Posted inAugust 4, 1997: Vanishing habitat

‘The real problem is lack of time’

Note: This article is a sidebar to one of this issue’s feature stories. Biologist Dennis Murphy, president of the Center for Conservation Biology at Stanford University, is a science advisor for several Habitat Conservation Plans in Southern California. The plans were designed to protect the California gnatcatcher and other species while allowing development in the […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

The Wayward West

Two years ago, Earl Shumway became notorious by bragging about looting archaeological artifacts and then receiving the most severe prison term yet for this crime – 78 months. Now, a U.S. appeals court has decided that the sentencing was too severe for Shumway’s crime of pillaging an Anasazi infant’s burial blanket, among other grave goods. […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

No parking in the parks

The public has spoken: America’s national parks are crowded. Consumer Reports asked 40,000 of its subscribers to rate their experiences in America’s national parks. The survey found that along with spectacular scenery, Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon offered headaches over parking, bad roads and too many people. Yellowstone, the nation’s first national park, ranked 27th […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

Not for aggies only

Those who think the phrase “agricultural press’ is an oxymoron should take a look at Oregon’s Capital Press, which covers ag issues in the Northwest with intelligence, perspective and a minimum of hysteria. While the weekly is definitely not an environmental publication, it covers much the same ground in a calm and informative way. Its […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

Bolting blues

The Access Fund, an advocacy group of over 7,000 rock climbers, says a proposed federal rule could kill climbing in BLM wilderness areas. The proposal prohibits “physical alteration or defacement of a natural rock surface in wilderness.” Sally Moser, executive director of the Access Fund in Boulder, Colo., says without bolts or nylon webbing and […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument

The government’s planning team for the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument is seeking ideas. The team, which includes the BLM and Utah’s Advisory Council on Science and Technology, wants proposals for papers on the geology, paleontology, biology and archaeology of the new monument. Scientists and planners at a symposium in November will assess the papers and […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

Ecological Consultants for the Public Interest

The nonprofit Ecological Consultants for the Public Interest, founded five months ago by Boulder, Colo., lawyer Randall Weiner, has already made headlines. On behalf of a Denver neighborhood exposed to a hydrogen-chloride spill, the environmental consulting firm sued Vulcan Chemical Co., which had failed to provide adequate warnings and information to residents. The neighborhood has […]

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