
Gabriel Pietrorazio
Indigenous Affairs Correspondent at KJZZ-FM (Phoenix, AZ)
Correspondent @kjzzphoenix covering Indigenous natural resources in the Grand Canyon State | Send me tips and story ideas: [email protected]
Articles
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1 month ago |
aspenpublicradio.org | Gabriel Pietrorazio
Coverage of tribal natural resources is supported in part by Catena FoundationThe Interior Department released hundreds of heavily redacted documents on Monday from a two-week review in February. These records contain action plans for national monuments and mineral withdrawals across the U.S. to accelerate President Donald Trump's American energy agenda. "This is over-redacted in a way that is almost laughable," said Aaron Weiss, deputy director of the nonpartisan Center for Western Priorities.
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1 month ago |
knpr.org | Gabriel Pietrorazio
Coverage of tribal natural resources is supported in part by Catena FoundationThe Interior Department released hundreds of heavily redacted documents on Monday from a two-week review in February. These records contain action plans for national monuments and mineral withdrawals across the U.S. to accelerate President Donald Trump's American energy agenda. "This is over-redacted in a way that is almost laughable," said Aaron Weiss, deputy director of the nonpartisan Center for Western Priorities.
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2 months ago |
ourcommunitynow.com | Gabriel Pietrorazio
Share A controversial land swap would allow Resolution Copper to access a multi-billion dollar ore deposit beneath public lands nestled in the Tonto National Forest. But a federal judge is ordering the U.S. Forest Service to release new details about that pending deal.
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Oct 26, 2024 |
wlrn.org | Gabriel Pietrorazio
Calling it "a blot on American history," president Biden formally apologized Friday in Arizona for the federal government's role in running boarding schools where thousands of Native American children endured abuse, neglect and eradication of their tribal identities. Copyright 2024 NPR
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Oct 26, 2024 |
wunc.org | Gabriel Pietrorazio
Calling it "a blot on American history," president Biden formally apologized Friday in Arizona for the federal government's role in running boarding schools where thousands of Native American children endured abuse, neglect and eradication of their tribal identities. Copyright 2024 NPR
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Before I embark for Europe, I’m humbly excited to share that I’ll be trading in Washington for the Southwest next month when I begin covering Indigenous natural resources @kjzzphoenix in Arizona following my time @NewsHour. I cannot wait to start my next public media journey!

RT @CivilEats: Despite its enormous budget, experts and former service members say the U.S. military is failing to ensure soldiers can feed…

Check out my in-depth interview with @garydfarmer for @Central_Current, only a few months before the third season of @RezDogsFX releases in early August. It’s still surreal to me! https://t.co/mNRTVHBP84