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The cold snap Montana saw this month brought days of below-zero temperatures across the state and with them what major Montana utility NorthWestern Energy said was record-high electric demand from its customers.
The arctic blast, and how the states energy system responded, triggered a wave of analysis from folks engaged in Montanas running debate over renewable energy, coal generation and the future of the states electric grid.
The Montana Environmental Information Center, for example, on Jan. 12 citing data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration to push back on NorthWesterns longtime assertion that it cant reliably supply Montanans with winter power without maintaining coal-powered generation.
The data, noted MEIC co-director Anne Hedges, showed that coal generation had dropped by about half on Jan. 7, a shift she interpreted as a sign of trouble at the Colstrip power plant. Wind generation, she noted, surged over much of the subsequent three days.
During the coldest part of the year, half of the largest plant in the western United States is not working but yet the grid hasnt collapsed, our lights turn on, so perhaps we need to start rethinking our connection to coal, Hedges said.
For its part, NorthWestern pointed in a press release this week to a later, colder stretch of the cold snap, stressing that it had relied heavily on Colstrip, natural gas plants and hydroelectric dam generation to keep electricity flowing to Montana customers. Wind and solar generation could not produce much, if any, power during the extreme cold, wrote NorthWestern spokesperson Jo Dee Black.

In a follow-up email, Black said the decline Hedges noted was the result of Colstrips operators bumping up planned maintenance in one of the power plants two operational units so both units could operate through the most extreme stretch of cold.
Black also wrote in her initial release that additional generating capacity, like the natural-gas generation plant the company is building near Laurel or the expanded Colstrip stake the company plans to acquire in 2026, would have allowed the company to avoid spending $18 million on energy from other utilities during the cold snap.
Travis Kavulla, a former Republican member of Montanas utility regulation board who now works as the vice president of regulatory affairs for Houston-based energy company NRG, this week to critique that latter argument, saying that its not necessarily a bad thing for Northwestern to be partially reliant on power purchases provided the company is smart about how it manages that trading.
It cannot be expected that Montana would have every single megawatt of capacity it needs to supply the state during the absolute worst hour of the decade. If Montana did, that would mean customers would be paying an absolute fortune, Kavulla said in a subsequent interview.
Kavulla and other energy analysts routinely note that regulated utilities like NorthWestern have a financial incentive to own and operate as much generating capacity as possible since they typically earn a profit on the infrastructure they own. That dynamic is as promoting the over-construction of expensive generating plants while discouraging utilities from finding cheaper ways to serve their customers.
Eric Dietrich, Deputy Editor and Amanda Eggert, Reporter
Reporters Notebook
School districts across Montana Tuesday night this week. None of them were ultimately deemed credible, and the word hoax appeared in numerous news stories. The threats nonetheless kept law enforcement, school officials and parents preoccupied throughout the day Wednesday.
They kept me, MTFPs education reporter, plenty busy too. Throughout the day Wednesday, the list of affected districts I scrawled on my office notepad kept growing: Great Falls, Browning, Missoula, Big Sandy, Billings.
According to in-state media reports, each school district responded a bit differently, reflecting the local nature of Montanas educational governance. Sweeps of buildings by law enforcement were the norm, but some districts went about the school day as usual, others with heightened police presence. While districts like Missoula County Public Schools did attempt to let families know what little they knew, comments from parents frustrated by the vagaries of the information popped up in local corners of social media.
Missoula schools spokesperson Tyler Christensen said the district had collaborated on a response with the Missoula Police Department a practice thats become increasingly common in this era of school shootings and anonymous threats. Officials take each threat seriously, Christensen told me. Her words were by Bryan Lockerby, administrator of the Montana Department of Justices Division of Criminal Investigation.
Parents have entrusted school administrators to protect their children when theyre at school, and school administrators have to make a decision on whats best for that organization, for the school and the students, Lockerby told KTVH Wednesday.
