Posted inNovember 10, 1997: Drain Lake Powell? Democracy and science finally come West

Dollars, Sense and Salmon

The Idaho Statesman is offering reprints of its landmark editorial series that argues for breaching four dams on the Lower Snake River to help save salmon populations. The series, titled Dollars, Sense and Salmon, ran three days last July, and helped push the dams issue to the forefront of Pacific Northwest political debate. Copies cost […]

Posted inOctober 13, 1997: The land is still public, but it's no longer free

Who will save our animals?

Greenpeace may no longer be going door to door, but another group continues its long-time canvassing, often stressing environmental issues. It distributes millions of copies of its material in about 60 languages, including Pidgin, Hiligaynon and Zulu. The July 8 issue asked on its cover: “Who Will Save Our Animals?,” with a story inside that […]

Posted inOctober 13, 1997: The land is still public, but it's no longer free

Forest fragmentation in the Central Rocky Mountains

Forest Fragmentation in the Central Rocky Mountains is the theme of a two-day conference at Colorado State University Nov. 12-13. From scientists to environmentalists, all-terrain vehicle drivers to timber industry representatives, everyone interested in forests is invited and no registration is needed. For more information, contact Rick Knight at 970/491-6714, or by e-mail: knight@cnr.colostate.edu. This […]

Posted inOctober 13, 1997: The land is still public, but it's no longer free

Environmental, Economic and Legal Issues Related to Rangeland Water Developments

Arizona State University’s Center for the Study of Law, Science and Technology hosts a symposium with 39 speakers Nov. 13-15 on Environmental, Economic and Legal Issues Related to Rangeland Water Developments, in Phoenix, Ariz. Symposium coordinator Rosalind Pearlman hopes the conference will attract staffers from state and federal environmental agencies as well as members of […]

Posted inSeptember 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace

Just in time for the budget requests

Forest Service mismanagement is one thing many environmentalists, ranchers and loggers agree is a problem. Now the Government Accounting Office has chimed in with a July 31 report to Congress that says the Forest Service’s decision-making culture is one of “indifference toward accountability.” The agency’s inability to make timely decisions costs taxpayers millions of dollars […]

Posted inSeptember 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace

It’s a big bird

Eleven California condors are cruising the skies over Grand Canyon all the way to Moab, Utah, after being released this year in northern Arizona. Biologists with the California Condor Recovery Project suggest bird-watchers travel Highway 89A north of the Grand Canyon between Lee’s Ferry and House Rock Valley Road to see the carrion-eaters. Pull-out parking […]

Posted inSeptember 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace

The Greater Yellowstone Coordinating Committee

When land managers meet to talk about the greater Yellowstone ecosystem, they need a large table. The Greater Yellowstone Coordinating Committee is composed of the superintendents of Yellowstone and Grand Tetons national parks and the six supervisors from neighboring national forests. They’ll get together in Jackson, Wyo., Oct. 7 and 8, to discuss air quality, […]

Posted inSeptember 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace

Western Colorado Congress

The consumer and environmental coalition, Western Colorado Congress, holds its 17th annual meeting in Grand Junction on Oct. 11, with historian Patricia Nelson Limerick, author of The Legacy of Conquest, starring in a provocative dramatization of “The Urban-Rural Divorce in the West.” This divorce hearing will explore the relationship between Western urban life and small-town […]

Posted inSeptember 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace

Managing Colorado Watersheds for Riparian and Wetland Values

You can learn for yourself about the West’s most precious resource at the Colorado Riparian Association’s Oct. 14-16 conference in Montrose, Colo. Managing Colorado Watersheds for Riparian and Wetland Values features speakers from dozens of agencies and citizen groups; topics include wetland recovery, pollution clean-up, agriculture and the Glen Canyon flooding experiment. CRA spokesman Larry […]

Posted inSeptember 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace

National Recreation and Access Summit “97

Climbers, mountain bikers, river rafters and other outdoor enthusiasts will converge in Boulder, Colo., Nov. 7-8, for the National Recreation and Access Summit “97, sponsored by sports retailer REI. Summit hosts, including the Access Fund and American Whitewater, want ideas for promoting conservation while ensuring access to public lands, reducing user conflicts and building a […]

Posted inSeptember 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace

Glen Canyon Institute

Members of the Glen Canyon Institute aren’t wasting time about their call for the restoration of a free-flowing Colorado River. Meeting for their third annual conference at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City Oct. 8-9, they plan to present the start of a “Citizens’ Environmental Assessment” centering on the removal of Glen Canyon […]

Posted inSeptember 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia

Abnormal amphibians

Have you ever been mucking about in the local swamp and found a one-eyed frog or a five-legged salamander? If you have, you’re not alone. In the last decade, malformed amphibians have turned up in about a dozen states around the country, including Washington, Oregon, California and North Dakota. Herpetologists, the scientists who study amphibians […]

Posted inSeptember 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia

Fleeting forests

For more than two decades, Utah wilderness advocates have been chanting, “5.7! 5.7!” Now, a similar cry is rising in Idaho: “8 million! 8 million!” There are 8 million acres of unprotected roadless land in Idaho’s national forests, according to Idaho’s Vanishing Wild Lands, a report by the Wilderness Society. The number is falling fast. […]

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