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The Top 10 Daily Montanan stories for 2024 • Daily Montanan

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The Top 10 Daily Montanan stories for 2024 • Daily Montanan


We’re not certain if it’s a good thing or a bad thing, but the staff at the Daily Montanan had a lot of discussion about what stories belong on the Top 10 story list, and which ones didn’t make the cut.

Translation: It was a very newsy year, and Montana was part of many larger stories, from its unparalleled and turbulent election cycle that began even before the calendar turned to “2024” to the effects of climate change and the Held trial, which was part of 2023, and played a very big role recently.

Every year, news organizations compile these lists, and every year, people point out something they didn’t like; or something we missed; or argued about our rankings. That is part of what it means to read and consume news: Asking the questions about what all of this means, and how it will affect your household. Regardless of what you think about our list and our rankings, we’re glad you’re here.

And now, in the waning moments of 2024, are the Daily Montanan’s Top 10 stories as chosen by the staff:

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Montana will have a new Senator

Montana’s senior Senator, Jon Tester, a self-proclaimed “dirt farmer” from Big Sandy sought his fourth term in the U.S. Senate. He also had the distinction of being the only Democrat elected statewide. Previous elections had all been tightly contested. During his four elections, he took only 50% or more of the vote once, while running against Rep. Matt Rosendale in 2018. Political neophyte Tim Sheehy was a hand-picked selection by Montana’s other senator, Steve Daines, a Republican who was leading the Senate’s Republican election efforts. Though Tester outperformed many Democrats on a state and national level, he was soundly defeated by Sheehy who had capitalized on an increasingly conservative trend in Treasure State politics.
Montana Republican U.S. Senate candidate Tim Sheehy and former President Donald Trump at a rally in Bozeman on Aug. 9, 2024. (Photo by Blair Miller, Daily Montanan)

But Sheehy was not without problems on the campaign trail. Not only did the race bring in as much as $350 million to the state of just 1.2 million people, it also brought intense media scrutiny of Sheehy’s background, including many questions that have never been completely answered. Those rumors were far-ranging and spotlighted in national media, far beyond the state’s borders. Those included questions of a bullet wound in Glacier National Park, a financially distressed company, more questions about military training in Glacier, and allegations of plagiarism in a book meant to introduce himself as a pilot, soldier and firefighter. Sheehy also ducked and dodged much of the media, speaking to carefully curated audiences. Leaked audio of some of those speeches included disparaging remarks about Native Americans and insulting comments about women.

2. Montana Supreme Court says ‘clean and healthful environment’ means what it says

Back in 2020, 16 Montana youths sued then-Gov. Steve Bullock, the state and several state agencies alleging violations of their constitutional right to a “clean and healthful environment.” Last summer, the lawsuit was heard in
Most of the Held v. Montana plaintiffs and their attorneys pose outside the courtroom for photos halfway through the trial.
Most of the Held v. Montana plaintiffs and their attorneys pose outside the courtroom for photos halfway through the trial. (Photo by Blair Miller, Daily Montanan)

a Helena District Court, grabbing headlines around the world as the first climate change trial of its kind. Following seven days of testimony from the youth and expert witnesses, Judge Kathy Seeley ruled in favor of the plaintiffs, saying they have a “fundamental right to a clean and healthful environment, which includes climate as part of the environmental life support system.”

The state immediately appealed the decision to the Montana Supreme Court, which heard oral arguments over the summer. The court’s 6-1 decision was released on Dec. 18, affirming the district court’s opinion and explicitly stating that Montana’s greenhouse gas emissions are “proven to be a substantial factor in causing climate impacts to Montana’s environment, and harm and injury to the youth plaintiffs.” The opinion of the court’s majority emphasized that Montana’s constitution contains some of the strongest, all-encompassing environmental protections in the nation. The court also found a Montana law limiting analysis of greenhouse gas emissions during environmental reviews to be unconstitutional.

3. Knudsen is found guilty on ethics charges, will be suspended

More than three years after two attorneys filed ethics grievances against Republican Attorney General Austin Knudsen and his deputies alleging he committed misconduct while representing the Legislature in a fight with the Supreme Court and court administrator regarding subpoenaed judiciary emails, Knudsen faced a Commission on Practice panel during a two-day hearing in October to determine if he would face any discipline from the commission and Montana Supreme Court.

