Posted inMarch 17, 1997: Working the Watershed

It’s cows as usual in Oregon

Last fall, Oregon activists envisioned cattle fenced away from riverbanks, and streams tested for purity after a district court ruled that grazing was polluting water on the state’s Forest Service lands (HCN, 10/28/96). It hasn’t happened yet. Instead, state officials are scrambling to draw up “emergency” grazing rules so ranchers can turn out their cows […]

Posted inMarch 17, 1997: Working the Watershed

No nagging or preaching here

Stuff: The Secret Lives of Everyday Things John C. Ryan and Alan Thein Durning, Northwest Environment Watch, 1997. 86 pages, illus. $9.95 paperback. When was the last time you heard an environmentalist complain that we’re recycling too much? No street-corner shouter or mealymouthed apologist, John Ryan is the sober, credentialed research director of Seattle-based Northwest […]

Posted inMarch 17, 1997: Working the Watershed

A Chicago bank will try to invigorate Willapa Bay

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. After spending nearly two years in the early 1990s scouting Washington’s Willapa Bay for entrepreneurs with plausible ideas for sustainable businesses, Alana Probst of Ecotrust found more than a dozen. But few local financial institutions were willing to make high-risk loans, and the chances […]

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