Reporter
Savannah is a reporter based out of Albuquerque, New Mexico. Her reporting centers on Indigenous communities and rural economies.
The ski industry is facing a labor shortage as it starts to navigate its third pandemic season.
As local newsrooms struggle, hedge funds can become the investors of last resort.
Those in the business of building roads and bridges expect a turnaround once money starts to flow from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
The nonprofits faced higher demand through the pandemic. Now, with food costs rising, their resources are stretched even further.
Economic conditions have changed from 2020 when better-off households had a lot of cash to spare.
Smaller businesses that sell locally sourced goods, or provide services, don’t always need faraway suppliers.
The agency is partnering with groups aiming to add more buffalo to tribal diets and to create an heirloom seed repository, among others.
The agency has warned companies against using what it calls “illegal dark patterns” to trap consumers into subscriptions that are then hard to get out of.
During the summit, tribal leaders drew attention to the lack of investment in the Indian Health Service.
Rural states with the most work to do on those fronts — like Alaska, Wyoming, Montana and Vermont — will receive the most funding per capita.