High Plains regional news
-
Scattered outages have been reported as of Monday, but there are no signs of the widespread generation failures that crippled the grid nearly five years ago.
-
The workers lost their jobs as part of the president's promised federal workforce reduction effort. Experts say the impact will be far-reaching for the region's economy and for people who rely on federal services.
-
Many who enrolled in Affordable Care Act health plans are paying steeper premiums this year. That means cutting back in other areas.
-
A recent study gives a dire snapshot of the teaching profession. Why are so many teachers leaving — or thinking about it?
-
A CAIR official blasted the Texas AG’s opinion, saying the law does not permit the comptroller to scrutinize Muslim schools because of their religious identity.
Happenings across the High Plains
Regional Features
-
While the Indigenous populations of the plains are the first peoples to live on and migrate across the landscape, the opening of trade with Santa Fe in 1821 marked the beginning of a series of treks across the Kansas plains by a variety of travelers. Those seeking fortune in the gold fields of California or Colorado, or those wanting a better life on their own piece of ground were also joined by immigrants and Civil War veterans who took up land under the provisions of the Homestead Act, and by the cowboys who drove their herds from Texas to Abilene and Dodge City. Many who crossed or stayed in Kansas brought their heritage with them in songs. Sung around campfires, to restless cattle herds, or in one-room schoolhouses, they offer an insight into Kansas history and of the characters and events that shaped the state.
-
By Dorothea Lange - This image is available from the United States Library of Congress's Prints and Photographs division under the digital ID fsa.8b29516. Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons/https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=52734Hi, everyone. This is Mildred Rugger from Canyon, Texas, for the 2026 Spring Read of HPPR Radio Readers Book Club. In re-reading John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, I was reminded why I read several of his books during high school. His books immerse me in the world he is recreating, and that world is usually unlike my own. -
Yep, it's going to be extra cold this weekend, and Luke's got you covered with some useful cold weather cooking tips!
-
You can look forward to hearing music by Mozart, Rossini, Mendelssohn, and Brahms on the show this week!
NPR Top Stories
The case filed in Massachusetts is the first lawsuit over the strikes to land in a U.S. federal court since the Trump administration launched a campaign to target vessels off the coast of Venezuela.
Leave a legacy of public radio for your community and the High Plains region