Posted inOctober 16, 1995: In the heart of the New West, the sheep win one

Heard Around The West

Paul Rauber of the Sierra Club wrote to say “I am a great fan of “Heard Around the West.” There is, however, something that drives me crazy about it: your habit of putting random phrases into boldface… Otherwise, I love you dearly.” We hear you, Paul. — Patricia A. McColm of California’s Bay Area likes […]

Posted inOctober 16, 1995: In the heart of the New West, the sheep win one

It’s unAmerican, or at best unWestern, but cooperation works

My mailbox is sounding the call to arms again. Since a Republican majority was elected to Congress, it’s been bulging with warnings that Newt Gingrich and his munchkins will dismantle most of the environmental gains made since the 1960s. Send more money and write more letters, the warnings trumpet, or risk seeing this environmental “dark […]

Posted inOctober 16, 1995: In the heart of the New West, the sheep win one

To save a Utah canyon, a BLM ranger quits and turns activist

Floating past cottonwood trees and tamarisk just before dusk, Skip Edwards deftly keeps his raft within earshot of ours so he can pummel us with facts about the 1964 Wilderness Act. But around the next bend, the former Bureau of Land Management river ranger falls silent and points to a massive red and orange sandstone […]

Posted inOctober 16, 1995: In the heart of the New West, the sheep win one

South Dakota pulls plug on Missouri River meetings

Blaming a bureaucratic process that has dragged on for too long without progress, South Dakota officials have withdrawn their state from the Missouri River Basin Association. Nettie Myers, secretary of the state’s Department of Environment and Natural Resources, said, “It seems like we have the same meetings over and over, and nothing is accomplished.” The […]

Posted inOctober 16, 1995: In the heart of the New West, the sheep win one

How the West was won, and won, and …

When did the following take place? A conservative wave sweeps the nation, and Republicans take control of the government. Western ranchers, furious about a proposed increase in the grazing fee on public lands, complain about the bloated federal bureaucracy. Members of Congress from the 12 Western states decide they have had enough of Eastern domination […]

Posted inOctober 16, 1995: In the heart of the New West, the sheep win one

Congress is reworking 100 years of federal policy

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Right-wing conservatives, who have long argued that the nation would be best served if public lands and resources were in private hands, believed that their hour had come. On Sept. 19, a bill reached the floor of House of Representatives to create a commission recommending the sale of selected lands now managed […]

Posted inOctober 16, 1995: In the heart of the New West, the sheep win one

Who knows best: grassroots or foundations?

The symbolism and coincidences were heavy. The day after Labor Day, the National Audubon Society fired the staff of the Endangered Species Coalition – the group created by the environmental movement to protect the Endangered Species Act from Congress. And as if it were waiting for the firings, three days after former Indiana Congressman Jim […]

Posted inOctober 16, 1995: In the heart of the New West, the sheep win one

Cut to the past: logging wars resume

Less than three years after the Clinton administration devised a plan to protect most of the remaining ancient forests in the Pacific Northwest, the big trees have started to fall again. Taking advantage of an obscure provision in a salvage logging bill recently signed by the president, loggers have begun cutting healthy old-growth forests west […]

Posted inOctober 2, 1995: Did Idaho libel the feds?

Hikers aren’t a herd

Dear HCN, “Fiddling while Rome burns’ should have been the subtitle of Christopher Smith’s stories concerning guidebooks and wilderness usage (HCN, 9/4/95). It’s sad to see wilderness advocates decrying people visiting the Colorado Plateau while the Utah congressional delegation legislates Utah wilderness out of existence. Hiking in the Swell with Steve Allen persuaded me to […]

Posted inOctober 2, 1995: Did Idaho libel the feds?

The San Pedro River: A Long View

Dear HCN, The article on competing water usages for Sierra Vista, Fort Huachuca, and the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area opens the door for more general consideration of the dramatic geologic and ecologic changes that have affected the San Pedro River over the past century (HCN, 6/12/95). The paired “before” and “after” pictures (pages […]

Posted inOctober 2, 1995: Did Idaho libel the feds?

The Politics of Sustainable Agriculture

Ponder the future of farming, free trade and technology with Wes Jackson and other researchers and writers at a University of Oregon conference, The Politics of Sustainable Agriculture, Oct. 7-8. For details, contact the Department of Political Science, 1284 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1284 (503/346-4868). This article appeared in the print edition of the […]

Posted inOctober 2, 1995: Did Idaho libel the feds?

Growth in the Intermountain West: Impacts on the GreenLine

How do you plan for growth and protect riparian areas? Look for some answers Oct. 11-13 at Growth in the Intermountain West: Impacts on the GreenLine, the 7th annual conference of the Colorado Riparian Association in Frisco, Colo. Topics include land-use planning and regulation, land trusts and riparian restoration. Contact Alan Carpenter, 303/444-2985. This article […]

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