ZION NATIONAL PARK, Utah – Michael Parshall wondered how much longer he’d be able to build trails for the National Park Service. His problem wasn’t with his job at Zion National Park, but with an advanced and crippling case of colitis. “I knew that I was getting sick in 1989, but I didn’t go to […]
New policy pits seasonals against parks
Grazing reform: A plan to chew on
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt launched his second attempt at grazing reform last month, issuing a giant 224-page draft plan to revamp grazing practices on 170 million acres of Bureau of Land Management rangeland. Like his initial proposal last summer, the revised plan would double grazing fees and tighten environmental regulations. But, in a major departure, […]
Dear friends
We want advice If all goes well, subscribers should soon receive the annual High Country News survey. The paper’s surveys don’t ask what kind of car you drive, or your annual income, or where you vacation. But we do ask questions to guide us in putting out the newspaper. And if you haven’t responded to […]
Fly-by tourism may be throttled at Grand Canyon
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau? Although Congress passed legislation in 1987 limiting where tourist-toting planes and helicopters could go over Grand Canyon National Park, the number of flights has nearly doubled. The National Park Service says noise pervades almost every nook and cranny […]
The West is hard at work, destroying its past
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau? The Colorado Plateau is internationally famous for its canyons and spectacular natural beauty, but it also contains the largest concentration of prehistoric ruins, rock art and artifacts in the world. Those traces of its past are being lost, […]
Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau?
A locally based group tries to set the agenda for 130,000 square miles
We pay for cheap aluminum
Dear HCN, While the aluminum vs. dams article (HCN, 2/7/94) was good it was short of basic information: what the aluminum industry pays for power. People can understand grazing fees – try to get a horse fed for $3 per month or pay for patent land at $5 per acre – but we should know […]
Getting Dombeck was a coup
Dear HCN, A short correction to the article by Tony Davis in the Feb. 21 edition, Western Roundup section: In the first article on Jim Baca, the last paragraph mentions acting BLM director Mike Dombeck. Mike is not a career BLM employee … in fact, as recently as 1990, Mike was a staff fish biologist […]
Some advice for rural residents
Dear HCN, Yes, house hunting in Bozeman can be frustrating (as described in the Jan. 24 HCN, “Montana Town Puts Out the Unwelcome Mat”). But unlike others profiled in that story, I don’t exclusively blame footloose entrepreneurs, Californians or Hollywood stars for this and other growth-related problems. While not always to our liking, change is […]
Condos, not cows
Dear HCN, As retirees and industries flock to the West, many fear the loss of the region’s open spaces and wildlife habitat. Officials from extractive industries such as farming, ranching and timber capitalize on this fear, warning that if environmentalists and others who are demanding an end to subsidies are successful, subdivisions will proliferate as […]
Professionals, not cowboys
Dear HCN, After reading Ed Marston’s Comb Wash “A Stark Victory in Utah” editorial in the January issue of HCN, I am very disappointed. I am a long-time BLM employee but am not personally involved in Comb Wash. However, I know enough about the issue and BLM to know that your editorial is full of […]
Hammering out “ecosystem management’
Lynx, grizzly bear and salmon could be the winners in a new plan to link the current patchwork of parks, national forests and recreation areas in Washington’s North Cascades. Along with the National Park Service, groups like The Wilderness Society, the National Parks and Conservation Association and the Canadian Earthcare Society will host a three-day […]
A grand intellectual critique
John Ralston Saul has developed a theory to explain what ails the world: rationality run amuck. Language, in the hands of bureaucrats or modern poets and novelists, is designed to obscure, as in environmental impact statements, or is all style and no substance. The ultimate rationalizers – Robert S. McNamara and Henry Kissinger – destroy […]
News but no paper
For people who want to keep up with environmental news but don’t want to drown in a sea of paper, Green Disk offers a wealth of information without filling up the mailbox or the local landfill. The Green Disk: Paperless Environmental Journal comes on a computer diskette in Mac or DOS format. Included in the […]
Sun Day
When making plans for Earth Day this spring, don’t forget about Sun Day, April 24, a national celebration of renewable energy and energy conservation. Organizers hope to educate people about the potential of renewable energy and showcase renewable-energy programs and technologies. Over 50 national environmental, business, utility, student and government groups are sponsoring Sun Day, […]
Elevating mud to art
You might need to build a new addition just to house the Adobe Journal. The 11 by 14 inch quarterly from Albuquerque, N.M., allows ample room for black and white photos of adobe innovations, from castles with stained glass and arches, to “earthships” of tires and cans that house indoor gardens. Published by the non-profit […]
Noisy wildlife refuges
Arizona’s endangered bobwhite quail and New Mexico’s antelope may be running away from national wildlife refuges instead of toward them. According to a recent study by the non-profit Defenders of Wildlife, military overflights continue to disrupt at least 35 refuges. The group’s report, Unfriendly Skies, says that while bombers and fighter-planes practice overhead, startled birds […]
Tree poaching on the rise
Timber prices are now so high that renegade loggers in northern Idaho have been stealing trees from national forests. Recently, 15 people were arrested for 35 timber thefts that occurred last year on the Priest Lake District of the Idaho Panhandle National Forest. Don Hacker, 42, of Priest River, Idaho, was fined $600 and ordered […]
Some groups hot, some not
If membership figures are any indication, the 1990s will be a lot tougher for many environmental groups than the 1980s. Traditional heavyweights like The Wilderness Society, the National Audubon Society, the Sierra Club and The National Wildlife Federation have experienced significant drops in membership since 1990. Membership at The Wilderness Society, for instance, dropped from […]
New Santa Fe mayor says: “This town is not for sale’
Defying predictions and the clout of big money, Santa Fe, N.M., voters elected former city councilor Debbie Jaramillo mayor March 1. She promised to rein in runaway development and return city government to the people. Pre-election polls and campaign funds had shown Jaramillo lagging well behind other candidates. Projected winner Peso Chavez raised $86,400 from […]
