Indianz.Com > News > Montana Free Press: ICT debuts Native news bureau in Montana
Native news service embraces challenges, opportunities of Montana bureau
The nonprofit ICT opened a bureau in Missoula earlier this year to focus on Native issues.
Tuesday, October 17, 2023
Montana Free Press
About a year and a half ago when the nonprofit Native news service ICT was considering locations for a new regional bureau, Montana rose to the top.
Along with the state’s 12 tribes living on and off seven reservations, Montana is the only state with the percentage of Indigenous representation in the Legislature exceeding the state’s proportion of Native population, said Jourdan Bennett-Begaye, ICT editor.
ICT (formerly known as Indian Country Today) leaders chose Missoula for the new mountain bureau after Bennett-Begaye’s discussion with University of Montana journalism professor Jason Begay, who pitched the idea, she said.
“It just felt right, overall, to have our bureau there,” Bennett-Begaye said.
In the approximately six months since it opened in the university’s Don Anderson Hall, which houses the School of Journalism, mountain bureau staff has found both opportunities for and challenges to covering Indigenous communities in the region.
Katie Fairbanks is a freelance journalist based in Missoula. Katie grew up in Livingston and graduated from the University of Montana School of Journalism. After working as a newspaper reporter in North Dakota, Katie worked as a producer for NBC Montana’s KECI station, followed by five years as a health and local government reporter in Longview, Washington
Search
Filed Under
Tags
More Headlines
Secretary Doug Burgum takes over Department of the Interior
Health and Human Services nominee responds to written questions about Indian health
Senate Committee on Indian Affairs schedules first meeting of 119th Congress
Judge hears arguments in federal funding case
NAFOA: 5 Things You Need to Know this Week (February 3, 2025)
Native Hawaiian performer Kalani Peʻa wins fourth Grammy for album dedicated to matriarchs
Department of Defense cancels National Native American Heritage Month
Chuck Hoskin: Cherokee Nation signs first disaster management agreement in Indian Country
DVIDS: Umatilla Tribes sign fish passage agreement
Native America Calling: Balancing economic safety and development for payday loan businesses on tribal land
‘Nothing’s changed. Nothing’s gotten better’: President Trump’s nominee takes on Indian health
Native America Calling: A Mohawk chef on TV and a Native foods cookbook
Cronkite News: Arizona governor promises $7 million for NAGPRA work
Indian Country still on high alert over President Trump’s freeze on federal funding
Native America Calling: Federal funds under fire from President Donald Trump
More Headlines
Health and Human Services nominee responds to written questions about Indian health
Senate Committee on Indian Affairs schedules first meeting of 119th Congress
Judge hears arguments in federal funding case
NAFOA: 5 Things You Need to Know this Week (February 3, 2025)
Native Hawaiian performer Kalani Peʻa wins fourth Grammy for album dedicated to matriarchs
Department of Defense cancels National Native American Heritage Month
Chuck Hoskin: Cherokee Nation signs first disaster management agreement in Indian Country
DVIDS: Umatilla Tribes sign fish passage agreement
Native America Calling: Balancing economic safety and development for payday loan businesses on tribal land
‘Nothing’s changed. Nothing’s gotten better’: President Trump’s nominee takes on Indian health
Native America Calling: A Mohawk chef on TV and a Native foods cookbook
Cronkite News: Arizona governor promises $7 million for NAGPRA work
Indian Country still on high alert over President Trump’s freeze on federal funding
Native America Calling: Federal funds under fire from President Donald Trump
More Headlines