Posted inRange

Should oil refiners disclose more health and safety info?

By Eric De Place, Sightline.org Much to their credit, the United Steelworkers and the AFL-CIO want more sunlight on oil company practices. The unions believe that a string of accidents — including the deadly 2010 fire at Anacortes, Washington where Steelworkers are employed —  is evidence that more safety information should be made public. WSJ’s MarketWatchreports: […]

Posted inRange

Swapping politics for science

By Heather Hansen, Red Lodge Clearing House It’s not often a government agency asks Congress to limit the amount of money it spends to do its job. But that’s what the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS) did last month when it told Congress that it wants a cap put on how much it can […]

Posted inRange

Moving Washington beyond coal

By Jennifer Langston, Sightline.org A deal to wean Washington off coal power is a hair’s breadth away from becoming law. Both houses of the Legislature have approved a bill to close the state’s largest single source of greenhouse gas, mercury, and nitrogen oxide pollution over the next decade and a half. And with the addition […]

Posted inRange

It’s Raining Rain Gardens

By Lisa Stiffler, Sightline.org Researchers have pointed the finger at stormwater runoff as the top source of pollution that’s getting into Puget Sound and other Northwest waterways. And because runoff comes from just about everywhere — roofs, roadways, parking lots, farms, and lawns — the solution has to be just as widespread. Enter 12,000 Rain […]

Posted inRange

Colorado may extend bear season

Colorado’s official state mammal is the bighorn sheep, but if you go by which wild critter gets the most attention from state government lately, it would be the black bear.  In 1992, state voters overwhelmingly approved an initiative which eliminated the spring bear-hunting season by outlawing bear hunting between March 1 and Sept. 1. The […]

Posted inRange

Time is running out for the Grand Canyon

By Heather Hansen, Red Lodge Clearing House On July 21, a moratorium on staking new uranium and other hardrock mining claims on over one million acres of public land near the Grand Canyon National Park, will end. Unless the Department of the Interior makes a decision on the land withdrawal prior to that–which seems unlikely, […]

Posted inRange

The hard drinkers aren’t in the West

The West has the two-fisted image as a land of hard drinking, but it may not deserve that reputation, according to statistics compiled by America’s Health Rankings.   The survey looked at “binge drinking,” defined as the percentage of population over 18 years old which has, in the preceding 30 days, had more than five drinks […]

Posted inRange

Who’s afraid of the big, bad wolf?

By Heather Hansen, Red Lodge Clearing House As darkness blanketed the land, two cunning predators made their move. Their thirst for blood was intense and, when the opportunity presented itself, they sunk their canines into the soft underbelly of their prey. This eager hunting pair–Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) and Rep. Mike Simpson (R-ID)–have doggedly pursued […]

Posted inRange

Dam removal and salmon science

Pacific salmon face grim times.  The plight of Canada’s Fraser River sockeye has fixated fishers, scientists, and the state for decades.  Concern has grown since the 1990s as annual runs went from bad to frightening, but then last summer’s run was bafflingly great.  The Canadian government federal government in Ottawa formed the Cohen Commission in […]

Posted inRange

Keeping the wild in National Wildlife Refuges

By Heather Hansen, Red Lodge Clearing House I’ve never thought much about this country’s National Wildlife Refuges (NWR). With the exception of controversial  ones like the “drill, baby, drill” Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, they’re stealthy public lands that don’t get the airtime our national parks and monuments do. It wasn’t until recently, when I learned […]

Posted inRange

Agriculture by the numbers

Every five years the US Department of Agriculture publishes the US Census of Agriculture.  The most current census is for 2007 and was published in 2009. I have previously written here about one aspect of the census – the first ever survey of native farmers and ranchers. Recently I had occasion to use the Census […]

Posted inRange

Conscience and the constitution

One Colorado county might be gearing up for a confrontation with the federal government over road closures on public land. Montezuma County — its seat is Cortez — sits in the southwest corner of the state, and its sheriff, Dennis Spruell, told the Denver Post last week that he is pondering certain matters of conscience. […]

Posted inRange

Indians await health care funding

Just over a year ago President Barack Obama signed the health care reform bill into law, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. That measure, of course, also includes the permanent authorization of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act. So what has happened since the president signed the bill into law on March 23, 2010? […]

Posted inRange

BLM Wild Lands policy deserves praise

By Joel Webster If a misleading statement is repeated often enough, some people will begin to believe it. That appears to be the strategy of those working to overturn the Bureau of Land Management “wild lands” policy that was introduced in December by Interior Secretary Ken Salazar. Beyond the misleading rhetoric are some hard facts: […]

Posted inRange

Red, white and blue is the new green

By Heather Hansen, Red Lodge Clearing House Despite what freshman Republican lawmakers would have us believe, giving a flying finch about the environment is very American. The authors of recent proposals and bills surrounding the federal budget—which have been called some of the most anti-environmental pieces of legislation in recent history—are out of touch with […]

Gift this article