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Environmental justice: A vision for change

“The environment for us is where we live, work and play.”  Jeanne Gauna, the SouthWest Organizing Project’s co-founder and longtime co-director, crystallized the inspiration and sentiment of the environmental justice movement with this simple yet profound idea.  In addition to transforming and reinvigorating the environmental, labor, indigenous and civil rights movements, environmental justice established a […]

Posted inGoat

Cows vs. RATs

The Forest Service and the BLM have just announced the 2010 fee for grazing one cow and calf on public land. Back in 1966, the fee was $1.23 per month. For comparison, here are the prices of some common items in 1966 and today: Item  In 1966   Today New car $2,650   $23,000 Gallon […]

Posted inFebruary 1, 2010: 'The environment ... is where we live'

Catch-and-release at HCN

A new and very talented crop of interns has just joined HCN. They’ll be here for the next six months, learning how a nonprofit media outlet works, and researching, interviewing and writing stories for us. A recipient of the Boyden Wilderness Writing Residency, Nicholas Neely arrived in Paonia after six months in a remote Oregon […]

Posted inFebruary 1, 2010: 'The environment ... is where we live'

How the West was really won

Savages & Scoundrels: The Untold Story of America’s Road to Empire through Indian TerritoryPaul VanDevelder    352 pages, hardcover: $26.Yale University Press, 2009. Paul VanDevelder, author of Coyote Warrior, digs deeper into the rotten core of the American experience in his new book, Savages & Scoundrels: The Untold Story of America’s Road to Empire through Indian […]

Posted inFebruary 1, 2010: 'The environment ... is where we live'

Finding freedom in Yosemite

GlorylandShelton Johnson278 pages, hardcover: $25.Sierra Club Books, 2009. Like its protagonist, Gloryland is a medley. In a novel that is part memoir, part historical fiction, and part poetry, Shelton Johnson tells the story of Elijah Yancy, a young man with African, Seminole and Cherokee bloodlines. Born in South Carolina on Emancipation Day, 1863, Yancy is […]

Posted inHeard Around the West

Odd jobs and animals

THE NATION Attention, unemployed daredevils: Jobs are opening up for athletic non-acrophobics. It helps if you’re the kind of risk-taker who thinks repairing the giant blades of a wind turbine sounds like good clean fun, in a blowy sort of way. The catch: The 122-foot arms don’t lower to the ground for tune-ups; instead, blade […]

Posted inGoat

Still snowed in

An editorial in last weekend’s Arizona Daily Sun described the paper’s “awe” at emergency response to the epic storm that dumped more than four feet of snow on Flagstaff. But while life in the city goes back to normal, stranded residents in Indian country are still digging out. The West’s recent rash of apocalyptic weather […]

Posted inGoat

Borderline environmental justice

Recently, the New York Times reported on immigration and drug traffic across the U.S.-Mexico border where it crosscuts the Tohono O’odham Nation in Arizona, a story HCN covered in-depth in 2007. The situation is horrific: strangers knock on doors to entice and scare tribal members into smuggling, while pervasive Border Patrol inconvenience and intimidate the […]

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They say it’s your birthday

Two years ago I celebrated my 40th birthday. I wasn’t thrilled about turning 40 (who is?) and couldn’t convince myself that a celebratory shindig was a good idea (all that attention). But in her quiet way, a close friend convinced me it needed to happen. On an April evening, friends filled the upstairs of the […]

Posted inWotr

Marijuana stores get no respect

Cimarron, a ranching town of 1,000 in New Mexico, says it does not want a marijuana store. Residents cite the seaside town of Arcata in California where the Arcata Eye says people have finally had it because over 1,000 homes there have turned into “grow houses.” Crime has spiked, newcomers are protecting their stash with […]

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