Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Guess who’s dining together

Dear HCN, Thank goodness for Ted Williams – -Hunters Close Ranks, and Minds’ – he’s a national treasure (HCN, 3/3/97). I would like to point out to your readers that Orion-The Hunters Institute has recently initiated a project called “Winsor Dinners,” named after a Colorado hunter who first held a potluck at his home for […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Greens should not stick to their guns

Dear HCN, Your piece on the mountain goats in Olympic National Park perpetuates the myth that environmental groups should stick by Park Service propaganda (HCN, 3/3/97). Park officials continue to declare the goats were brought to the Olympic Peninsula by settlers in the 1920s. They were embarrassed, however, when the Fund for Animals unearthed an […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Protect it, don’t pave it

Dear HCN: Your cover story on the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument (HCN, 4/14/97) stated that the challenge facing the Bureau of Land Management in planning for the monument is “to protect the land and make it accessible.” Wrong. The comment incorrectly assumes the BLM is confronted with the same bedeviling mandate adopted by some national […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

‘I felt defensive’

Dear HCN, The sidebar editorial by Louise Liston, “A proud and defiant native,” (HCN, 4/14/97) regarding the recent creation of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, was disturbing. It made me uncomfortable. It made me stop and think. Liston characterized an environmentalist’s love of the land as a “weekend love affair,” quite different from her deep […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Utah’s culture war continues

Dear HCN, Paul Larmer’s story on the president’s new monument (HCN, 4/14/97) is a pretty unfortunate piece of work, reprinting the same tired and unsupported information that has been circulating around the Intermountain West for the past few months. Most of this folklore is, of course, lies created by the extractive industries and swallowed by […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Marathon Oil sues to get into roadless area

In a case that could set a precedent for how citizen-proposed wilderness in Colorado is managed, an oil company is suing the Bureau of Land Management for pulling certain parcels from a routine oil and gas lease sale. The Texas-based Marathon Oil company says the lands do not lie in official wilderness study areas and […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Wolves have friend in Washington

Wolves may yet howl in Washington state’s Olympic National Park now that Norm Dicks, the Olympic Peninsula’s influential congressman, supports the cause. But the effort hinges on a feasibility study that has yet to be funded. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the lead federal agency on wolf recovery, is already involved in recovery efforts […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Taking range reform by the horns

Almost a year after last summer’s devastating droughts parched the Southwest, Navajo ranchers are warming up to the idea of range reform. A joint Bureau of Indian Affairs-Navajo Nation plan may revoke some 900 grazing permits on Navajo land. This step is the most recent in a long-standing effort to reduce overgrazing on much of […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

No takers for wilderness trip

Last month, Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt tried a consensus approach to resolving the state’s rancorous wilderness debate: He suggested a camping trip, but no one wanted to come. Leavitt invited environmental leaders, county commissioners, federal land managers, ranchers and coal miners to eastern Utah. They would visit proposed wilderness areas on Bureau of Land Management […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Timber mill dreams of museum

It’s a public-relations dream: Save an outdated, inefficient timber mill from the scrap heap by making it a working museum that cuts logs for show. But there’s a catch: Hull-Oakes Lumber Co., owner of the 90-year-old steam-powered mill near Monroe, Ore., wants the federal government to guarantee two-thirds of its timber supply – 12 million […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Judge is bullish on trout protection

Pushed by a federal judge, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says it has started the process of listing the bull trout under the Endangered Species Act. The announcement was sad news for the governors of Idaho and Montana, who both have crafted state recovery plans for the cold-water-loving species, partly in an attempt to […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Shutdown attempts go up in smoke

-It’s like standing on the dock and watching the Titanic set out to sea,” says Craig Williams of the Chemical Weapons Working Group, a Kentucky-based organization that monitors chemical weapons activity around the U.S. “Nobody wants to listen to us.” Williams is talking about the chemical weapons incineration plant in remote Tooele, Utah, (HCN, 9/16/96) […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Coffee is bad for birds

You pour yourself a cup of coffee and listen for the chirp and twitter of birds outside. But as you sip, you notice the quiet: What’s happened to the songbirds? The answer could be right in your cup. Songbird populations are dropping as foreign coffee plantations “modernize” to keep up with America’s thirst for the […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Utah Paiutes put the brakes on chaining

When over 250,000 acres of central Utah’s public lands burned in last summer’s wildfires, the Bureau of Land Management began its routine land-clearing procedure: chaining. But soon after the BLM tractors started up this spring, dragging a heavy chain between two vehicles to uproot dead trees and create a new seed bed of churned-up earth, […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Rancher shoots for test case

Brucellosis-infected elk are a major threat to Wyoming’s economy, says Meeteetse-area rancher Martin Thomas. Serious enough, he will argue in court, to warrant the assault-rifle attack that left nine elk dead and lots of wildlife-management questions unanswered (HCN, 3/3/97). On March 31, Thomas pleaded not guilty to charges that he illegally gunned down elk near […]

Posted inMay 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business

Oregon gets shot at saving salmon

In a move that speaks loudly of the Clinton administration’s approach to resolving endangered species conflicts, the National Marine Fisheries Service will give federal protection to one population of wild coastal salmon but not another. Under a court-imposed deadline, the agency decided April 25 to list the southern population of coho – which spawn in […]

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