skip to main content
skip to newscasts

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Public News Service Logo
facebook instagram linkedin reddit youtube twitter
view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Elon Musk says Trump's spending bill undermines the work DOGE has been doing; Report outlines hazards of NC Buc-ee's project, other gas stations; Latest school funding bill heads back to TX House; NASA begins closing Goddard Institute in NY.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

King Charles warns Canada of attacks on democracy. Britain's Ambassador to the U.S. says allies must work together, and GOP's budget plan severely impacts the arts.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Immigrants are driving rural population growth, especially in Texas, North Carolina, and Iowa, ICE agents are targeting immigrant labor groups along with their leaders and Louisiana's T-Rey's lures customers with hogshead cheese and boudin.

Water Watchdogs to Redouble Efforts After Trespass Law Revoked

play audio
Play

Thursday, November 1, 2018   

CHEYENNE, Wyo. – Environmental watchdog groups are eager to get back in the field after a Wyoming federal district court this week struck down so-called data trespass laws.

Erik Molvar, executive director of the Western Watersheds Project, says by threatening citizens with jail time for collecting environmental data on public lands – if private lands had been crossed to reach those sites, even accidentally – the laws made it a lot harder to hold polluters accountable.

"So basically the law clamps down on the free speech rights of environmental watchdog groups, and indeed any member of the public, that wants to warn a federal agency that a problem is happening on public lands that that agency manages," he states.

Legislators passed laws in 2015 and 2016 arguing that measures were necessary to protect the rights of property owners.

But the judge wrote in his ruling that "there is simply no plausible reason for the specific curtailment of speech in the statutes beyond a clear attempt to punish individuals for engaging in protected speech that at least some find unpleasant."

Molvar says his group has collected scientific data for years showing that a majority of waterways on publicly owned lands in Wyoming are contaminated by potentially lethal fecal bacteria from livestock, in violation of the Clean Water Act, and he believes the state laws were passed to protect industry from being held accountable.

"But the Wyoming Legislature wanted to suppress our ability to warn the public about these serious health and safety problems and the risks that are posed by the livestock industry and their fecal coliform contamination," he states.

The court's ruling strikes down the state laws and permanently blocks them from being applied.

Earlier this year, the Wyoming Legislature passed a law that would have added bigger penalties to people who exercised their free speech rights at energy facilities, but the statute was vetoed by Gov. Matt Mead.


get more stories like this via email

more stories
Cure Violence program outreach workers are trained by Temple University's Center for Bioethics to spot patterns of violence and connect with people at highest risk, often those with criminal records, gang involvement or past experiences with gun violence. (Courtesy Tyreek Counts)

Social Issues

play sound

CLARIFICATION: The grant from Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency is helping to keep program staff employed. An earlier version of the …


Social Issues

play sound

In response to increasing federal threats to immigrant communities, including cuts to food assistance and deportations, a coalition of more than 100 …

Social Issues

play sound

New bipartisan bills in the Ohio Legislature would provide a $2,000 tax credit to working Ohioans who care for family members at home. The goal is …


Environment

play sound

The National Park Service faces at least two lawsuits for its latest bison management plan for Yellowstone National Park, the first update released …

Along Minnesota's Iron Range, taconite mining is one of the heavily scrutinized industries in the push to protect surrounding resources, like Lake Superior. (Adobe Stock)

Environment

play sound

Minnesota has its own carbon emissions reduction goals in place but under a changing federal Environmental Protection Agency, it is an open question …

Environment

play sound

In 2022, Colorado passed a law requiring oil and gas operators to let the public know what chemicals were being used underground. Chemicals are …

Environment

play sound

By Nina B. Elkadi for Sentient.Broadcast version by Mark Moran for Iowa News Service reporting for the Sentient-Public News Service Collaboration …

 

Phone: 303.448.9105 Toll Free: 888.891.9416 Fax: 208.247.1830 Your trusted member- and audience-supported news source since 1996 Copyright © 2021