Posted inGoat

Blocking solar power … with national monuments?

If you follow basic media coverage of debates over whether to protect various bits and chunks of public land from development, you’re probably painfully familiar with the following archetypal stances. We’ll call them Merle and Becky. Merle, a hardscrabble, hardworking local resident who may be involved in local government or small business and is eager […]

Posted inWotr

When all else fails, go to court

The national environmental movement is spinning its wheels in Congress and accomplishing very little. The big groups lobbied like crazy in 2008 and 2009 on the crucial issue of limiting the fossil fuels that cause climate change, but couldn’t get the Senate to approve even a moderate move to curb carbon emissions with a “cap-and-trade” […]

Posted inRange

Water truce in Colorado

About 80 percent of Colorado’s population lives on the east side of the Great Divide, and about 80 percent of the state’s precipitation falls on the west side.   Moving the water to the people has been an expensive and contentious process for the past century or so. As the saying goes, “Whiskey is for drinkin’, […]

Posted inRange

Should oil refiners disclose more health and safety info?

By Eric De Place, Sightline.org Much to their credit, the United Steelworkers and the AFL-CIO want more sunlight on oil company practices. The unions believe that a string of accidents — including the deadly 2010 fire at Anacortes, Washington where Steelworkers are employed —  is evidence that more safety information should be made public. WSJ’s MarketWatchreports: […]

Posted inGoat

Mopping up at Los Alamos

Last week, Los Alamos National Labs finally reached a settlement with community groups over their 2008 lawsuit claiming that polluted runoff from the facility violated its federal clean-water permit. But worries over toxic stormwater discharges at the lab go back decades (PDF report) and came to a head 11 years ago this month, when the […]

Posted inGoat

Wolverines in the Wallowas

After almost two decades of silence, the North American wolverine (Gulo gulo) is confirmed to be back on the prowl in the mountains of Oregon. Two of the feisty carnivores, dubbed “Iceman” and “Stormy,” were caught on remote camera feasting on hunks of bait meat in the Wallowa Mountains — the first verified wolverine sightings […]

Posted inRange

Swapping politics for science

By Heather Hansen, Red Lodge Clearing House It’s not often a government agency asks Congress to limit the amount of money it spends to do its job. But that’s what the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS) did last month when it told Congress that it wants a cap put on how much it can […]

Posted inMay 2, 2011: The Westerner in D.C

A misguided investigation ends an era in Arizona

Calling the National Park Service case against Billy Malone “misguided” is a kindness. Others use words like “corrupt” or “fiasco” when speaking of the bungled federal investigation that cost taxpayers nearly a million dollars, ruined the reputation of one of the last old-time Indian traders and may have transformed an authentic Indian trading post into […]

Posted inMay 2, 2011: The Westerner in D.C

Profile: Rodger Schlickeisen, Defenders of Wildlife

“I like snow on the Crazies,” says Rodger Schlickeisen, longtime president and CEO of one of the most ardent D.C.-based environmental groups, Defenders of Wildlife. He’s not talking about snowflakes falling on members of Congress. He means the white stuff that piles up on Montana’s Crazy Mountains, northeast of Bozeman. For 22 years, Schlickeisen has […]

Posted inMay 2, 2011: The Westerner in D.C

“Shoot locally”

In late March, High Country News was one of the sponsors of our hometown’s inaugural Paonia Film Festival. Twenty-two short films by western Colorado filmmakers were presented at the Paradise Theatre, including HCN Online Editor Stephanie Paige Ogburn‘s stop-motion animation about boots in love. The Audience Choice award for “Most Environmentally Conscious” film — a […]

Posted inMay 2, 2011: The Westerner in D.C

Go East, young greens

After college, I landed a series of internships with environmental groups in Washington, D.C. I thought I would change the world, protecting the last wild places while putting some badly needed brakes on society’s insatiable appetite for growth. I ended up making vast amounts of coffee, Xeroxing dense legal documents (no computers yet), and writing […]

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