Posted inSeptember 27, 1999: The Millworker and the Forest

Environmental Protection and Growth Management in the West – 1999

Everyone from planners to community activists and lawyers is welcome at a continuing education program workshop, Environmental Protection and Growth Management in the West – 1999. The Oct. 29-30 gathering will focus on what works to protect open spaces and what doesn’t. To register, write to the Rocky Mountain Land Use Institute at the University […]

Posted inSeptember 27, 1999: The Millworker and the Forest

Blurring the landscape

In southern Idaho’s irrigated landscape, the boundaries between what’s natural and what’s not appear to be definitive: Canals and huge water sprayers on central pivots draw stark lines between fields of green produce and sagebrush desert. But historian Mark Fiege says in Irrigated Eden: The Making of an Agricultural Landscape in the American West, that […]

Posted inSeptember 27, 1999: The Millworker and the Forest

The Wayward West

Meridian, Idaho, will host a high-visibility merger Oct. 2, when Rep. Helen Chenoweth, 61, weds Wayne Hage, 62. Chenoweth is famous for fighting federal protection of endangered species and wilderness (HCN, 9/28/98). Her betrothed, a rancher from Tonopah, Nev., has battled the Forest Service in court for almost a decade over grazing (HCN, 10/30/95). Invitations […]

Posted inSeptember 27, 1999: The Millworker and the Forest

The Red Desert: Wyoming’s endangered country

RED DESERT, Wyo. – Fossils of tree limbs were all around, most the size of my fingers, a few the size of horse troughs. Prehistoric bits of turtle shell, horse bones and arrowhead chippings also lay scattered, testimony to the diverse inhabitants who once frequented this ocean-turned-desert. I suddenly looked up. Our group had flushed […]

Posted inSeptember 27, 1999: The Millworker and the Forest

An Arizona mayor condemns the New West’s thirst for servants

Note: in the print edition of this issue, this article appears as a sidebar to another article,”Battered borderlands.” Ray Borane, mayor of Douglas, Ariz., from a letter to the Aspen Daily News, dated July 8, 1999: “The U.S. Border Patrol has apprehended and expelled from our area more than 200,000 illegal aliens since the beginning […]

Posted inSeptember 27, 1999: The Millworker and the Forest

A Lewis and Clark revival hits the Northwest

While tracing the steps of Lewis and Clark, Judy Anderson has stopped off at two dozen places where the explorers walked nearly 200 years ago. Among these, Pompey’s Pillar, a lonely landmark on the plains of southeastern Montana, remains fixed in her memory. There, immortalized behind Plexiglas, she saw William Clark’s signature carved into soft […]

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