Posted inJune 24, 1996: Catron County's politics heat up as its land goes bankrupt

Chaining is a sop for cows

Dear HCN, HCN muddies the waters in regard to “chaining” of piûon-juniper woodlands almost as much as Sid Goodloe does (HCN, 4/15/96). Just think of it as deforestation accompanied by profound soil disturbance, habitat aridification and heating due to increased wind velocity and insolation, and destruction of virtually all extant wildlife habitat. On public lands […]

Posted inJune 24, 1996: Catron County's politics heat up as its land goes bankrupt

Frog story hurt, not helped

Dear HCN, I feel compelled to respond to Todd Wilkinson’s May 2 article, “Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion,” because it exemplifies one of the greatest problems facing contemporary conservation issues today: polarization. Wilkinson’s article does not just present the arena of opposition but pushes the fighters further into their respective corners. This article promotes […]

Posted inJune 24, 1996: Catron County's politics heat up as its land goes bankrupt

Development plan breaks consensus on grizzlies

The pact worked out last year between Plum Creek Timber Co. in Montana’s Swan Valley and some federal and state agencies looked like a good deal for both bears and loggers. Then this May, the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund served notice it will file suit to negate the agreement. What’s changed is Plum Creek’s […]

Posted inJune 24, 1996: Catron County's politics heat up as its land goes bankrupt

Idaho air base guns for more space, again

If cats have nine lives, how many lives do bombing range expansions have? Air Force officials hope their plan for an air training and dummy bomb range in southwest Idaho has at least three. In a series of meetings early this month, Mountain Home Air Force Base unveiled its third training-range expansion plan. Air Force […]

Posted inJune 24, 1996: Catron County's politics heat up as its land goes bankrupt

Ski industry masters the sneak attack

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Legislation often resembles siege warfare back in the days of the battering ram and the catapult. The attackers figure that the more stuff they throw at the walls – rocks, spears, little guys – the better the odds that something will get through. They’re right, because the defenders tend to relax after […]

Posted inJune 24, 1996: Catron County's politics heat up as its land goes bankrupt

Canyonlands is a park in name only; in truth only highly organized chaos reigns

They put a park on it in 1964. Canyonlands National Park. People struggled to define its borders, to leave in Indian Creek, or to exclude Lavender Canyon, should the Orange Cliffs be inside or outside? A congressional hearing was held. Meanwhile rocks off the Orange Cliffs broke loose and moved from BLM land into proposed […]

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