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Livid over livestock

Just 18 months ago, ranchers effectively defeated a voluntary federal program to trace disease among their livestock. Now U.S. Department of Agriculture officials are coming back to the traceability table with mandatory interstate livestock trade regulations they hope will kick disease out of the barn and are improved enough to overcome rancher resistance. The agriculture […]

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Gutter Trash

On August 1, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Anchorage officially charged Arne Fuglvog, a veteran commercial fisherman and the fisheries aide to U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, with the crime of poaching wild Alaskan fish. His crimes led to an eventual charge and sentencing for misdemeanor violation of the Lacey Act, which protects wildlife, fish, […]

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Haze be gone

When I started researching regional haze rules a few months back, a source warned me that I was wading into the Clean Air Act’s wonkiest, most technically complicated depths. I remember her asking me something like: “Are you sure you want to go there?” Which is to say, you’d be forgiven if you paid little […]

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Surf and turf update

After two decades of restoration, roughly 1,700 gray wolves now roam the Northern Rockies. But constant court battles over their management led Congress to end federal protection in May, using a budget rider to sidestep the Endangered Species Act (see our May 30 story). Last week, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy unhappily upheld the rider, […]

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Air quality and all that gas

If you’ve been following the recent media blitz surrounding fracking — where water, chemicals and sand are pumped at high pressure down a well to help release oil or natural gas — you might think that concerns over the process are all about groundwater pollution. After all, thanks to the “Halliburton loophole,” the process is […]

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The Visual West: Going with the Monsoonal Flow

Over the past several weeks, the monsoon season has kicked in nicely across the Southwest, reaching up into Colorado, where it has created some spectacular lightning, downpours and sunsets. In my humble opinion, summer afternoons during monsoon season were meant to be spent working (not too vigorously) in the garden and watching the thunderheads build […]

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Game on, Government!

Updated 8/3/2011, 2:46 pm A grouse, a prairie chicken, and a rabbit walk into a bar. The bartender looks up and says, “There’s a two for one special on drinks tonight. Who’s game?” Okay, cheesy pun, I admit. But here’s a worse joke: In June, Safari Club International, a wealthy hunters’ rights group, filed a […]

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Next train to … China?

Billionaire Forrest Mars, of Mars candy bar fame, used to be the Tongue River Railroad’s most high-profile foe. The much-disputed rail line — first proposed some 30 years ago — gained new momentum in recent years as interest mounted in mining southeastern Montana’s untapped coal reserves, which currently have no path to market. Mars, like […]

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Ignorance is blissless

Ever noticed how the loudest, most enraged environmental critics (you know, the ones with the tumescent neck vein that throbs angrily at the slightest mention of endangered species or roadless areas) are usually the people who know the least about environmental issues? “Global warming? That’s BS! Our state had record snowfall this year.” “Green energy? […]

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Bad bills on the rise

Two bills being considered in the House continue Republican-led efforts to weaken environmental protections. HR. 1581, the Wilderness and Roadless Area Release Act, would drop protections on at least 43 million acres of public land. Roadless national forest lands and wilderness study areas would be “released” for unfettered access to off-highway vehicles, oil and gas […]

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A wild week in Washington

In a remote alpine valley in 1968, Rocky Wilson shot the last grizzly bear to be killed in the North Cascades. Since then, biologists have longed for proof that any grizzlies remain; some wondered if they were all gone. But with the click of a camera, hiker Joe Sebille brought the North Cascades grizzly bear […]

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Don’t Forget The Little Guys!

In May, the environmental advocacy group WildEarth Guardians struck a significant bargain with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that will require the agency to consider federal protections for more than 250 species under the Endangered Species Act. To solidify the agreement, The Center for Biological Diversity, which collaborated with the Guardians in earlier discussions […]

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Boats vs. birds

Protesters armed with posters opposing a ban on fishing, canoeing, boating and other recreation paraded 200 boats in a “Death of Recreation Parade” July 9.  Locals worried about Idaho’s Deer Flat National Wildlife Refuge’s proposed comprehensive conservation plan were demonstrating to express concern that the new plan would limit their recreational pursuits and the industries […]

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What’s for dinner?

Flying over Washington’s Puget Sound from SeaTac Airport, the view today is a wash of blues and whites. Low-hanging soupy, humid air vagues the sharp edges of an industrial waterfront. Blurred boatwake lines sketch the harbors and bays. The ocean looks smooth from here – unbroken and dull in the flat light save for a […]

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Montana Fly Shops Welcome New Customers: Hair Stylists

Despite their reputation as hangouts for brawny hook and bullet types, fly-fishing shops–particularly the fly-tying sections–have always been a tad swishy.  No matter how you slice it, scores of straight-faced men poking through purple Krystal Flash and pearl Flashabou or inquiring about the next shipment of pink chenille isn’t exactly manly. But a recent women’s […]

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