Great Falls Public Schools Superintendent Tom Moore said that puts school officials in a hard place. The sources of such messages are a different breed of threat actor than a disgruntled local phoning in, Moore told MTFP, and their primary goal appears to be to disrupt the normal day-to-day operations of government agencies something the internet has made far easier for entities foreign and domestic. Similar threats have been made repeatedly against Montana schools this academic year, as well as at and . Additionally, theyve recently triggered and a brief evacuation of the Montana Capitol.
Whats not lost on Moore is the impact on students. A single day of lost instruction time is no small thing, and with the recent cold snap already having prompted school closures around the state, simply canceling classes isnt a viable option, he said. Equally important is the mental and emotional strain that attending school under a cloud of fear can place on children. Schools can collaborate with law enforcement and parents, can train staff and be hyper-prepared and empathetic, Moore said, but at some point the issue becomes bigger than a schools response.
This isnt just a school issue, Moore said. This is a societal issue.
Alex Sakariassen, Reporter
Following the Law 儭
Montanas legal system delivered so many notable developments this week we couldnt decide on just one to feature here. So, in lieu of a big long writeup, heres a quick rundown (and links to our news stories if youd like to know more):
- On Tuesday, Attorney General Austin Knudsens office blocked a proposed ballot initiative that would ask voters to enshrine abortion access in the state constitution. In a written justification for finding that Ballot Issue #14 was legally insufficient, his staff argued that the amendment drafted by Planned Parenthood Advocates of Montana wrongly bundled multiple legal issues together. The coalition backing the ballot measure has promised to challenge Knudsens finding in court.
- On Tuesday, the Montana Supreme Court denied a motion by the state to halt implementation of a greenhouse gas analysis mandated by the Lewis and Clark District Court ruling in the landmark Held v. Montana lawsuit. The state had argued that moving forward with the mandate before the appeal is finally decided would lead to a slipshod analysis, but the Supreme Court in a 5-2 decision sided with the young plaintiffs, who want state agencies to comply with the district court order while the Supreme Court weighs the states appeal.
- On Tuesday, a Lewis and Clark County District Court judge ruled that the governor cannot veto a bill in a way that denies the Legislature the ability to override the veto. That decision opens the door for lawmakers to override the governors veto of , a measure with broad bipartisan support that would have allocated marijuana tax revenue to conservation projects, county infrastructure and other areas.
Public Comment 儭
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Wednesday announced that its initiating a public input process that could help clear the way for reintroducing grizzly bears into the Bitterroot.
The agency, which is charged with managing threatened and endangered species, is considering the move after that it had erred by failing to act on a 2000 record of decision establishing a framework for a reintroduction of a nonessential experimental population in the 5,800-acre Bitterroot Recovery Area. The recovery area includes swaths of central Idaho as well as the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness on the west side of Montanas Bitterroot Valley.
Siding with the Alliance for the Wild Rockies and Native Ecosystems Council, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy has directed the agency to prepare a new Environmental Impact Statement. The public scoping process that USFWS is undertaking now is a preliminary step in the production of that document, which is expected in the latter half of 2026.
In a soliciting input from the public, USFWS said it aims to create a plan that will incorporate potential effects on the human environment, approaches to managing bear-human conflicts, considerations related to grizzly bear connectivity between recovery zones and other relevant information regarding impacts. It noted that a no-action alternative is one of the options available to the agency.
USFWS is currently reviewing a petition by Montana and Wyoming to delist the Northern Continental Divide and Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem grizzly populations. Additionally, confirmed sightings of grizzlies have been reported over the last year in parts of Montana where they havent been seen in decades, including the Missouri River Breaks, the Shields River Valley and the Pryor Mountains.
One of the places that grizzly bears have been increasingly moving into after a nearly 80-year absence is the Bitterroot Valley an area thats becoming increasingly popular with people, too. In 2018, a , and in 2022 Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks that had been hanging around the northern end of the valley into the Sapphire Mountains.
Members of the public on this step of the process through March 18, 2024, and tune into virtual the agency is hosting on Feb. 5, 13 and 14.
Amanda Eggert, Reporter
By the Numbers 唦

The daily cost to house a patient at the Montana State Hospitals Spratt Unit, a specialized part of the hospital for people with dementia, Alzheimer’s and traumatic brain injuries.
