Posted inOctober 16, 2006: A River Once More

Will your favorite Forest Service campsite be closed down next summer?

Perhaps, if it doesn’t fit the agency’s increased focus on “dispersed recreation” at remote sites. The 155 national forests are now ranking their developed camping and picnic sites to determine if they meet agency standards; those that fall short will be closed or have their services reduced. According to a recent report from the Western […]

Posted inOctober 16, 2006: A River Once More

In politics, it’s not about who you want to drink a beer with

So Angie Paccione filed for personal bankruptcy in 2001. According to the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, so did another 1,452,029 people. Why should anyone care? Because Marilyn Musgrave, the two-term Republican incumbent Paccione is running against to represent northeastern Colorado in Congress, has informed the world about the bankruptcy via a radio ad. […]

Posted inOctober 16, 2006: A River Once More

On the ballot: Voters could be energized, or exhausted, by ballot initiatives

In the Western states, either the legislature or petition-toting individuals can take issues directly to the voters by putting initiatives on the ballot. This year, the West is a hornet’s nest of initiatives: Voters face 82 ballot measures in 10 states. Come Nov. 7, for example, Coloradans will choose whether to legalize marijuana, and Californians […]

Posted inOctober 16, 2006: A River Once More

Dear friends

MONGOL STOPOVER Seventeen Mongolians, including environmentalists, politicians, journalists and representatives of the mining industry, showed up on HCN’s doorstep in late September as part of a tour around Colorado. The tour, organized by the San Francisco-based Asia Foundation, was intended to “establish a foundation for trust and relationship-building between participants” in order to yield “viable […]

Posted inWotr

A simple act

No matter what time of day or night the phone rings, the voice that summons me sounds tired and desperate. But that’s not the only reason I go. I’m known there, so I seldom wait long before someone comes for me, leads me into the little room, closes the door, asks to see my ID […]

Posted inOctober 2, 2006: From the ground up

What’s wrong with the EPA?

If you’re wondering why this nation’s environmental laws aren’t implemented coherently or consistently, grab David Schoenbrod’s latest, Saving Our Environment from Washington. From a Natural Resources Defense attorney turned Yale law professor, the book is part memoir, part manifesto. And considering the potentially boring topic, Schoenbrod does an excellent job of explaining how laws such […]

Posted inOctober 2, 2006: From the ground up

A tribal renaissance

If, when you think of Indian country, you think first of its particular heartaches — alcoholism, violence, poverty, and hopelessness — then read Blood Struggle, Charles Wilkinson’s inspiring account of Indians’ political and legal victories during the last fifty years. A catalog of Indian achievements rather than problems is rare, welcome, and a little unexpected, […]

Posted inOctober 2, 2006: From the ground up

Enviros avoid the real problem

“Reborn” by Jonathan Thompson in your Sept. 4, 2006, issue beautifully displayed the intellectual dishonesty of the environmental movement, as exemplified by Greenpeace founder Patrick Moore. Neither friends nor enemies of the environment want to reduce demand by “talking about population control or conservation measures. …” Instead, they want to build nuclear power plants to […]

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