Wyoming
Judge temporarily blocks Wyoming abortion ban
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — A Wyoming decide on Wednesday quickly blocked the state’s abortion ban on the day it took impact, siding with a firebombed ladies’s well being clinic and others who argued the ban would hurt well being care staff and their sufferers and violate the state structure.
Attorneys arguing earlier than Teton County District Decide Melissa Owens, in Jackson, disagreed over whether or not the Wyoming Structure offered a proper to abortion.
Wyoming was amongst states that lately handed abortion bans ought to the U.S. Supreme Courtroom overturn Roe v. Wade, which occurred June 24. After a overview, Gov. Mark Gordon, a Republican who signed the abortion “set off” invoice in March, gave the go-ahead for the legislation to take impact Wednesday.
Owens was sympathetic with arguments that the ban left pregnant sufferers with harmful issues and their docs in a tough place as they balanced critical medical dangers in opposition to the potential for prosecution.
“That could be a potential irreparable harm to the plaintiffs. They’re left with no steering,” Owens stated.
The 4 Wyoming ladies and two nonprofits that sued Monday declare the brand new legislation violates a number of rights assured by the state structure, together with a “elementary proper to be left alone by the federal government.”
The 2 organizations that sued embrace a nonprofit opening a Casper ladies’s and LGBTQ well being clinic that may have supplied abortions. A Could arson assault has set again the clinic’s opening from mid-June till at the very least the top of this yr, months previous the beginning of Wyoming’s new abortion ban.
The lawsuit claims the abortion ban will hurt the ladies — two obstetricians, a pregnant nurse and a College of Wyoming legislation pupil — by outlawing probably life-saving therapy choices for his or her sufferers or themselves.
The Wyoming legislation would have outlawed abortions besides in circumstances of rape or incest or to guard the mom’s life or well being, not together with psychological situations. Wyoming till Wednesday had allowed abortions as much as the purpose of viability exterior the mom, or round 23 weeks into being pregnant.
Wyoming’s listening to got here a day after Indiana Republican lawmakers narrowly superior a plan to ban almost all abortions within the state, regardless of opposition from abortion-rights supporters, who say the invoice goes too far, and anti-abortion activists, who say it doesn’t go far sufficient.
In West Virginia, lawmakers on Wednesday debated a sweeping abortion ban invoice on the Home flooring that may make offering the process a felony punishable by as much as 10 years in jail. The invoice supplies no exceptions for rape and incest, however for an ectopic being pregnant, a “nonmedically viable fetus” or a medical emergency.
Tons of of individuals descended on the state Capitol to look at lawmakers vote, standing exterior the Home chamber and Speaker Roger Hanshaw’s workplace chanting and holding indicators studying “we is not going to go quietly” and “cease stealing our well being care.”
Throughout a morning public listening to on the invoice, a number of folks have been escorted out from the Home chambers by safety, together with employees from the state’s solely abortion clinic.
Round 70 of 90 folks spoke in opposition to the invoice. All audio system have been every given 45 seconds earlier than they have been reduce off and requested to step down from the rostrum. Some folks cried, together with a girl who stated getting an abortion saved her life and a mom whose teenage daughter was raped final yr at a sleepover.
Ladies’s Well being Heart of West Virginia Govt Director Katie Quiñonez was reduce off by legislative employees and requested to step down from the rostrum as she started speaking concerning the abortion she acquired when she was 17, months away from graduating highschool.
“I selected life,” she stated, elevating her voice to talk over the interruption. “I selected my life, as a result of my life is sacred.” As safety approached to escort her away from the rostrum, she walked previous them, down the chamber aisle and out the doorways. Folks sitting within the gallery stood as much as clap and cheer.
Copyright 2022 The Related Press. All rights reserved. This materials is probably not revealed, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed with out permission.
Wyoming
14th annual Wyoming State Parks 'First Day Hikes' set for January 1, 2025
Wyoming
Wyoming governor approves $100 million sale of state land to join Grand Teton National Park
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — Wyoming will sell a 1-square-mile (2.6-square-kilometer) parcel of pristine land bordering Grand Teton National Park to the U.S. government for $100 million after Gov. Mark Gordon signed off on a deal Friday that ends the state’s longstanding threats to unload it to a developer.
Under the agreement the federal government will pay the appraised value of $62.5 million for the property, while privately raised funds will supply the rest.
Carpeted by a mix of trees, shrubs and sagebrush, the rolling land has a commanding view of the iconic Teton Range and is prime habitat for animals including elk, moose and grizzly bears.
