Brooke Larsen
@jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
2.2K followers 700 following 25 posts
Reporter at The Salt Lake Tribune. Formerly at High Country News. Views my own. Tips: [email protected] or DM for signal. jbrookelarsen.com
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jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
Zion National Park has been considering a timed entry system to better handle the boom in visitors. Some Utah officials don't want a reservation system, though. Washington County passed a resolution in opposition to the park's anticipated draft visitor use management plan.
Zion National Park is considering a reservation system. Utah leaders don’t want it.
Utah leaders speak out against a proposed reservation system at Zion National Park as they anticipate the release of a draft visitor use management plan.
www.sltrib.com
Reposted by Brooke Larsen
thefern.org
Read the full story, which is part of “Food and Power in the West,” a FERN special issue produced in partnership with High Country News, at thefern.org/2025/09/food...

@highcountrynews.org @jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
The volunteer Pine Valley firefighters defended their community from the ferocious Forsyth Fire. Now they're processing the emotional toll and helping their community recover. “This was traumatic,” said Pine Valley Fire Chief Robert Hardy. “The whole department felt it.”
After defending their community, Pine Valley firefighters reckon with Forsyth Fire’s toll
Pine Valley firefighters are processing their trauma from the Forsyth Fire as they help their community recover from the blaze.
www.sltrib.com
jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
House Republicans are seeking to slash funding for the management of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, limiting the BLM’s ability to protect roughly 900,000 acres of land within the current 1.9 million-acre monument.
House Republicans move to slash funding for this southern Utah national monument
U.S. House Republicans are seeking to slash funding for the management of Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument. According to a proposed funding bill for fiscal year 2026 for the Department of ...
www.sltrib.com
Reposted by Brooke Larsen
propublica.org
NEW: On March 15, President Donald Trump’s administration sent more than 230 Venezuelan immigrants to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador.

Last week, the men were released as suddenly as they’d been taken away.

These are their stories.
The Men Trump Deported to a Salvadoran Prison
On March 15, President Donald Trump’s administration sent more than 230 Venezuelan immigrants to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador. Last week, the men were released as suddenly as they’d been t...
www.propublica.org
Reposted by Brooke Larsen
jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
The BLM approved the expansion of an oil transport facility in eastern Utah Thursday evening after a 16-day review. This will increase the amount of waxy crude oil producers can truck out of the Uinta Basin and transfer onto rails cars that travel for over 100 miles along the Colorado River.
Trump administration fast-tracks oil transport expansion in eastern Utah
The Bureau of Land Management approved the expansion of an oil transloading facility in Carbon County Thursday evening after an expedited review under President Trump’s “national energy emergency” dec...
www.sltrib.com
jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
UPDATE: Forsyth Fire destroys 12 structures, including primary and secondary homes in Pine Valley.
jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
Wildfires are growing across Southern Utah. Last night, the Forsyth Fire started north of St. George. The France Canyon Fire near Bryce Canyon has spread to more than 9,000 acres, and the Bridge Creek Fire on Navajo Mountain near Lake Powell is now over 1,000 acres. Critical fire weather persists.
Forsyth Fire in Washington County forces mandatory evacuations, as other fires across southern Utah grow
The Forsyth Fire prompted mandatory evacuations in the Pine Valley community, forcing 400 to 500 people from their homes. There are approximately 450 homes in the area, with half of those inhabited by...
www.sltrib.com
jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
Wildfires are growing across Southern Utah. Last night, the Forsyth Fire started north of St. George. The France Canyon Fire near Bryce Canyon has spread to more than 9,000 acres, and the Bridge Creek Fire on Navajo Mountain near Lake Powell is now over 1,000 acres. Critical fire weather persists.
Forsyth Fire in Washington County forces mandatory evacuations, as other fires across southern Utah grow
The Forsyth Fire prompted mandatory evacuations in the Pine Valley community, forcing 400 to 500 people from their homes. There are approximately 450 homes in the area, with half of those inhabited by...
www.sltrib.com
jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
I'm excited to share I started a new position this week as Southwestern Utah Reporter with @sltrib.com. Here's my first quick story on the reconstruction of the Emerald Pools Bridge in Zion National Park. Send me tips on all things Southwest Utah at [email protected].
Zion National Park reopens bridge to popular trails after more than 2 years
Zion National Park on Tuesday reopened a bridge connecting Zion Lodge to the popular Emerald Pools hiking trails that weave through ephemeral waterfalls and essential water bodies for wildlife.
www.sltrib.com
Reposted by Brooke Larsen
wired.com
WIRED @wired.com · Mar 18
They're called public records for a reason. Starting today, WIRED will *stop paywalling* articles that are primarily based on public records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, becoming the first publication to partner with @freedom.press to offer this for our new coverage.
Wired is dropping paywalls for FOIA-based reporting. Others should follow
As the administration does its best to hide public records from the public, Wired magazine is stepping up to help stem the secrecy
freedom.press
Reposted by Brooke Larsen
sourcenm.com
“We don’t know what’s happened to these four dozen New Mexicans. They’ve effectively disappeared. They’re gone,” said Becca Sheff, senior staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico.
ICE has ‘disappeared’ 48 New Mexico residents, attorneys say • Source New Mexico
“We don’t know what’s happened to these four dozen New Mexicans. They’ve effectively disappeared. They’re gone,” an ACLU attorney said.
buff.ly
Reposted by Brooke Larsen
highcountrynews.org
📣 Starting now, @HighCountryNews will provide free digital access to all of our reporting to any federal employee, including those who have recently lost jobs due to government layoffs. 📣
jbrookelarsen.bsky.social
For over a year, I've been investigating the Utah Inland Port Authority's expansion around the receding Great Salt Lake. While some local leaders see UIPA as an opportunity to boost economic growth, community members worry about pollution, wetland destruction, accountability and loss of rural life.
As the Great Salt Lake recedes, industry rises - High Country News
Utah’s Inland Port Authority works with local officials to boost development, but residents feel ignored.
www.hcn.org
Reposted by Brooke Larsen
grist.org
Grist @grist.org · Feb 14
Where did billions in climate and infrastructure funding go?

