Corin Cates-Carney
Corin Cates-Carney is the Flathead Valley reporter for MTPR.
Corin has worked for NPR, and is a UM Journalism School Graduate.
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Low housing supply is reducing affordable places to live, and Pew reports rising rents are linked to growing homelessness.
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Power to more than 10,000 Flathead Electric Cooperative members went out Monday night in northwest Montana as strong winds pushed across the region. Thousands of people remain without power.
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State wildlife officials say chronic wasting disease was detected in a deer within the city limits of Baker in southeastern Montana. CWD is a fatal neurological disease that infects members of the deer family.
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A record level of funding is available to help Montanans shop for health insurance options in the Affordable Care Act marketplace.
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Unofficial election results show Missoula, Park and Yellowstone counties each approved a 3% local tax on recreational marijuana.
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During a conversation about climate change held Thursday night at the University of Montana between former Vice President Al Gore and former Montana U.S. Sen. Max Baucus, both men expressed hope.
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Montana has joined a lawsuit with nine other states suing the U.S. government over President Biden’s vaccine mandate for federal contract workers. Meanwhile, the Montana Nurses Association has filed to join a lawsuit against a state law that bans most employers from requiring vaccinations.
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Montana’s program designed to encourage people to reenter the workforce during the pandemic is expected to spend about a third of the money set aside for it. State lawmakers agreed on recommendations for how to spend the leftover $10 million.
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A tenured professor at the University of Montana announced through his attorney that he has resigned amid an investigation into his blog. This comes after a student newspaper reported the blog shared homophobic and misogynistic views.
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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has given emergency use authorization for monoclonal antibody treatment for mild-to-moderate COVID-19 cases in people who have tested positive for the virus and who are at high risk of having a severe case.