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Montana politics, elections and legislative news

Missoula High-Schoolers Demand Action On Climate Change

Missoula High School students join in the nationwide "climate strike", March 15, 2019.
Josh Burnham
Missoula High School students join in the nationwide "climate strike", March 15, 2019.

A couple of hundred Missoula high school students walked out of class today, demanding tough action on climate change.

"It’s a huge deal!" says Big Sky High School Senior Cassie Farago.
Fargo was one of at least tens of thousands of students from across the globe joining the coordinated so-called "school strikes" Friday.

Cassie Farago at the "climate strike" in Missoula, March 15, 2019.
Credit Josh Burnham / Montana Public Radio
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Montana Public Radio
Cassie Farago at the "climate strike" in Missoula, March 15, 2019.

The strikes were inspired by a 16-year-old Swedish activist who started holding solitary climate demonstrations outside Swedish parliament last year.

Missoula students today expressed concerns about not only global climate change, but their disappointment in what they see as their government’s lack of action on the issue.

"The President of the United States of America doesn’t think that climate change exists, so … yeah."

Hellgate senior Carson Brandt says there’s a political disconnect at play when it comes to the climate issue.

"And that’s very concerning to us because there’s a generation gap between the politicians of today and the politicians of the future."

Brandt would include Democratic U.S. House Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez from New York as a politician of the future. Ocasio-Cortez and Massachusetts Democratic Senator Ed Markey introduced the ‘Green New Deal’ last month, intended to eliminate most, if not all, U.S carbon emissions.

Critics jeer it as a comically impossible mish-mash of unrealistic goals. But Missoula’s Carson Brandt wants policy makers to give it chance.

Carson Brandt at the "climate strike" in Missoula, March 15, 2019.
Credit Josh Burnham / Montana Public Radio
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Montana Public Radio
Carson Brandt at the "climate strike" in Missoula, March 15, 2019.

"Oh, I’m all for it. I think it’s a good place to start. I don’t necessarily know if the New Green Deal is going to be able to accomplish all that it says at first, but as long as we only water it down a little bit and then eventually build it up to its original aspirations, then we have a good plan in mind.” 

Sentinel High Sophomore Aurora Segerstrom thinks climate change is an issue that transcends politics. The 16-year-old believes it presents an existential threat and must be confronted.

"The climate heating up is definitely a huge problem with me. I don’t want even my children or grandchildren to have to deal with that kind of stuff," she says.

A Missoula County school district spokesperson say students who left school to attend today’s strike would be marked as absent.

Edward O’Brien first landed at Montana Public Radio three decades ago as a news intern while attending the UM School of Journalism. He covers a wide range of stories from around the state.
edward.obrien@umt.edu.  
(406) 243-4065
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