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Score one for Grand Staircase-Escalante

Thirteen years ago, when outgoing President Clinton designated Grand Staircase-Escalante a national monument, the outcry from some southeast Utah residents was deafening (and HCN was there to write about it). Angry ranchers called their representatives and demanded repeal, locals burned Clinton in effigy, billboards saying NO MONUMENT! went up along the highways. Garfield and Kane […]

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Tea Party Day is coming

Even here in the boondocks, far from any place that Fox News has ever covered, it’s impossible to escape the publicity about the impending “Tea Party on Tax Day.” First came a robocall on Saturday; a husky male voice advised me to “show that you care about our country” by “attending a Tea Party on […]

Posted inApril 13, 2009: The Desert That Breaks Annie Proulx’s Heart

Nonprofits reap the profits

Green, Inc. – An Environmental Insider Reveals How a Good Cause Has Gone BadChristine MacDonald288 pages, hardcover: $24.95.The Lyons Press, 2008. Inflated executive salaries. Top brass hobnobbing at expensive getaways. Questionable side deals negotiated with no concern for the everyday folks affected by them. These problems aren’t just native to Wall Street. They also occur […]

Posted inApril 13, 2009: The Desert That Breaks Annie Proulx’s Heart

Avalanches for dummies

NameHomer HometownBozeman, Mont. OccupationExtreme-sports guinea pig Best LookPowder beard A man leans on a bamboo pole high above the slopes at Bridger Bowl near Bozeman, Mont. From a distance, he appears remarkably calm, even as ski patrollers throw explosives onto the snow-loaded slope directly above him. There’s a loud blast and a fracture forms in […]

Posted inRay

Battle for justice in Libby might collapse quietly

Environmental groups send me many press releases. And I read many news stories about environmental issues — news framed by the groups. The influential groups are busy designating more wilderness, and filing lawsuits to protect wolves, and pushing Congress to reform mining law, battling coal, battling oil and gas, battling off-road drivers etc. etc. But […]

Posted inWotr

Ranchers now have a way out

The years-in-the-making Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009 finally became law last month. The act designates more than 2 million acres of new wilderness, plus 1,100 miles of new wild and scenic rivers, and it also  includes an increasingly popular model for resolving grazing conflicts on  public lands. In two Western states — Oregon […]

Posted inApril 13, 2009: The Desert That Breaks Annie Proulx’s Heart

A ghost of the 1970s

Bipartisan politics reappeared in Washington, D.C., in March. It felt like a ghost from the golden age of the environmental movement, the 1970s, when Republicans and Democrats worked together to pass major environmental laws. The new Omnibus Public Land Management Act assembles 166 deals related to conservation and natural resources (plus an unrelated 167th for […]

Posted inWotr

Let’s remember the children

As dollars from the Economic Stimulus Act arrive here in the eight Rocky Mountain states, most Westerners  seem to be talking about spending that money on shovel-ready jobs. The projects we hear about are intended to repair our crumbling schools, bridges, roads and sewers, or to restore our abused landscape.  We know, too, that money […]

Posted inGoat

Outlaws with guns

Tomorrow Homeland Security chief Janet Napolitano and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder will visit Mexico to discuss ways to halt the flow of guns across the border. Mexico has some of the strictest gun control laws in the world, but its drug cartels are armed with high-powered weapons smuggled over the border from the United […]

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Climate change is easy money

At their worst, carbon offsets are opaque, morally-ambiguous items that reek of guilt, arcane rites of penance and the potential for profiteering. When you buy an offset it’s hard to tell whether your money will actually be used to plant the promised grove of trees or install, for example, a slew of compact florescent light […]

Posted inRay

Some ‘stimulus’ may be bad for environment

Despite their greenish credentials, Barack Obama and the Democratic Congress are bound to offer a mixed bag of environmental policies. Reality ho. Yes, they’ll push conservation deals like the Omnibus federal-lands package that Congress just passed. They’ll try to address climate change and energy and they’ll try other greenish moves. But it’s already apparent, some […]

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Outlawed…

The fruit farmers in Paonia have been a bit worried about our weird weather. Spring came early, so the trees started budding. And this week, it’s been cold – sometimes freezing. If it gets too frosty, we might be out of luck for the season. Something else that’s on farmers’ minds: H.R. 875, a bill […]

Posted inRay

Newsitos for 3/26/09

Enviros are literally popping champagne corks to christen the Omni federal-lands package. Undercover feds busted several American Indians, charging they killed eagles illegally to sell the feathers for ceremonies. Mormon Church leaders calculated their moves quietly, leading many years of political campaigns against gay marriage, says a Salt Lake City columnist. And as killer bees […]

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Paranoia, helicopters, herbicides

March 25th: An association of Hispanic residents from two Texas barrios near the Rio Grande river file a lawsuit complaining that the Department of Homeland Security has acted “arbitrarily and capriciously” in violation of the National Environmental Policy Act. The group, called Barrio de Colores, hopes to stop the Border Patrol from going forward with their plan  to apply […]

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Slums and tent cities

Urban planners love the fact that slums are “walkable, high-density, and mixed-use,” as The Boston Globe recently reported about Dharavi, one of Asia’s largest slums. In the article, reporter Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow says many governments are beginning to “mitigate the problems with slums rather than eliminate the slums themselves.” The general consensus is that informal communities (read: […]

Posted inRay

Newsitos for 3/23/09

Who’s the most reasonable Republican in the Interior West? The latest evidence is here and here. Obama’s Energy Secretary, Steven Chu, is this unique: He has “a Nobel Prize, a YouTube following (for his lectures on climate change) and an unofficial theme song (Dr. Wu by Steely Dan.)” For a glance at the nuclear waste […]

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