Author

Alex Brown
Based in Seattle, Alex Brown covers environmental issues for Stateline. Prior to joining Stateline, Brown wrote for The Chronicle in Lewis County, Washington state.
More States Allow High School Athlete Endorsements
By: Alex Brown - May 9, 2022
High school athletes in an increasing number of states are gaining the right to profit from endorsements, autographs and sponsorships. The Louisiana High School Athletic Association became the latest governing body to approve name, image and likeness rights, known as NIL, for its athletes. The association announced last month that it was partnering with Eccker […]
Offshore Wind Gains Momentum on West Coast
By: Alex Brown - May 6, 2022
East Coast states are poised to generate significant amounts of electricity from offshore wind in the coming years, as long-awaited projects come online. But in the states bordering the Pacific Ocean, plans have been slow to develop. That’s because the steep Pacific shoreline does not allow for the fixed turbines that make up most of […]
Minor League Baseball Players Demand Spring Training Pay
By: Alex Brown - May 4, 2022
Last month, minor league baseball players received their first paychecks since October. The checks came nearly two months after the players showed up for spring training, the preseason period that is mandatory but unpaid. Some players want that to change. Last week, more than 1,000 minor league players sent a petition to Major League Baseball […]
Private Lands Are the Next Battleground in State Conservation Policy
By: Alex Brown - April 26, 2022
Since last year, staff members at the Land Trust of Virginia have fielded phone call after phone call from landowners seeking to set aside their property for conservation. “We’re getting calls like crazy,” said Sally Price, executive director of the nonprofit, which works with private landowners to preserve farms and natural landscapes. “We’re doubling our […]
Some Cities, States Say Big Oil Should Pay for Climate Damage
By: Alex Brown - April 13, 2022
In the waning days of 2021, a grass fire broke out in Boulder County, Colorado. Fueled by extreme drought and high winds, the fire swept through the communities of Superior and Louisville. Within hours, it had destroyed more than a thousand structures—making the Marshall Fire the most destructive in the state’s history. The December fire […]
Baseball Players Press Lawmakers for Minor League Labor Standards
By: Alex Brown - March 30, 2022
Lawmakers in a handful of states are crafting policies to protect a workforce that they say has been exploited by poverty wages, restrictive contracts and onerous federal labor laws: minor league baseball players. Over the past few years, players and advocates have drawn increasing attention to the poor conditions in which many minor leaguers toil. […]
States Grapple with Allowing High School Athlete Endorsements
By: Alex Brown - March 21, 2022
In a handful of states, high school athletes have started making endorsement deals with pizza parlors, apparel companies and smartphone apps—cashing in on their status as star players. Throughout much of the country, such deals would still cause students to forfeit their athletic eligibility. But the landscape is shifting quickly. Eight state athletic associations now […]
Seaweed Farming Has Vast Potential (But Good Luck Getting a Permit)
By: Alex Brown - March 7, 2022
HOOD CANAL, Wash. — On a gray February afternoon, Joth Davis motors his skiff along the northern edge of Hood Canal, a glacier-carved fjord in Puget Sound. A grid of black buoys marks the boundary of his 5-acre saltwater farm, where a crop of sugar kelp is growing quickly beneath the surface and containers of […]
States to Feds: Don’t Tell Us How to Spend Infrastructure Money
By: Alex Brown - February 17, 2022
State and local leaders from both parties are at odds with the Biden administration over how billions of dollars in new infrastructure money should be spent. Republican governors are upset over a federal memo seeking to limit dollars for highway expansions. Western states and some progressive cities don’t like the feds’ plan for how to […]
Offshore Wind Takes Off at Last. States Have Been Counting on It.
By: Alex Brown - February 7, 2022
The United States currently produces almost no electricity from wind farms in ocean waters. That’s about to change—fast. State leaders have spent years laying the groundwork: requiring their utilities to purchase set amounts of offshore power by certain dates, investing in ports and transmission infrastructure and setting up workforce training programs. As a quickly growing […]
Electric Vehicles Charge Ahead in Statehouses
By: Alex Brown - January 24, 2022
This is part one of Stateline’s 2022 State of the States series. Automakers are planning to put nearly 1 million new electric vehicles on American roads in 2022. Lawmakers are trying to make sure their states are ready. “We will see a lot more emphasis on electric vehicles in 2022 and 2023,” said Dylan McDowell, deputy director […]
Natural Gas Bans Are New Front in Effort to Curb Emissions
By: Alex Brown - January 6, 2022
Lawmakers in New York are considering the nation’s first statewide ban on natural gas connections in new buildings, following dozens of local governments that have passed similar policies in the past two years. But as New York and other left-leaning states consider ways to limit natural gas and the greenhouse gas emissions it creates, 20 […]