Missoula began sending a special crew on emergency mental health calls in November, and it is now one of six mobile crisis response programs in Montana.
Montana State University has filed a motion to dismiss the possible class action lawsuit that asks the school to reimburse tuition and fees for students after it shut down in-person classes during the COVID-19 pandemic but continued to charge full fare.
Friday, June 11, marks the birthdate of Jeannette Rankin, and the foundation that bears her name says it’s a great day to memorialize her on money as part of a new campaign by the U.S. Mint.
State legislators this year passed two new laws that prohibit direct primary care practices or health care sharing ministries — religious or ethical groups whose members pool money to cover medical costs — from being regulated as insurance.
There are now less than six months until Montana’s first legal recreational marijuana sales – set to begin on Jan. 1, 2022. That has both marijuana providers and state regulators hurrying to get ready for the change.
The jockeying of two schools — one a nonprofit, the other for-profit — to open campuses in Montana highlights the rapid spread of for-profit medical learning centers despite their once-blemished reputation.
Traffic on U.S. Highway 93 north from Missoula will move a little slower this summer as the Montana Department of Transportation widens and rebuilds the road.
While housing prices have been rising in the Flathead Valley over the last decade, the pandemic has fueled what some have called a “land grab.” That inflated demand is now starting to push renters out of the market as property owners cash in.
More than a year after it agreed to explore the creation of a quiet zone at a busy railroad crossing near downtown Missoula, the city believes it has found a solution, and it tested it this week.