Maps are no more objective than any other documents. Just look at the ones of the Klamath Basin produced by its two federal landlords. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation portrays the basin as a network of reservoirs and canals designed to deliver water to farms. Since parts of the basin have no natural outlets, areas […]
Klamath’s federal agencies map different realities
Digging for liquid gold
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. – Farmer Doug McCabe didn’t wait for the Bureau of Reclamation to announce that it wasn’t delivering any water this year. With only junior water rights, he suspected that drought would force the agency to cut his water off early in […]
Will farmers harvest a legal take?
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Farmers in the Klamath Basin are not the first group of irrigators to lose their water to endangered fish. In the early 1990s, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service ordered California to shut down pumps that divert water […]
Depot neighbors are on a short fuse
Pressure mounts against the Sierra Army Depot’s open-air munitions burning
Old firefighters need not apply
Forest Service regulations are keeping experienced workers off the fireline
Boaters float for their rights
Colorado paddlers confront property owners over river access
Dear Friends
Writers on the Range, redux In the Dear Friends column for June 18, 2001, we discussed HCN’s op-ed syndicate, Writers on the Range, and the extent to which it should air a variety of views. The heart of the discussion was a column by Frank Carroll, a Potlatch timber company employee. In response, we got […]
2001: No refuge in the Klamath Basin
LOWER KLAMATH NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE, Calif. – Wildlife biologist Tim Griffiths leans out his truck window, squints at the bright, scorching sun, and shakes his head with wonder. Yellow-headed blackbirds perch on slender cattails, bald eagles swoop through the sky, and white pelicans dunk their tugboat-size beaks in the shallow water. “This place is pure […]
‘Mormon’ stereotyping not helpful
Dear HCN, Tim Westby’s article on Rocky Anderson highlighted well some of our mayor’s controversies, political integrity and impressive achievements (HCN, 7/2/01: A maverick mayor takes on sprawl). However, it also presented a stereotypical caricature about “Mormons” and the “Mormon” Church. Anderson’s “lapsed Mormon” status is emphasized along with the “polar opposite” of an influential […]
Plenty of fallout from a Yucca Mountain delay
Dear HCN, While Jon Christensen did a great job of detailing Nevada’s battle against the permanent storage of nuclear waste (HCN, 7/2/01: Can Nevada bury Yucca Mountain?), the story unfortunately was not broad enough to tackle the question of what if Yucca Mountain’s opening is delayed. That issue, too, encompasses the West. The fact is […]
Tribes doing most for salmon, feds least
Dear HCN, I cringed at the photograph of myself on your June 18 cover, but I guess it is churlish to blame HCN for the distance between my self-image and how I actually look. So on to substance. It was a good article on the complex intersections of salmon, dams, energy and money. I’d like […]
Fire as ‘tool’ an arrogant concept
Dear HCN, After reading Louise Wagenknecht’s essay (HCN, 5/7/01: The year it rained money) and Mark De Gregorio and Lester Wood’s responses (HCN, 6/18/01: Smokey’s secret is out), I am more than ever convinced of the danger and arrogance of the use of the word “tool” for the practice of prescribed burning. How can we […]
Lots to see in Carrizo
Dear HCN, Sam Kennedy, in his article on the grazing controversy in the new Carrizo Plain National Monument in California (HCN, 6/4/01: California monument welcomes cattle) starts by saying “The first thing you notice … is, well, there’s not much to see.” How wrong he is! Carrizo Plain is a premier world site for seismology, […]
Dave Skinner’s red herrings
Dear HCN, Ed Marston’s essay (HCN, 6/04/01: Environmentalism meets a fierce friend) regarding future strategies of the conservation movement was dead-on, and sparked a predictable response from Dave Skinner (HCN, 7/02/01: Greens are still a minority) with a list of red-herring comments that completely ignored the important facts in the fight to protect America’s heritage […]
Bush fails to defend roadless rule
The roadless rule for national forest lands is still alive – but it’s caught in a legal and bureaucratic labyrinth. On July 9, the Bush administration missed the deadline to appeal a decision by U.S. District Court Judge Edward Lodge. The Idaho judge had blocked the roadless rule with a preliminary injunction in May, citing […]
Wetland degrader swims in murky waters
IDAHO John Simpson concedes that he was “a bit naive” when, in 1997, he began clearing debris and beaver dams out of what he believed was an old side channel of the Salmon River on his central Idaho ranch. Bothered by the mosquito-infested swamps created by the dams, Simpson wanted to restore water flow that […]
Snowmobile ban stalled
WYOMING A Clinton administration ban on snowmobiles in Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks that would start in the winter of 2002 has been stalled, maybe permanently (HCN, 3/27/00: Parks rev up to ban snowmobiles). At the end of June, the Bush administration announced that it wants to re-evaluate the rule because local communities and […]
Logging cut short for salmon
OREGON Salmon in the Pacific Northwest just got a break. In late May, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the National Marine Fisheries Service must re-examine how logging affects endangered salmon before 24 federal timber sales can proceed. That may mean loggers would provide larger buffers around riparian areas, thin units instead of […]
Indigenous group seeks citizenship
ARIZONA To the Tohono O’odham, the barbed-wire fence that stretches across the Sonoran Desert, dividing southern Arizona from Mexico, was always seen more as a cattle barrier than an international boundary. For as long as they can remember, tribal members have traveled back and forth across the border to visit relatives, join in ceremonies and […]
Norton snubs grizzlies
MONTANA, IDAHO Unless they make it by their own devices, grizzly bears likely won’t return to the Bitterroot Mountains anytime soon. On June 20, Interior Secretary Gale Norton set aside a Clinton-era plan to reintroduce the bears to the wilderness of central Idaho and western Montana. Under the old plan, grizzly recovery would have been […]
