Posted inOctober 14, 1996: Greens prune their message to win the West's voters

Who you gonna call?

Are you distressed about a nearby mine polluting streams, groundwater or soils? The Mineral Policy Center in Washington, D.C., might be able to help. It recently published the Green Mining Guide: Mining Experts You Can Call, which lists 101 consultants, government employees and mining specialists from across the country. The experts range from hydrologists and […]

Posted inOctober 14, 1996: Greens prune their message to win the West's voters

Bring back the natives

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, a nonprofit group in Washington, D.C., recently announced the grant winners of its “Bring Back the Natives’ campaign. The 26 projects chosen in 13 states include local partnerships to preserve riparian areas and bring back native fish throughout the West. In Washington’s Olympic National Forest, for example, grant money […]

Posted inOctober 14, 1996: Greens prune their message to win the West's voters

Yellowstone land swap stinks

Dear HCN, High-powered environmentalists, stealthily working behind the scenes, have persuaded President Clinton to support a $65 million land exchange that will rescue Yellowstone National Park from the proposed New World Mine (HCN, 9/2/96). I wish I could be pleased by this news, but I am not. Like many Americans, I consider the mining proposal […]

Posted inOctober 14, 1996: Greens prune their message to win the West's voters

Utah ranch to remain whole

The historic Dugout Ranch bordering Canyonlands National Park in southeast Utah will be purchased by The Nature Conservancy to prevent its possible development into recreational properties. The Conservancy has a one-year option on the ranch and will need to raise $4.62 million in the next year to complete the transaction. The ranch, northwest of Monticello, […]

Posted inOctober 14, 1996: Greens prune their message to win the West's voters

Boise braces for floods

Sandbags may have replaced mountain bikes as the “in” thing for Boise residents this fall. Forty thousand sandbags were recently snapped up by homeowners and businesses after the city’s public works department offered them to the public to ward off possible floods and mud slides this winter. City officials say an August fire that denuded […]

Posted inOctober 14, 1996: Greens prune their message to win the West's voters

What happens when “True Grit” meets “Easy Rider’

Utopian Vistas: The Mabel Dodge Luhan House and the American Counterculture by Lois Palken Rudnick, 1996, University of New Mexico Press, 416 pages, $35. Lois Palken Rudnick’s Utopian Vistas is almost enough to send me back to my native New York. But it’s probably too late. After more than two decades here, I’m unlikely to […]

Posted inOctober 14, 1996: Greens prune their message to win the West's voters

Custom and culture’s worst enemy speaks

The West is certainly changing, but cultural beliefs rather than economic facts tend to dominate our dialogue. Because those beliefs are tied to a vision of a good society rooted in stereotypes of a simpler, less-corrupted-by-evil America, I see them as a type of economic fundamentalism. Consider these characteristics: Worshipping at the rearview mirror. Economic […]

Posted inOctober 14, 1996: Greens prune their message to win the West's voters

Wise-users try to whip up a recipe for their own salvation

Casper, Wyo. – Utah House Speaker Melvin Brown tells the audience that he doesn’t want to end the evening on a negative note. But he does want to make you “mad enough to come back tomorrow recommitted.” To get their blood pumping, Brown conjures up an enemy – Thomas Michael Power – a University of […]

Posted inOctober 14, 1996: Greens prune their message to win the West's voters

Public-lands issues loom large in November

Note: This article is a sidebar to a feature story. A hot election issue this year in Wyoming is the fate of the state’s 3.6 million-acre school trust lands, which generate money for the public school system. The Legislature approved the sale of some 35,000 acres in 1995, despite well-attended protests. Primary results show little […]

Posted inOctober 14, 1996: Greens prune their message to win the West's voters

Indian gamblers target green lawmakers

Note: This article is a sidebar to a feature story. It’s not sagebrush rebels who have environmentalists and their candidates on the run in New Mexico this election – it’s Native American gambling interests. Angered by the state Legislature’s refusal to sign gaming compacts, some tribes have thrown considerable resources into campaigns to defeat key […]

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