Posted inAugust 13, 2001: No refuge in the Klamath Basin

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 […]

Posted inJuly 30, 2001: Not in our back yard

‘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 […]

Posted inJuly 30, 2001: Not in our back yard

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 […]

Posted inJuly 30, 2001: Not in our back yard

Counties cross the yellow line

UTAH Utah wilderness recently got a reprieve. In late June, a district judge ruled that three counties had illegally graded 16 undeveloped jeep tracks and footpaths located within Bureau of Land Management-maintained wilderness study areas and the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. The judge concluded that Garfield, Kane and San Juan counties had for several years […]

Posted inJuly 30, 2001: Not in our back yard

The Latest Bounce

The Bonneville Power Administration has some good news. In late June, the Washington-based federal power company announced that a pending increase in power prices would amount to 46 percent, rather than the predicted 250 percent (HCN, 6/18/01: Transforming powers). BPA officials praised Northwest utilities and industries for reducing their energy demands by an average of […]

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