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  • It's Tuesday, June 28th. Fire danger increases as summer weather heats up, the state's plan to expand electric vehicle infrastructure and Montana's Catholic leaders say they're grateful for the overturning of Roe v. Wade.
  • It's Friday, July 1st. The head of the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services steps down, push back against a health department rule barring transgender residents from amending the gender marker on their birth certificates and a conversation about why abortion havens on tribal lands are unlikely.
  • It's Friday, February 11. In today's headlines: an unusual lawsuit makes its way through the courts; betting big on the Super Bowl; and getting students the mental health help they need.
  • It's Monday, February 14. (Happy Valentine's Day, if that's your thing.) Today in Montana news: no more mask requirement in Bozeman public Schools; an abortion lawsuit heads back to court; and long-term residents of a Kalispell hotel that closed over the weekend scramble to find new housing.
  • It's Tuesday, March 15th. Billings' public transit gets funding for new buses, more than 300 people filed to run for office in the state and the Montana State Hospital receives more time to prevent the loss of Medicare funding.
  • It's Thursday, March 17th. A disability rights group has reached a settlement with the Montana Department of Corrections over conditions at the Montana State Prison and the state hospital projected to spend about $7 million over its budget due to staffing issues.
  • It's Friday, March 11th. A long-distance rail study boosts hopes that passenger rail could return to the state, a former Secretary of State looking into running for president and the U.S. Census Bureau undercounts American Indian, Black and Hispanic residents at higher rates than a decade ago.
  • It's Monday, March 14th. Today is the filing deadline for candidates running for office in the state, the Montana Democratic Party hires a coordinator to engage Native American voters and the impacts on water supply due to warming temperatures in the Greater Yellowstone region.
  • It's Tuesday, April 5th. Federal funds to clean up developed and abandoned mine land and the state environmental regulatory agency reaffirms its argument that a pollution standard for a lake in northwest Montana follows state and federal law after a state review board called it into question.
  • 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.
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