Posted inFebruary 5, 1996: Lack of enchantment: Santa Fe's boom goes flat

Power to the power boats

Northwest Republican lawmakers want to swamp efforts to regulate noisy power boats in Hells Canyon. Claiming that “the use of motorized river craft is deeply interwoven in the history, traditions, and culture of Hells Canyon,” Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, introduced a bill allowing both powerboats and floatboats year-around access to the entire 71-mile stretch of […]

Posted inNovember 13, 1995: Seeing the forest and the trees

Round and round and round it goes, where it stops…

Note: this article appears in the print edition as a sidebar to the news story titled “Idaho’s new crop: nuclear hot potatoes.” The continuing question of where to bury nuclear waste has high stakes for the West. Federal officials have focused on permanent burial of the waste in two locations: Yucca Mountain, Nev., for commercial […]

Posted inOctober 30, 1995: Nevada's ugly tug-of war

Grizzly plan sent back to drawing board

A recent federal court ruling may delay plans to declare grizzly recovery in Yellowstone a success. U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman ruled Oct. 4 that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s 1993 Grizzly Bear Recovery Plan lacks an adequate yardstick for measuring recovery of the species, which gained federal protection in 1975. Citing the plan’s […]

Posted inOctober 16, 1995: In the heart of the New West, the sheep win one

Bears forced to defer to cows

A plan by Wyoming officials to relocate two grizzly bears with a taste for beef has environmentalists concerned. They say cows are taking precedence over bears in important grizzly habitat near Jackson, Wyo. In mid-September, Wyoming officials decided to move one bear from a grazing allotment inside Grand Teton National Park and another from the […]

Posted inOctober 16, 1995: In the heart of the New West, the sheep win one

Just ask the loggers

Though environmentalists feared the worst when President Clinton signed a controversial timber-salvage law this summer, the Forest Service told them not to worry: The agency would take every precaution to protect the environment. A memo sent to regional foresters Sept. 21 from the agency’s headquarters in Washington, D.C., suggests otherwise. Citing a lack of government […]

Posted inOctober 2, 1995: Did Idaho libel the feds?

Civil disobedience heats up in Oregon

Frustrated by their inability to appeal two old-growth logging sales, environmentalists in Oregon have taken to the woods. More than 30 people have been arrested since Sept. 11 in protests against the Sugarloaf logging operation in southern Oregon’s Siskiyou National Forest (HCN, 9/19/94). Farther north, in the Willamette National Forest, 20 to 30 people have […]

Gift this article