Reporter
Savannah is a reporter based out of Albuquerque, New Mexico. Her reporting centers on Indigenous communities and rural economies.
At more than 500,000 residents, Albuquerque, New Mexico is the largest city in the U.S. to experiment with zero-fare transit.
Many health care workers have fled the pandemic’s burdens in areas with low vaccination rates and fragile economies.
With the expiration of federally mandated COVID sick leave and related tax incentives, businesses are on their own.
The pandemic has highlighted existing challenges for grad student workers and created new ones.
Indigenous agricultural producers say they’ve had it with the federal government’s loan programs.
The global chip shortage. Supply chain headaches. Empty dealer lots and sky-high prices. New car shopping isn’t for the faint of heart.
Gift-givers seem to be paying attention to messages urging them to ship early.
The program will help state and tribal governments purchase locally produced food for nutritional assistance programs like food banks and school cafeterias.
There’s a gaming console shortage thanks to the computer chip shortage and high pandemic demand.
Tribal agricultural leaders say they would like to see more lending to agricultural producers and more autonomous control over federal funds.