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Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen listens to a witness at his Commission on Practice disciplinary hearing on Oct. 9, 2024. (Photo by Blair Miller, Daily Montanan)
Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen listens to a witness at his Commission on Practice disciplinary hearing on Oct. 9, 2024. (Photo by Blair Miller, Daily Montanan)

The Office of Disciplinary Counsel had charged Knudsen with multiple legal ethical violations in a 41-count complaint, while Knudsen’s attorneys told the commission panel that Knudsen had either made or agreed to sign off on statements from his deputies simply because he was rigorously defending his client, the Legislature.

But the panel sent down a recommendation that the Supreme Court suspend Knudsen from practicing law for 90 days because of his conduct in 2021 and 2022. Montana’s attorney general must be an attorney in good standing with the State Bar, and a suspension would in theory prohibit Knudsen from doing his job if the Supreme Court agrees that is the discipline that should be handed down.

Knudsen, who handily won re-election in November to another four years in office, is appealing the recommendation to the Supreme Court and has until the end of the day on Monday, Jan. 6 – also the first day of the 2025 legislative session – in order to file his objection to the recommendations.

4. Constitutional initiative that will enshrine abortion passes handily

Montanans voted 58% to 42% in November to pass Constitutional Initiative 128, which enshrines abortion protections in Montana’s Constitution and keeps a person’s medical decisions regarding abortions protected from government interference at least until a fetus is viable. Montanans Securing Reproductive Rights, the consortium of organizations that ran the initiative, called the measure’s broadly supported passage a “consequential day” for Montana because the measure will add new language protecting abortion rights to the constitution in addition to the long-held state Supreme Court precedent from 1999 that said Montana’s right to privacy includes a right to abortion.

Signs supporting and opposing CI-128 in front of the Lewis and Clark County Fairgrounds polling location on Nov. 5, 2024. (Photo by Blair Miller, Daily Montanan)
Signs supporting and opposing CI-128 in front of the Lewis and Clark County Fairgrounds polling location on Nov. 5, 2024. (Photo by Blair Miller, Daily Montanan)

The measure was one of several run in different states during the general election, as groups sought to put abortion protections into state constitutions in the wake of the Dobbs U.S. Supreme Court decision that undid Roe v. Wade protections and put the question of abortion legality into the hands of each state government. Montanans Securing Reproductive Rights faced hurdles throughout the process of even getting the language finalized and out for petition, as Attorney General Austin Knudsen and Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen challenged the language and initiative process for the measure before the Montana Supreme Court allowed the measure to go out for signature gathering.

Despite opposition groups running an anti-128 campaign during the signature gathering phase, proponents ended up submitting a state record 117,000 signatures from all 56 counties, and after verification by the counties, the measure was certified for November’s ballot – one of three constitutional amendments Montanans voted on this year.

The measure is set to take effect July 1, 2025, but abortion providers and others working to help people obtain and pay for them said earlier this month they still have concerns that the Republican-led Legislature and Gov. Greg Gianforte will try to undermine and get ahead of the measure taking effect by seeking to pass more laws to restrict abortion access and other reproductive medical care where possible.

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5. Rosendale jumps in, out and away

For two-term U.S. Rep. Matt Rosendale, whose district spanned central and eastern Montana, it was no secret that he wanted a rematch of the 2018 Senate race in which Tester beat him, despite former and future President Donald Trump making several visits to Big Sky Country to defeat Tester. But it appeared that the Senate Republicans had
Montana Rep. Matt Rosendale before going on a broadcast on Newsmax on March 3, 2022 (Photo credit via Rep. Matt Rosendale).

other ideas as Rosendale’s time in Congress’ lower chamber had earned him a reputation of being an ultra-conservative firebrand who wasn’t afraid to characterize some Republican leaders, including minority leader Mitch McConnell, as part of a swamp and cabal. That led Daines to pick Sheehy, who ultimately received the endorsement of Trump.

Undeterred, Rosendale filed to run against Sheehy in the Senate, touring the state with fellow House firebrand Matt Gaetz, R-Florida, who resigned to become Trump’s pick for U.S. Attorney General, but then had to bow out after damning reports of sexual conduct with minors. Rosendale’s bid to beat Sheehy was short-lived — six days — after rumors swirled around Rosendale’s conduct, which lasted briefly. Rosendale then announced he’d continue to seek election for his current Congressional seat, but as rumors persisted, Rosendale quickly withdrew from the race, opting not to run at all, becoming a lame-duck for nearly a year. Meanwhile, Republican state auditor Troy Downing took out a crowded primary field to win the very, very Republican district, replacing Rosendale — the same man he’d replaced as auditor four years ago.

