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Bozeman Fights to Protect Wildlands While Wildfire Burns and Healthcare Changes Loom
Published 1 month, 1 week ago
Description
Good morning, this is your Bozeman Local Frequency for Thursday, March 19.
Folks, our community is buzzing with passion over the future of our wild lands. Just last week at the Gallatin County Fairgrounds, a packed house gathered for a fiery public meeting on the proposed repeal of the 2001 Roadless Rule, which protects six million acres in Montana from new roads and logging. Local heroes like former Bozeman Ranger District leader Lisa Stoeffler warned that threats like wildfires and climate change make these protections more vital than ever, debunking claims that roads help fight fires by pointing to data showing they actually spark more blazes. Adaptive athlete Vasu Sojitra shared how roadless areas open the outdoors to everyone through smart programming, not more pavement. Residents from Karissa Wedman, a young wildland firefighter whos known these safeguards her whole life, to Scott Bischke, whos explored every corner, poured out heartfelt stories urging leaders to preserve these spaces for wildlife, families, and future generations. Organizers from Wild Montana and allies collected hundreds of comments to submit when the US Forest Service drops its proposal soon, proving Bozemanites voice matters in shaping our backyard forests.
Shifting to urgent alerts, Gallatin Gateway Fire crews are battling a wildfire in the 14200 block of Cottonwood Canyon right now, so please steer clear to keep responders safe and let them contain it fast, especially with spring winds picking up.
On a brighter note, healthcare access faces changes with Montanas Medicaid work requirements kicking in July 1, six months ahead of schedule. Adults 19 to 64 must log 80 hours monthly in work, training, or volunteering, or risk losing coverage, though exemptions cover the medically frail, caregivers, and more. Local providers like Big Sandy Medical Centers CEO Ron Wiens worry it could hit clinics hard, where Medicaid patients make up 20 percent, potentially straining care for working families. Doctors call for clear guidance to keep it helpful, not a barrier.
Tonight, dive into fun. Head to Bozeman Library at 2pm for Raptors for Kids, a free hands-on adventure with our feathered predators. Catch Rent rocking the Ellen Theatre at 7:30pm, tickets from 84 bucks for that timeless tale of love and survival. Or join Bingo Nights at The Jump from 7 to 9pm for laughs and prizes. Todays also prime for business networking with the Bozeman Chamber at 7:30am if youre hustling.
Stay engaged, Bozeman, these stories shape our valley life.
This has been Bozeman Local Frequency. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Folks, our community is buzzing with passion over the future of our wild lands. Just last week at the Gallatin County Fairgrounds, a packed house gathered for a fiery public meeting on the proposed repeal of the 2001 Roadless Rule, which protects six million acres in Montana from new roads and logging. Local heroes like former Bozeman Ranger District leader Lisa Stoeffler warned that threats like wildfires and climate change make these protections more vital than ever, debunking claims that roads help fight fires by pointing to data showing they actually spark more blazes. Adaptive athlete Vasu Sojitra shared how roadless areas open the outdoors to everyone through smart programming, not more pavement. Residents from Karissa Wedman, a young wildland firefighter whos known these safeguards her whole life, to Scott Bischke, whos explored every corner, poured out heartfelt stories urging leaders to preserve these spaces for wildlife, families, and future generations. Organizers from Wild Montana and allies collected hundreds of comments to submit when the US Forest Service drops its proposal soon, proving Bozemanites voice matters in shaping our backyard forests.
Shifting to urgent alerts, Gallatin Gateway Fire crews are battling a wildfire in the 14200 block of Cottonwood Canyon right now, so please steer clear to keep responders safe and let them contain it fast, especially with spring winds picking up.
On a brighter note, healthcare access faces changes with Montanas Medicaid work requirements kicking in July 1, six months ahead of schedule. Adults 19 to 64 must log 80 hours monthly in work, training, or volunteering, or risk losing coverage, though exemptions cover the medically frail, caregivers, and more. Local providers like Big Sandy Medical Centers CEO Ron Wiens worry it could hit clinics hard, where Medicaid patients make up 20 percent, potentially straining care for working families. Doctors call for clear guidance to keep it helpful, not a barrier.
Tonight, dive into fun. Head to Bozeman Library at 2pm for Raptors for Kids, a free hands-on adventure with our feathered predators. Catch Rent rocking the Ellen Theatre at 7:30pm, tickets from 84 bucks for that timeless tale of love and survival. Or join Bingo Nights at The Jump from 7 to 9pm for laughs and prizes. Todays also prime for business networking with the Bozeman Chamber at 7:30am if youre hustling.
Stay engaged, Bozeman, these stories shape our valley life.
This has been Bozeman Local Frequency. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI