Posted inSeptember 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace

Humility is the heart of park’s approach

Dear HCN, One of the few things Greg Hanscom got right in his article on Yellowstone’s Northern Range (HCN, 9/15/97) is that politics is running the show, and that “range managers, wise-users and Republican lawmakers are all ears’ for any criticism of natural regulation. Unfortunately, he fell into the critics’ trap and declared them the […]

Posted inSeptember 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace

Stop the assaults on wilderness

Dear HCN, Scott Stouder’s article about extending a road on the rim of Hells Canyon brought back memories (HCN, 4/14/97). I guided river trips in Hells Canyon, backpacked through the Oregon-side wilderness areas, and taught school in Halfway, Ore., in the early “70s. His article illustrated the continuous assault on wilderness values throughout the West […]

Posted inSeptember 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace

Too little and too late

Dear HCN, A little comment about your story on the sacred and profane colliding in the West (HCN, 5/26/97). I’m old enough to remember that when the Bureau of Reclamation was promoting Glen Canyon Dam and the resulting reservoir, which it called the “Jewel of the Colorado,” the Bureau strongly argued that now, people would […]

Posted inSeptember 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia

A High Plains rejoinder

Dear HCN, Jeffery Smith’s plaintive essay, “Sensory Deprivation on the High Plains’ (HCN, 7/7/97), reflects what Patrick Jobes has called the “deconstructing” of Western communities. In his decade-long study of demographic trends in the Gallatin Valley of Montana, Jobes found that newcomers had, on average, moved four times in the past decade. “Newcomers have a […]

Posted inAugust 18, 1997: The West that was, and the West that can be

Plum Creek hasn’t changed

Dear HCN, I’d like to comment on the article about Habitat Conservation Plans, in which biologist Lorin Hicks says that his company, Plum Creek Timber, began changing its timber management philosophy in 1990 and is working to become environmentally responsible (HCN, 8/4/97). I’m a logger/conservationist who lives near Plum Creek’s hometown, Columbia Falls, Mont., and […]

Posted inAugust 4, 1997: Vanishing habitat

A great analysis

Dear HCN, Thanks for the extraordinary stories on Wyoming (HCN, 7/7/97). The response from those I have talked with has been elation for a great analysis and critique of Wyoming; hopefully, those responsible for making public policy will learn from the picture Paul Krza put together. Tom Throop Lander, Wyoming The writer is executive director […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

Are we so shallow of spirit?

Dear HCN, We Americans are really something (-The Sacred & Profane Collide…,” HCN, 5/26/97). We spend a century trying to annihilate the natives so we can steal all their best land, land that contains their holiest sites, their natural cathedrals. Somehow a few manage to survive our onslaught, but we banish these people to hostile […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

Coffee drinkers can choose

Dear HCN, I wish to comment on the Hotline item, “Coffee is bad for birds,” in the May 12 issue of HCN. The article left the impression that consumers, until now, could not obtain shade-grown (bird-friendly) coffee. Actually, bird-friendly coffees are and have been available to the discerning coffee drinker. This is an important consumer, […]

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