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  • It's Monday, April 6th. Today we have updates on coronavirus including college graduation, an increase in scams and continued construction of the Keystone…
  • It's Friday, December 6th. Today we have stories about the controversial M-44 device, the CSKT tribal water compact and a school program aimed at lowering…
  • It's Friday, September 6th. Today we have stories about whooping cough, Last Best Outdoors Fest and the Northern Cheyenne Nation's new solar farm.
  • It's Tuesday, April 6th. Gov. Greg Gianforte tests positive for COVID-19, a possible record-breaking tourism season this summer and we take a look at legislation that would impact transgender people moving through the state capitol.
  • Today is Thursday, February 6. We've got stories about how Montanans are feeling following President Donald Trump's acquittal by the U.S. Senate, a…
  • It's Monday, June 6th. Registration to vote in this week's primary ends today at noon, health officials stock up on COVID vaccines ahead of the expected approval of the shots for kids under five and the interlocal agreement that will oversee public health services in Gallatin County.
  • It's Wednesday, April 6th. The plan to expand Helena's psychiatric children's hospital, a ballot initiative to add extra protections to sections of two popular Montana rivers and why a bitcoin mining company near southeastern Montana's Crow reservation is relocating.
  • It’s Thursday, October 6th. Today, a National Park Service historical site honoring Native Americans expands, Governor Greg Gianforte wants to further cut taxes next session, and a street mural in downtown Bozeman celebrates the city’s LGBTQ+ community.
  • It's Wednesday, July 6th. Flooding in downtown Helena, how biologists are tracking a fungal disease that wiped out most of the bats in a north central Montana cave and why researchers are training dogs to sniff out Chronic Wasting Disease.
  • It's Thursday, January 6th. Montanans among the insurrectionists who stormed the U.S. Capitol a year ago today, a new wave of COVID-19 cases and a conversation about donors hitting a $1 million cap on a new tax incentive for donating to public schools.
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