Posted inApril 16, 2007: Phoenix Falling?

Bee Anatomy 101

“The Silence of the Bees” incorporated one tiny error. Hannah Nordhaus writes: “… microscopic tracheal mites that set up shop in a honeybee’s feeding tube and shorten its lifespan.” I’m no honeybee biologist, but I was trained as an entomologist. “Tracheae” are the abdominal tubes that insects use to breathe. So it’s more likely that […]

Posted inApril 16, 2007: Phoenix Falling?

Hold the bullet

A recent HCN story describes a major delay in planning or building a bullet train to link California’s major cities. As someone who has been working to restore and conserve wildlife corridors in Southern California for a decade, I am relieved. The bullet train needs a few more years of planning. Although you’d never know […]

Posted inApril 16, 2007: Phoenix Falling?

Dear Friends

THERE’S LIFE AFTER HIGH COUNTRY NEWS We’ve recently gotten exciting news from some former HCN interns. Patrick Farrell (summer 2005) just landed a job as a video journalist at the New York Times. Katie Fesus(fall 1996) now teaches English at Lake Tahoe’s Sierra Nevada College and directs ARC (Adventure, Risk, Challenge), an outdoor adventure and […]

Posted inWotr

Why would a federal agency trash itslibraries?

It takes a special talent to make the topic of library management controversial, but the Environmental Protection Agency seems to have a real knack for self-inflicted wounds. EPA gave itself a black eye and enraged librarians throughout the country last year, when, without public notice or congressional consultation, it began the process of dismantling its […]

Posted inWotr

The decline of logging is now killing

If the connection between logging and closing libraries isn’t clear to you, then you don’t live in Oregon. Here, the connection is the stuff of crisis, the subject of daily news stories and of increasingly desperate political maneuvering. It is a crisis that reveals much about changing expectations and attitudes concerning government services, taxes and […]

Posted inArticles

The Klamath dams by the numbers

Removing the four salmon-blocking dams on the Klamath may prove even cheaper than regulators first thought. The California Energy Commission just re-ran the numbers, comparing the costs of removing the dams versus retrofitting them for fish passage. The results, released March 24, say it would cost PacifiCorp $114 million less to breach the dams than […]

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