Posted inMay 26, 2003: A losing battle

Mountain bikes rule!

The time has come to let all the little Tilley-hat-wearing granolas give their heads a shake. Mountain bikes are the best form of transportation ever invented and have less impact on the environment than hiking boots (HCN, 3/3/03: Let bikers in, and we’ll stand behind wilderness). They also have less impact than horses and hunters […]

Posted inMay 26, 2003: A losing battle

Monuments under attack

The old debate over the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument is fascinating (HCN, 4/14/03: Change comes slowly to Escalante country), but you missed the larger story: the emerging threats to the National Landscape Conservation System (NLCS). This system has the potential to dramatically reshape conservation in the West. Established to encompass the crown jewels of the […]

Posted inMay 26, 2003: A losing battle

Desert saved from ‘dingbat’ development

The Wildlands Conservancy, a California-based nonprofit organization, has wrapped up the largest purchase of private land for conservation purposes in the country’s history. In March, the Conservancy completed a four-year effort to buy over 600,000 acres in the Southern California desert and turn the land over to the federal government. The land was owned by […]

Posted inMay 26, 2003: A losing battle

The Latest Bounce

The Defense Department needs to do a better job cleaning up its “formerly used defense sites,” according to a report to Congress from the General Accounting Office (HCN, 3/31/03: While the nation goes to war, the Pentagon lobs bombs at environmental laws). The study, requested by Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., points out a variety of […]

Posted inMay 26, 2003: A losing battle

Heard Around the West

NEVADA Las Vegas’ drought has gotten so serious that some golf courses are replacing grass with crushed rock. But course managers aren’t ripping out their turf without casting verbal stones at homeowners, who use 65 percent of the area’s water, spraying three-quarters of it outdoors, according to The Associated Press. Golf courses are just the […]

Posted inMay 26, 2003: A losing battle

Firespeak Catastrophe

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “A losing battle.” Firespeak catastrophe #1 “Wildland-urban interface.” This catchall phrase describing the forest fringe includes cabins and watersheds in the woods around Salmon, Idaho — a remote town of only 3,200 people that can hardly be described as urban. It also includes Lowman, […]

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