6. St. Marys siphon disaster

For 110 years, the St. Mary Canal has diverted water from the St. Mary River to the North Fork of the Milk River, delivering drinking water to 18,000 people and irrigating more than 700 farms. In June of this year, two 90-inch riveted steel barrels in the St. Mary river siphon failed, causing extensive damage from local flooding and erosion. An emergency authorization through the Bureau of Reclamation allowed repairs to begin immediately, but the total cost of the project is estimated at around $90 million.

7. Problems with Medicaid as rolls cut

This year saw the official end of a massive undertaking to review the eligibility of Montanans enrolled in Medicaid, but not the end of the problems related to redetermination, or “unwinding.”

During the Covid-19 pandemic, the federal government declared a public health emergency, and it generally prohibited states from cutting off most people from insurance through Medicaid.

Photo illustration by Getty Images.

On April 1, 2023, states could start terminating people again based on eligibility, and Montana released a final report on “Medicaid Unwind” this summer.

The report said the Department of Public Health and Human Services assessed eligibility for 280,180 individuals, and of those, 51% were renewed, 41% were disenrolled and 8% were still pending.

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The health department said the number of people who remained enrolled in Medicaid wasn’t far off from the number of people it had projected.

However critics pointed out that 64% of people who lost coverage did so for procedural reasons, such as botched paperwork, and the American Academy of Pediatrics found Montana had the highest portion of children who lost coverage in the U.S. from April through December 2023, a 26.6% loss based on federal data.

Nursing homes saw delays in reimbursements related to both redetermination and new applications, and at one point, late payments totaled $8.8 million for 25 nursing facilities, according to the Montana Health Care Association.

Charlie Brereton, head of the health department, said redetermination revealed some cracks in the public assistance delivery system — ones his agency pledged to address.

8. Property taxes become one of the biggest issues in the state’s affordable housing crisis

The portion of property taxes coming from residential payers has increased from 51% in 2023 to 59% this year, and just last month, Montana lawmakers heard property taxes could jump again.

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(Screenshot from a chart in a Montana Department of Revenue presentation.)

The sticker shock from a huge increase after the 2023 session led to legal fights and finger pointing in 2024.

At a meeting in November, the Department of Revenue told lawmakers that market values are expected to increase 21% for the 2025 reappraisal cycle, but payments could be offset by reducing the assessment rate.

A Republican-controlled Montana Legislature didn’t take that step in 2023, and homeowners faced a 21% median property tax increase.

Gianforte proposed rebates to help, although those $675 payments in 2024 and 2023 brought their own package of criticisms, including that renters were left out.

The governor, though, also formed a task force to figure out a solution to property taxes, and proposals are headed to the 2025 Montana Legislature.

In the meantime, at least one lawsuit that estimates residential property taxpayers have been overcharged more than $100 million is still pending.

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9. GOP sweeps most state offices, but Dems break a supermajority

In November, Montana turned a new shade of red amid record voter turnout. 

Voters ousted Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Tester, meaning Montana has an all-GOP Congressional delegation. U.S. Rep. Ryan Zinke will head back to the House, and incoming Rep. Troy Downing will join him. In the U.S. Senate, political newcomer and Sen.-elect Timothy Sheehy will join soon-to-be senior Sen. Steve Daines.

The five-member Montana Public Service Commission and all statewide elected offices remain all Republican, and Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte coasted to re-election to lead Montana for a second term.

In the legislature in 2023, Republicans strutted their supercontrol of the Montana Legislature, but redistricting cut into their margin this time around. In 2025, the GOP still will have majority control, but not a veto proof one.

10. MHP investigation shows massive problems with leadership, morale

A deep division between Attorney General Austin Knudsen and the Montana Highway Patrol division revealed itself this year.

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(Provided by the Montana Highway Patrol social media feed on Facebook.)

A workplace climate survey showed troopers don’t have a lot of faith in Knudsen’s leadership, and financial reports show a high vacancy rate persists at the Highway Patrol.

The Attorney General’s Office tried, unsuccessfully, to keep the survey results under wraps.

Survey participants and top leaders who left the Highway Patrol under Knudsen said the division is in turmoil under Knudsen. They alleged the Attorney General’s Office micromanages the agency and improperly uses human resources.

At least a couple of related complaints are pending.

One filed by the Montana Federation of Public Employees alleged retaliation and wrongful termination of a trooper. Another, filed in district court by the former head of the Highway Patrol, also alleges wrongful termination and forced resignation.

The Attorney General’s Office has denied the allegations.

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Montana

Montana Lottery Mega Millions, Big Sky Bonus results for May 8, 2026

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The Montana Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big.

