Posted inHeard Around the West

The burning billboard

Grand Junction in western Colorado has long had a problem separating state from Christian church. County commissioners keep trying to pray before public meetings, and public officials approve of nativity displays on public property. Now, a Wisconsin-based organization, the Freedom from Religion Foundation, is striking back with an in-your-face message for drivers. The Associated Press […]

Posted inRay

Newsitos for 3/20/09

Birds are in trouble. Pretty much everywhere. Largely thanks to our appetite for energy. “In the last 40 years,” reports AP, “populations of birds living on prairies, deserts and at sea have declined between 30 percent and 40 percent.“ The biggest bundle of federal-lands deals in decades (the Omnibus Lands Bill) — which died last […]

Posted inRay

Western states flex various Congressional muscles

Keep in mind the famous line: “There are three kinds of lies — lies, damned lies, and statistics.” Roll Call, a 54-year-old Washington, D.C. insider magazine, has announced its latest ranking of the political clout of each state’s Congressional delegation. The Western states are ranked: California has the most influential delegation of all the states, […]

Posted inHeard Around the West

Cactus carnage

YouTube.com recently fired up people who love the Southwest’s iconic saguaro cactus. All it took was a startling video of a tractor chowing down on a 15-foot-tall plant in the desert near Phoenix, reports the Arizona Republic. Within seconds after the tractor’s mower grabs the cactus at the top, it smashes it down until nothing […]

Posted inWotr

Dust off your survival skills

These are good days for survivalists, those dour predictors of dire times who’ve said all along that we’d better prepare for the worst. With people losing jobs, homes and life savings through no fault of their own, and with natural disasters, oil shortages and terrorists in the news, those long-predicted grim times may have arrived. […]

Posted inGoat

Thank you, BLM

Our dog Bodie, a collie-shepherd rez-mutt mix, may make it to his fifth birthday in October. Or maybe not. He’s a car-chasing idiot and nothing we’ve tried, including a shock collar with five settings that range from tickle to Ted Bundy, has prevented him from racing off after anything on wheels. We all need some […]

Posted inGoat

Salvaging the “Fire Service”

Lawmakers are trying, for a second time, to toss a lifeline to the Forest Service. Ballooning fire-fighting costs and constrictive Bush-era budgets have been squeezing the soul (read: expenses other than fire retardant, hoses and helicopters) out of the agency. But last week, 12 senators and five U.S. reps, most of them from western states, […]

Posted inGoat

Colorado’s job bias complaints soar

Nancy Sienko became Colorado’s Equal Employment Opportunity Commission field office director three years ago, in the middle of a surge of discrimination charges. While job-based discrimination complaints grew by 17 percent in the United States in the past five years, the caseload in Colorado exploded by 46 percent in the same time period. Sienko, with […]

Posted inWotr

Let them eat copper

I am sitting on the sun-blasted South Rim of the Grand Canyon, tracking condors through binoculars and trying to read the numbers on their wing tags as they dip and wobble above and below me. Next to me is Elaine Leslie, the heroic National Park Service biologist who never gave up on condors, even when […]

Posted inMarch 16, 2009: Innovate

Changeable weather

The West’s environmental movement got buffeted by strong late-winter winds, both good and ill. First, President Barack Obama has targeted the federal government’s 22-year-old multibillion-dollar effort to bury nuclear waste in Nevada’s Yucca Mountain. He vowed to devise “a new strategy” on dealing with nuclear waste, while seeking little money for Yucca Mountain in his […]

Posted inWotr

Calling Hollywood to run the West

Macho Hollywood actor Val Kilmer has starred in more than 40 movies, often playing tough cops and Western gunfighters. He’s probably best known for playing the 1995 Batman and punching out a villain called The Riddler. Now Kilmer wants to become a political hero by running for the governorship of New Mexico. Don’t laugh too […]

Posted inMarch 16, 2009: Innovate

Slumdog U.S.A.

In recent months, the big-screen blockbuster love story, Slumdog Millionaire, has brought images of a ramshackle Mumbai slum to millions of American viewers. Although the slum may have been a bit prettified, it did the trick: Moviegoers were shocked, offended and deeply moved by how the poor of other nations live. The movie’s popularity has […]

Posted inMarch 16, 2009: Innovate

Raising cows — and kids — in the West

The Family Ranch: Land, Children, and Tradition in the American WestLinda Hussa, photographs by Madeleine Graham Blake272 pages, hardcover: $24.95.University of Nevada Press, 2009.   The families described in The Family Ranch: Land, Children, and Tradition in the American West are traditional in that they are not “traditional” at all: One mother is single, and […]

Posted inMarch 16, 2009: Innovate

History viewed through gunsights

Famous Firearms of the Old West: From Wild Bill Hickok’s Colt Revolvers to Geronimo’s Winchester, Twelve Guns That Shaped Our HistoryHal Herring189 pages, hardcover: $24.95. TwoDot/Globe Pequot Press, 2008.   Chief Joseph was carrying a lever-action Model 1866 Winchester rifle that fired .44 Rimfire cartridges when he led the Nez Perce against the U.S. Cavalry […]

Posted inGoat

Paper exercise or real progress?

In words typical of claims by environmental organizations, the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) recently trumpeted “a big step forward for polar bear protection” when the Bush Administration agreed to designate critical habitat for the Polar Bear as part of a settlement with the group and its allies (Nature’s Voice, Jan/Feb 2009).  Based on my […]

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