
Mustard-yellow colored nitric acid in the sky Wednesday, being looked into by Benton Clean Air Agency