Southern California wants to use desalination to increase its water supply, but critics think the idea should be taken with a grain of salt.

Real work
Depending on your perspective, my partner Laurie’s resume is either impressive or disturbing. In her 20s, she worked as a wilderness ranger, hiking miles with a too-heavy pack, digging drain dips and toilet holes. In her 30s, she worked on a trail crew, chopping roots, sawing logs, clearing brush. Nowadays she works in an historic…
Desperate measures
With water shortages a constant, Westerners are looking at wacky (and not so wacky) ways to squeeze more water out of the sky and land.
On Obama’s coattails
Westerners inspired by Barack Obama have a right to feel giddy these days: The history-making wave that swept the Democrat into the presidency Nov. 4 had a lot of impact around the region. It lifted a surprising number of other Democrats into offices that had long been held by Republicans, many of whom were seen…
Ultimate solution?
Desalination may finally be coming of age in a thirsty West. Take it with a grain of salt.
Weekend Westerner
Name Arthur KruseAge 69Hometown Munich, GermanyOccupation Consultant to the high-pressure compressor company where he was sales manager for 32 years.Still mourned “Flites Gentleman,” Kruse’s quarter horse, who had to be put down after a bad fall on ice just before Christmas Eve four years ago. Other club members About 50 men and 35 women –…
Bearing witness on the border
Exodus/ExodoCharles Bowden, Julian Cardona312 pages, 115 black-and-white photos, hardcover: $50.University of Texas Press, 2008. There are many ways to write about illegal immigration. One way is to shuffle through Immigration and Customs Enforcement reports, cherry-pick the latest data and file an article from a safe distance. Another way is to step into the fray, boots-on-the-ground,…
Welcome, new board members
HCN is happy to announce that Wayne Hare and Jane Ellen Stevens recently joined our board of directors. A long-ago transplant from the East, Wayne became a “native Westerner” while working as a ranger with the Bureau of Land Management in western Colorado, patrolling the Colorado River and McInnis Canyons National Conservation Area. Prior to…
Peak economy
Just a few months ago, you could walk into the local hangout in any little Western town and hear the hanger-outers talk dramatically about “peak oil,” that long-awaited moment when petroleum production would decline enough to throw the world into turmoil. Someone else might have brought up “peak water,” too, what with global warming and…
Stuck in the PAWGmire
How the BLM failed Pinedale
“Homosexuals are not some cabal”
As a gay former Mormon who grew up in Idaho Falls, “Prophets and Politics” perfectly articulates why this issue is just as important outside of California (HCN, 10/27/08). It pains me to see my childhood friends who attend BYU-Idaho spending so much time and money on this issue with the endorsement of the LDS church.…
Can’t see the forest for the guns
I’m frankly flabbergasted that, in an era so defined by crises of the environment, energy, and economy, that folks are still voting on useless wedge issues like guns and abortion — and voting for folks that are hopelessly deficient on the first three but who pander on the last two (HCN, 10/27/08). These issues were…
Getting out the (gun) vote
As someone who is a “liberal Democrat” on most issues and an Abe Lincoln “conservative” on others, I believe it has been a profound mistake for the Democrats to throw away the gun owner’s vote as they have for years (HCN, 10/27/08). I grew up in Ohio plinking with my dad’s .22. I’m a gun…
No friends of the Indians
Regarding your story “Power to the First People,” in Montana in the 2006 election, it was the seven counties with reservations which assured Democrat Jon Tester his narrow victory over incumbent GOP Sen. Conrad Burns, a charlatan good ol’ boy tainted by his associations with lobbyist Jack Abramoff (HCN, 10/27/08). The Democrats should never forget…
Back to bison
The ranching and sport-hunting communities in Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming exhibit none of the tolerance of the wolf, much less the knowledge, shown by Native Americans (HCN, 11/10/08). It is hate, sheer hate, that drives these communities’ actions and led to the deliberate extinction of wolves in the last century. If the state wolf “management”…
Big water
Regarding your story “Liquid Assets,” this summer at Mount Shasta I learned from locals that Shasta Dam releases, in August, were running at the equivalent of the spring flood stage. Why would we do that during a drought, in a period fraught with intense pressure to build more dams, canals and other forms of water…
Risky gun business
I was shocked by Hal Herring’s commentary on abandoning gun control (HCN, 10/27/08). More than the inaccuracies about “the Democrats” being against the Second Amendment and the clearly mistaken judgment that Democrats are declining, it was upsetting to read the absurd notion that owning guns protects us against tyranny. Where has this author been for…
Welcome to hard times
First, there’s the dark cloud: The economy of the Mountain West is going into the tank for a few years, and there’s not much that anybody — including the Democratic Congress and President Barack Obama — can do about it. But then there’s the silver lining: As our regional economy tanks, the West will become…
