This winter, hundreds of people filed into school gymnasiums, town halls and hotel conference rooms, working up the gumption to stand in front of a crowd and speak out on the future of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in southern Utah. To their surprise, the stomach butterflies were for nothing. They didn’t find the rows […]
Agencies seek quieter public meetings
A statesman steps off the stage
When House Interior Committee Chairman Morris K. Udall of Arizona flew north in 1977 to hold hearings on a bill to protect more than 100 million acres in Alaska, locals in the town of Pelican hanged him in effigy. Ten years later, when Udall returned to Alaska to make a speech, an audience of chamber […]
Dear Friends
Tony the workhorse This paper depends on its readers and financial supporters, but above all it depends on people who hold down demanding full-time jobs and yet still find time to do little things, like writing huge chunks of High Country News. Over the years, reporter Tony Davis has been first among this group of […]
‘Let’s get it resolved’
Note: This is a sidebar to a feature story headlined ‘Desert sprawl.’ Ron Asta, an environmentalist and Pima County supervisor from 1973 to 1976, is now a zoning consultant to small landowners. “After I lost my seat on the Board of Supervisors in 1976, I was offered a job by KUAT-TV (the local public TV […]
Selling sizzle and steak
Note: This is a sidebar to a feature story headlined ‘Desert sprawl.’ David Taylor is a veteran planner for the city of Tucson. “I got asked at a meeting once, “When did the town peak?” I said, “If you are a rich, old, white lady living in the Catalina Foothills, it peaked in 1940. If […]
The roll call of sprawl
Note: This is a sidebar to a feature story headlined ‘Desert sprawl.’ People per square mile in metropolitan Tucson in 1953: 5,000 … in 1998: 2,400 Acres of Sonoran Desert land cleared for new homes, offices and commercial buildings each day: 12 Average annual temperature in Tucson in 1900: 67 degrees … in the mid-1990s: […]
‘People have a voice’
Note: This is a sidebar to a feature story headlined ‘Desert sprawl.’ Gayle Hartmann is a longtime environmental activist in Tucson’s growth wars and a former Pima County Planning and Zoning commissioner. “The first time I spoke before the County Planning and Zoning Commission, it was 1971. I was living in the Tucson Mountains (west […]
‘The party is over’
Note: This is a sidebar to a feature story headlined ‘Desert sprawl.’ Doug McVie and his wife, Christina, live on five acres in the heart of the ironwood forest on Tucson’s northwest side. They are active in the environmental group, Desert Watch. “Once you see the surveying tags, the party is over. I called up […]
‘It was God’s country’
Note: This is a sidebar to a feature story headlined ‘Desert sprawl.’ Dee Dee Arnaud is once again a resident of the Catalina Foothills north of Tucson. “My family moved here from the Chicago area in 1946. My sister had respiratory allergies, and the dry air in Tucson took care of it. We lived in […]
Desert sprawl
Note: This feature story is accompanied by seven sidebars listed at the end. TUCSON, Arizona Last spring, tens of thousands of people strolled the Street of Dreams subdivision to gaze at a $749,000 mansion. Behind the house, man-made waterfalls flowed past prickly pear and saguaro cacti. Inside, a television set popped up from a nightstand […]
Going underground can be beautiful
Dear HCN, I was delighted to read, in “Wildlife crossings cut down on roadkill” (HCN, 11/23/98), that people are beginning to talk about wildlife bridges and underground highways. Just my cup of tea. But the Alberta overpass in your photo is ugly enough to set the movement back 10 years, though at least it is […]
Bag the word “amphibian”
Dear HCN, I regret to inform you that the Turtle and Tortoise Liberation Front takes exception to Mark Matthews’ report on “amphibian underpasses’ being considered for the Flathead Reservation ostensibly to reduce the “hundreds of painted turtles smashed” on Hwy. 93 (HCN, 11/23/98). Turtles, being reptiles, go through no demeaning gill phase, nor do they […]
ROOTS enjoyed shallow support
Dear HCN, As a former intern and longtime friend of the paper, I have often defended HCN’s journalistic integrity, even when your views didn’t happen to support my own. Paul Larmer’s recent article, “Idaho grizzly plan shifts into low gear” (HCN, 11/9/98), leaves me feeling painfully bereft of much defensible. Larmer focuses on the “ROOTS […]
No cheers for violence
Dear HCN, The attitude of the writer of “Three cheers for the arsonists at Vail” (HCN, 11/9/98), that the end justifies the means, is exactly the same as the attitude of those who cheered the death of the gay student in Wyoming, the attitude that led to the murder of the doctor in New York […]
‘Speaking truth to power’ about bears
Dear HCN, Todd Wilkinson’s sad but necessary account of grizzly bear politics (HCN, 11/9/98) is as much an indictment of human nature as it is of organizational and personal conflict. The early Protestants used to talk about “speaking truth to power,” and power burned them at the stake. Times haven’t changed much. Speaking truth to […]
Enlibra is better than what we’ve got
Dear HCN, I was pleased to read HCN’s Oct. 26 profile of Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber and the state’s efforts to restore habitat for coho salmon by involving environmentalists, landowners, timber companies and others in a consensus-based process. A sidebar article correctly notes that Gov. Kitzhaber’s Oregon Salmon Plan serves as a model for Enlibra, […]
Forest and Stream Management in the Oregon Coast Range
Learn about the latest ecosystem research on “Forest and Stream Management in the Oregon Coast Range” at a conference Jan. 12-13 at Oregon State University. Contact the Conference Assistant, Oregon State University, College of Forestry, 202 Peavy Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331-5707 (541/737-2329). This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline […]
Targhee National Forest
Recent road closures on Idaho’s Targhee National Forest, intended to protect grizzly bear habitat, have stirred up massive local resistance. The forest is taking public comments through Feb.1 on a draft environmental impact statement for a plan to guide off-road vehicle use on forest roads and trails. The draft is available on the Web at […]
North American Interdisciplinary Conference on Environment and Community
John Elder, Stephen Trimble and C.L. Rawlins will be featured speakers at the North American Interdisciplinary Conference on Environment and Community at Weber State University in Ogden, Utah, on Feb. 11-13. Organizers are looking for participants from a variety of backgrounds to discuss the relationship between nature and society. For more information, contact Mikel Vause […]
15th Cowboy Poetry Gathering
For those who like a little rhythm and rhyme, the Western Folklife Center holds its 15th Cowboy Poetry Gathering Jan. 23-30, in Elko, Nev. Besides public radio star Baxter Black and other outdoor poets, there are workshops on everything from sewing boots to estate planning for ranching families. For information, contact Western Folklife Center, 501 […]
