Posted inHeard Around the West

Not as bad as it seems

IDAHO Whiny, weak and what you might call wussy are adjectives that characterize too many people in Idaho today, complains the Idaho Mountain Express, and even some elected officials admit they’re living in fear. What fills folks with such anxiety? Wolves — which, according to one legislator, are loitering at the mailbox, holding innocent women […]

Posted inJune 13, 2011: Under the Flight Path

Fire fight: Forest Service explores chemical retardant hazards

What’s  worse for the forest: wildfires or the chemicals dropped from planes to stop them? The U.S. Forest Service tackles this question in its 370-page study of fire-retardants’ ecological impacts, released May 13. It’s a dilemma: Retardants kill fish, contaminate aquifers and fertilize noxious weeds, but unchecked fires destroy homes, wreck some habitats, ruin views […]

Posted inJune 13, 2011: Under the Flight Path

How developers and businessmen cash in on Grand Canyon overflights

Tusayan, Arizona In the lobby of Papillon Helicopters’ terminal at Grand Canyon National Park Airport, Enrique Ochoa stared at his smart phone, searching for a WiFi signal. Unlike the scores of late-April tourists, who were waiting to board one of Papillon’s noisy helicopters for a $175, 30-minute Grand Canyon sightseeing flight, Ochoa was simply trying […]

Posted inJune 13, 2011: Under the Flight Path

That quiet haunted place: A review of American Masculine

American Masculine: StoriesShann Ray192 pages, softcover: $15.Graywolf Press, 2011. American Masculine has already won a major literary award, the 2010 Bakeless Prize for fiction, sponsored by the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. Author Shann Ray is a professor at Washington’s Gonzaga University who specializes in leadership and forgiveness studies. He musters these 10 stories from the […]

Posted inHeard Around the West

Dry times

ARIZONA Growth may be slow in resort towns like Aspen, but the entire state of Arizona, whose motto is “God enriches,” is burdened by more than 463,000 vacant housing units — about one vacancy for every six homes. “That’s enough housing to accommodate an entire decade’s worth of population growth — if the population were […]

Posted inMay 30, 2011: Wolf Whiplash

A nuclear watchdog pushes feds on safety

On April 14, California State Sen. Sam Blakeslee grilled Nuclear Regulatory Commission official Troy Pruett on the seismic hazards facing California’s nuclear plants. It was roughly a month after a tsunami generated by a 9.0-magnitude earthquake swamped the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan. Blakeslee, whose Central Coast district includes Pacific Gas & Electric’s Diablo […]

Posted inJune 13, 2011: Under the Flight Path

God bless the “dickybird fellows”

I guess I’m really naive: I thought the only way environmentalists had ever gained any substantial ground in protecting places or species was by starting at the far-left extreme (HCN, 5/30/11). Unfortunately, if it wasn’t for “dickybird fellows” — as Professor Emeritus Valerius Geist from the University of Calgary called environmentalists in Hal Herring’s story […]

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