Posted inNovember 6, 2000: 'Re-inhabitation' revisited

‘Reckless charges’ refuted

Dear HCN, The first lesson you learn if you want to be a conservation activist is that you have to know what you’re talking about. Otherwise, you lose credibility. Unfortunately, Larry Tuttle’s letter (HCN, 9/25/00: Response to ‘squishy-soft’) reflects that he has yet to learn that lesson. Our suggestion? Visit the Northern Plains Resource Council’s […]

Posted inNovember 6, 2000: 'Re-inhabitation' revisited

Snake River salmon and steelhead

How much do people value the restoration of Snake River salmon and steelhead runs? Environmental economics students and faculty from Reed College in Portland, Ore., and Whitman College in Walla Walla, Wash., are trying to find out using a confidential Web survey. Find the survey at people.whitman.edu/~crouter/survey/intro.htm. This article appeared in the print edition of […]

Posted inNovember 6, 2000: 'Re-inhabitation' revisited

Grassbanks in the West: Challenges and Opportunities

A conference on Grassbanks in the West: Challenges and Opportunities brings together environmentalists, ranchers, the Forest Service and writers Nov. 17-18 in Santa Fe, N.M. Speakers include former Interior Secretary Stewart Udall, writer and Valle Grande Grassbank director Bill deBuys, poet and Animas Foundation director Drum Hadley and High Country News publisher Ed Marston. For […]

Posted inNovember 6, 2000: 'Re-inhabitation' revisited

Efficient energy is efficient business

It is rare that business sense and environmental quality interest intersect to make a resource-use decision so obvious. But the recent rise in Northwest power prices has turned energy conservation into good business, says Lyn Oha Carey of Washington State University’s Cooperative Extension Energy Program. The program’s Energy Ideas Clearinghouse Web site offers many ways […]

Posted inNovember 6, 2000: 'Re-inhabitation' revisited

A watershed worth its weight

WASHINGTON Ellsworth Creek near the mouth of the Columbia River is a typical Northwest forest ecosystem, with 800-year-old red cedars, clear-cuts, salmon, the federally protected marbled murrelet, rare salamanders and frogs, and nearly 100 inches of annual rainfall. Now it’s in line for one more thing – protection. The Nature Conservancy of Washington wants to […]

Posted inNovember 6, 2000: 'Re-inhabitation' revisited

Sprawl will be televised

ARIZONA, COLORADO It seemed obvious. The media love controversy, and in Arizona and Colorado, growth-control initiatives on the Nov. 7 ballot have been extremely controversial (HCN, 10/23/00: Arizona’s 202 takes aim at sprawl). So of course the public-minded, public-broadcast stations would want to air Subdivide and Conquer, a film about sprawl. Yet the film has […]

Posted inNovember 6, 2000: 'Re-inhabitation' revisited

Timber counties get new money

NATION Since 1908, counties with national forests have received 25 percent of Forest Service timber receipts to pay for schools and roads. In recent years, rural communities have struggled financially as logging has declined (HCN, 12/20/99: Counties grab for control of national forests). Now, after several years and six legislative versions, President Clinton is expected […]

Posted inNovember 6, 2000: 'Re-inhabitation' revisited

On the trail

In July, Arizona’s growth-control initiative looked unstoppable: A poll by KUET, the Phoenix public television station, showed Proposition 202 winning, 68 percent to 17 percent. But the opposition, heavily supported by the development industry, has used its $4.1 million in contributions to mount a no-holds-barred media campaign (HCN, 10/23/00: Arizona’s 202 takes aim at sprawl). […]

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