Congressional hopefuls take heed: It pays to support national parks. Three-quarters of voting Americans say their representative’s record on parks is important, according to a 1996 survey conducted by Colorado State University for the nonprofit National Parks and Conservation Association. The 46-page survey, American Views on National Park Issues, found that only 4 percent of […]
We love our parks
Un unfair rap
Dear HCN, The issue on outdoor education (HCN, 6/10/96) was excellent. I was delighted to see our photo and the quality of the entire issue. Then I read the blurb about Deer Hill. Deer Hill does not “yank bored teenagers out of suburban high schools and drop them on the Colorado plateau.” What a message […]
Logging starts – and stops again – in Southwest
A federal judge may soon lift the injunction that has halted most logging on the 11 national forests in Arizona and New Mexico this year. Then again, maybe he won’t. Last month the Forest Service tried to take the matter into its own hands. Southwest Regional Forester Chip Cartwright issued an ebullient press release July […]
‘Takings’: Lobbyists love it, the public doesn’t
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Remember Mr. Smith proclaiming that lost causes were the only ones worth fighting for? Even without Jimmy Stewart’s comforting drawl, that sentiment strikes a chord. Who can resist the charm of the loser who does not quit, the true believer who persists despite the disapproval of the multitudes? In that light, consider […]
Two tribes, two religions, vie for a place in the desert
TUBA CITY, Ariz. – Few Navajos or Hopis can remember a year like this. Nine months and no rain. No grass. Big winds. Shrunken livestock. Dying wildlife. The toughest, most drought-resistant corn on the continent almost strangled by thirst. A year like this means something to these people, and it’s not good. But it’s something […]
Prayers generate hope and bring showers
Note: in the print edition of this issue, this article appears as a sidebar to another news article, “Drought has Navajos discussing a taboo subject – range reform.” HESPERUS, Colo. – While Navajo politicians and bureaucrats back in Window Rock are arguing over how to limit cows or where to find money for drought relief, […]
Drought has Navajos discussing a taboo subject – range reform
DILKON, Ariz. – “Do you know anywhere where livestock sells for more?” asks Navajo rancher Jane Yazzie. As her friend translates my negative response, Yazzie fidgets with a check on the table. It’s clear the amount pains her. For one 450-pound heifer, an Arizona auction house paid $186.10. Two years ago, she probably would have […]
Fear of flying: Local resistance keeps condors behind bars
A big bird gliding over a mostly empty Western landscape shouldn’t be a big deal, but if the bird is an endangered condor and the land is publicly owned, it can be just that. California condors will not be restored to northern Arizona’s rugged and remote Vermilion Cliffs on schedule because of local opposition. Although […]
Dear friends
Curiosity about consensus Perhaps feeling angry or resentful takes more work than cooperation, or maybe it’s the habit of perceiving people as black hats or white hats that eventually seems old hat. In any case, we’ve had so many requests for our special issue May 13 on consensus (-Howdy, neighbor!: As a last resort, Westerners […]
A radical water czar is cashiered by his board
It is not on quite the scale as the 1989 defeat of Denver’s $1 billion Two Forks Dam, but it is worth a mention. On July 16, the Colorado River Water Conservation District board fired its secretary-engineer, Rolly Fischer, after 28 years on the job. Fischer was fired – officially he resigned – in large […]
Heard around the West
Congregational minister Glover Wagner of Bozeman, Mont., recently reported on his drive home from Madison, Wis.: “I walked into an interstate cafe somewhere in North Dakota,” he wrote in the pamphlet he regularly distributes to his congregation. “Next to me on the stool sat a toothless man banging on the counter. I couldn’t tell what […]
A confirmed railroad addict
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story: Disappearing railroad blues You’re approaching the railroad tracks when you hear the horn and see a train coming down the line. Most people get annoyed by the delay. But if you relax and look forward to watching the train roll by, you’re a railroad buff. […]
Disappearing railroad blues
SALIDA, Colo. – For about 25 years, people around here have observed that “the train doesn’t stop here any more.” Someday soon, we may be saying that the train doesn’t even come through here any more. “Here” is a town of 5,000 in the middle of Colorado. Like many towns in the West – Cheyenne, […]
Drought ‘ heat = fire
Drought ‘ heat = fire This year’s fire season started fast and furiously. Across the parched states of Arizona and New Mexico, 3,600 fires have scorched some 324,000 acres. As a precautionary measure, 10 of 11 national forests in the region declared at least part of their acreage off-limits to recreationists in June. The most […]
Canyon trip turns fatal
When Robin Phillips of Bountiful, Utah, planned a six-day hiking trip into the Grand Canyon for his troop of Boy Scouts last month, he knew the remote route would be waterless. But maps and guidebooks couldn’t tell him it would prove deadly. Three days into the trip, which, as it turned out, Phillips could not […]
Story’s comparison was wrongheaded
Dear HCN, Your May 13 article on dams and Northwest salmon quoted a Boise teacher to the effect that removing dams on the Snake and Columbia rivers would only affect “15,000 jobs connected to the BPA, the Army Corps, the navigation industry, three lower Snake ports, eight aluminum companies, and 500 farms served by the […]
We are regulating ourselves at last
Dear HCN, As a professional in the field of outdoor-adventure education, I appreciated your well-balanced, thorough discussion of outdoor education (HCN, 6/10/96). As wilderness becomes the place for personal growth, team-building and therapeutic purposes, industry regulation becomes increasingly critical. This is evidenced by the toll of teenage fatalities in “tough love” programs such as North […]
Winning hearts and minds through local action
Dear HCN, Sierra Club leader Michael McCloskey was correct when he told his board that community collaboration processes “have the effect of transferring influence to the very communities where we are least organized and potent.” He went on to note that local environmentalists often lack experience, training, skills and money. So what is the correct […]
Keep it on the ground
Dear HCN, I read with interest your issue featuring community-based approaches to conservation (HCN, 5/13/96). Mike McCloskey’s essay illustrates the concerns of many since, in his view, locally based conservation would disempower the heavily urban constituencies of the Sierra Club, and by extension, other national environmental organizations. That concern is perhaps the most compelling reason […]
Postscripts from a Californian
Dear HCN, Regarding the Quincy Library Group efforts described in HCN May 13, there are consequences to the Clinton administration’s well-meaning decision to provide the promised $4.7 million to fund the library group’s agreement. The funding was taken off the top of an already impoverished Region 5 resources budget. Range management programs which have never […]
