Posted inGoat

Planning for drought while in one: Colorado is a model for the region

In the spring of 2002, Colorado temperatures were averaging four degrees above normal. Snowpack began disappearing at an alarming rate, and rain was scant. Then the fires started. The Hayman Fire, 215 square miles southwest of Denver, tore through nearly $200 million in firefighting costs alone. “(That summer) was hellacious,” remembers Reagan Waskom, co-chair of the […]

Posted inSeptember 2, 2013: Of Sparrows and Sodbusters

Joshua Zaffos on the Front Range fracking wars

The debate over the drilling technique known as hydraulic fracturing is heating up this fall, as several cities along Colorado’s Front Range prepare to vote on fracking bans or moratoriums. In a story in the current issue of High Country News, Joshua Zaffos documents the groundswell of Front Range opposition to fracking, and he also describes […]

Posted inGoat

New oil and gas leases throw another wrench in Utah’s big wilderness deal

The San Rafael Swell, the Book Cliffs, Desolation Canyon and the areas around Canyonlands National Park are some of Utah’s most iconic places; yet they lack federal protections. They’ve been land management battlegrounds for decades, pitting wilderness advocates and muscle-powered recreationalists against resource extraction and motor–powered recreationalists. But as reporter Greg Hanscom described recently in […]

Posted inSeptember 2, 2013: Of Sparrows and Sodbusters

When turtles and national security collide

Your article about desert tortoises was well researched and written (“Mojave Squeeze,” HCN, 8/5/13). I’m concerned about the U.S. Army’s unsuccessful efforts with tortoise translocation at Fort Irwin as part of its land expansion authorized by Congress in 2001. Similar land-acquisition efforts are underway by the U.S. Marine Corps in Twentynine Palms, Calif., where the military […]

Posted inSeptember 2, 2013: Of Sparrows and Sodbusters

What’s the nerdiest roadtrip you can think of?

ARIZONAComing back to Las Vegas from the Grand Canyon Skywalk on Arizona’s Hualapai Reservation, 32 Chinese tourists and their guide got more adventure than they planned for. Their driver, Joseph Razon, suddenly — and unintentionally — morphed into the captain of a floating barge when his bus was engulfed in a flash flood estimated at […]

Posted inSeptember 2, 2013: Of Sparrows and Sodbusters

The Latest: Mt. Taylor uranium mines still haunt Navajo communities

BackstoryThe controversy surrounding Mount Taylor — a volcano in northwest New Mexico sacred to several tribes — began in 2008, when the tribes sought to protect it from further uranium mining (“Dueling Claims,” HCN, 12/7/09). After contamination from the mines sickened workers, they fought to have 400,000 acres of federal, state and private lands designated […]

Posted inSeptember 2, 2013: Of Sparrows and Sodbusters

The Latest: Megaloads to Alberta incite protests

BackstorySouth Korean-made mining equipment destined for Alberta’s tar sands is too massive to squeeze under interstate overpasses. So energy companies propose to float it up the Columbia and Snake Rivers to Lewiston, Idaho, and then haul it up narrow Highway 12, which winds along federally protected rivers and over the Continental Divide into Montana. That […]

Posted inSeptember 2, 2013: Of Sparrows and Sodbusters

The elephant in the water world: agriculture

As a polar oceanographer long involved in climate research and a resident of the Yakima River Basin, I have followed closely the development of the Integrated Plan described in Sarah Jane Keller’s article (“Climate-forced water planning,” HCN, 8/5/13). There are a few points in her description that need clarification. First, a major portion of the $5 […]

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