WASHINGTON, D.C. — It looks as though the Endangered Species Act is not going to be eviscerated this year. Neither will the National Environmental Policy Act. On second thought, the government will not sell off millions of acres of the public domain for as little as a thousand dollars an acre. For the nonce, at […]
The green Republican: back from the dead?
Waste disposal the industry’s Achilles’ heel
Note: This article is a sidebar to one of this issue’s feature stories, “Retooling a Leviathan.” The first nuclear reactor in the United States went online at Shippingport, Pa., in 1956. Since then, the nation’s nuclear power industry has generated at least a few hundred tons of spent fuel per year. The highly radioactive waste […]
Retooling a Leviathan
The challenges of keeping an aging nuclear infrastructure alive
The Hot West
Note: This article is a sidebar to one of this issue’s feature stories, “The Fourth Wave,” in a special issue about the West’s resurgent uranium economy. THE NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE MINING AND MILLING In 1983, mining ceased at Kennecott Energy’s Sweetwater open-pit uranium mine (at right) near Rawlins, Wyo. Uranium ore from traditional open-pit or […]
Navajo Windfall
Uranium companies anticipate tomorrow’s profits, while yesterday’s workers await compensation
The Fourth Wave
Can the West’s uranium towns rise once more?
The rural West’s pragmatic booster
Name Larry Swanson Vocation Economist and demographer Age 55 Home Base Center for the Rocky Mountain West, Missoula, Mont. Known for Hair-raising presentations about dramatic shifts in Mountain West demography and economics. He says “We can’t successfully adapt to change without a fuller understanding of it. Good people with good information make good decisions.” Larry […]
States crack down on illegal immigrants
Congress punts until after the elections; states turn ‘nativist’
Anti-government attack has many fronts
Out-of-state activists mastermind assault on government spending and judiciary
When can the BLM say ‘no’?
Note: in the print edition of this issue, this article appears as a sidebar to another news article, “The anatomy of an energy lease.” If a BLM or Forest Service management plan OKs an area for leasing, BLM officials say they have little power to prevent drilling. “The bar (for withholding land from leasing) is […]
The anatomy of an energy lease
How a city’s watershed was opened for natural gas development
Two weeks in the West
“They’ve had so many C’s I can’t keep track anymore.” — John Kostyack of the National Wildlife Federation, commenting to Greenwire on the Interior Department’s announcement that it will add “community” to the “Four C’s” touted by former Interior Secretary Gale Norton. Environmentalists have widely criticized Norton for making a mockery of the original four: […]
Dear friends
BIKERS, FILMMAKERS, ENGINEERS, CHEESEMAKERS Billie Stanton, editorial writer for the Tucson Citizen, left a business card in our door on a recent weekend: “I was here; you were gone. But keep up the good work.” Sorry we missed you, Billie. Filmmaker Dave Gardner and his daughter, Stephanie, of Colorado Springs, Colo., stopped by as part […]
HCN’s secret past
In the interest of full disclosure, I must make a confession: High Country News owes its existence, in part, to the nuclear industry. I learned of this a couple of years ago at a High Country News board meeting in Jackson, Wyo. I was sharing a rustic cabin at the Murie Center with Tom Bell, […]
Reborn
The West casts a wary eye on the latest nuclear craze
Will I ever become a local?
I’m still what people call a newcomer, but it seems to me that most people who live in the mountains fall into one of three categories: Second home owner, transplant from somewhere else — usually a city, like me — or native, though I meet very few natives who are older than 10. I’ve lived […]
Utah legislation endangers lands we hold dear
There’s a bill before Congress that would have far-reaching impacts for my backyard in Utah and could also set a precedent for where you live, especially if you — like me — love the public lands that make the West unique. The legislation is called the Washington County Growth and Conservation Act, sponsored by Utah […]
Wyoming can buy what Portland can’t
It’s too early to panic, but there’s a rumor that Wyoming, with a population that’s only a quarter of metropolitan Portland, Ore., might buy Portland’s basketball team, the Trail Blazers, using the $2 million that daily aggregates into the Cowboy State’s swelling reserves. Portland should cringe at the outrageous notion of losing the Blazers because […]
Our lungs, ourselves: Smoking in Wyoming bars
In a victory for health activists, non-smokers are increasingly able to enter workplaces, restaurants, bars and outdoor patios without breathing secondhand cigarette smoke. Smoking bans of various levels of restrictiveness are being enacted all around the country, and even my state of Wyoming, historically resistant to knee-jerk social change, has seen a few communities unplug […]
Montana Sen. Conrad Burns spotlights a bad burn policy
Conrad Burns, the third-term Republican senator from Montana, may have done Westerners a backhanded favor when he cornered firefighters in the Billings airport and berated them for the job they did on an eastern Montana wildfire. Burns reportedly confronted members of the Augusta Hotshots last month as they were waiting for their flight back home […]
