In seven years, pipeline incidents have killed nearly 100 people nationwide.
A map of $1.1 billion in natural gas pipeline leaks
The West grapples with history through its place names
A growing number of places have been renamed to honor their first inhabitants.
Republican infighting; Bundy trial delayed; Western climate report
HCN.org news in brief.
In Utah, public access to state lands comes at a cost
Public access to trust lands varies widely from state to state.
Threatened plants on state lands have few protections
Politics, land ownership and imperiled plants collide in New Mexico.
A tale of two parks: How the Bakken boom transformed a landscape
While a North Dakota national park is an oasis from drilling, a nearby state park is thrown open.
Photos that trace migrations through Yellowstone
Ungulates overcome highways, rivers and other barriers while roaming the region.
Turning Americans away from public lands
Toward the end of his excellent essay “The Changing Face of Woods Work,” Hal Herring gets to the core issues of what is — yes, Hal — a “vast right-wing conspiracy” (HCN, 10/30/17). The goal is to create, in the minds of as many people as possible, a distaste for anything associated with the federal […]
The best job in the West
Thank you, Hal Herring, from the bottom of my tree-planting heart. You presented the situation for forest workers that many of us have been trying to address for the last 20 years (“The Changing Face of Woods Work,” HCN, 10/30/17). You connected the dots in just the right way. You didn’t blame the victims (guest […]
Soulless choices
I was appalled by Linda Hasselstrom’s poem “Spring” and your newspaper’s commentary on it (“Heard Around the West,” HCN, 10/30/17). Hasselstrom categorizes drowning kittens and bashing them with a wrench as “taking responsibility.” What she calls “taking responsibility” is really a grotesque and wholly unjustifiable lack of responsibility. Her “stark choices” are no more than […]
California, un estado de odio
Un ex-defensor de la supremacía de la raza blanca observa el aumento en los crímenes de odio
Latest: Grand Canyon ‘mega-development’ voted down
Navajo council rejects plans for Escalade’s tram, shops, restaurants.
How states generate money from the land they own
From Arizona to Oregon, states have different tactics to make money off their state trust lands.
Macho moose; thousand-dollar bobcat; lost in Dark Canyon
Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.
How do states treat the lands they own?
An investigation into state land management, to better understand what’s at stake in federal land transfers.
High Country News visits Bears Ears
Editorial takes a trip, our holiday party gets closer and welcome new staffers!
Interior Department mired in investigations
Democrats vow to press the investigations while Zinke shrugs them off.
The divides that unify a Southwestern village
Stanley Crawford writes about rifts between Anglo and Chicano neighbors.
Paiute Tribe elders navigate a faltering health care system
As federal funding dwindles, remote Nevada tribes struggle for access.
Advice from Moab’s mayor: Be careful what you wish for
As his final term ends, Dave Sakrison weighs the cost of decades of transformation.
