Posted inDecember 24, 2012: The new Wild, Wild West

Scott Groene on the Washington County land bill

Editor’s Note: In our interview with former Utah Sen. Bob Bennett (“Bob Bennett after the fall,” HCN, 10/29/12), Bennett said of his 2009 Washington County land bill: “The Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance’s board was split 7-7 over the bill. So they took no position, which effectively let it move forward.” SUWA Executive Director Scott Groene […]

Posted inDecember 24, 2012: The new Wild, Wild West

A review of Last Water on the Devil’s Highway: A cultural and natural history of Tinajas Altas

Last Water on the Devil’s Highway: A cultural and natural history of Tinajas Altas Bill Broyles, Gayle Harrison Hartmann, Thomas E. Sheridan, Gary Paul Nabhan, Mary Charlotte Thurtle 240 pages, hardcover: $49.95. The University of Arizona Press, 2012. Last Water on the Devil’s Highway is the story of a waterhole that, for centuries, has kept […]

Posted inDecember 24, 2012: The new Wild, Wild West

Canadian government cuts pollution research that’s crucial in the U.S.

EXPERIMENTAL LAKES AREA, ONTARIO To reach Lake 658, you leave the Trans-Canada Highway in the moose-ridden backwoods of western Ontario, creep down a teeth-jarring gravel road, follow a trail to a different lake, hop onto a motorboat and then take a short hike to 658’s granite shoreline. The water is crystal-clear, and yet a sign […]

Posted inDecember 24, 2012: The new Wild, Wild West

A sampler of U.S. environmentalists working in British Columbia

Mitch Friedman, head of Conservation Northwest, a Washington-based group whose advocacy reaches into British Columbia, has an unusual way of estimating the strength of the environmental movement: by the number of “activists per square mile.” In B.C., he says, that number is “very low — there are whole mountain ranges without a single citizen watchdog, […]

Posted inDecember 24, 2012: The new Wild, Wild West

A different borderland blues

(This editor’s note accompanies a story exposing a British Columbia mining rush that threatens salmon rivers flowing through Southeast Alaska.) When I first ventured into environmental journalism in the early 1980s, one of the hottest Western controversies was coming down in the temperate rainforests of the Alaska panhandle, bordering Canada’s westernmost province, British Columbia. Two […]

Posted inGoat

Boom, bust, yawn

There’s nothing new about a natural resource boom and its ugly twin, the bust. When reporting on how these economic hurricanes blow through communities, writers tend to tell similar narratives. First, there’s the sepia-toned photo of what the place used to look like, maybe a quote or two from some old-timer at the local diner […]

Posted inRange

Natural resources and the fiscal cliff

By Heather Hansen, Red Lodge Clearing House As even people living in a cave know by now, if Congress doesn’t strike a deal soon, some combination of automatic tax hikes and draconian budget cuts will kick in. As early as January 2, the first round of sequestration cuts will be triggered. I’ve heard little discussion […]

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