Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

We can’t save the land without first saving the West

Once a month I spend several hours with what I affectionately call my “wise-use” group. It’s not really a wise-use group but at first glance it resembles one. Members include the six county commissioners from Delta and Montrose counties here in western Colorado, a rancher, a timber mill employee, a coal miner, a banker, and […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

What to do when opposition to planning turns ugly

Note: this article is a sidebar to a news article titled “Land-use plan is disemboweled.” When the numerous and vocal opponents of the Flathead plan suddenly came out of the woodwork last summer, it was a shock to many people. But it was probably no accident. “That’s a typical strategy,” says Tarso Ramos of the […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

Coming soon: A leaner, more ecological agency

A leaner, more environmentally conscious Forest Service is about to be born, says Forest Service Chief Jack Ward Thomas. In an 11-page memo sent to agency employees Dec. 6, Thomas unveiled a plan for “reinventing” the agency over the next two years. Regional offices would shrink from nine to seven and the agency’s 32,000-person workforce […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

Agency condemns cabin as a teardown

Many visitors call a 63-year-old cabin in the Tonto National Forest, Ariz., a “half-acre garden of Eden.” The Grand Canyon Trust says it’s “a historical, aesthetical and botanical treasure.” Yet the Forest Service has decided to tear down the cabin within six months. The agency made the decision despite a spirited effort by the private, […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

Ranchers protect land in Wyoming

ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo. – The Nature Conservancy has purchased a 4,200-acre ranch near the Big Horn Mountains, ending speculation that the prime real estate might find its way into the hands of developers. The sale of the Pete Widener ranch prompted 10 other nearby ranching families to donate conservation easements on an additional 10,223 acres. […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

Home, home on the subdivisions

Yellowstone National Park’s bison have come a long way since 1901, when only 44 survivors of North America’s millions grazed inside its boundaries. Stu Coleman, chief of the park’s natural resources branch, estimates the current population at 4,300 – nearly a hundred times that number – and calls the place “a bison-generating machine.” In 1988-89, […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

Northwest council says salmon should float

Despite tremendous pressure to delay a decision, the Northwest Power Planning Council approved a plan Dec. 14 to save Columbia River salmon. It relies on drawing down reservoirs – rather than on barges – to speed migrating salmon to sea. “After 14 years of studying the problem, the council finally concluded that fish float,” says […]

Posted inDecember 12, 1994: Shrink to fit

Pests and pesticides

If you don’t like chemical pesticides but don’t like pests either, then Pesticides in our Communities: Choices for Change may be for you. It tells how to substitute boric-acid powder, powdered sugar, corn syrup and stale beer for dichlorvos (Vapona), chlorpyrifos (Raid Roach, Hot Shot Roach), and carbaryl (Sevin). Published by Concern Inc., a Washington, […]

Posted inDecember 12, 1994: Shrink to fit

War on wheels

Jeeps, dirt bikes and four-wheelers roar off designated roads in the wildlands of Utah and rip up desert wildlife, says the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance. Meanwhile, the Bureau of Land Management stands by and lets the damage happen, the group charges. SUWA wants President Clinton to issue an Executive Order closing all public lands to […]

Posted inDecember 12, 1994: Shrink to fit

Fighters for justice

Gail Small: I am a member of the Northern Cheyenne tribe. I am an environmental attorney, activist, and founder of Native Action – one of the few grass-roots environmental groups based on a reservation. The 500,000-acre Northern Cheyenne reservation is located in the beautiful ponderosa pine country of southeastern Montana, (and is) rapidly being surrounded […]

Posted inDecember 12, 1994: Shrink to fit

A passion for less

Did you know that the average American spends one year of his or her life watching TV commercials, that every year in this country 1.3 million acres are blacktopped, and that each day, nine square miles of rural land are turned over to development? Americans overconsume, yet remain unhappy, according to statistics in All Consuming […]

Gift this article