News

Hurricane Helene made landfall in the southeastern U.S., later downgrading to a tropical storm causing strong winds, flooding ...
Jim Branscome is a retired managing director of Standard & Poor’s and a former journalist whose articles have appeared in the ...
As Trump proposes cutting Appalachian Regional Commission, Central Appalachia's coalfields and rural counties remain mired in ...
Privately held producer Greylock Energy gains traction in both upstream and midstream deal-making, boosting build-out in ...
A documentary that examines the cultural stereotype of the people of Appalachia and how that has affected America's rela | ...
Rousseau was a repeat entrant in the prestigious Dijon Prize contests and actually won the coveted award a second time in ...
Wyoming's first new coal mine in 50 years is said to be operating soon but it won't rely on the fossil fuel to make money.
Appalachia is still recovering following Hurricane Helene's widespread damage and the federal government's efforts have been missing or inefficient.
By filling the vacuum of recognition of Appalachia, he used the region to his and the Republican Party’s benefit without actually helping it.
Reports of White Things occur across Appalachia. One early encounter out of West Virginia dates to July 1929, when miner Frank Kozul was walking home from work through the woods of Morgan’s Ridge.
In rural Appalachia, where landslides scarred slopes and water thundered into narrow valleys, Helene’s acute impact renews focus on future mitigation.
Yet another disaster in Appalachia, and yet another lack of enough interest from the cultural elites. Where are the national media regarding Hurricane Helene?