Montana
Come see the 'State of Montana' • Daily Montanan
In July of 2019, I launched a radio show on Yellowstone Public Radio based on my book, “Fifty-Six Counties: A Montana Journey.” For the first few years of that program, I interviewed people from all over Montana, talking to them about what it means to them to be from Montana, and about what they’re doing to make Montana a better place.
I loved doing that program, but there were some restrictions, especially in terms of politics, to what I could talk about because of the sponsorship of public radio. So a couple of years ago, I changed the format to talk more about the history of Montana, focusing on events that were important in shaping the way we view ourselves. For example, I did an episode on the Montana Constitution, which is considered one of the best constitutions in the country, an episode on “The Big Burn,” a huge fire that swept through most of Western Montana in 1910 and completely changed the way forestry people approached their job. It also saved the National Forest Service, which the government was considering doing away with.
All this to say that I feel as if I have learned a lot about what is important to Montanans, and what they value most about living in this glorious state. So a few months ago, since I don’t have enough to keep me busy, I decided to start a podcast that would give me a little for freedom to talk to people about whatever I want, including politics. I called the podcast “The State of Montana,” and as the title suggests, my intent is to present various peoples’ ideas of what’s important and what’s troubling about our state. It’s a sort of inventory of what’s going on around the state.
I was fortunate to procure my first interview with Montana legend Dorothy Bradley, the first woman to run for governor, and also the founder of Earth Day in Montana. I drove to Dorothy’s house just outside Clyde Park, and we had a delightful conversation about her experiences as a legislator and a candidate for governor, among other things.
Dorothy also put me in touch with former governor Marc Racicot, the man who beat her in the election, and Marc graciously agreed to an interview as well. It was a good way to get things rolling, and I’ve been happy since then to have the opportunity to visit with several prominent figures, past and present, in the political arena in Montana.
But I also wanted to focus on people who are not directly involved in politics, but are doing things that have a huge impact on our state and the way things are done here in Montana. So I have been very pleased to have conversations with such people as Rachel Carroll Revis, who works for the Southern Poverty Research Center, and Alison Fox, the executive director of the American Prairie, formerly the American Prairie Reserve. I talked to Blackfeet siblings Ivan and Ivy MacDonald, who have had phenomenal success making documentary films, focusing in particular on the issue of Missing and Murdered Indigenous People.
I’ve also interviewed such interesting folks as Tammi Fisher, the former Republican mayor of Kalispell who has become so disillusioned with her party’s tactics that she started her own podcast, “Montana Values,” where she and her producer Mickey talk very frankly about politicians around the state, from both parties, that are disappointing them in major ways. This was one of my favorite conversations.
And now I am pleased that Darrell Ehrlick, The Daily Montanan guru, has agreed to feature “The State of Montana” on the Daily Montanan site. So you can look forward to upcoming interviews with Montana Congressional candidate Steve Held, candidate for State Auditor John Repke, along with a joint conversation with Ryan Busse and Raph Graybill, and an interview with Denise Juneau, who was our Superintendent of Public Schools before making her own run for governor, the first indigenous candidate for that office in our state.
I hope you’ll join me in my journey around the state of Montana, and if you enjoy the podcast, remember that this is a labor of love. I do all the research, editing and engineering myself, so you can support the podcast by subscribing and spreading the word to your friends. I want to give Montanans the chance to get to know those who are making their mark in our state, and I’m grateful for the opportunity to share these conversations with you.
Montana
Montana Morning Headlines: Wednesday, October 29, 2025
WESTERN MONTANA — Here’s a look at Western Montana’s top news stories for Wednesday.
The University of Montana removed Business Professor Anthony Richard Pawlisz from faculty after he was charged with criminal endangerment in Ravalli County court. Pawlisz allegedly pulled a gun on a man and fired a shot into the air after a fight outside of a bar in Florence on Aug. 17, according to court documents. His former class will continue under Professor Udo Fluck. (Read the full story)
Nathaniel Luke Smith pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct on Monday after posing a threat to Mission High School on Oct. 8, which prompted increased police presence while classes continued. Smith is also serving a three-year deferred sentence for intimidation from an incident in November 2024. (Read the full story)
Montana Governor Greg Gianforte said he will not be using state funds to temporarily cover SNAP benefits for nearly 78,000 enrolled Montanans if federal funding runs out on Nov. 1. Amidst a government shutdown, he said it’s a federal responsibility — despite calls from Democrats and food banks to use leftover state money. (Read the full story)
Montana
Army Veteran and Fourth-Generation Montana Rancher Announces Run for Montana’s First Congressional District
Matt Rains recently announced his campaign for Montana’s First Congressional District seat. Rains, a Democrat, is a fourth-generation Montana rancher, U.S. Army Veteran, and former Chief of Staff for the Montana Farmers Union.
“I am running for Congress because Montanans deserve better,” said Rains. “Like my neighbors and friends, I see and feel the cost of everything going up in Montana – and Ryan Zinke is making it worse by voting to support the tariffs and cutting Medicaid to drive up our health care costs.
