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

The Bear Essential

Attention writers: The free magazine, The Bear Essential, is holding its first annual Edward Abbey short fiction contest, deadline Sept. 2. Editor Tom Webb tells us judges want unpublished “quality work with a Western environmental aspect” and that winners receive $100 to $500. For more information, write The Bear Essential, P.O. Box 10342, Portland, OR […]

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

Water Partnerships

As the West’s demands on water increase, so does the need for cooperation among agricultural, city and recreational interests. Collaboration, an idea with increasing popularity in the West, will be addressed July 30-Aug. 1 at the 22nd annual Colorado Water Workshop in Gunnison, Colo. Water Partnerships: Can Competing Users Cooperate to Manage a Vital Resource […]

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

Our role as stewards

Dear HCN, I was pleased to see your feature on “Evangelical Christians preach a green gospel” (HCN, 4/28/97). Too often those in the environmental movement blame Christianity for promoting ideas that lead to degradation of the earth. There have also been too many Christians who have not understood that the environmental movement has been doing […]

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

Coffee drinkers can choose

Dear HCN, I wish to comment on the Hotline item, “Coffee is bad for birds,” in the May 12 issue of HCN. The article left the impression that consumers, until now, could not obtain shade-grown (bird-friendly) coffee. Actually, bird-friendly coffees are and have been available to the discerning coffee drinker. This is an important consumer, […]

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

Are we so shallow of spirit?

Dear HCN, We Americans are really something (-The Sacred & Profane Collide…,” HCN, 5/26/97). We spend a century trying to annihilate the natives so we can steal all their best land, land that contains their holiest sites, their natural cathedrals. Somehow a few manage to survive our onslaught, but we banish these people to hostile […]

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

Goats don’t belong in Olympic National Park

Dear HCN, I suspect High Country News will soon have its fill of communications about Olympic Mountain goats, but Mr. Markarian’s letter of May 12 should not go unchallenged. All of the evidence he cites in support of the idea that the goats are native to the Olympic Mountains is suspect. First, the Gilman expedition, […]

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

Lakes vanish – and then return

Over the past decade, a 10-mile stretch of lakes, creeks and a waterfall in southwestern Washington’s Lincoln County disappeared. This spring, they came back. Pacific Lake, Tule Lake and Delzer Falls, all part of the Lake Creek water system, are among the watering holes that dried up, much to the dismay of local residents. A […]

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

Get your ash off our mountain

People leave things in wilderness areas: toilet paper, orange rinds, even beer cans. But in the San Francisco Peaks north of Flagstaff, Ariz., it’s human remains that are littering the Coconino National Forest. Last month, Native Americans in Arizona were upset when newspapers reported that a deceased Navajo woman’s ashes had been scattered in the […]

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

Hanford workers point the finger

Since a May 14 minor explosion at the Hanford, Wash., Plutonium Reclamation Facility, four employees say they are experiencing symptoms associated with toxic chemical exposure. Ten employees were outside the facility in a trailer at the time of the explosion, which was caused by chemicals accidentally allowed to concentrate in one of the plant’s holding […]

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

Cove-Mallard warms up for another summer

No sooner had the courts given the Forest Service a go-ahead to resume logging in Idaho’s Cove-Mallard than activists took to the woods to begin a sixth straight year of protest. Nez Perce National Forest officials responded by arresting two activists perched in 40-foot-high tripods. The June 18 arrests came one week after U.S. Magistrate […]

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

Weighing in on mining rules

When the Bureau of Land Management announced in early May that it would hold forums around the West before changing its mining regulations, both mine operators and mining opponents rallied their troops. GREEN, a program of Defenders of Wildlife, sent an e-mail asking environmentalists to attend the scoping meetings “if it is humanly possible.” Laura […]

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

Coalition says: Stop logging watersheds

In 1996, floods and landslides exacerbated by decades of logging forced over 200,000 Oregon residents to boil their drinking water. Now, the Oregon Natural Resources Council and 20 other conservation organizations want the Forest Service to stop all logging of municipal watersheds in the Northwest. Streams draining Forest Service lands provide drinking water to two-thirds […]

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

Petroglyphs and pavement collide

A proposed road through Petroglyph National Monument in Albuquerque continues to be paved with controversy. The latest round features a standoff between Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., and Pueblo Indian leaders. Domenici, who met recently with the Pueblos for the first time since proposing the bill in April, says the road would reduce traffic congestion around […]

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

Republican riders toppled

Facing growing disgust from the American public as well as inner-party revolt, Republican congressional leaders abandoned riders that stalled a flood relief bill for more than a month. President Clinton vetoed an early bill because it contained several unrelated measures – one of which would have opened public lands to road building. He blamed Republican […]

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

Wolf pups proliferate

As scores of bison and deer perished last winter in and around Yellowstone, one species was there to take it all in. Literally. Yellowstone’s wolf packs found feast where others fell to famine. Eight of Yellowstone’s nine wolf packs produced 11 litters last spring. This could double the park’s total wolf population of 47. Although […]

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

Heard around the West

For sheer chutzpah, nothing beats Las Vegas. This gambling boomtown dares to downsize New York’s Statue of Liberty, compress Egyptian pyramids into city-block-size containers, and as wry writer Dave Barry put it in a bazillion dailies recently, “every week or so somebody out there builds a new casino the size of Czechoslovakia, but with more […]

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