Posted inNovember 8, 2004: Keepers of the Flame

Steward Udall wasn’t all green

I respect the sum total of Stewart Udall’s accomplishments and would certainly prefer him to the current administration’s secretary of Interior. But it is not accurate to portray his record as a string of “unambiguous environmental victories” as does Ray Ring (HCN, 10/11/04:Udall patriarch laments startling changes). In 1963, Secretary Udall supported damming the Grand […]

Posted inOctober 25, 2004: Window Shopping: Part-Time Paradise

Energy industry is rigged

In your recent story about Colorado’s renewable energy initiative, representatives of the big utility companies have faithfully called upon the magic of the free market, claiming that the citizens are “artificially picking winners and losers in the energy debate” (HCN, 9/13/04: Colorado voters hold the cards on renewable energy). Missing from this story, as usual, […]

Posted inOctober 25, 2004: Window Shopping: Part-Time Paradise

Kerry cares about Indians

In a recent question and answer session at a conference for minority journalists, a Native American panelist asked George Bush about his view of tribal sovereignty in the 21st century. Bush’s answer clearly showed he pays little attention to Native American issues. He babbled that sovereignty was “just that, sovereignty.” The audience laughed awkwardly at […]

Posted inOctober 11, 2004: The First Family of Western Conservation

Klamath farmers stand in the way of progress

Tim Holt’s column on the Klamath Basin makes some excellent points, but misses two of the keys (HCN, 9/13/04: Failure of leadership, not a lack of water, dooms the Klamath). Any rational person familiar with the situation understands that demand reduction is key to rebalancing water in the basin. Gross overallocation of water by the […]

Posted inSeptember 27, 2004: Life After Old Growth

Subsidies Strike Again

The feature article, “Prairie Conundrum” points out that the federal government’s Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) is providing incentives for farmers to convert native prairie into crop monocultures. But the article praises another USDA/Farm Bill program — the Environmental Quality Incentive Program (EQIP). According to the article, EQIP claims to “pay farmers to adopt conservation practices […]

Posted inSeptember 13, 2004: When a Boom is a Bust

Backpacker magazine responds

As longtime fans of HCN, we were deeply disappointed by the unprofessional reporting and inflammatory tone of Sean Neilson’s “Writers on the Range” column in the Aug. 2 issue. Neilson grossly mischaracterizes a recent Backpacker article on Yellowstone, accusing the magazine of three things: 1) Sending readers on illegal routes; 2) Failing to mention backcountry […]

Posted inSeptember 13, 2004: When a Boom is a Bust

Parks need efficient money management

Dan Wilcock’s piece on national park budgets relates a “shouting match” between the Interior Department and parks observers about how much is or isn’t being spent (HCN, 8/16/04: National parks pinching pennies). But focusing on money spent is diversionary, since money can be used inefficiently, siphoned to other uses, inflated away, and otherwise disguised. The […]

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