“When I see a problem, I run towards it to find a solution: when our country was at…
Montana
Thousands of pounds of pork bound for Montana food banks following feral swine investigation
After the state intervened to trap about 100 swine demonstrating feral behaviors, Montana food banks are slated to receive an influx of pork this week.
Late last month, Wildlife Services, a federal agency under the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s umbrella, tipped off the Montana Department of Livestock that it might have a feral swine population on its hands.
Wildlife Services, which intervenes when landowners report conflicts with wildlife, had been called to Phillips County in north-central Montana to investigate a potential bear conflict. The agency didn’t find evidence of bear activity, but it did find hoof prints, pig scat and other signs consistent with swine presence. The day after Wildlife Services visited the site near Malta along the Hi-Line, the state started looking into the matter and learned that approximately 100 pigs were running uncontained and “beginning to demonstrate behaviors and characteristics consistent with feral swine populations,” according to a press release.
The Montana Legislature passed a law in 2015 prohibiting the importation, transportation or possession of feral swine. Intentionally, knowingly or negligently allowing swine to live in a “feral state” is also illegal. By passing the law, policymakers sought to ward off issues states and provinces have reported with feral swine, which can damage crops and wetlands, prey on wildlife and spread a form of brucellosis that can be transmitted to humans.
Neighboring areas, most notably Alberta and Saskatchewan in Canada, have grappled with feral swine populations for years, and wildlife managers there and in the U.S. consider them to be an invasive species.
Montana State Veterinarian Tahnee Szymanski told Montana Free Press that feral swine can become established in three ways: they can migrate into Montana from an area with an established population, they can be introduced — illegally — by hunters eager to pursue them for sport, or they can develop when domestic animals are freed from the “normal checks and balances” associated with livestock production.
“Domestic swine, left to their own devices for a couple of generations, actually revert back to feral behavior very quickly,” Szymanski said. “This is a really good reminder that a potential feral swine population could crop up anywhere in the state.”
The state livestock department receives about six reports per year of potential feral swine sightings. All of them have turned out to be “owned domestic swine running at large,” according to an agency press release.
In this particular case, there were some unique circumstances related to a death in the family that owned the swine, Szymanski said.
“This situation just kind of got out of control,” she said. “It has been allowed to maybe fester a little bit longer than a traditional circumstance we would encounter.”
Syzmanski said trapping operations began earlier this month, and all parties involved are pleased the meat will be distributed at food banks around the state.
On Oct. 18, the first swine shipment arrived at Producer Partnership, a nonprofit animal processing facility that works with agricultural producers to turn donated livestock into food for schools and other nonprofits. Trapping operations are ongoing with another 30-45 animals yet to be collected, Szymanski told MTFP on Oct. 22.
Producer Partnership is the country’s only nonprofit meat processing facility inspected by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. A product of the COVID-19 pandemic, Producer Partnership is located between Big Timber and Livingston and employs about 10 people.
Producer Partnership president and founder Matt Pierson estimates that the Montana Food Bank Network will receive between 8,000 and 14,000 pounds of pork from the swine. He said he’s unaware of any other organizations set up to take on these kinds of “oddball projects.”
“Our hope through this partnership is that people realize there’s a more amicable, better way to solve these issues without just going in and shooting everything,” he said. “It helps solve a problem for the state, and it helps put all that meat into the food bank.”
LATEST STORIES
Thousands of pounds of pork bound for Montana food banks following feral swine investigation
In late September, Wildlife Services alerted the Montana Department of Livestock to a potential feral swine issue involving about 100 animals in Phillips County, and the state began trapping the animals and delivered them to a nonprofit meat-processing facility shortly thereafter. The animals are now expected to provide a bounty of pork for food banks around the state. Matt Pierson, president and founder of Producer Partnership, said the arrangement will allow for a “better resolution” for all involved.
New law requires election officials to reject mail ballots that aren’t signed with voters’ birth years
Montana voters are having their first encounter with a new requirement to provide their birth year on the back of mail-in ballot envelopes alongside the previously required signature line. The change is a result of a legislative mandate aimed at enhancing mail election security. Election officials in Montana’s two largest counties, Yellowstone and Missoula, said the change had already forced them to reject hundreds of ballots in early returns.
Born from tragedy, Great Falls nonprofit Toby’s House provides free child care for families in need
Cascade County child care centers meet just 71% of the area demand, and a 2021 study described a “severe shortage” of child care capacity in Great Falls with an estimated 580 children in need of child care that wasn’t available. In that landscape, Toby’s House offers free, drop-in care that specializes in crisis intervention.
-
New York6 days agoVideo: How Mamdani Has Evolved in the Mayoral Race
-
World1 week agoIsrael continues deadly Gaza truce breaches as US seeks to strengthen deal
-
News1 week agoVideo: Federal Agents Detain Man During New York City Raid
-
News1 week agoBooks about race and gender to be returned to school libraries on some military bases
-
Technology1 week agoAI girlfriend apps leak millions of private chats
-
Politics1 week agoTrump admin on pace to shatter deportation record by end of first year: ‘Just the beginning’
-
Business1 week agoUnionized baristas want Olympics to drop Starbucks as its ‘official coffee partner’
-
News1 week agoTrump news at a glance: president can send national guard to Portland, for now