Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. In mine reclamation, lessons are learned through failure. Nowhere has the failure been more spectacular than at the Summitville Gold Mine in southern Colorado. The mine is being reclaimed now, but at a huge cost, borne almost entirely by people and companies that had […]
Summitville: an expensive lesson
Turning the Old West into the New West
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. ANACONDA, Mont. – Until this town got involved, mine reclamation was fairly dull. You could say, reclamation lacked imagination. No flair. Then Anaconda, a town that rose and fell on the smelting of ore from the mines in nearby Butte, got the idea of […]
A few plants love mine waste
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Gazing around old diggings just outside Yellowstone National Park, Ray Brown says, “The ecosystem hasn’t been damaged, it’s been destroyed. It’s typical on these sites.” Yet he points to a small grasslike plant and says enthusiastically, “This is the miracle!’ Brown is a plant […]
This heavy-metal collection includes a shovel that dug the Panama Canal
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. SILVER STAR, Mont. – When you drive Montana Highway 41 past Lloyd Harkins’ yard, here in the heart of mining country, you can’t help noticing that Harkins has a peculiar idea of mine reclamation. Right next to the highway Harkins has stood a humongous […]
Superfund strives for accountability
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. In 1980, two years after toxins oozed out of a landfill and seeped into a suburban housing development called Love Canal in Niagara Falls in upstate New York, Congress passed the Superfund Law. Officially known as CERCLA, the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability […]
After the gold rush
Note: see the end of this feature story for a list of several accompanying sidebar articles. NEW WORLD MINING DISTRICT, MONTANA The landmarks here are about what you’d find in many of the other hundreds of thousands of abandoned or inactive mines in the West. Old pits, collapsed tunnels and piles of waste rock cling […]
Judge says wolf reintroduction was illegal
Several years ago, the Department of Interior sold its program to reintroduce wolves into Yellowstone and central Idaho by assuring ranchers they could shoot wolves that got into their herds without fear of penalty under the Endangered Species Act. Now, with introduced wolves thriving in both areas, a federal judge has ruled that the agency […]
Dicey future for Northwest casinos
When the Lummi tribe in Washington opened the Northwest’s first casino 13 years ago, gambling became a jackpot, bringing in almost $1 billion a year to the region’s tribes. Then last August the Lummi Casino closed its doors, blaming competition within the state as well as in Canada. Some say other closings will follow. Lummi […]
The Wayward West
For the first time in its history, the U.S. Forest Service admits it has lost money on national forest timber sales. Losses amounted to $14.7 million for fiscal year 1996. The agency says the shortfall comes mostly from rehabilitation projects such as forest thinning and stream restoration, while commercial logging operations continue to profit. Utah […]
A rural county says no to pork
GUNNISON, Colo. – On a brilliant fall day in central Colorado, Federal Highway Administration engineer Mark Taylor offered Gunnison County commissioners $38 million. The money would pay to reroute, widen and pave the road connecting the small town of Buena Vista, pop. 2,141, to the even smaller town of Almont, pop. 300. The 35-mile road […]
The Quincy Library Group has green credentials
Dear HCN, As an original member of the Quincy Library Group, I was pleased to read an honest treatment of the QLG (HCN, 9/29/97). However, speaking as a forester and environmentalist who has been actively involved in Northern Sierra land management issues since 1975, I take issue with the letters in the Nov. 10 issue. […]
Idaho chokes Spokane
Eleven-year old Derek Uphus fears the start of school each year because that’s when local farmers near his Spokane, Wash., home begin burning their fields and fouling the air over the city. He suffers from cystic fibrosis and asthma and when there’s smoke in the air, Uphus coughs constantly. “It’s like someone’s hands are around […]
Activists ‘shepherd’ wayward bison
Highway Administration says it’s all or nothing
Dear Friends
Snow time in the Rockies Winter has crept up on us, even though the town of 1,400 where we work boasts “banana belt” status. Avalanche reports take the place of weather or traffic bulletins on KVNF, our public radio station, embellished by personal accounts from disc jockeys. Here are a few of the mishaps that […]
The West from a snowmobile: a 50 million-acre theme park
It was fortunate that I could ski faster than my friend Mark Tokarski, because, like a 200-pound mosquito in a red stocking cap, he was pursuing me, belting out this incredibly annoying whining sound: “YEEEEENNNNGGGHHHH.” Foolishly, as we shushed along cross-country trails on the Bitterroot Divide, I had commented what a rare pleasure it was […]
Heard around the West
The driver was a Romanian-born mathematician zooming 96 miles per hour through Montana – a state famous for its disdain of speed limits – and he was royally ticked off when Highway Patrol Officer Silkitwa Rivera pulled him over. Constantin Pirvulescu ranted and screamed, the officer recalled, and kept insisting, “There is no limit. You […]
An 1872 law still calls the shots
WASHINGTON, D.C. – It was a good year. The president was easily re-elected, there was a tight race for the baseball championship, and Congress passed landmark environmental legislation. Some things have changed since then, though. Ulysses Grant is better known for a question about the contents of his tomb than for his accomplishments as president, […]
Can silver be mined safely from under a wilderness?
Note: This news article accompanies this issue’s feature story about hardrock mining. Thanks to President Clinton, you’ve probably heard of the New World Mine that was to be built near Yellowstone. And you may have heard of the proposed McDonald gold mine on the Blackfoot River near Lincoln, Mont. Thank Norman Maclean and his novel […]
Miners and Montana were too cozy
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. During Kevin Keenan’s 24 years as a water-quality enforcer for the state of Montana, he often criticized the agencies for favoring the mining companies. In 1995, he retired because, “I knew my career was over. I was left out of enforcement issues for a […]
The rise and fall of a gold mining company
Note: This timeline is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. 1855 The Assiniboine and Gros Ventre tribes move to what will later be known as the Fort Belknap Reservation, named for a U.S. Secretary of War. Late 19th century Pike Landusky and Pete Zortman strike gold in a corner of the reservation. 1895 Threatened […]
