Posted inJanuary 31, 2000: Searching for pasture

Not your average beauty queen

Note: This article appeared as a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Rachel Benally, recent runner-up in the Southwest Regional Miss Navajo Pageant, Internet surfer, and unflinching slaughterer of her grandmother’s goats, lies in a reclining chair in her Aunt Sharon’s living room. She is recovering from last night’s TV-watching marathon. Wrapped in a comforter, […]

Posted inJanuary 17, 2000: STOP

Locals do it better

Dear HCN, Your article on Washington County’s Habitat Conservation Plan in southern Utah (HCN, 8/30/99) failed to make it clear that the plan is already successfully protecting tortoises inside the 61,000-acre Red Cliffs Desert Reserve and that the county is working further to reduce impacts to tortoises. With the help of federal, state and local […]

Posted inJanuary 17, 2000: STOP

The bulldozer wins

Dear HCN, “Bulldozers Roll in Tucson” described the tragedy one can expect when wildlife gets in the way of children – and their parents. I learned this lesson at a middle school built in a piûon-juniper forest near Cedar City, Utah. The spring after the school opened, roaming students spotted a nearby great horned owl […]

Posted inJanuary 17, 2000: STOP

Why fee me?

Dear HCN, I applaud Annie Conner and the Clearwater National Forest in their efforts to erase roads and recreate some semblance of an ecologically viable system in north-central Idaho (HCN, 11/8/99). Although I, too, have used many a Forest Service road, I will gladly curtail my off-road driving time for the good of the system, […]

Posted inJanuary 17, 2000: STOP

Nuns get a windfall

The wind didn’t exactly blow dollar bills through the door of the Sacred Heart Monastery in Richardton, N.D. But two years after the monastery’s Catholic sisters installed two windmills 100 feet high, their electric bill was cut almost in half for a savings of $18,000 in two years. “We’ve been here for over 30 years, […]

Posted inJanuary 17, 2000: STOP

The swift fox comes home

Visitors to the rolling grasslands of Montana’s Blackfeet Indian Reservation may wonder what animal is making a chirping sound. It sounds like a bird, but it’s the mating call of the swift fox. The long-legged, long-eared and bushy-tailed animals were once common on the range, eating grasshoppers and Richardson’s ground squirrels. Lewis and Clark first […]

Posted inJanuary 17, 2000: STOP

A spick-and-span plan

Every year, untreated sewage flows out of storm drains in Portland, Ore., and into the Willamette River. “Most of the time, when you flush the toilet, it goes straight into the river because basically, when it rains in Portland, the sewers overflow,” says Don Francis of the nonprofit group, Riverkeepers. He estimates that 3 billion […]

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