Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

What to do when opposition to planning turns ugly

Note: this article is a sidebar to a news article titled “Land-use plan is disemboweled.” When the numerous and vocal opponents of the Flathead plan suddenly came out of the woodwork last summer, it was a shock to many people. But it was probably no accident. “That’s a typical strategy,” says Tarso Ramos of the […]

Posted inJune 27, 1994: Home, home on the range ... where neo-Nazis and skinheads roam

Outdoor groups fight camping limits

Faced with ever-increasing hordes of visitors, Canyonlands National Park recently issued a bold management proposal to protect its still-pristine backcountry. The plan calls for closing some jeep roads, reducing horse numbers, and restricting where and how hikers travel. Park officials say they weren’t surprised at the stack of angry comments from commercial outfitters, but they […]

Posted inMarch 21, 1994: On the borderline

Border doesn’t block dirty air and water

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, On the borderline. Because much of the U.S.-Mexico border is already considered a “free trade” zone, additional impacts due to the North American Free Trade Agreement are hard to gauge. U.S. and Mexican environmentalists had hoped NAFTA would help their communities by strengthening regulations […]

Posted inJanuary 25, 1993: Can Bruce Babbitt make Interior hum?

A tracker’s guide

WESTERN VISIONS “Competing Visions of the New West,” an ambitious symposium on environment, land use and alternative economic strategies, is set for the University of Colorado in Boulder, Feb. 5-7. Panels will examine the “wise use” movement’s recent court cases dealing with property rights and environmental “takings,” wolf reintroduction, reform of the 1872 Mining Act, […]

Posted inFebruary 24, 1992: Sagebrush Rebellion II: Some rural counties seek to influence federal land use

Sagebrush Rebellion II: Some rural counties seek to influence federal land use

The assumption underlying new county ordinances is that grazing permits are the “intangible” property of the permittee. Federal agencies, meanwhile, insist that grazing permits have always been a privilege, not a right. To read this article, click the “View a PDF from the original” link below, or download entire issue: https://www.hcn.org/wp-content/uploads/1992/02/1992_02_24_Catron.pdf This article appeared in […]

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