Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, Pay as you waste, says EPA. New EPA rules haven’t been the only federal vexation for rural counties. About 425,000 square miles of “land that nobody wanted” is administered by the federal Bureau of Land Management, and in almost 300 places in the West, […]
Federal land managers put up no-dumping signs
State-by-state trash
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, Pay as you waste, says EPA. Idaho had 85 landfills, according to Katie Sewell, solid waste coordinator in the state department of environmental quality; by summer, that will be down to 30, and most of the panhandle counties will ship their trash to big […]
Washington county splits in half over proposed dump
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, Pay as you waste, says EPA. HOOPER, Wash. – Burying Seattle’s garbage in rural eastern Washington is like putting a toilet in a refrigerator, according to cartoonist Milt Priggee of the Spokane, Wash., Spokesman Review. That sums up the feeling of opponents of a […]
Pay as you waste, says EPA
It’s a new world for rural trash
A struggle for the last grass
SILVER CITY, N.M. – Black Canyon is a place that only a hard-core stream addict should be able to love, so barren are its edges, so sparse its grasses. Superficially, the canyon offers a park-like atmosphere in America’s first wilderness. The stream runs freely over its shallow bed, and a few 75- to 100-foot-tall cottonwoods […]
Earth First!ers experience Idaho-style justice
MOSCOW, Idaho – State and federal judges have been hammering members of Earth First! who are fighting the Cove-Mallard timber sales in central Idaho. In early February, Earth First!er Erik Ryberg was sentenced to six months in jail, with four months suspended, for interfering with a U.S. Forest Service officer. Ryberg also must pay a […]
Painting for quieter skies
Artist Wilson Crawford recently painted Thumper Meets the Airport Expansion to protest a proposal to lengthen the runway in Taos, N.M. The painting shows giant airplane wheels squishing a rabbit against a backdrop of purple mountains and blue sky. Along with more than 100 artists, Crawford donated his work to a two-week exhibit, Quiet Skies, […]
Bandelier overrun by hooves
If left unchecked, growing numbers of elk and wild cattle could leave New Mexico’s Bandelier National Monument eroded and overgrazed, park officials say. Nearly 30 cows and over 2,000 elk now trample the park’s fragile hillsides and brittle archaeological ruins and, according to an environmental assessment released Jan. 13, the cattle herd could double in […]
Public foots DOE bill
The Department of Energy spent millions of dollars over a 32-month period defending its contractors from the public. A DOE internal document says that the agency paid $47 million to private attorneys from Oct. 1, 1990, through May 31, 1993, to defend its private contractors from class action lawsuits. The suits charged firms such as […]
Agency reins in Wyoming rancher
After catching a Wyoming rancher illegally subleasing federal grazing permits, Forest Service officials cancelled half his grazing privileges and suspended the remainder for three years. The rancher, George Salisbury, who is also a longtime county commissioner and state legislator, insists he is innocent. “I owned the cattle, I just didn’t have the paperwork to justify […]
Chevron gets a go-ahead
The Forest Service is going to let Chevron USA drill an exploratory well two miles north of the boundary of the High Uintas Wilderness in northern Utah. Wasatch-Cache Forest Supervisor Susan Giannettino’s decision allows Chevron to construct a bridge, 2.8 miles of new road and improve 2.1 miles of an existing road, as well as […]
Campbell sides with Telluride
Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell (D, Colo.) says he will introduce legislation to condemn a developer’s dream house built in Colorado’s West Elk Wilderness – if the Forest Service rejects a proposed land exchange with the developer. A Campbell spokeswoman said the senator wants to give the Forest Service another tool to deal with Tom Chapman, […]
Yucca Mountain’s fault
Geologists working for the U.S. Geological Survey and the state of Nevada have discovered a new earthquake fault cutting directly through Yucca Mountain, the site slated for the nation’s first high-level nuclear waste repository. Geologists believe the new sheer zone, combined with the already known Ghost Dance Fault, could reduce the underground space available for […]
Wise use at Grand Canyon
A Grand Canyon chapter of the People For the West! was formed Jan. 14. Its goals include unrestricted access to public lands, gaining state and county control of federal lands, and preventing federal land managers from interfering with “free enterprise” pursuits such as mining, grazing and logging. The chapter also wants to end federal restrictions […]
Jackson’s last letter answered
Activist Leroy Jackson’s last letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service hit home. Shortly before his death, Jackson wrote the agency to protest any exemption of Navajo timberlands from the Endangered Species Act (HCN, 11/29/93). The Bureau of Indian Affairs had asked for an exemption based on tribal sovereignty and claimed that the Mexican […]
Back at the ranch
Amid all the hoopla about grazing reform, the Bureau of Land Management raised its monthly grazing fees by 12 cents, up to $1.98 per cow-calf pair. Each year the agency adjusts the price from a 1966 base price to reflect lease rates on private land, cattle prices and livestock production costs. Last year the agency […]
Owyhee: On the eve of destruction
The next time you’re looking at a map of the United States, locate what appears to be the largest area without roads in the lower 48. Surprisingly, few people have ever seen or heard of it. Centered around the point common to Idaho, Nevada and Oregon, it is known as the “Owyhee” high desert region: […]
Dear friends
Odds and ends HCN couldn’t live without the U.S. Postal Service, but at times we wonder if we can live with it. On Dec. 26, 1993, we mailed notes, via Third Class mail, to readers in Boulder, 250 miles away, inviting them to the Jan. 21 potluck. Bill Doud of Boulder tells us that his […]
Draining the budget to desalt the Colorado
YUMA, Ariz. – When people talk about 1990s boondoggles, conversation often turns to the superconducting super collider, the Hubble space telescope or the space station. But consider for a moment a water-desalting plant in the middle of a desert. Make it the largest, most expensive reverse-osmosis plant ever built, and keep in mind that it […]
Why don’t we think of this?
Why didn’t we think of this? Writing in the Washington state weekly, The Reflector, Marvin Case asks, “Why not create a spotted owl preserve somewhere, plant owl eggs in, say, 5,000 acres in northern Idaho, then let the loggers have the old growth?” This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the […]
