A mother comes to terms with her son’s childhood in the urban environment.
Pilgrim at Shit Creek
A half percent of hope in this year’s drought reports
“Let’s play a game,” a friend suggested last weekend as we walked through stands of brown, brittle trees on Stewart’s Creek trail to San Luis Peak in southwestern Colorado. The game was called “find the living tree,” and like “I spy,” we’d scan the landscape for green leaves. We chuckled grimly. The truth she spoke […]
My life without a dog
A newspaperman wonders if he’s the only person around without a canine friend.
Renewable energy transmission projects create tension among greens
In mid June, I received two very different press releases from two environmental groups announcing the same event: The Bureau of Land Management’s release of the Final Environmental Impact Statement on the proposed SunZia high voltage transmission line that would stretch from central New Mexico to the fringes of Phoenix, Ariz. The document is the […]
I will fight fire no more
A wildland firefighter reflects on joys and sorrows of her fighting career, and on why she’s leaving the field.
New data shows government oversight of oil and gas spills is spotty at best
When the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently walked back its massive investigation of water contamination from natural gas drilling in Pavillion, Wyoming, John Hanger, a Democratic candidate for governor in Pennsylvania and the former secretary of the state’s Department of Environmental Protection, wrote on his blog: “The EPA has just put a ‘kick me’ sign on […]
Durango life requires a hefty commute
Could this Colorado town benefit from high-density development?
EPA chief confirmed. Are three key judicial nominees next?
Gina McCarthy must have been exhausted last week when she completed her 136-day slog down the path of most resistance – also known as the U.S. Congress – to the helm of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. It was the most drawn-out battle over a nominee for EPA’s top job ever. But it had little […]
You can’t have your gas and burn it, too
Many Americans are not enthusiastic about drilling in rural areas like the Rocky Mountain Front (“The Rocky Mountain Front blues,” HCN, 6/24/13). Unfortunately, we are also not happy with the cost of energy and our dependence on politically unstable areas such as the Middle East. We want solar power and wind generators, but those also […]
The politics of the possible
In the late 1980s, Western wilderness activists began changing their tactics: Stymied by increasingly anti-environmental elected officials opposed to any new wilderness, they decided to bypass local politicians and “nationalize” the issue. In Utah, led by the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, they pushed “America’s Redrock Wilderness Act,” a bill that would protect a whopping 9.4 […]
The end is nigh
I was shocked by the statement of Scott Edwards that, “Drinking water is not a human right … if it costs somebody else money to provide it to you” (“Water Rights,” HCN, 6/24/13). Even the Declaration of Independence states that we are endowed by our “Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and […]
The death of the working class
The most unfortunate legacy of the development over the last 50-plus years of “paradise resorts” for the wealthy like Aspen, Vail, Telluride and Jackson is primarily that the middle-class and working-class folks who perform the day-to-day work that keeps those resorts running have been shut out of affordable housing by the wealthy and by conservationists […]
Report from the summer HCN board meeting
High Country News‘ board of directors met in our hometown of Paonia, Colo. at the end of May, to assess the nonprofit’s health, discuss our prospects, and savor the Western Slope’s beauty. The news was good: HCN continues to expand its reach — our website, hcn.org, saw one-third more visitors in the first quarter of […]
Obama’s love letter to natural gas
The political and practical potential of gas in the climate fight
Next stop: Nanny State
It’s a proper function of the law to protect the public from improper actions by others, such as wanton destruction of public lands through thoughtless use of ATVs (“Western kids have fun — and die — motoring off-road,” HCN, 6/24/13). It is not a proper function of the law to protect people from their own […]
Migrant mother retold: A review of Mary Coin
Mary CoinMarisa Silver322 pages, hardcover: $26.95.Blue Rider Press, 2013. Halfway through Marisa Silver’s crystalline new novel, Mary Coin, two women’s lives converge near a frost-blighted field of peas in Depression-era California. Vera Dare, a government photographer, aims her camera at a rumpled migrant family. Her thoughts drift to her own children: two young boys sent […]
Let them play … Somewhere else
As a cyclist, hiker and returnee to Colorado after a 30-year absence, I was surprised at the level of mayhem that piston-head vehicles have inflicted on the Front Range (“Western kids have fun — and die — motoring off-road,” HCN, 6/24/13). It’s a disappointment. Rather than sacrifice a beautiful state like Colorado, maybe we should […]
Is the Rainbow Gathering a natural disaster?
THE WEST Sizzling, blistering, brutal: Whatever adjective you use to describe the West’s recent heat wave, it’s not strong enough. Normally cool places like Portland and Seattle hit the 90s. Phoenix soared above 104 every day in June, reaching 119 once, and a few nights the low was a baking 91 degrees. Rattlesnakes huddled in […]
Gold and Silver in the Mojave: Images of a Last Frontier: A review
Gold and Silver in the Mojave: Images of a Last Frontier Nicholas Clapp 187 pages, paperback: $24.95. Sunbelt Publications, 2013. It’s a book of contrasts — a Las Vegas in the days before electricity. A vibrant mining town where today stands only desert. Grizzled prospectors next to voluptuous women. Unimaginable riches in an arid, empty […]
Frontier Justice: A review of Little Century
Little CenturyAnna Keesey336 pages, paperback:$16.Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013. When Esther Chambers moves to central Oregon from Chicago in 1896, she finds herself caught in a range war between cattle ranchers and sheepherders. Anna Keesey’s elegant debut novel, Little Century, resurrects the complex West of those early days, in prose that captures the rhythms and […]
