Wyoming
I'm a New Yorker who visited Jackson Hole for the first time. 8 things surprised me.
- Jackson Hole, Wyoming, is a billionaire hot spot next to Grand Teton National Park.
- I recently visited the ultrawealthy mountain town and was surprised by the airport and the housing.
- I didn’t expect to be so immersed in nature without sacrificing comfort and luxury.
I grew up in the tri-state area, spent some years in Texas, and then moved back to the East Coast to start my life in New York City.
That was more than five years ago, and If I’ve learned anything about living in this gritty metropolis, it’s that sometimes you need a break.
Enter Jackson Hole, Wyoming — the 60-mile-long valley bordering Grand Teton National Park. This section of Teton County comprising the towns of Jackson, Teton Village, Wilson, and others, has fewer than 11,000 residents. The top 1% of those residents earn an average of $16 million a year — 132 times more than the rest — making Jackson Hole the most unequal place in the US in terms of income, according to the Economic Policy Institute.
It’s essentially a luxury mountain town where billionaires and celebrities like Kanye West and the Kardashians hide out from the fast-paced lifestyle dominating cities around the US.
I visited the Wyoming wealth enclave for the first time in September when I needed some time away from my bustling home city.
I got the nature getaway I expected but was surprised by many aspects of the region, from the luxe airport to the mansions in the mountains.

Wyoming
(PHOTOS) KWHS sends off largest graduating class in school history

CASPER, Wyo. – Friday night was one for the record books for Kelly Walsh High School.
Some 476 students graduated from KWHS for the 2025 school year, according to principal Mike Britt, making it what they believe to be the largest class in the school’s 56-year history.
The Ford Wyoming Center was packed with graduates, students, friends and family on Friday during the last of four graduation ceremonies in the Natrona County School District.
The school’s choirs and band performed, and addresses by Emerson Levin and Haylie Williams.
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Wyoming
Threatened federal funding for education, workforce programs spark concern among Wyoming tribes – WyoFile

A national narrative that Job Corps isn’t working couldn’t be further from the truth in central Wyoming, according to Jared Baldes, a field director and former carpentry instructor at Wind River Job Corps in Riverton.
In a region of the state where high school dropout rates are high and traditional college paths aren’t the norm, Baldes said, Wind River Job Corps creates a viable pipeline for students to enter the workforce and earn high wages and good benefits. It helps keep youths out of the juvenile justice system, and is an important avenue for Wind River Indian Reservation youth.
“Just in my trade alone, I’ve placed 15 students this year into jobs, six of them Native American,” Baldes told members of the Legislature’s Select Committee on Tribal Affairs last week. “So the national narrative that Job Corps isn’t working is very wrong. Job Corps is working, and it’s very effective, and it’s changing lives.”
Now, however, the free career training program for low-income young adults is in danger. The Trump administration proposed a significant cut to the Job Corps program following an initial call to eliminate funding entirely. The U.S. Department of Labor announced Thursday it will pause operations at contractor-operated Job Corps centers nationwide.
“It would be very unfortunate not to be able to continue that pipeline to small businesses and businesses around the state for these young men and women being trained by very good instructors,” Baldes said.
Job Corps’ demise was among a chorus of warning bells rung during the meeting last week in Fort Washakie. Though the topic was not on the agenda, tribal representatives repeatedly raised worries that federal funding could end or decline for programs vital to Native communities.
The tenor underscored deep trepidation about impacts that could ripple from federal efforts to cut spending.
Wind River Job Corps has clearly been a positive force in the state, committee member Rep. Ivan Posey, D-Fort Washakie, said. He remembered cedaring the dorms with his brother when the facility opened.
“I hope that [Wyoming’s congressional] delegation realizes that it’s been a boon to our economy here, and that it’s been a good thing for us,” he said. “It changes people’s lives.”
Education
School leaders are keeping close watch on potential cuts that could impact tribal education, they told the committee.
Though the Trump administration has apparently backed away from a proposal to eliminate Head Start funding, the threat remains, Eastern Shoshone Business Council Wayland Large said.
“On this reservation, each district has a Head Start — one in Fort Washakie, Ethete and Arapahoe,” Large said. The program, which is under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, provides early childhood education, health, nutrition and parent services to low-income families with children from birth to age 5.
Fremont County School District 38 Superintendent Curt Mayer, meanwhile, said his district is concerned about Impact Aid funding. That federal program provides financial assistance to local school districts with concentrations of children living on tribal lands as well as military bases and other federal property.
District 38 officials travel to Washington, D.C. twice a year to secure the funding, Mayer said, which is used to fund counselors, nurses, school resource officers and cultural staff in the Arapahoe schools.

