It’s not easy fighting mines. Under the 1872 General Mining Law, mining is the “highest and best use” of federal public lands, and every anti-mine effort is an uphill battle. But buried in the Bureau of Land Management code of regulations is a glimmer of good news for activists: a directive to the secretary of […]
Mining: There’s a reform-blocking rider
Glacier takes a stand
A draft plan for managing Glacier National Park in Montana for the next 20 years would avoid problems plaguing other national parks by proposing bold moves: banning personal watercraft use and barring commercial air tours. The proposal would also protect historic lodges, gradually improve Going-to-the-Sun Road, increase services for visitors during the winter season, and […]
Tour the underground
It’s probably not the first place you might think of for a family vacation, but coal mines and electricity-generating plants in North Dakota have packaged a tour of their facilities as the “Energy Trail.” Hitting the trail offers more than authentic coal soot. If you time it right, Thursday at the Freedom Mine in Mercer […]
On The Trail
In Utah, Republican Rep. Merrill Cook was fishing for green votes when he told his urban Wasatch Front district that he wants to see more Beehive State wilderness protected – without saying exactly how much (HCN, 8/3/98). But his support for wilderness didn’t endear him to environmental groups. In early September, the Sierra Club and […]
Hunt sparks whale of a controversy
This fall, members of the Makah tribe of northwestern Washington state plan to do something they haven’t done for decades: kill a whale. The ceremonial whale hunt, set to begin in October, will mark the restoration of rights promised in an 1865 treaty between the Makahs and the United States. The International Whaling Commission allows […]
The Wayward West
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt and Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt have agreed to settle a squabble over state-owned school trust lands isolated by the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument; now it awaits approval in Washington, D.C. (HCN, 5/25/98). The deal means Utah will trade 377,000 acres of state lands for $50 million and 139,000 acres of federal […]
Critics slam bison plan
-I’ve got two words for this plan: it stinks,” said Page McNeill, chair of the Wyoming chapter of the Sierra Club, at a recent public meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyo. Criticism of the draft management plan for the Yellowstone National Park bison herd (HCN, 7/6/98) came fast and furious at the Aug. 10 meeting, where […]
Is park station a boondoggle?
When user fees went into effect two years ago in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming’s Teton County residents thought the money would go toward improving existing facilities. Then the Park Service proposed to spend that money to build a $1.4 million welcome center along a remote dirt road in the park’s southwest corner. Local opposition, […]
God to Helen: ‘Do I know you?’
The fall of 1998 will undoubtedly go down in history as a record year for confessions of infidelity – followed by professions of contrition – from politicians. The latest comes from Idaho Rep. Helen Chenoweth, the ultra-conservative Republican, who recently admitted to a six-year affair with a married, former business partner. The Idaho Statesman decided […]
Heard around the West
Maybe the issue isn’t who first threw the shoes. A huge old tree close to U.S. 50 in Nevada – dubbed “the loneliest road in America” – has become festooned with shoes and even pairs of skis and rollerblades. Stories vary as to how the shoes first went airborne, but one oft-told tale goes like […]
Cell phones: Sometimes you need a crutch
Dear HCN, Because I am currently involved in a heated wilderness debate myself, Christina Nealson’s essay about cellular phones in wilderness areas caught my eye (HCN, 8/17/98). In the Grand Canyon where I work, as elsewhere, the debate over what constitutes a wilderness experience and the appropriate role of the federal government in prescribing exacting […]
Congress avoids buying public land
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Thirty-five years ago, in that golden age when a president could engage in White House trysts without worrying about it, one of those presidents endorsed the idea of a self-financing fund to raise money so the government could buy land. It was a popular idea, so popular that it soon became law, […]
In place of a bigger park, Tucson gets houses
TUCSON, Ariz. – Five years ago, federal officials saw a perfect spot in the Tucson Mountains foothills for a park expansion. Covered by lush stands of palo verdes, saguaros and ocotillos, the site included several washes that provided shelter for wildlife. It also contained one of the few perennial water sources in the mountains, attracting […]
Voters to decide mining’s future
MISSOULA, Mont. – Two years ago, a broad coalition of environmentalists, ranchers and politicians put an initiative on Montana’s ballot to force mining companies to clean up their wastewater before dumping it into rivers. The initiative failed after the mining industry spent $2 million convincing voters that tighter water standards would affect anyone who washed […]
Dear friends
Here comes camouflage Some of the men you see walking down the streets of this town of 1,400 look a mite peculiar these days. Their faces are deliberately dirty and they’re wearing camouflage. It’s the first clue that summer is close to over and fall is moving in fast. The earliest hunters to appear are […]
Nevada on the move
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Rank in growth among states since 1960: First Number of new residents per month: 4,000-6,000 Percentage of state-owned land by the federal government: 87 Percentage of U.S. gold mined there: 60 Percentage of Nevada workers employed in the service industry: 44 Percentage of Nevada […]
Beyond sagebrush politics: A prospering megalopolis steers Nevada
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Nevada doesn’t get a lot of respect. It has been called “The tag-end of Creation,” “America’s Great Mistake” and “the Rotten Borough.” John Muir said it was “irredeemable now and forever.” The Almanac of American Politics, considered by many to be the bible of […]
A senator for the New West in the race of his life
Note: two sidebar articles, one with Nevada statistics and one titled “Beyond sagebrush politics: A prospering megalopolis steers Nevada,” accompany this feature story. RENO, Nev. – In the halls of Congress, Sen. Harry Reid is proud to be known as a “Senator for the New West.” For more than a decade, the two-term, senior Democratic […]
Leave wilderness out of your climbing plans
Leave wilderness out of your climbing plans Dear HCN, I, for one, and I suspect there are others, applaud the Forest Service’s ban on fixed anchors. Wilderness areas are not to be permanently marred by man – regardless of how insignificant the marring is (HCN, 8/17/98). We don’t allow motorized vehicles, bicycles or hang-gliders in […]
Rock climbers = litter
Rock climbers = litter Dear HCN, Armando Menocal needs to open his eyes (HCN, 8/17/98). Rock climbing in wilderness causes impacts which are inappropriate to areas where the signs of man are to remain unseen. Bolts, nylon straps, chalk marks and bare patches left when lichen is removed by climbing shoes are unsightly. The trails […]
