Cutthroat trout, a native species in trouble around the West, are facing an increasing threat in a key sanctuary, Yellowstone National Park. Whirling disease, spread by a European parasite that showed up in the park five years ago, now infects 12 to 20 percent of the cutthroats in Yellowstone Lake, according to biologists’ studies. And […]
Mike Stark
Rebuilding a road to prosperity
Ex-timber town’s plan to resurrect a buried highway worries conservationists
High court weeds out pesticides
OREGON For years, irrigation districts and golf course operators have used pesticides in irrigation canals to battle pesky weeds that choke the flow of water. But a few years ago, an aquatic herbicide in southern Oregon didn’t kill just plants. More than 90,000 young steelhead trout died in 1996 when the chemical acrolein leaked from […]
Will logging save the spotted owl?
A symbol of conflict struggles to survive
Wind power spins into the energy mainstream
Note: in the print edition of this issue, this article appears as a sidebar to an essay, “Rearranging the grid.” While most of the power-strapped West looks toward fossil fuels for relief, wind power has quietly swept onto the energy playing field as a viable alternative. Next month, on the Oregon-Washington border, construction will begin […]
Salmon plan grows a few teeth
NORTHWEST The Clinton administration’s final rendition of a Northwest salmon plan is tougher than the last one, but it still doesn’t call for the dismantling of four federal dams on the Snake River in eastern Washington. Instead, the federal government will try other measures, including restoring rivers and streams where salmon spawn, and giving added […]
EPA reins in ranchers
OREGON For years, a bureaucratic gap in Oregon law has allowed some ranchers to violate the Clean Water Act by allowing their cows’ manure to seep into rivers. Now, the Environmental Protection Agency is cracking down. So far, the EPA has fined 10 Oregon ranchers – some as much as $50,000 – while also requiring […]
A watershed worth its weight
WASHINGTON Ellsworth Creek near the mouth of the Columbia River is a typical Northwest forest ecosystem, with 800-year-old red cedars, clear-cuts, salmon, the federally protected marbled murrelet, rare salamanders and frogs, and nearly 100 inches of annual rainfall. Now it’s in line for one more thing – protection. The Nature Conservancy of Washington wants to […]
Is a dredging project drowning?
NORTHWEST After 10 years and millions of dollars in studies, plans to deepen more than 100 miles of the Columbia River shipping channel have hit troubled waters (HCN, 1/17/00: A dredging dilemma). Last August, the National Marine Fisheries Service responded to a lawsuit threat by rescinding its earlier approval. The agency cited new worries about […]
Killing salmon to save the species
Critics say hatchery reform takes the wrong tack
Corps catches criticism
NATION A national storm is swirling around the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and some say it could rattle two of the agency’s most controversial projects in the Northwest: dredging the Columbia River and continuing operation of the Snake River dams. In February, The Washington Post reported that the agency rigged a $50 million economic […]