From clean energy projects to bridges, this interactive tool shows what projects lawmakers announced in your neighborhood.

grist.org/accountabili...

#Climate #Data #GreenSky #IRA #BIL
Where did billions in climate and infrastructure funding go? Search our map by ZIP code.
From clean energy projects to bridges, this interactive tool shows what projects lawmakers announced in your neighborhood.
grist.org
Reposted by Brooke Larsen
esqueer.net
We've created a tracker that covers all executive orders affecting LGBTQ folks along with federal and state legislation.

We're at 334 anti-LGBTQ bills.

docs.google.com/spreadsheets...

Credit
@alli.gay
@erininthemorning.com
@evanurquhart.bsky.social
@miralazine.bsky.social
@lizsaila.bsky.social
A screenshot of a multi‐column table listing several U.S. presidential Executive Orders relating to LGBTQ+ rights and antidiscrimination policies. Each row has columns for “Origin” (POTUS), “Number/Identifier” (e.g., EO 13988), “Title” (such as Preventing and Combating Discrimination…), “Action Type” (e.g., Broad Nondiscrimination, Military Nondiscrimination), “Summary” (key points of each order), and “Date Signed.” The listed orders span from early 2021 through early 2025, covering topics like preventing discrimination based on gender identity or sexual orientation, banning conversion therapy, rescinding prior harmful EOs, and restricting or expanding DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) initiatives. A spreadsheet at the top shows columns tracking anti‐LGBTQ bills by status and year: total bills (334), 2025 bills (327), 2024 rollovers (7), how many passed committees (3), passed one chamber (5), passed both chambers (0), enacted (1), vetoed (0), failed (3), and carried forward (0). Below that, another header row lists different types of anti‐LGBTQ legislation (e.g., gender‐affirming care bans, pronoun bans, “Don’t Say Gay,” drag bans, bathroom bans) with the total count of each category (e.g., 55 for gender‐affirming care bans, 20 for pronoun bans, 14 for “Don’t Say Gay,” etc.). A color‐coded U.S. map spans the lower half, with states shaded from light orange to deep red according to how many anti‐LGBTQ bills they contain. Texas appears in the darkest red (46 bills), with lighter shades indicating fewer bills in other states. A note at the bottom right explains that the map shows total tracked bills per state, which does not necessarily reflect each bill’s likelihood of passage.