A new governor sparks debate with a controversial solution
News
Texas water case is ‘takings’ on steroids
Farmers want $500 million in damages from Mexico, but critics say the water wasn’t theirs in the first place
Resort homes threaten scenic Mono Lake
Developers around California watch to see if a county can trump federal preservation rules
Follow-up
Employees at New Mexico’s nuclear weapons lab may soon have new bosses. After Los Alamos National Laboratory suffered repeated financial and security scandals, outgoing U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham announced that the lab’s contract, held by the University of California since 1943, was up for grabs (HCN, 11/24/03: New Mexico goes head-to-head with […]
Klamath farmers face a new threat
In 2001, farmers in the Klamath Basin marched against the federal government when it withheld irrigation water to protect endangered salmon and suckers (HCN, 8/13/01: No refuge in the Klamath Basin). But ultimately the fish may not be to blame if the crops in this arid landscape dry up. In January, the power company PacifiCorp […]
California’s farmers ditch dirty diesel pumps
California’s two biggest utility companies want to help farmers ditch their polluting diesel pumps to comply with air-quality crackdowns. In the process, the companies stand to gain thousands of new customers. In November, Pacific Gas and Electric Company and Southern California Edison submitted a proposal to the California Public Utilities Commission — which authorizes all […]
Wildlife refuge may still be radioactive
Scientists may have discovered a radioactive “hot spot” at a future wildlife refuge surrounding the former Rocky Flats Nuclear Weapons Plant. The plant, northwest of Denver, produced plutonium triggers for nuclear weapons for more than 30 years. The U.S. Department of Energy and Kaiser-Hill, the company contracted to clean up the site, plan to dispose […]
Locals flush proposed kitty litter mine
A recent court ruling could give local communities more control over mining projects on federal land. On Dec. 30, a Nevada district court judge ruled that Washoe County has the authority to deny a company’s proposal to mine clay for cat litter near the Reno-Sparks Indian Colony. In 1999, the Chicago-based Oil-Dri Corporation announced plans […]
Los Angeles dumps coal deal
Los Angeles Mayor James Hahn has directed the city’s Department of Water and Power to pull out of a deal to expand a coal-fired power plant in Delta, Utah. The funds earmarked for the project — which would have provided 2 percent of the city’s power — will instead be used to meet the mayor’s […]
Bush’s second-term shake-ups
The political appointments you don’t hear about — and how they affect the West
Split-estate rebellion: Ranchers take on energy developers
By threatening to bring the fight to voters, landowners may force the Legislature to regulate drilling
Developers push ahead with mammoth ski village
Feds say they’re largely powerless to regulate impacts of ‘The Village at Wolf Creek’
Follow-up
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has decided not to protect the greater sage grouse under the Endangered Species Act (HCN, 12/20/04: Rulings keep the West open for business). In early January, the agency announced that even though there are only 100,000 to 500,000 of the birds left in 11 Western states and two Canadian […]
Seattle’s rural neighbors rise up
Emboldened by a recently passed ballot initiative requiring Oregon’s state and local governments to pay for land-use regulations, residents in Seattle’s King County are whipping up a property-rights revolt of their own (HCN, 11/22/04: Election Day Surprises in the Schizophrenic West). In October, the Democrat-led county council adopted new land-use ordinances meant to protect “critical […]
Graves halt a highway project
A recent decision in Washington state protects the largest prehistoric village ever discovered in the state, but puts a $284 million highway construction project on hold. To repair the 40-year-old Hood Canal Bridge, which connects the cities of the northern Olympic Peninsula with the Seattle area, the Washington State Department of Transportation needed to build […]
A crisis brews on the Colorado
With water supplies dwindling, states getan order to share the pain
Feds to hand wolves to states
Idaho and Montana are poised to take greater control of gray wolves, but the Nez Perce Tribe, and some environmentalists, are resisting
The Utah backcountry gets crowded
And a chance for change in the Wasatch comes and goes
Butterfly escapes endangered species net
New Mexico community creates its own conservation plan
Wyoming wildlife faces twin threats
Drill rigs and houses gobble habitat and sever migration routes
