The Forest Service is once again pinned down in a shootout over grazing in the Southwest. If the agency moves one way, it dodges lawsuits from environmental groups that say cows imperil endangered fish and birds. If it steps the other way, it faces fire from the livestock industry and its powerful allies in Congress. […]
Southwest cows have friends in high places
Dreams of new industry go up in smoke
WILLISTON, N.D. – An empty warehouse, a crooked smokestack and a few tons of hazardous waste in a decayed industrial district on the edge of town are all that remain of a company that five years ago opened to fanfare. This isolated Missouri River town of 14,000 people on the northern prairie had welcomed Dakota […]
A community seeks to feed its own
ETHETE, Wyo. – A tribal elder on the Wind River Indian Reservation is relying on Arapaho traditions of generosity and prayer to fight hunger here. The elder is Laverne Brown, who has donated seven acres of river-bottom land for a community garden. Vegetables grown in the garden are made available free to families who need […]
In the flatter parts of Montana, some ranchers fence out subdivisions
GREAT FALLS, Mont. – Four years ago, Jerry Townsend and his family drove from their ranch in the shadow of the Highwood Mountains in the middle of Montana, bound for their children’s track meet a few hours to the west. They climbed the Continental Divide and descended into the famed Blackfoot River Valley on their […]
A county in Nevada assaults a river
County commissioners of Elko County, Nev., in the sparsely populated northeastern corner of the state, aren’t known for their goodwill toward the federal government. So when they decided to do a little road repair on Forest Service land this summer, they didn’t waste any time on paperwork. They wanted to reopen the flood-damaged South Canyon […]
Dear Friends
Visitors of late summer Chip Blake, managing editor of Orion magazine, stopped by after taking part in a floating reunion of river guides at Cataract Canyon in Canyonlands National Park. Chip, who has been with the Massachusetts-based quarterly for six years, shared his expertise about reaching potential new readers. In a nutshell, Chip says, anything […]
Department of Energy Web site
A redesigned Department of Energy Web site aims to be a clearinghouse for a variety of sustainability issues. Learn about land-use planning, “green” buildings, and join a dialogue at the Center of Excellence for Sustainable Development. The Web site address is www.sustainable.doe.gov. This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline […]
Westslope cutthroat trout
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has added 60 days to the comment period on the petition to list the Westslope cutthroat trout as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. See the petition at www.mcn.net/~amwild and send comments by Oct. 13 to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Native Fishes Management, 4052 Bridger Canyon Rd., […]
Water for Fish vs. Water for People: A Real Conflict?
Western cities that drink water like a fish may actually compete with fish for water. The Western Regional Instream Flow Conference, Water for Fish vs. Water for People: A Real Conflict?, Oct. 8-9 at Copper Mountain Resort in Colorado, features speakers including Colorado Supreme Court Justice Greg Hobbs, and High Country News publisher Ed Marston. […]
Peaks to Prairies: A Conference on Watershed Stewardship
Case study workshops at Peaks to Prairies: A Conference on Watershed Stewardship, Sept. 27-30 in Rapid City, S.D., will test ideas about community and the environment to see if they hold water. Speakers include history professor Patricia Nelson Limerick; contact Thorne Ecological Institute, 5398 Manhattan Circle, Suite 120, Boulder, CO 80303-4239 (303/499-3647) or e-mail dir@thorneecoinst.org. […]
Oregon Natural Desert Association
Desert rats in eastern Oregon will cavort near fossil beds, on the river and under the stars at the Oregon Natural Desert Association’s annual membership meeting, Sept. 25-27. Contact Gillian Lyons at 503/525-0193 or glyons@onda.org. This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline Oregon Natural Desert Association.
Colorado Environmental Education Conference & Expo
Educators in Colorado are invited to discover what’s new in environmental curricula, where to find speakers and ideas for classroom presentations, and how to share information to help build a statewide environmental education master plan. Colorado Alliance for Environmental Education hosts the Colorado Environmental Education Conference & Expo Sept. 26 at Red Rocks Community College […]
Justice for All: Racial Equity and Environmental Well-Being
-Environmental concerns cannot stand apart from social arrangements of power and opportunity,” says the Center of the American West, introducing Justice for All: Racial Equity and Environmental Well-Being, a conference Sept. 11-12. Speakers will try to link environmentalists of color, who have done much in urban areas, to the larger conservation movement. Contact the center […]
Musings on the Big Sky
MUSINGS ON THE BIG SKY From several hundred miles away, Montana is a place of contradictions: occupied by people who deeply love the land and the rivers that run through it, except when they are voting by a lop-sided majority to turn those rivers into toxic, metal-laden sewers. Now comes John B. Wright with 10 […]
Tribes struggle for a free press
-On the banner of our paper it says, “The newspaper of the Navajo people.” We’re here first and foremost for them. Not for the government; not for the politicians; not for one single person or viewpoint.” * Tom Arviso Jr., editor of the Navajo Times, in From the Front Lines; Free Press Struggles in Native […]
From croaks to chirps
I used to spend a lot of time chasing frogs. It would be easier to say that I quit doing this at age 12, like the other kids, but the truth is a little harder to explain. I would show up at work – I got paid for this – with a long-handled net and […]
Air Force drops a sweetheart deal onto ranch land
In an unorthodox move, the U.S. Air Force plans to offer an Idaho rancher around $1 million to turn his grazing allotment into a bombing range. The deal, which was added to the defense appropriations bill by Idaho Republican Sen. Dirk Kempthorne, would pull Bert Brackett’s cattle off 12,000 acres of Bureau of Land Management […]
Only Grand Teton knows
Who was first to reach the top of 13,770-foot Grand Teton in Wyoming? Was it Yellowstone National Park’s first superintendent, Nathaniel Langford, who said he did it in 1872? Or a group of climbers who documented their ascent later, in 1898? No one will ever know for sure, but the Park Service did not take […]
National parks pull the plug on jet skis
The National Park Service will ban personal watercraft by mid-September on all of its waterways except 11 national recreation areas and two national seashores. The prohibition follows bans by individual parks, including the Everglades in Florida, Canyonlands in Utah, and most recently Olympic National Park in Washington, where Lake Crescent will see its last jet […]
The Wayward West
Climbers are off the hook and back on their bolts (HCN, 8/17/98). Undersecretary of Agriculture Jim Lyons halted a U.S. Forest Service ban on fixed anchors in wilderness – for now. USDA official Stephanie Hague says public groups will begin “negotiations’ about a new rule in the next few months. Climbers and wilderness advocates want […]
