Posted inMay 30, 2011: Wolf Whiplash

Indebted to Debbie

Kudos on your terrific article about Debbie Sease (HCN, 5/2/11). Those who have worked to protect land, water and wildlife with Debbie throughout her career know how talented she is and how much she has accomplished. All who love the West’s wild lands are indebted to Debbie.Johanna WaldSan Francisco, California This article appeared in the […]

Posted inRange

Utah goes for the gold

If you live in Utah, you can now pay your local bills or taxes with gold or silver coins, thanks to a law passed by the state legislature this year. The new Utah law directs the state treasurer to set the exchange rate (so many dollars for a given weight of gold or silver) and […]

Posted inGoat

The Sound of … Journalism?

They say sex sells. But does music teach? This seems to be the case with a couple recent music videos — one on the potential health hazards of hydraulic fracturing (which we’ve covered quite a bit here at HCN, from lack of regulations to  health studies to health hazards in the chemical mix) — and […]

Posted inGoat

Lead bullets find a champion in Tester

Last January, three endangered California condors were found dead in Arizona. The cause of death: lead poisoning. After eating carrion riddled with spent lead ammunition, the birds’ digestive systems likely shut down, starving them to death. Since condor reintroduction began in Arizona in 1996, 15 have died of lead poisoning; in California, 18 condors have […]

Posted inWotr

It may be High Noon for tumbleweed

Conjure up the lonesome sound of a harmonica in a dusty Western town where gunmen with jingling spurs reach for their six-shooters at high noon. The scene would be incomplete without a few tumbleweeds rolling past. But here’s the truth: Tumbleweed doesn’t belong on the Western plains. An exotic also known as Russian thistle, it […]

Posted inGoat

Oil Industry Wins Subsidy Game, Again

Little more than a year after the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, 4 dollar-a-gallon gas has prompted a bout of political amnesia. Despite various moratoriums on offshore drilling, the House of Representatives passed three separate bills last week that would hasten and expand domestic oil production. Then a Senate bill that had gained considerable momentum […]

Posted inRange

Kevin Costner, Western rivers, and climate change

By Heather Hansen, Red Lodge Clearing House Reading the recently-released Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) report—on the impacts of climate change on Western water resources— is like watching Waterworld, that futuristic flop in which Kevin Costner sails around a post-apocalyptic globe that’s been completely inundated by melted polar ice caps, in search of dry land. Waterworld […]

Posted inGoat

Eminent domain expands

In early May, a business-supported eminent domain measure became law in Montana. It allows privately-held utilities to condemn private property for transmission lines and other “public good” projects if they cannot reach agreement with landowners. That means that two major new transmission lines slated to cross Montana can go forward. The lines were put on […]

Posted inRange

Same Old Song and Dance Over CA Parks

By Laura HugginsOnce again California is threatening to close state parks. Seventy (out of 270) parks are on the chopping block this time around (see an interactive map of the planned closures). The plan is to place the parks in “caretaker status,” which means gates would be closed and people would not be allowed to enter. What a dismal idea […]

Posted inBlog

Biomass energy production in the Interior West

In November I wrote a post exploring reasons many western political elites are gung ho for biomass energy production. This follow-up post explores the push for biomass energy projects where it is strongest – in the Interior West – and profiles developments in SE Oregon’s Klamath County.  A wood chip truck is unloaded at a […]

Posted inWotr

We’re not all Right in Idaho

A March Gallup poll probably surprised no one when it determined that Idaho, Utah and Wyoming rank among the five most conservative states in America. The trio came in second, fourth and fifth, respectively, putting them in the archetypal company of Mississippi, which was first, and Alabama, third. Being a conservative in a blue state […]

Posted inGoat

Game on in the Wyoming Range

The future of gas leasing in the Wyoming Range is being batted around like a tetherball on a playground as energy companies and conservation groups each take swings. If conservationists win, the gas leases will be scaled back or retired and the mountains protected from development under the 2009 Wyoming Range Legacy Act. If energy […]

Posted inMay 16, 2011: Ripple Effects

Wild lands by any other name

The quarter-billion acres of mostly arid territory overseen by the federal Bureau of Land Management have become an unlikely battleground in the war over wilderness. Last December, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar ordered the BLM to identify any “lands with wilderness characteristics,” and, when appropriate, protect them as designated “wild lands.” Salazar’s order in full is […]

Posted inGoat

Mountain of … bluster

President Barack Obama’s decision to put the kibosh on the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository has been a favorite punching bag for House Republicans in recent weeks, thanks in part to the debacle at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi power plant stoking fears over the safety of nuclear waste stored at more than 100 temporary sites around […]

Posted inWotr

Me and my SUV

I love my purple 4Runner.  She’s a 1998 stick-shift with 177,000 miles on the odometer, and her name is Jesse.  She’s been all over the West, camping on dirt roads and shuttling for river trips. Once, in the high desert of central Oregon, I hit a patch of ice going fast on a cold, bluebird […]

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