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Wyoming State Authority

Wyoming State Authority is home to 582,397 residents with median household income $76,176.

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Wyoming

Wyoming State: What It Is and Why It Matters

Wyoming is the least populous state in the United States — the 2020 Census counted 576,851 residents spread across 97,914 square miles, a ratio that makes it simultaneously one of the largest and emptiest places in the country. That combination of sparse population and enormous land mass shapes almost every dimension of how the state operates: its government structure, its fiscal architecture, its relationship between county and state authority, and the quiet but consequential ways its residents navigate public services. This page covers the essential structure of Wyoming as a functioning governmental and civic system — what it includes, how the parts connect, where confusion tends to cluster, and where its jurisdiction ends.

The site covers 90 published pages on Wyoming — from county-level government profiles and city guides to revenue policy, constitutional offices, licensing requirements, and workforce services. The Wyoming State: Frequently Asked Questions page addresses common practical questions directly.


What the System Includes

Wyoming's state system is built around a constitutional framework established in 1890, the year it became the 44th state admitted to the Union. The Wyoming Constitution vests executive authority in five elected officers — the Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, State Auditor, and Superintendent of Public Instruction — alongside a bicameral legislature (30 senators, 60 representatives) and a Supreme Court with five justices.

But the formal constitutional skeleton is only part of the picture. The operational structure includes more than 20 executive agencies covering everything from environmental quality to corrections, a Permanent Mineral Trust Fund that held more than $10 billion in assets as of the Wyoming State Treasurer's 2023 annual report, and a school finance system that routes state revenue to 48 school districts of wildly varying enrollment — from Laramie County's thousands of students to districts serving fewer than 100.

The Wyoming Government Authority provides detailed coverage of the state's constitutional offices, legislative process, and agency structure, making it an essential companion resource for understanding how Wyoming's public institutions are organized and how they interact.

This site sits within the broader United States Authority network, which covers state-level government and civic information across the country.

The Wyoming Counties: Complete Overview maps the full geographic and administrative structure of the state's 23 counties — the primary units through which most local services, property records, courts, and elections are administered.


Core Moving Parts

Wyoming's operational machinery runs on a few distinctive features that set it apart from most other states.

Mineral revenue dominates the fiscal picture. Wyoming levies no personal income tax and no corporate income tax. The state funds public services primarily through severance taxes on mineral extraction and federal mineral royalties. The Wyoming Department of Revenue reported that mineral severance taxes and federal mineral royalties accounted for more than 40% of total state general fund revenue in recent fiscal years. This creates a structural dependence on commodity markets — coal, oil, natural gas, and trona — that no amount of policy preference fully insulates.

County government carries unusual weight. In Wyoming, counties are not merely administrative subdivisions. They hold elected sheriffs, assessors, clerks, treasurers, and coroners, and they administer property tax collection, land records, election administration, and district court support. A resident's daily experience of government is often more county than state.

The land ownership question is never simple. The federal government owns approximately 48% of Wyoming's land area (Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, and other agencies). This creates a permanent negotiation between state jurisdiction and federal land management that touches grazing, mineral leases, water rights, and wildlife regulation in ways that rarely surface in states with higher private land ratios.

Five counties illustrate the range of what "Wyoming county" actually means in practice:


Where the Public Gets Confused

Three misunderstandings appear with enough regularity to warrant direct address.

Wyoming and Wyoming's federal land are not the same jurisdiction. Activities on Bureau of Land Management parcels, National Forest land, or Yellowstone (which is a federal entity, not a state park) fall under federal regulatory frameworks, not Wyoming state law. State hunting licenses, for instance, are required for wildlife taken on federal land within Wyoming's borders, but land-use permits for grazing or mineral extraction on BLM land run through federal agencies — the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality does not govern them.

No income tax does not mean no taxes. Wyoming residents pay property taxes administered at the county level, sales and use taxes (the state rate is 4%, with counties authorized to add up to 2% more under Wyoming Statute §39-15-204), fuel taxes, and a range of licensing and registration fees. The absence of a personal income tax is real and meaningful, but it is not a tax-free environment.

County boundaries matter for services. Driver's license renewals, vehicle registrations, property tax payments, and voter registration are administered by county offices, not a single statewide system. A resident of Sheridan County cannot walk into a Laramie County clerk's office and expect equivalent procedures or jurisdiction.


Boundaries and Exclusions

Scope and coverage: This site addresses Wyoming as a state — its government structure, public services, geographic subdivisions, legal framework, and civic systems. Coverage applies to matters governed by Wyoming state law, administered by Wyoming state or county agencies, or otherwise falling within Wyoming's geographic boundaries and sovereign jurisdiction.

What falls outside this scope: Federal law, federal agency regulations, and federally administered lands within Wyoming are not covered here except where they intersect directly with state-level administration. Tribal governments — the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho nations on the Wind River Reservation operate sovereign governments with their own jurisdictional authority — are distinct from Wyoming state government and are not addressed in detail here. Interstate compacts (Wyoming participates in compacts governing the Colorado River, the Belle Fourche River, and other shared water systems) involve multi-state and federal dimensions that extend beyond Wyoming's unilateral jurisdiction.

Adjacent states — Montana, Idaho, Utah, Colorado, Nebraska, and South Dakota — share borders with Wyoming but have entirely separate legal and governmental systems. Nothing on this site addresses those jurisdictions.

For questions about specific programs, eligibility, or procedural requirements, the Wyoming State: Frequently Asked Questions page addresses common scenarios in plain language.

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Top Employers — Statewide

Data from state economic-development agency. Source: https://doe.state.wy.us/lmi/wylarge/largest.htm

Federal Disaster Declarations (38)

Red Canyon Fire
August 2025 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-5608-WY
Wildfires
August 2024 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · DR-4845-WY
Elk Fire
September 2024 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5539-WY
House Draw Fire
August 2024 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5531-WY
Pleasant Valley Fire
July 2024 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5523-WY
Happy Jack Fire
March 2024 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5490-WY
Flooding
June 2023 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4739-WY
Mullen Fire
September 2020 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5375-WY
316 Fire
September 2020 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5347-WY
COVID-19 Pandemic Federal Disaster
January 2020 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4535-WY
COVID-19 Emergency
January 2020 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · EM-3479-WY
Roosevelt Fire
September 2018 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5276-WY
Badger Creek Fire
June 2018 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5241-WY
Flooding
June 2017 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4327-WY
Severe Winter Storm And Straight-Line Winds
February 2017 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4306-WY
Tokawana Fire
July 2016 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-5139-WY
Lava Mountain Fire
July 2016 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-5136-WY
Station Fire
October 2015 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · incident type: fire · FM-5115-WY
Severe Storms And Flooding
May 2015 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4227-WY
Sheep Herder Hill Fire Complex
September 2012 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-5014-WY
Oil Creek Fire
July 2012 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-2995-WY
Squirrel Creek Fire
July 2012 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-2993-WY
Arapahoe Fire
June 2012 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-2992-WY
Severe Storms, Flooding, And Landslides
May 2011 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4007-WY
Flooding
June 2010 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1923-WY
Little Goose Fire
August 2007 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-2719-WY
Jackson Canyon Fire
August 2006 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-2665-WY
Thorn Divide Fire Complex
July 2006 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-2654-WY
Tornado
August 2005 · Major disaster declaration · Individual Assistance to residents · DR-1599-WY
Wy - Tongue River Wildfire - 11/19/2003
November 2003 · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: fire · FM-2512-WY
+ 8 more

Source: FEMA OpenFEMA v2 DisasterDeclarationsSummaries

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