Nigel Duara
"Drunken forests" in Alaska are just another sign of melting permafrost
Human activity is bad for the climate, but what waits under the Arctic is much worse.
The big stink: North Carolina can't solve its hog waste problem
When the storm season hits North Carolina, the hog shit hits the fan.
Alaska initiative to protect wild salmon could kill off a massive open-pit mine
Proposition 1 would protect rivers the salmon need to spawn but the oil, gas, and mining industries say it would make new projects a "deal killer."
Illinois and Nevada are fighting over where to store nuclear waste
President Trump’s Department of Energy has expressed interest in restarting research and development at Yucca Mountain in Nevada.
Louisiana can't fix the pitch-black sludge coming from this town's faucets
Louisiana’s water system has consistently ranked amongst the worst in the country. And the road to clean water does not look promising.
Ohio’s new Medicaid proposal could screw over its poorest urban communities
Medicaid "redlining" in Ohio means Appalachia gets a break and Cleveland doesn’t.
Here's what the deadly wildfires raging across California have left behind
In a neighborhood leveled by a "fire tornado," the chemical cleanup begins.
Inside a Mexican cartel stash house holding migrants crossing into the U.S.
Puerto de Anapra is one of the poorest communities in the state of Chihuahua, dominated by the Juarez Cartel. It also backs right up to the border fence — making it the perfect spot for migrants looking to cross illegally.
“They hate this mission”: Inside the tent camp for migrant children
VICE News toured the tent camp for migrant kids in Tornillo, Texas.
Migrants are still crossing the border to escape danger at home, despite Trump's policies
Activists and immigrants themselves don't think Trump's family separation policy was actually deterring people from crossing the border
Trump’s "zero-tolerance" border policy is rounding up legal immigrants, too
"It's now no longer individuals who cross illegally but even individuals that present at a port of entry," one advocate said.
Some Disneyland employees are facing homelessness working at "The Happiest Place On Earth"
Disneyland is supposed to be the happiest place on Earth. But for the people who work there, it’s not so simple.