Posted inApril 13, 2009: The Desert That Breaks Annie Proulx’s Heart

Avalanches for dummies

NameHomer HometownBozeman, Mont. OccupationExtreme-sports guinea pig Best LookPowder beard A man leans on a bamboo pole high above the slopes at Bridger Bowl near Bozeman, Mont. From a distance, he appears remarkably calm, even as ski patrollers throw explosives onto the snow-loaded slope directly above him. There’s a loud blast and a fracture forms in […]

Posted inGoat

Your turn, our turn

Today and tomorrow only, fellow intern Terray Sylvester and I will be guest blogging at the National Recreation & Parks Association Blog. The forum is called Y Become Involved? Basically, we’ll be discussing a big issue that public lands are facing: How to get young people involved in parks, recreation, and conservation activities. As with […]

Posted inGoat

It takes a village…

It’s National Library Week (April 12 – 18), and here in HCN‘s hometown of Paonia, Colo. we just celebrated the opening of our brand-new public library. After 5 years of hard work, the old, dingy, 3,700-square-foot library has been replaced by an 8,000-square-foot building with tall windows that let in plenty of light and a […]

Posted inHeard Around the West

Prickly P.R.

Porcupines have gotten such a bad rap lately — and yes, some of them do girdle and kill backyard trees in pricy subdivisions — that it’s time to make amends to these thorniest of large rodents, says Colorado Outdoors, the colorful publication of the state’s Division of Wildlife. Porcupines are handsome in an outlandish way, […]

Posted inGoat

California’s Central Water War Heats Up

California’s State Water Project and the federal Central Valley Project (CVP) – which serve the vast Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys of California – have projected dramatically reduced water delivery to all water users.  Municipalities, wildlife refuges and farmers who hold water rights can expect to receive 50% to 60% of what has been requested.  […]

Posted inRay

Battle for justice in Libby might collapse quietly

Environmental groups send me many press releases. And I read many news stories about environmental issues — news framed by the groups. The influential groups are busy designating more wilderness, and filing lawsuits to protect wolves, and pushing Congress to reform mining law, battling coal, battling oil and gas, battling off-road drivers etc. etc. But […]

Posted inWotr

Ranchers now have a way out

The years-in-the-making Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009 finally became law last month. The act designates more than 2 million acres of new wilderness, plus 1,100 miles of new wild and scenic rivers, and it also  includes an increasingly popular model for resolving grazing conflicts on  public lands. In two Western states — Oregon […]

Posted inApril 13, 2009: The Desert That Breaks Annie Proulx’s Heart

A ghost of the 1970s

Bipartisan politics reappeared in Washington, D.C., in March. It felt like a ghost from the golden age of the environmental movement, the 1970s, when Republicans and Democrats worked together to pass major environmental laws. The new Omnibus Public Land Management Act assembles 166 deals related to conservation and natural resources (plus an unrelated 167th for […]

Posted inWotr

Let’s remember the children

As dollars from the Economic Stimulus Act arrive here in the eight Rocky Mountain states, most Westerners  seem to be talking about spending that money on shovel-ready jobs. The projects we hear about are intended to repair our crumbling schools, bridges, roads and sewers, or to restore our abused landscape.  We know, too, that money […]

Posted inApril 13, 2009: The Desert That Breaks Annie Proulx’s Heart

Apparently Schwarzenegger wouldn’t agree

I found it interesting that “Tarp Nation” followed so closely on the heels of your article about Amtrak (HCN, 3/16 & 3/30/09). I often ride the Denver-Sacramento and Bakersfield-Sacramento routes when visiting family. Whenever the train enters the outskirts of any sizeable town, observant riders can see slum settlements at regular intervals along the tracks, […]

Posted inApril 13, 2009: The Desert That Breaks Annie Proulx’s Heart

“The officially sanctioned helpless”

Your story “Tarp Nation” seems to condone living in squalor, while trying to convince the reader that the plucky residents of these communities are creative, self-reliant and just happen to suffer because of the government’s harshness, the mainstream’s condemnation and society’s refusal to embrace the positive potential of this new social movement, “informal urbanism” (HCN, […]

Posted inGoat

The Water Theft Bill

This week, the Montana Senate is voting on legislation that could give gas companies much more control over water pumped out of coalbed methane wells in the Powder River Basin. Senate Bill 505, if passed, will legitimize what many Montanans consider “water theft.” A single coalbed methane well can produce around 16,800 gallons of water every day. Water […]

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