Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

BuRec will halt water spreading

Dear HCN, Those who simply scanned Paul Koberstein’s Nov. 28, 1994, headline, “BuRec to allow water thefts to continue,” may have assumed that Reclamation is not addressing the problem of unauthorized use of water. That’s not the case. Reclamation is actively seeking to eliminate the unauthorized use of water, sometimes referred to as water spreading. […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

Land-use planning can be a nightmare

Dear HCN, As a Seattle-suburbs hobby farmer (horses), widow of a lawyer, mother of four college graduates, and (unpaid) legislative liaison for the King County Property Rights Alliance, I am also one of those “people with an ideological predisposition who are most vulnerable to independence, anti-government and property rights slogans.” (Hoo-ha!) The condescension of the […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

L-P coughs up

Corporate giant Louisiana-Pacific must answer, finally, to a diminutive plaintiff. Four families who successfully sued the wood-products company two years ago will now collect their $2.3 million settlement. The U.S. Supreme Court recently denied the company’s appeal of the original judgment, reports the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel. The case centers on the small town of […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

Option 9 survives

In a rare environmental victory for the Clinton administration, a federal judge upheld the president’s plan for protecting wildlife and allowing some timber cutting in the federal forests of the Pacific Northwest. Judge William Dwyer of Seattle, who said in 1991 that federal land managers had committed “deliberate, systematic” violations of environmental laws, ruled Dec. […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

‘Wise-use’ laws challenged

Environmentalists are challenging the “wise-use” laws of Catron County, N.M., that have become a model for other rural counties around the West. Two groups, the Greater Gila Biodiversity Project and Gila Watch, along with several private citizens, filed suit in federal court Nov. 17 charging that the ordinances are unconstitutional and violate civil rights laws. […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

Plucky ‘Batman and Robin’ make an airport their case

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, The West sings the Denver airport blues. Excerpts from a free-ranging interview with two of the most effective critics of Denver International Airport. PAUL EARLE: We have to keep buying new file drawers, shifting them around to make room for more. We’ve got more […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

Forest Service may finally evaluate grazing

As the Clinton administration backpedals in the nation’s capitol from grazing reforms, an environmental lawsuit is moving ahead in Montana. A federal judge will soon decide whether the Forest Service must do analyses for 150 allotments where ranchers run livestock on the Beaverhead National Forest. Last March, the National Wildlife Federation and its Montana affiliate […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

Yellowstone bison guts pile up

On the day after Christmas, bison migrating downhill from Yellowstone National Park’s northern range once again met gunfire in Montana. Caught in a power struggle between the National Park Service, whose policy of “natural regulation” has allowed their numbers to grow to an estimated 4,300, and the livestock industry, which is worried about disease, more […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

Feds targeted by louder thunder from below

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah – Met Johnson worried that no one would show up for the two-day Western Summit of conservative state legislators, county commissioners and public-land users he organized here in January. Johnson, the leader of the so-called “Cowboy Caucus” in the Utah House of Representatives, feared the “steam might have gone out of […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

So far, wolf reintroduction survives legal challenge

Wolves arrived in central Idaho and Yellowstone last week after evading enemies in courtrooms and legislatures around the region. The frenzy of last-minute legal maneuvering preceding their return has fragmented opinion on both sides of the issue and bewildered onlookers. Five months ago, to block the wolves’ return, the American Farm Bureau and the Mountain […]

Gift this article