The Nevada Division of Water Planning meets an untimely demise
A desert state axes water planning
Hear that whistle blowin’
A modern-day railroad baron stakes a claim in an ambivalent town
Voters pummel planning, ban new elk farms
In an election full of murky results, at least two decisions were definitive. The region’s twin growth-control initiatives, Colorado’s Amendment 24 and Arizona’s Proposition 202 (HCN, 10/23/00: Colorado’s growth amendment rouses voters) were both defeated by more than 2-1 margins. Proponents of the initiatives blame the loss on relentless – and occasionally inaccurate – media […]
A ‘most improbable scenerio’ has come to pass
Am I some kind of a smart guy? Loyal readers may recall that I recently pointed out on these pages that even in very close elections one candidate always piled up a pretty hefty majority in the Electoral College, rendering the votes of any one state meaningless in the great scheme of things (HCN, 10/23/00: […]
David Brower: Remembering the Archdruid
I was 20 years old and an undergraduate wildlife biology student when I first heard David R. Brower deliver “The Sermon” at the University of Colorado. I had come to Boulder to hear the famous Archdruid, whom I had only known through Sierra Club books and magazine articles before. I knew him by reputation as […]
Water pressure
A valiant veto defeated Two Forks Dam; will Denver’s sprawl bring it back?
Gorton story a disappointment
Dear HCN, As a former 18-year resident of Washington state (1982-2000), journalist and participant in politics there, I found Steve Stuebner’s article on Slade Gorton a disappointing concoction of free advertising for tribal and environmental biases. The article had its moments in viewing a tight race for the Senate, featuring a strong Democratic candidate who […]
The other side of the story
Dear HCN, I was disappointed to read your newspaper’s article of Sept. 25 titled “Backyard Boom” by Rebecca Clarren and the associated sidebar article titled “The playing field has to be leveled.” What concerns me the most is that there does not appear to have been an attempt to verify sources or obtain the other […]
‘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 […]
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 […]
Cowboy Poetry Gathering
The 17th annual Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nev., Jan. 27 to Feb. 3, 2001, aims to keep the ranching tradition alive and kicking. Contact the Western Folklife Center, 501 Railroad St., Elko, NV 89801 (888/880-5885) or on the Web at www.westfolk.org. This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline […]
Northwest Mining Association
The Northwest Mining Association holds its 106th annual meeting, “Winds of Change,” in Spokane, Wash., Dec. 4-8. Contact the NWMA at 10 N. Post St., Suite 414, Spokane, WA 99201-0772 (509/624-1158), www.nwma.org. This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline Northwest Mining Association.
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 […]
Into the depths
Scientists from the federal government and the University of New Hampshire pulled off an amazing feat this July: They went to 600-feet-deep Crater Lake in Oregon and, “took all the water out of it,” says Jim Gardner of the U.S. Geological Survey. Gardner and his team managed this without actually moving any water: They used […]
Take a walk
If anyone walking along the sidewalk were to make deafening noises, spew poisonous gas into innocent faces, and threaten people with a deadly weapon, they would be arrested. Yet a few feet away, on the public roadway, it is considered normal behavior.– Steve Stollman, a cycling/pedestrian advocate in New York City, quoted in Divorce Your […]
Bypass bickering
Fred Dexter of Nevada’s Toiyabe Chapter of the Sierra Club agrees that heavy traffic between Phoenix and Las Vegas mandates another bridge over the Colorado River near Hoover Dam. But Dexter is crusading against the plan the Federal Highway Administration has chosen: a four-lane bridge at Sugarloaf Mountain, just downstream from the dam and within […]
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 […]
Greens are still seeing red
WYOMING After 100 years of failed attempts to protect southwest Wyoming’s Red Desert, environmentalists say it’s do or die. Oil and gas companies plan to sink 10,000 to 15,000 wells by 2010, and a coalition of conservation groups, ranchers and outfitters doesn’t think the Bureau of Land Management’s plan will protect the area. Mac Blewer […]
Is a dredging project drowning?
NORTHWEST After 10 years and millions of dollars in studies, plans to deepen more than 100 miles of the Columbia River shipping channel have hit troubled waters (HCN, 1/17/00: A dredging dilemma). Last August, the National Marine Fisheries Service responded to a lawsuit threat by rescinding its earlier approval. The agency cited new worries about […]
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 […]