Here’s a look at May 8, 2026, results for each game:

Winning Mega Millions numbers from May 8 drawing

37-47-49-51-58, Mega Ball: 16

Check Mega Millions payouts and previous drawings here.

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Winning Big Sky Bonus numbers from May 8 drawing

09-14-18-20, Bonus: 16

Check Big Sky Bonus payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Millionaire for Life numbers from May 8 drawing

14-16-21-43-51, Bonus: 03

Check Millionaire for Life payouts and previous drawings here.

Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results

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When are the Montana Lottery drawings held?

  • Powerball: 8:59 p.m. MT on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
  • Mega Millions: 9 p.m. MT on Tuesday and Friday.
  • Lucky For Life: 8:38 p.m. MT daily.
  • Lotto America: 9 p.m. MT on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
  • Big Sky Bonus: 7:30 p.m. MT daily.
  • Powerball Double Play: 8:59 p.m. MT on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
  • Montana Cash: 8 p.m. MT on Wednesday and Saturday.
  • Millionaire for Life: 9:15 p.m. MT daily.

Missed a draw? Peek at the past week’s winning numbers.

This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Great Falls Tribune editor. You can send feedback using this form.



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“It’s Life Alert or rent”: Montana trailer park tenants are on rent strike

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“It’s Life Alert or rent”: Montana trailer park tenants are on rent strike


Mobile home residents in Bozeman, Montana, say they’re being forced to choose between paying rent and paying medical costs.Courtesy of Jered McCafferty

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35-year-old Benjamin Moore has lived in Mountain Meadows Mobile Home Park, outside Bozeman, Montana, since he was 17. This month, for the first time, he’s withholding his rent.

On May 1, Moore received a rent bill for $947, up 11 percent from the month before, and the second hike in nine months—the product of the park’s sale to an undisclosed buyer. 

Moore hung a sign on his trailer that says “RENT STRIKE.” He and his neighbors in Mountain Meadows and nearby King Arthur Park, organized with the citywide group Bozeman Tenants United, are collectively withholding over $50,000 a month from their landlord. 

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Historically, trailer parks have been a relatively affordable housing option—a third of trailer park residents in America live below the poverty line. But on average, their cost of living has risen 45 percent over the past decade. By unionizing, the Bozeman trailer park tenants believe they might be able to fight the most recent rent hike—especially given the state of their housing. 

For years, tenants say, the maintenance hasn’t been attended to: tree limbs hang perilously over trailers, and water shutoffs are a regular occurrence. “I cannot recall a time in the past 20 years where we had three straight months of water and power working all day, every day,” Moore said. 

Shauna Thompson, another resident, calls the water “atrocious…like a Milky Way, like you’re drinking skim milk. It’s very nasty and turned off all the time, without any notice.” And tenants allege that they’ve experienced retribution for maintenance requests, punitive eviction attempts, and unsafe conditions. 

A group of protestors in support of a rent strike rip up rent notices.
Members of Bozeman Tenants United, including Benjamin Moore and Shauna Thompson, rip up their rent increase notices. Jered McCafferty

“It’s really hard on people here,” Moore said. Some residents are “already paying their entire Social Security check for rent. It’s a very poor neighborhood. We’ve got old folks. We’ve got young families. We’ve got working-class people who can’t afford anything else.”

For the past four decades, a group called Oakland Properties has owned both trailer parks. When they learned about the sale, tenants were scared that their parks would be bulldozed, or that their rent would be increased even further, forcing them to move. 

The tenants attempted to buy the parks themselves, but were decisively outbid. The winning bidder demanded an NDA. The transaction should be finalized next month, park owner Gary Oakland said, but residents still don’t know who’s going to own the land they live on.

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This month’s rent hike, Oakland acknowledged, was “part and parcel” of the sale. But for tenants, it’s a catastrophe. On top of the $947 lot rent—more than double the national average—many residents also pay off home loans on their trailers, as well as insurance and utilities costs.

Oakland calls claims of broken utilities “nonsense”: “If it was such a bad place to live, why would the homes be selling for such high dollars?” he said. The rent strike, Oakland points out, is “just a group of people not paying their rent.”

Some people are rationing their medication to make ends meet, Moore said. “There’s one person who canceled Life Alert. It’s either Life Alert or rent, and if you don’t pay rent, they evict you and throw you in the streets.” 

