Posted inApril 4, 1994: Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau?

Rural co-ops must change

Under a draft proposal by the Western Area Power Administration, over 600 publically owned utilities and rural electric associations must add renewable resources and energy efficiency to their planning procedures or forfeit their right to buy cheap federal hydropower. WAPA’s Draft Energy Planning and Marketing EIS, released March 25, would require all utilities that buy […]

Posted inApril 4, 1994: Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau?

Energy Fair

Alternative energy technologies will be on display at the second annual, free Energy Fair April 30-May 1 in Montrose, Colo. Vendors will feature tepees, dome houses, earth-sunken homes, devices to computerize energy conservation and energy-efficient lighting and building materials. Workshops will examine bio fuels and hybrid solar systems, among other topics. Events include baking cookies […]

Posted inApril 4, 1994: Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau?

Trees are more than logs

An “idea fair” sponsored by the Forest Service and a coalition of private and public organizations will show how to extract higher value from forest products before they leave timber-dependent communities. “Growing Sustainable Forest Enterprises, An Intermountain Idea Fair” examines how timber can be made into specialty products such as toys or furniture rather than […]

Posted inApril 4, 1994: Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau?

An alleged massacre comes under fire

As the story goes, Shoshone-Bannock warriors scalped and murdered nearly 300 men, women and children near Almo, Idaho, in 1861. Now, several historians call the massacre mere campfire folklore. Brigham Madsen, a retired University of Utah professor who recently researched the killing, says no newspapers or U.S. military records in 1861 mention the massacre, and […]

Posted inApril 4, 1994: Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau?

Old power poles electrocute eagles

Last March, Clent Bailey found an electrocuted golden eagle beneath a power pole near Roswell, N.M. Bailey, who works as a biologist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, then uncovered an electrocuted hawk under the eagle, a victim of the same “problem pole.” The experience launched Bailey’s campaign to retrofit poles and strengthen regulations. […]

Posted inApril 4, 1994: Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau?

Court strikes at Endangered Species Act

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service cannot require private landowners to protect the habitat of endangered species, according to a recent court decision. The ruling by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., stems from a lawsuit challenging federal regulations restricting timber harvesting near spotted owl nests in Oregon and […]

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