Dear HCN, In your 8/3/98 issue, Robert Nold takes me to task over my 6/22/98 essay, “It Rhymes With Scourge.” Robert admits that donkeytail spurge has “escaped from Boulder-area gardens and established itself in some areas,” but is not a “fast-moving, aggressive invader.” Boulder Mountain Parks would disagree; it lists donkeytail spurge as an invasive […]
It still rhymes with scourge
Wyoming reporter was biased
Dear HCN, Paul Krza’s July 6 article on Wyoming errs in many ways – including his failure to ever talk to any Wyoming Heritage Society representative regarding our lasting commitment to Wyoming’s economy. For the record, the Wyoming Heritage Society: * Supports economic diversification. (Mr. Krza alleges we have not supported economic changes or causal […]
Wyoming likes what it’s got
Dear HCN, I just got finished reading the article on Wyoming in your July 6 edition. I would like to point out that Paul Krza fails to mention an important fact about economic development in Wyoming – many people really don’t want it. Wyomingites hate the New West. They would rather have the big empty […]
Global economics swing the West
Dear HCN, Your article, “A timber town rallies for roads’ (HCN, 7/6/98), notes that protesters in Cascade, Idaho, say the proposed moratorium – which would place a temporary end to road-building in roadless public forests in the Interior West – would put the squeeze on local timber supplies and lead to mill closures. On July […]
Bicycling and wilderness: It’s not a simple matter
Dear HCN, I wanted to correct what I perceived to be the inaccuracy of your Wayward West blurb about the International Mountain Bicycling Association’s decision not to join the Utah Wilderness Coalition (HCN, 7/6/98). First, you got the group’s name wrong, calling it the International Mountain Biking Association. While that may seem like a small […]
Battle Mountain Gold Mine
Opponents of the proposed Battle Mountain Gold Mine in the Okanogan Highlands of Washington state want to send Congress a message in a bottle. Because local water would be polluted by the mine, critics say, they’ve created the Okanogan Highlands Bottling Co. to give others a taste of what might be lost. A bonus: customers […]
Lynx as “endangered’
Who cares about the big bad cats? The Predator Project encourages comment on a proposed listing of the lynx as “endangered” under the Endangered Species Act. September hearings will be held in Idaho, Oregon, Maine and Wisconsin. Send comments by Sept. 30 to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Lynx), 100 North Park, Suite 320, […]
Colorado Coalition of Land Trusts
For land conservationists at home in plenary sessions and on field trips, the Mesa County Land Conservancy will host the Colorado Coalition of Land Trusts fall meeting Sept. 24-26 in Palisade, Colo. Call the coalition at 970/259-3415. This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline Colorado Coalition of Land Trusts.
Water at the Confluence of Science, Law and Public Policy
Water at the Confluence of Science, Law and Public Policy, a symposium sponsored by the Tucson Chapter of the Arizona Hydrological Society, convenes Sept. 23-26 at the Holiday Inn-City Center in Tucson, Ariz. The event includes field trips and discussions on topics including water quality, mining and NAFTA. For details, contact Suzanne Kirk, Dames & […]
Wild Rockies Rendezvous
Alliance for the Wild Rockies will bring conservationists to a wildlife refuge for the Wild Rockies Rendezvous, Sept. 18-20 in Corvallis, Mont., to hear Peter Kostmayer of Zero Population Growth, celebrate the bull trout listing and watch a slideshow on the Yellowstone fires. Contact Jamie Lennox at P.O. Box 8731, Missoula, MT 59807 (406/721-5420) or […]
Litigating Regulatory Takings Claims
Does the government have the right to regulate private property to protect our air and water? This is just one question that will be discussed at a conference Sept. 24-25 in San Francisco, Calif. “Litigating Regulatory Takings Claims’ will feature over 30 speakers and is expected to draw a diverse audience of federal, state and […]
More than pretty parks
The secret’s out. Some Bureau of Land Management land can rival the scenery of more famous – and more crowded – national parks. The BLM, in cooperation with more than 20 conservation and recreation groups, has just published Beyond the National Parks, a guide to Western public lands, which covers all the Western states, including […]
You can eat the scenery
Conservation and economic development each require the other in the northern Rocky Mountains, says The New Challenge: People, Commerce and the Environment in the Yellowstone to Yukon Region, a Wilderness Society report written by two staff members of the Sonoran Institute. Communities in the corridor between Yellowstone and the Yukon have shared a decline in […]
Pat Schroeder: Tougher than Teflon
Colorado can be proud of sending Democrat Patricia Schroeder to the House of Representatives in 1972. There, she battled the Old Boy network with wit and, more important, grit. Two years ago she retired, and now she’s published a book, 24 Years of House Work … and the Place is Still a Mess: My Life […]
Birds bridge borders
Development erects “No Vacancy” signs for migratory birds, forcing olive-sided flycatchers, yellow-billed cuckoos, and loggerhead shrikes to fly farther every year as they seek safe havens to rest and eat. Their familiar breeding spots are also disappearing, says Terry Rich of Partners in Flight, a group created to address declines in populations that breed in […]
Grand planning at the canyon
Some major environmental groups are taking the Forest Service to task for not thinking bigger and greener when it comes to planning a new town just outside Grand Canyon. In July, the Kaibab National Forest in Arizona released a supplement to its 1997 draft Tusayan Growth Environmental Impact Statement with a preferred alternative: 900 lodging […]
Tribe wins a third of a lake
A big chunk of Lake Coeur d’Alene, the crown jewel of the Idaho Panhandle tourism industry, is once again owned by the people that share its name. In late July, a federal court ruled that the 1,450-member Coeur d’Alene Indian tribe owns the lake bed and banks of the southern third of the lake, as […]
Mining the crown jewels
-We’ve put our blood and sweat into this for 50 years,” says 81-year-old A.J. Jackson, an owner of the Rainbow Talc Mine in Southern California’s Death Valley. Jackson is talking about the mine he ran sporadically between 1952 and 1972. Now, Jackson and his partners want to dig again. The only problem: Rainbow Talc now […]
Not so hog wild in Colorado
When D&D hog farm moved its South Dakota-based operation to northeast Colorado, Sue Jarrett thought she was getting a good neighbor. What she got instead, she says, were overpowering smells and polluted water. “The odor is so sickening that at times it drives you back in your house,” says Jarrett, who was born and raised […]
Prairie dogs get a cease-fire
Prairie dog shooting means big business for many small towns across the Great Plains states. So when the U.S. Forest Service recently closed the 70,000-acre Conata Basin in South Dakota’s Buffalo Gap National Grasslands to shooters, many prairie dog shooters and businesses across the plains grew wary. Shooters “make up about 70 percent of my […]
