Dear HCN, Rebecca Clarren’s article on the Klamath River Basin (HCN, 8/13/01: No refuge in the Klamath Basin) gives readers the most in-depth portrait of the real people engaged in the Klamath water conflict – farmers, Native Americans and commercial salmon fishermen – that has appeared to date in the national, regional or local press. […]
Klamath story misrepresents the ESA
Oak killer on the loose
OREGON, CALIFORNIA A new plague threatens thousands of native oak trees in southern Oregon. Sudden oak death, which causes trees to bleed a reddish-black fluid and their leaves to droop and turn brown, has already killed thousands of trees in Northern California. Last month, forestry experts in Oregon learned that the disease had made its […]
Grand Teton rancher gives up grazing lease
WYOMING The largest grazing-lease holder in Grand Teton National Park plans to give up his 2,000-acre lease. Brad Mead, co-owner of the Mead-Hansen Ranch and a fourth-generation Jackson Hole rancher, says his ranch will stop grazing on public land by the end of the year. Mead acknowledged that his ranch needed a “dramatic change in […]
The Latest Bounce
The terrorist attacks on Washington, D.C., and New York City may impact the 2002 Olympic Games in Salt Lake City, Utah, next February (HCN, 3/16/98: Olympic onslaught: Salt Lake City braces for the winter games). Officials are considering whether to cancel the games for safety reasons; if the games do proceed, security is likely to […]
State proposes mother-lode mine fee
NEW MEXICO If New Mexico has its way, it will slap the state’s biggest mine with an unprecedented tab. In June, state regulatory agencies presented Phelps Dodge with a draft plan to close out the old (1910) and large (fourth largest in the country) Chino Mine near Silver City. It could cost the company $759 […]
In the house of the grizzly
We have begun to think of this place as ours. Every year, we cross the creek, ride up the long slope to the timbered bench, then drop into the meadow, as we have for a decade. It’s a coming home; a flood of memories of previous hunts, good times, hard work; a shared experience of […]
Heard around the West
Firefighters in the West battle extreme heat, unpredictable winds that can send wildfire racing up draws and endless hours on a fire line, but fish falling from the sky? It happened in Libby, Mont., reports Kevin Cardwell, who says the event will enter Forest Service firefighting lore. The incident occurred Aug. 17 as Todd Murray […]
The enduring Endangered Species Act
Four years ago, Bruce Babbitt stood at a podium in Austin, Tex., and, in his most sonorous, Garrison Keillor-like voice, delivered the new gospel on endangered species. The conservationists’ most effective tool in the restoration of species and their habitats – the Endangered Species Act – was in peril, the then-Interior secretary told the Society […]
Lessons for the Colorado
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. The power of place worked wonders in the fight to fund Elwha restoration. When visiting congressmen were taken to the old dam, they saw the few remaining salmon rolling in the waters below, and they made a connection that no amount of beltway lobbying […]
‘Hydro(power) had no friends’
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Orville Campbell has worked for the companies that have owned the Elwha dams for almost 30 years. He lives in Port Angeles. Orville Campbell: “From 1980-1990, the level of the drumbeat for dam removal was increasing over time, and in the early 1990s, that […]
The revival of a river people
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. At night the salmon move, out from the river and into town, They avoid places with names, like Fosters Freeze, A&W’s, Smileys, but swim close to the tract homes on Wright Avenue where sometimes in the early morning hours you can hear them trying […]
The timber sale that won’t die
Eagle Creek has become an icon for anti-logging activists
Montana guts a green law
Environmentalists fear life in the post-MEPA era
Nature hits a home run for salmon
Record salmon, steelhead runs buy time for endangered stocks
Far from out of it
The HCN offices on the morning of Sept. 11 were the same as any other place in the nation, and perhaps in the world: People quietly huddled around radios, trying to figure out what the events would mean for themselves and the future. Circulation manager Gretchen Nicholoff sweated out the hours until mid-day, when she […]
Dear Friends
Award-winning intern Congratulations to former Daily Astorian reporters Karen Mockler and Mike Stark. The pair will share the 4th annual Dolly Connelly Excellence in Environmental Journalism Award for their three-part series on the Columbia River Estuary, titled “Life on the Brink.” The $1,000 annual award was created by Seattle Post-Intelligencer columnist Joel Connelly to honor […]
River of dreams
The 30-year struggle to resurrect Washington’s Elwha River and one of its spectacular salmon runs
Coverage appreciated
Dear HCN, We are so delighted when HCN arrives in our mailbox. It provides well-written and excellent information – though often disturbing – about our changing world and Western landscapes. Some of these changes are very positive, however, like the most recent article about the Salish and Kootenai tribes whose stewardship principles should be carried […]
Carla and Greg Woodall not the whole story
Dear HCN, The July 30 front-page piece titled, “Not in our backyard” was well-written and informative, except for one important detail: It gave the reader the impression that Greg Woodall and his sister, Carla, invented the campaign to preserve Scottsdale’s McDowell Mountains and are practically doing it by themselves. That isn’t the case. Greg and […]
The facts about fish control
Dear HCN, In a May article titled “Debate rages over fish poisoning” (HCN, 5/7/01: Debate rates over fish poisoning), very subjective views of the impacts of fish-control chemicals antimycin and rotenone on the environment were presented. It’s ironic that despite the article’s recognition of the growing fears of the uninformed public toward fish-control chemicals, it […]
