Posted inGoat

The Visual West — Image 8

This male American Kestrel took off before I could take a decent shot — but I love the blurred movement  anyway. It reminds me of how mercurial  a March day can be, when a sunny morning gives way to afternoon snow showers, which clears to a star-studded night. The birds and other wildlife are as […]

Posted inRange

Does natural gas drilling make people sick?

By David Frey, 3-08-2011 Residents of Battlement Mesa, a sprawling housing development in western Colorado, are used to seeing the golf course from their windows, not gas rigs. But when an energy company announced plans to start drilling inside the subdivision, residents became concerned not just about the noise and the traffic, but the health […]

Posted inRange

Deflation Nation

Finally the economy seems to be creating jobs again. Last week a federal jobs survey showed an increase in 222,000 private sector jobs, a full year of growth that added 1.5 million jobs at companies and small businesses. As Austan Goolsbee, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers put it in his White House blog: […]

Posted inGoat

Wrestling with wolves

The U.S. Senate last Friday proposed a 350-page budget bill with one particularly furry paragraph: Section 1709. Before the end of the 60-day period beginning on the date of enactment of this division, the Secretary of the Interior shall reissue the final rule published on April 2, 2009 (74 Fed. Reg. 15123 et seq.) without […]

Posted inMarch 7, 2011: High Tension

Thirteen ways of looking at a mushroom cloud

Friendly Fallout 1953Ann Ronald248 pages, hardcover: $24.95.University of Nevada Press, 2010.Friendly Fallout 1953, Nevada writer Ann Ronald’s latest exploration of place, is itself an experiment in fission — the literary kind. Set at Nevada’s Proving Ground, the book splits the telling of history among 12 fictional characters — plus Ronald herself — who witness the […]

Posted inMarch 7, 2011: High Tension

Crowdsourcing helps tackle environmental injustice in California’s Imperial Valley

The border city of Calexico, Calif. — population 27,000; 95 percent Latino; 25 percent poverty rate — is the kind of place where environmental laws are enforced last, if at all. But a local task force of residents, academics, and environment and health officials hope to change that. Last year, they launched the Imperial Visions […]

Posted inRange

Let us bid!

By Shawn Regan, public affairs fellow at the Property and Environment Research Center (PERC) in Bozeman, Montana. Just hours before Tim DeChristopher made false bids in a BLM oil and gas lease auction, he took a final exam at the University of Utah. One of the test questions asked whether the sale prices at the auction would […]

Posted inRange

Arizona the trendsetter?

As I pointed out last year, under our federal constitution and various court decisions, American states don’t any power to determine who is or isn’t legally within their borders. That’s a federal responsibility.  That doesn’t stop states from trying, though. There’s the well-known Arizona immigration law, which requires local police to ask for the papers […]

Posted inGoat

Mustang management gets an overhaul

Roughly 37,000 wild horses and burros roam the West’s public lands — about 40 percent more than the feds think those lands can sustain. But the Bureau of Land Management’s efforts to round them up and adopt them out have been costly, ineffective and unpopular, with critics charging that horses are unnecessarily harmed and even […]

Posted inWotr

A fish tale in the land of Oz

The most expensive and protracted battle over an endangered species is at last approaching its day of reckoning in Portland, Ore.  Sometime this spring, federal District Court Judge James Redden will decide the terms of a recovery plan for some two dozen endangered salmon stocks in the Columbia River Basin. Like the famous Boldt Decision […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2011: Palin, politics, and predator control

Western wildlife commissions on the chopping block

In Washington and New Mexico, state wildlife commissions could become a thing of the past. As part of their budget-trimming measures, both states’ legislatures are considering bills that would do away with the commissions’ power to set regulations and policy for managing fish and wildlife. In theory, wildlife commissions, found in every Western state, allow […]

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