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  • Marijuana dispensaries in Bozeman lighting up after limits are lifted, the state's hot real estate market not so hot for grizzly bears, and your last day to visit Montana’s historical society is coming up.
  • A plan to ease the housing crisis in Big Sky needs more cooperation from home owners, the Bozeman Public School District needs to make big budget cuts for next year and an Indigenous opera singer hopes her new song will be a new anthem for Yellowstone National Park.
  • Residents in one southwest Montana town question whether or not they can afford to stay there, suggestions for coping with increased depression during the winter months shows success, and residents in West Yellowstone work to build a hospital closer than fifty miles away.
  • It's Tuesday, Jan. 3. Montana Republicans are at odds over a legislative rule change, Bozeman’s public bus system clears an election hurdle, and a Helena woman recounts her time volunteering in Ukraine.
  • Montana lawmakers consider a bill to help find missing persons, Bozeman school officials search for ways to cut millions in their budget and a lottery to float one of Montana’s most popular rivers is open.
  • More police presence is planned at a Billings school after a threat is made, Montanans now have two additional years to update their driver’s license for federal certification, and a conversation on wolves in Yellowstone Park from those who know them best.
  • Some of Montana’s surplus budget is going for restoration projects in the state, money continues to be available for families of young children, and a Montana air base is part of a secret pentagon plan.
  • It's Thursday, June 3rd. Farmers and ranchers can now use hemp in feed, the fire outlook as the state experiences some hot weather this week and a look at the future of predator management in Montana.
  • It's Friday, June 4th. Lawmakers consider overriding some of Gov. Greg Gianforte's vetoes, $75 million in federal coronavirus aid for public health spending approved and the federal program to help small businesses stay afloat during the pandemic ends.
  • It's Tuesday, June 29th. Energy usage spikes due to hot weather, an increase in overdoses from synthetic opioids in the state and a pop-up COVID-19 vaccination clinic for veterans reflects slumping demand for the shot.
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