JACKSON, Wyo. — As high-profile bills move through the capitol and the Wyoming Legislature’s 2025 general session draws to a close, Better Wyoming is publishing semi-weekly Accountability Reports tracking legislators’ votes on important issues.

The information is arranged in county-based format to show community members how local lawmakers are voting. The reports include votes cast on high-profile legislation that is already receiving wide news coverage, according to a press release, as well as “less sensational legislation” that still has important impacts on education, healthcare and other issues.

“Communities should know how their elected legislators are representing them at the capitol, how they are voting on individual bills, and that information often takes an internet deep dive to find,” Bella Pope, Better Wyoming’s statewide community organizer, said in the press release. “Our reports are a tool folks can use to learn how their local lawmakers are voting on the issues that impact them most, as well as the votes from lawmakers who represent their neighbors elsewhere in Teton County. The idea is to start a conversation where we can decide, ‘Are the legislators we’ve trusted to represent us…actually representing our community’s best interests?’”

Find the first three reports of the session for Teton County below:

Better Wyoming also reports that, by and large, Teton County lawmakers vote in favor of bills and policies that increase affordable healthcare access and strengthen public schools.

Better Wyoming will publish a roundup version of the reports collecting all lawmakers’ important votes during the session once the legislature finishes its work at the capitol.

River Stingray is a news reporter with a passion for wildlife, history and local lenses. She holds a Master's degree in environmental archaeology from the University of Cambridge and is also a published poet, dog mom and outdoor enthusiast.