The dollar amount, a yearly average from 2022 to 2023, was presented by state health department officials during a Jan. 17 meeting of the . Made up of a mix of lawmakers, health department employees and other appointees, the group is tasked with overseeing efforts by the state health department to transfer patients out of the Spratt Unit by June 2025 and finding more appropriate placements for them in community group homes or private residences, rather than the adult psychiatric hospital in Warm Springs.
Mara Silvers, Reporter
Glad You Asked
Gov. Greg Gianfortes recent appointment of Republican lawmaker Paul Green as director of the Montana Department of Commerce last week produced a question from a reader who thinks Green may be prohibited from taking the job under the Montana Constitution as a legislator who wasnt through serving out his term. As we asked around about the issue, one prominent Democrat also cried foul, though the governors office maintains the appointment is above board.
Article V, Section 9 of the state Constitution says, in part, that no member of the legislature shall, during the term for which he shall have been elected, be appointed to any civil office under the state.
Green, a freshman lawmaker from Hardin, was first elected to the state House of Representatives in 2022, and the term for which he shall have been elected ends at the beginning of 2025.
The Constitution isnt explicit about whether the so-called disqualification provision, designed to discourage a revolving door between political offices that could facilitate improper lobbying or vote trading, applies when a legislator resigns to take a civil office with the state. But House Minority Leader , told MTFP this week its her understanding that the purpose of the provision is precisely to prevent lawmakers from doing what Green did. (Abbott, to be clear, is not a lawyer).
I think the plain language makes [the appointment] unconstitutional, she said. Pauls a nice guy, I dont know much about his background or qualifications, but I dont think thats the point.
The governors office maintained that Greens appointment passes constitutional muster.
Before the governor appointed Paul Green to serve as director of the Department of Commerce, the governor’s office carefully reviewed the Constitution and statute, and is certain his appointment is in accordance with the law, Gianforte spokesperson Kaitlin Price told Capitolized this week.
Its not currently clear whether Democrats or some other entity will attempt to challenge that assessment in court.
Green was appointed to direct the commerce department following the December departure of Scott Osterman, who resigned in the wake of an internal audit that alleged he racked up more than $26,000 in disallowed government expenses in possible violation of state law and policy. Osterman repaid the state the sum and no charges have been filed regarding those potential violations.
Arren Kimbel-Sannit, Reporter
On Our Radar 
Amanda Though Im not a hunter myself, I was fascinated by this that dives into the tension between advocating for hunters and access on one hand and promoting the sport in a way that leads to crowding and questionable sporting ethics on the other.
Alex Veteran Montana reporter Jim Robbins penned for Missoulas newest online news outlet, The Pulp, about the work federal, state and tribal scientists are doing to save an imperiled icon of Montanas alpine landscape: the whitebark pine.
Arren Music publication Pitchfork, which certainly expanded my musical horizons and contributed to my tastes (and pedantry), is being folded into GQ, with the jobs of many staffers lost as collateral damage. , a longtime Pitchfork writer looks at the websites legacy.
Brad I eagerly anticipate my invitation to your Super Bowl party, but my actual early-year must-watch is the calendar years first Grand Slam, the Australian Open, just finishing its first week in a time zone far, far away. (Thats tennis, by the way, and yes Im aware that no one cares.) On the mens side Im following Italys ascendant Jannik Sinner and hoping to see him face off in a final with Spanish phenom Carlos Alcaraz. Because .
JoVonne A high school classmate and friend of mine recently started a nonprofit forensics organization specifically aimed to help Indigenous communities and families that have been affected by the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons crisis. , who is Blackfeet and Hopi, about her launch of Ohkomi Forensics in December as one of the first Indigenous-led programs of its kind.
Mara Coverage of the Iowa caucuses packed with horse-race observations from veteran political journalists and party insiders often leaves me craving a close-up on how the democratic process is playing out between neighbors and town residents. This Washington Post piece, , zooms in on Chichasaw County to focus on exactly that.
Eric As the U.S. grapples with our national shortage of family-sized homes, concludes childless or empty-nester Baby Boomers now own twice as many three-plus bedroom homes as do Millennials with kids.
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