I just wonder if, when we oppose mining, drilling, etc., in the United States, the effect of a victory merely spawns more destruction in other parts of the world? This world is getting smaller every day. Are we holding seminars and discussing the “costs of civilization” as we’ve come to know it? I think we […]
‘No’ isn’t enough
Collaboration is killing Klamath salmon
Your “follow-up” article about juvenile salmon dying in the Klamath River (HCN, 7/19/04: Follow-up) contained an error. You stated: “But the Bureau of Reclamation has no more water to send downstream …” BuRec does have the ability to send more water downstream. They could do this by cutting irrigation deliveries by as little as 10 […]
Racetrack
A proposed ballot initiative in Montana would add one sentence to the state Constitution, “forever” preserving the right of Montana citizens to hunt and fish. However, that right “does not create a right to trespass on private property or diminution of other private rights.” The race is on for retiring Colorado Republican Ben Nighthorse Campbell’s […]
Ancient archaeological secret is revealed
Over the years, rancher Waldo Wilcox had told very few people about the well-preserved Fremont Indian settlement on his land in eastern Utah’s Range Creek Canyon. The site, which includes a thousand-year-old treasure trove of pottery, arrowheads and cliff dwellings, is one of Utah’s most dramatic archaeological finds. But in the late 1990s, when Wilcox […]
Follow-up
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is getting into the endangered species business. On July 29, the agency announced it is “streamlining” pesticide registration. Under the old rules, the EPA had to consult with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and NOAA Fisheries, the federal agencies that enforce the Endangered Species Act, before approving a new […]
Heard around the West
MONTANA Artist Phil Kunz recalls seeing a vending machine filled with tiny art a few years ago, and the vision stayed with him; now, he’s created one for the former mining town of Butte. Kunz first had to track down an out-of-date cigarette vending machine; then, he enticed fellow artists to help decorate it to […]
“W” in 2004: Taking stock of wilderness at 40
As the 40th anniversary of the Wilderness Act approaches, this Sept. 3, there is an overwhelming temptation to talk about iconic places like the John Muir Wilderness in California or the Bob Marshall in Montana. But out in the middle of a worked-over oil and gas patch south of Vernal, Utah, lies a place that […]
Fees and our forests don’t always fit
The next time you visit your local public library, drive an interstate highway through the West or attend a city council meeting, imagine how frustrated and upset you’d be if you were charged a fee for the privilege of doing so. In spite of the tax dollars you already pay to support these entities, imagine […]
Death of the San Pedro: Not if, but when
Note: this is a sidebar to a main story about the political struggles over protecting the San Pedro River. New evidence has surfaced that pumping in the Sierra Vista area may already be reducing groundwater flow to the San Pedro River. Water levels in seven monitoring wells on U.S. Army property have dropped by roughly […]
Arizona elections stay ‘clean’
Despite a challenge from big business, the state’s public campaign program prevails
Squirrels and scopes in the line of fire
The Mount Graham red squirrel suffers an ecological shock
Will a mining-reform victory hold water in Nevada?
Long-term cleanup trust fund may get shortchanged
Interior encourages BLM land sales
Selling public lands will let Western cities sprawl into new territory
Dear friends
THE HCN FAMILY GETS A LITTLE BIGGER — AND MUCH CUTER The summer has been a fruitful one — and not just for farmers growing sweet corn, cherries, peaches and tomatoes. Within only 15 days, we were graced with two new members of the High Country News family. On July 30, Lydia Kestrel Puckett was […]
Turning water inside-out
Our feature story this issue tells the tale of two cities — a city and a fort, actually — along the San Pedro River in southeastern Arizona. As veteran growth reporter Tony Davis shows, the two places have had markedly differing success in dealing with a shared water problem. On one hand, there’s Fort Huachuca. […]
A Thirst for Growth
For decades, Sierra Vista, Arizona, has pumped groundwater like there’s no tomorrow. Now, to save the Southwest’s last free-flowing river, the city’s leaders must confront an age of limits.
How a resort town loses its soul
If not paradise, Aspen during the summer comes close. The mountains are dazzling, the gussied-up Victorian homes beguiling. The musical menu is rich, and a Nobel or Pulitzer prize-winner lectures nearly every evening. Everywhere are trails. It’s a heaven for tourists. But Aspen is no longer a tourist town in the conventional sense. A new […]
Western utilities beware: Coal is a risky business
It wasn’t long ago that I got one of those flyers about rates that comes with my bill from Xcel Energy, formerly Public Service Co. and now one of the country’s largest utilities, serving much of Colorado and several other Western states. I knew that Xcel was planning on building a huge and expensive coal-fired […]
The living, breathing natives who made Lewis and Clark
The most widely held and deeply ingrained popular image of Lewis and Clark also happens to be the most serious misconception of their expedition. In that image, they cross North America on their own at the start of the 19th century, somehow finding their way through an uninhabited wilderness and blazing a trail where no […]
At least life on the frontier wasn’t boring
I began thinking about the phenomenon we call boredom while watching public-television reruns of a provocative series called Frontier House. Its creators took three American families and placed them in the Montana wilderness for five months, from late spring to early fall. Then the families pretended it was 1883. They built log cabins and corrals, […]
