Posted inFebruary 20, 1995: No more ignoring the obvious: Idaho sucks itself dry

Governor overrules voters

Voters in Arizona may have trounced a takings initiative last election but Republican Gov. Fife Symington isn’t listening. In his state-of-the-state address, Symington promised to issue an executive order ensuring compensation for any property owner whose land use becomes limited by government regulations. “Every executive agency in state government will be ordered to respect private-property […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 1995: No more ignoring the obvious: Idaho sucks itself dry

Forest activists retrench and grope for support

Nearly 400 West Coast forest activists who gathered in Ashland, Ore., last month were faced with a sobering civics lesson: Their foes in Congress and statehouses throughout the West had captured the populist high ground. The fourth Western Ancient Forest Conference, sponsored by the Ashland-based environmental group Headwaters, is an annual gathering of the forest […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 1995: No more ignoring the obvious: Idaho sucks itself dry

Freed wolves roam up to 20 miles a day

Note: this article is a sidebar to a news article titled “From freedom to FedEx: Wolf B13 killed.” Fourteen remaining Canadian wolves released last month into a central Idaho wilderness are giving U.S. Fish and Wildlife trackers a run for their money. Two wolves have left Idaho and headed north into Montana. One was about […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 1995: No more ignoring the obvious: Idaho sucks itself dry

From freedom to FedEx: Wolf B13 killed

SALMON, Idaho – Just nine days after her release into the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness, a Canadian wolf found her way out of central Idaho’s maze of steep snow-covered mountains. Sixty air miles from where she had been set free, the wolf trotted straight into Gene Hussey’s cattle herd about 25 miles south […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 1995: No more ignoring the obvious: Idaho sucks itself dry

Salmon campaign fractures over how to include people

SALMON, Idaho – Environmentalists ignited a firestorm in central Idaho by requesting a blanket injunction on all logging, mining and grazing on six national forests to protect endangered salmon habitat. U.S. District Judge Daniel Ezra of Honolulu, filling in for a sick Idaho judge, granted the injunction on Jan. 12, lighting the fuse. Within a […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 1995: No more ignoring the obvious: Idaho sucks itself dry

Apaches send a signal to nuclear industry

Four years ago, Mescalero Apache Rufina Laws says, she dreamed of iridescent water streaming out of a mountain onto a meadow. It was radioactive, killing all it touched. That nightmare propelled Laws to wage a one-woman fight against a plan for a nuclear-waste storage site on the New Mexico reservation. Just about everyone, from public […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 1995: No more ignoring the obvious: Idaho sucks itself dry

River purity is a new goal for all sorts offarmers

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, No more ignoring the obvious: Idaho sucks itself dry. On a clear evening in the Magic Valley of southern Idaho, Don Campbell heads down a hill to check on his catfish. They’re enclosed in a group of raceways below his house overlooking the Snake […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 1995: No more ignoring the obvious: Idaho sucks itself dry

No more ignoring the obvious: Idaho sucks itself dry

ARCO, Idaho – They stand like giant tombstones in a graveyard. Hundreds of black cottonwood trees – all dead or just barely hanging on – line the dry cobblestones of the Big Lost River. Charlie Traughber cusses state water authorities as he points out decaying groves of cottonwoods across the Big Lost River Valley. “Gawd, […]

Posted inFebruary 6, 1995: The wolves are back, big time

Taxpayers and the grizzly are getting gored

Dear HCN: Why is the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee supporting delisting of the Yellowstone grizzly bear? (HCN, 1/23/95). After 35 years of research on this population and the expenditure of several million dollars, there still is no reasonable population estimate for the Yellowstone grizzly or a scientifically defensible measure of what constitutes a recovered population. […]

Posted inFebruary 6, 1995: The wolves are back, big time

Why can’t both sides move a little toward each other?

Dear HCN, I enjoyed Ed Marston’s editorial in the Dec. 26 High Country News. I’m a (gasp) federal-land rancher in (gasp) Catron County, N.M., and write a weekly editorial in the Courier, which often bashes (gasp) enviro-preservationists. I’ve been active in working on the Catron County Land Plan in relation to water. I’ve watched each […]

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