Bozeman lawyer Jim Goetz filed suit in 2023 behalf of a few residents of Bozeman and other Montana cities over four laws passed in the 2023 legislative session affecting housing,
The Department of Commerce is putting $3.2 million of federal funding into four communities statewide.The money will come through the state's Housing Trust Fund
The legislation, Senate Bill 164, is one of several strategies Republican lawmakers in Montana and other states have advanced in recent years to prohibit transgender minors from receiving medical treatments that help align their appearance with their gender identity.
In a recent study from Construction Coverage, Helena will see a 29.5% rent increase, two years after Lewis and Clark County was ranked among the highest in the country.
Balance beams, pommel horse, and uneven bars are just a few of the events that over 700 gymnasts from across the region will compete for in Helena at Montana’s longest running gymnastics meet.
Monday at the State Capitol, family and friends of people killed by drunk drivers told their stories, to make the case for tightening Montana’s DUI laws.
Property taxes are a major concern for many Montanans, and recently, Montana Governor Gianforte highlighted proposed property and income tax cuts in his budget. The governor's budget
The Bureau of Business and Economic Research is touring the state with its annual Montana Economic Outlook Seminars.
MONTANA - While sunshine brightened many areas today, minor snow moved through central in the afternoon and evening.
That route is the Big Sky North Coast Corridor which would run through southern Montana. This route, formerly known as the North Coast Hiawatha — which ended operations in the late 1970s — is being recommended to be restored with the hopes that it will bring Amtrak service to Billings, Bozeman, Helena, Butte and Missoula.
Medicaid expansion saves lives and saves money, proponents said — an estimated $27 million the last biennium, according to Rep. Ed Buttrey, sponsoring one bill to continue the program.
Stevensville resident Bryce Eggleston, in a deposition obtained by Montana Free Press, testified that it wasn’t Republican Sen. Jason Ellsworth’s call to divide into two contracts a $170,100 work agreement awarded to Eggleston.