Gordon, a Republican, announced in a statement that he was approving the deal to add the land to the national park after his office ensured that a U.S. Bureau of Land Management plan for managing a vast area of southwestern Wyoming doesn’t carry too many restrictions on development including oil and gas drilling — a stipulation made by the state Legislature last winter.
Even so, Gordon criticized the BLM’s overall plan for the arid, minerals-rich area 150 miles (240 kilometers) south of Grand Teton as “the Biden administration’s parting shot” at the state.
“I have been in contact with Wyoming’s congressional delegation and potential members of the incoming Trump Administration to fix the mess an ideological Biden administration is leaving for southwestern Wyoming,” Gordon said in the statement.
Interior Department officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.
Wyoming has owned the southeastern Jackson Hole property, bordered by Grand Teton on three sides and national forest on the fourth, since long before the national park’s establishment in 1929. It is the last and most valuable of four state-owned parcels sold to be annexed by the park in the past decade.
The federal government granted such lands to many states, particularly in the West, at statehood to help raise money for public education. Despite the location and astronomical value of the parcels, they brought in relatively little revenue for the state through grazing leases and other uses.
So over the years, governors have sought to goad federal officials into buying the lands by threatening to auction them off.
The Wyoming Board of Land Commissioners, made up of Gordon and the state’s other four top state elected officials, voted 3-2 in November to proceed with the sale after debating whether to negotiate a trade for federally owned mineral rights elsewhere in the state.
Wyoming
Opponents Want To Stop $500M Wyoming Wind Farm, Say It Will Kill Eagles And Bats
Wyoming archaeology and conservation groups, an eagle expert and two Albany County residents are asking a judge to stop a federal energy bureau and the U.S. Energy Secretary from advancing a vital step in building up to 149 wind turbines in the southeastern Wyoming county.
The critics say the devices will kill eagles and bats, harass wildlife, blast the locals with constant noise, and mar the landscape and the skyline of the Ames Monument National Historic Landmark.
The $500 million Rail Tie Wind Project is a proposed utility scale wind energy system scheduled to be built in southern Albany County, with its turbines measuring 500 to 675 feet tall — about the height of the Seattle Space Needle. It’s estimated to span across about 26,000 acres, prompt the construction of 60 miles of new roads and 109 stream crossings, court documents say.
The Wyoming Association of Professional Archaeologists and Albany County Conservancy on Monday asked a federal court to intervene in a critical step of the build, along with wildlife biologist J. Michael Lockhart and Albany County residents Michelle White and Natalia Johnson.
They filed their action in the U.S. District Court for Wyoming against Western Area Power Administrator Tracey LeBeau and U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm.
The Western Area Power Administration (WAPA) in 2022 issued a decision that will allow the project to graft into its high-voltage transmission lines.
That was based on “shallow” analysis of the turbines’ potential to kill eagles and bats, among other environmental and cultural harms, the petition alleges.
Neither WAPA nor the U.S. Department of Energy responded by publication time to email requests for comment.
Repsol, the company developing the Rail Tie Wind Project, is not named in Monday’s court action. The company did not immediately respond Friday to a late-day voicemail.
Ryan Semerad of the Fuller & Semerad Law Firm filed the petition on the concerned parties’ behalf. It asks the federal court to declare that WAPA’s decision authorizing a major step in the project violates federal laws and regulations, and to set it aside. The petition also asks the court to block the project’s progress until the WAPA has taken a more public-facing, receptive approach.
The groups and people challenging the action claim WAPA has held meetings in “secret,” floated undefined plans, avoided consultation and dodged meaningful conservation studies.
The petition also asks that WAPA and the Secretary of Energy pay the challengers’ attorney fees and grant any other “just and proper” action.
More Litigation
Monday’s filing is the latest in a yearslong conflict between the Rail Tie project and local residents.
In July, a group of residents near Tie Siding told Cowboy State Daily that they’ve put together a war chest of money to fight the wind energy project.
Deep-pocketed donors who live in the 4,300-acre Fish Creek Ranch Preserve have kicked in money to pay the legal bills to halt the Rail Tie project.
Otterbox founder Curt Richardson, who owns a cattle ranch in the area, and others have shown interest in the litigation. There are other big-name donors from the preserve who have contributed to the litigation war chest to fight Rail Tie.
There’s John Davis, a retired certified public accountant and lawyer from an Indianapolis water utility who built his dream cabin less than a mile from the border of Colorado in the foothills above the Laramie Plains.
Jim Grant also wants to see the project go away. He’s a well-known author who writes the thriller Jack Reacher novels under the pen name Lee Child and also lives near Tie Siding.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.
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