Posted inMarch 7, 2005: Anarchy in the Gas Fields

Follow-up

The Union of Concerned Scientists is concerned again — this time, about the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The Union, a nonprofit coalition of scientists and citizens, has released the results of its survey of Fish and Wildlife Service employees: Forty-four percent say they have been told, “for non-scientific reasons,” to refrain from making findings […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2005: Have Environmentalists Failed the West?

A Lively Exchange with the Interior Department

HCN GOT IT WRONG ON THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION To the Editor: The Dec. 6 feature article, “Taking the West Forward,” contains a thoughtful overview of issues facing the West but it grossly mischaracterizes the Bush Administration’s policies and programs. The article states the administration has “opened the region’s resources to development” when in fact public […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2005: Have Environmentalists Failed the West?

Of Chiles, Cacti, and Fighting Cocks: Notes on the American West

Of Chiles, Cacti, and Fighting Cocks: Notes on the American West Frederick Turner 297 pages, softcover $16.95 Fulcrum Press, 2004 First published in 1990, this book of deft essays is back in print and as engaging as ever; it even includes some new work. Whether he’s describing cock fights, the artist Georgia O’Keeffe’s solitary ways […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2005: Have Environmentalists Failed the West?

The Meat You Eat: Corporate Farming and the Decline of the American Diet

The Meat You Eat: Corporate Farming and the Decline of the American Diet Ken Midkiff 240 pages, softcover $23.95 St. Martin’s Press, 2004 Midkiff shows us the ugly underbelly of industrialized meat production: “Mad cow” disease scares, farm animals shot full of massive doses of hormones and antibiotics, and giant farms producing giant amounts of […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2005: Have Environmentalists Failed the West?

You, too, can be in the know about California’s H2O

Mention the word “cyborg” in Sacramento, and the name of California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger pops immediately to mind. It’s easy to forget that the state he governs — part natural waterscape, part ingeniously engineered plumbing system — is a hydraulic cyborg that could probably kick even the Governator’s butt. One number pretty much speaks for […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2005: Have Environmentalists Failed the West?

From folk singer to fierce activist — the life of Katie Lee

Among desert rats and river lovers, folk singer and activist Katie Lee is legendary. A Hollywood actress in her youth, Lee started running Southwestern rivers in her 30s and became an outspoken defender of her beloved Colorado River. She fought the damming of Glen Canyon, and celebrated its beauty and mourned its loss in All […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2005: Have Environmentalists Failed the West?

The Editors Respond

We appreciate Rebecca Watson’s invitation to Westerners, and we salute the many positive efforts Interior is undertaking to protect wild places and involve the public. But we do not believe HCN has mischaracterized the Bush administration’s record. On the subject of opening land to development: In 2001, the Department of Agriculture rewrote the Roadless Area […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2005: Have Environmentalists Failed the West?

HCN has it wrong on Bush

The Dec. 6 feature article, “Taking the West Forward,” grossly mischaracterizes the Bush administration’s policies and programs. The article states the administration has “opened the region’s resources to development” when in fact public lands, at the direction of Congress, have been open for years. More typically, this administration has restricted development in previously open sensitive […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2005: Have Environmentalists Failed the West?

Coal company takes refuge in a blind spot

Last spring, the government of British Columbia allowed Montanans only four days to comment on plans for an open-pit coal mine six miles north of Glacier National Park. To environmentalists on both sides of the border, who have fought similar mine proposals for three decades, the hurry seemed suspicious. Montana’s congressional delegation, along with many […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2005: Have Environmentalists Failed the West?

Snowmaking on sacred slopes stirs controversy

The U.S. Forest Service will soon decide whether to allow the owners of an Arizona ski resort to create artificial snow from the city of Flagstaff’s treated wastewater. Since 1937, recreational refugees from Phoenix and Flagstaff have enjoyed the 777-acre Arizona Snowbowl ski area in the San Francisco Peaks. On average, the resort gets 260 […]

Gift this article