By Maggie Mullen CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Both the Wyoming House and Senate adjourned Thursday “sine die” — Latin for recessing “without
By Maggie Mullen CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Both the Wyoming House and Senate adjourned Thursday “sine die” — Latin for recessing “without
By Mike Koshmrl Working out of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Lander office back in the 1970s, biologist Richard Baldes
Only a handful of the whopping 45 election-related bills filed this session made it to the governor’s desk.
The governor cited concerns over the bill’s invasive nature and its lack of exceptions for victims of rape and incest
House Bill 199 will give $7,000 to families to pay for private school or tutoring. Gov. Gordon lauds it in
The governor cited concerns over the bill’s invasive nature and its lack of exceptions for victims of rape and incest
Senators restored a $66.3 million external cost adjustment Friday for teacher and school staff salaries, signaling intent to abide by
CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Gov. Mark Gordon signed seven bills into law on Tuesday, including bills that provide permanent property tax
The governor objected to the bill’s invasive nature and its lack of exceptions for victims of rape or incest.
Official figures are lacking amid an information lockdown under the new administration, but sources tell WyoFile that a small percentage
Wellspring Health Access in Casper — the only in-clinic abortion facility in Wyoming — asked a judge to block new
Rep. Bill Allemand watched intently from the Wyoming Senate gallery as the upper chamber considered advancing a prairie dog-shooting bill
Property tax talks falter after senators accuse House members of backing out of deal
Rooftop solar advocates were jazzed about expanding the state’s net-metering credit system to ranches, churches and municipalities, but say amended
"Everybody is scratching their heads," Sen. Stephan Pappas said of questions about the bill’s impact that some senators think were
Congress ended a program that offered $8.3 million, mostly to ranchers, to conserve water in 2023. Wyoming wants it renewed.
Senate File 69 will now go to the conference committee, where House and Senate members will try to reconcile their
Lawmakers and residents want more answers before opening the state to nuclear fuel waste storage.
Debate and legal filings show state politicians view illegal immigration as an economic threat. Interviews with immigrants show the limits
Firefighters, sheriffs, community colleges and special districts are calling for targeted relief for homeowners in place of blanket cuts that
Spending between the two chambers is not terribly far apart, but the two positions reveal meaty philosophical differences.
Bill would have opted Wyoming into federal SUN Bucks program, which offers debit cards to income-qualified families to help buy
The most sweeping measure would move the 2026 governor’s race up several months and implement a runoff system.
Bear’s online remarks hurt the House, Harshman said on the floor, before the Freedom Caucus doubled down on social media.
CHEYENNE, Wyo. — The Wyoming Legislature officially reached the halfway mark of the 2025 session Feb. 10, marking a critical
Church leaders and people in families with mixed-immigration status say Senate bill criminalizes the day-to-day actions of legal citizens as
The federal program is "the most efficient, effective way to get food to those kids," bill sponsor Rep. Lloyd Larsen
The measures faced skepticism from mining groups, as well as ranchers hoping to earn revenue from carbon dioxide storage.
In the wake of a Laramie representative’s universal school voucher bill and another to relax teacher certification standards, critics encourage
A Wyoming Senate-approved bill aiming to halve residential property taxes faces concerns it could cripple essential services like fire departments
Support local news and always be the first to know!
© 2025 Cap City News | 120 West 1st Street, Casper WY 82601 | Privacy | AP Policy
Website by Web Publisher PRO