Deb Smith, superintendent of the Fort Washakie Schools in Fremont County School District 21, echoed that concern.
“Impact Aid is huge for us,” Smith said. “So we’ve all been very worried about the funding, if it’s going to be there in the future.”
Committee chairman Sen. Cale Case, R-Lander, asked about other implications.
“It seems that the situation is evolving with respect to our federal partners in education,” Case said, “and I’m wondering what kind of implications are there, for example, with the elimination of the Department of Education?”
If the DOE goes away, Smith said, the hope is that Impact Aid can survive in a different federal department. Other areas of concern include federal funding for free and reduced lunch programs, Title I funds that help schools with high percentages of low-income students and similar programs.
“We can’t provide some of the programming and resources without that funding,” she said. “And it’s scary. It’s very scary.”
Lawmakers listened sympathetically to Smith and others’ concerns but remained relatively mum.
Higher ed
Central Wyoming College in Riverton has the state’s largest Trio Program, CWC President Dr. Brad Tyndall told the committee. The federal program offers outreach and services designed to provide pre-college services for people from disadvantaged backgrounds.
There are roughly 650 eligible students in the CWC service area, Tyndall said, and the college works with them by going through the high schools to identify and help students.
“The recommendation from the White House budget is to cut all of that, and that would be devastating to our community, and especially our Native Americans, but it would be everybody,” he said. “The economic impact to the state is huge, and begs the question: ‘What do we do if that money goes away as a state?’”
College officials are also concerned about Native American-Serving Nontribal Institutions Program, or NASNTI, grants, Tyndall said, which are on hold.
“But NASNTI is kind of dwarfed by Trio,” he said.

The college is also concerned about some changes to the Pell Grant availability in the federal budget bill, CWC Vice President of Student Affairs Coralina Daly said.
The changes would require students to take 15 credits per semester.
With many at-risk students, she said, taking 12 credits “is a significant load already. To ask them to take another class is really impeding their ability to be successful.”
There also is a proposal to cut Pell for part-time students, she added, “so all of these students that we know who are working and have these other obligations are going to have less access to aid.”
Federal work study is also slated to be canceled in the budget bill, she said. “So that is another opportunity that would go away.”
Of the funding coming to CWC’s self-identified tribal students, Daly said, “71% of those funds are coming from federal sources. That is disproportionately larger than our overall population.
“I think it’s important to note those federal funds are incredibly important for our tribal students,” she said.
The federal budget bill, officially called the One Big, Beautiful Bill Act, passed the U.S. House last week. It must still clear the Senate.
Uncertainty
Other areas of concern included Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which are both targeted for cuts.
Conversations during the committee meeting also highlighted a high level of confusion related to when or how federal money will come through, the fact that some funds that were frozen have been released and if and how court intervention will impact programs.

For example, staff in the federal department that oversees the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, or LIEAP, were eliminated this spring, spurring worries that the program would end.
“It does help our elders and the community with the gas and the lights,” Eastern Shoshone Business Council member Latonna Snyder said. “So that’s a big issue.”
However, LIEAP in Wyoming has been funded through September, the Wyoming Department of Family Services announced this spring, adding that for the time being, no changes were anticipated.
Wyoming
Wyoming Supreme Court stays Laramie attorney suspension – County 17

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — The Wyoming Supreme Court has stayed the suspension of Laramie attorney Vaughn H. Neubauer from the practice of law.
That’s according to a release from the Wyoming State Bar, which states the suspension was to last 30 days.
The court ordered the stay so long as Neubauer complies with probationary terms for a period of six months — intended to assure the efficient operation of his office — as well as court rules and deadlines.
The release notes the order of suspension came from Neubauer’s lack of diligence in representing two clients.
“Neubauer failed to timely file a brief with the Wyoming Supreme Court appealing a decision of the District Court, resulting in dismissal of the appeal,” the release states. “Upon learning of the looming deadline, Neubauer requested an extension of time and reinstatement of the appeal in which Neubauer took responsibility for the failure to timely file the brief. Both requests were denied.”
Further, in a separate matter, Neubauer failed to file a petition for Post-Conviction Relief.
“Following commencement of disciplinary investigations by the Office of Bar Counsel, Neubauer admitted that the failure to file the documents violated Rule 1.3 (diligence) and caused injury to his clients,” the release states. “Neubauer agreed to reimburse the fees paid and out-of-pocket expenses incurred by the clients. Neubauer agreed to the suspension and probationary terms which included the implementation of formal office policies and procedures and monthly reports to the Office of Bar Counsel regarding Neubauer’s compliance with probationary terms.”
Correction, May 29, 2025: A previous version of the story did not include the stay of suspension in the lead paragraph and headline. The story has been corrected.
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