An older woman in a wheelchair with oxygen tubes holds a rent notice and a rent strike sign.
Many of the tenants of King Arthur and Mountain Meadows parks rely on a fixed income to pay their rent.Jered McCafferty

Tenant organizers across the nation have found a foothold in recent years organizing against individual landlords, and Bozeman’s tenant union, situated in one of the fastest-growing communities in the state, is no exception. Tenant unions from Los Angeles to Kansas City to New York have organized to win rent freezes, maintenance, and security in their homes.

Mobile home parks—increasingly private-equity-owned and uniquely at-risk in the face of climate disasters—are organizing, too: a group of trailer park residents in Columbia, Missouri, unionized in February. In Montana, as Rebecca Burns recently wrote for In These Times, mobile homes were already once a site of tenant organizing: buoyed by the state’s miners unions, the first Bozeman-area mobile home tenants’ union won an agreement with their landlord in 1978.  

Oakland says park residents “have been terrorized by the union,” and plans to evict the strikers. The strikers say they’ve retained a lawyer and will fight to stay in their homes.

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“I wish none of this was happening,” Moore said. “Your utilities should work. Your place should be safe. You should be able to get in and out of it. These are the absolute basics, and they just haven’t kept them up. And if you call them on it, they threaten you.”



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Montana’s fastest man who started as a walk on

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Montana’s fastest man who started as a walk on


Karsen Beitz arrived at Montana with no scholarship offers, one remaining walk-on spot and no guarantee that his track career would last.

Now, the former Sentinel High School standout is one of the fastest athletes in Montana history.

Beitz, a Missoula native and junior sprinter for the Grizzlies, has turned an unlikely college opportunity into a record-setting career. He owns Montana’s 100-meter and 200-meter program records and enters next week’s Big Sky Conference Outdoor Championships as one of the top sprinters in the league.

Coming out of high school, Beitz was a football and track athlete without a Division I offer.

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“I was upset about it,” Beitz said. “But at the same time, I was fine with just going to college and living a normal college life.”

That changed after conversations between Sentinel coach Dylan Reynolds and Montana coach Doug Fraley.

“You may not think he’s a D-I prospect based on his times,” Reynolds told Fraley, “but I’m just telling you, if he gets in the right program, he’s going to be a D-I runner.”

Fraley had one walk-on spot left on his roster. He brought Beitz into his office, talked with him and decided to take a chance.

“I liked him. We had a good conversation, so I decided to give him the last walk-on spot,” Fraley said. “I’m sure glad I did.”

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Beitz became a Division I athlete in his hometown, but his first goal was modest. He wanted to prove he belonged and earn a scholarship.

He did that quickly.

As a freshman, Beitz placed at the Big Sky Outdoor Championships and helped Montana’s 4×100-meter relay reach the podium with a school-record performance.

“There was no doubt he earned that scholarship,” Fraley said.

Beitz continued to climb in 2025. He placed second in the 200 meters at the Big Sky indoor meet, but a hamstring injury kept him out of the outdoor championships.

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“It sucked to deal with,” Beitz said. “But I’m young and still had two years left, so I shifted my mindset to how I could come out these next two years.”

He has not looked back.

Beitz won the 200 meters at the 2026 Big Sky indoor championships, the first individual conference title of his track career. His time of 21.09 seconds edged Idaho State’s Alex Conner by one-hundredth of a second.

“I think the best part about it was seeing how happy Doug was,” Beitz said. “He was jumping up and down, gave me a big hug. After last year, I knew what I was capable of, so to go out there and do it was amazing.”

Then came the outdoor season.

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In April, Beitz broke Montana’s 58-year-old 200-meter record, running 20.55 seconds at the Pacific Coast Intercollegiate in Long Beach, California. The previous record had stood since 1968.

Two weeks later, he added the school’s wind-legal 100-meter record, running 10.25 seconds at the Bengal Invitational in Pocatello, Idaho. Which broke a 44-year-old program record and gave Beitz both sprint marks.

“He’s a really competitive guy, and he wants to be the best in the Big Sky,” Fraley said.

The records have not left Beitz satisfied. They have made him hungrier.

“You have all these goals and numbers in your mind,” Beitz said. “Then once you hit those numbers, you’re not satisfied. There’s just more numbers to chase.”

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The next chase begins at the Big Sky Conference Outdoor Championships, scheduled for May 13-16 in Portland, Oregon.

After college, Beitz hopes to follow his mother’s footsteps and become a pharmacist. Maybe even the world’s fastest pharmacist.

“If I’m running around the hospital talking to doctors,” Beitz said, “I’ll do it pretty fast.”

From a walk-on few people noticed to a conference champion and school-record holder, Beitz has become Montana’s fastest man — and he is not done running.



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