Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

Don’t dump on tourists

Those who blame tourism for dissolving ties in small towns and increasing living costs are on the wrong track, say some planning experts. It’s “the real estate community that is corrupting towns,” said Myles Rademan, public affairs director for Park City, Utah, at a Telluride, Colo., summer travel symposium. Other panelists also targeted escalating real […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

We can’t save the land without first saving the West

Once a month I spend several hours with what I affectionately call my “wise-use” group. It’s not really a wise-use group but at first glance it resembles one. Members include the six county commissioners from Delta and Montrose counties here in western Colorado, a rancher, a timber mill employee, a coal miner, a banker, and […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

What to do when opposition to planning turns ugly

Note: this article is a sidebar to a news article titled “Land-use plan is disemboweled.” When the numerous and vocal opponents of the Flathead plan suddenly came out of the woodwork last summer, it was a shock to many people. But it was probably no accident. “That’s a typical strategy,” says Tarso Ramos of the […]

Posted inNovember 28, 1994: Beauty eludes the beast

How Methow Valley grew an economy

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, Beauty eludes the beast. METHOW VALLEY, Wash. – While developers and government officials spent two decades and millions of dollars trying to turn this valley into a destination downhill ski resort, residents quietly built and maintained a world-class cross-country skiing area. Now the proposals for […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

On campus: A department head tries to change the academic culture

Note: this feature article is one of several in a special issue about land grant universities in the West. If the West’s land-grant universities are to evolve, faculty like Glen Whipple are keys to that evolution. Whipple is head of the Agricultural Economics Department at the University of Wyoming in Laramie. Just as important, he […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

Off campus: A sociologist tries to help Idaho’s small towns

Note: this feature article is one of several in a special issue about land grant universities in the West. When sociologist Aaron Harp interviewed for a job at the University of Idaho, he was asked if the university had an obligation to save the state’s rural communities. “That’s a loaded question,” says Harp. “And having […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

A small town in Oregon gets ugly

After tarred-and-feathered effigies of two environmental activists were strung up in the center of Joseph, Ore., Sept. 30, the local newspaper headlined its story: “Enviros can learn a lot from a couple of dummies.” Some residents then organized an economic boycott aimed at driving the two environmentalists out of town. Were these tactics reminiscent of […]

Posted inOctober 17, 1994: As elections near, green hopes wilt

Reality intrudes on Big Rock Candy Mountain

The bluebirds no longer sing by the lemonade springs: The Big Rock Candy Mountain Resort on the Sevier River near Marysvale, Utah, is bankrupt. The sulphur- and chocolate-colored mountain, celebrated in a song written by Harry McClintock and sung by Burl Ives, attracted visitors from around the world who during the 1950s drank its mineral-rich […]

Gift this article