In this issue, we look past the contentious symbolism of dams and see what we can learn from them. We examine the lessons learned on Washington’s Elwha River, whose dams came down six years ago, and Utah’s Bear River, where a diversion is still being planned. And we look at the surprisingly scant science behind calls to take down Glen Canyon Dam, which would be a major win for preservationists but a potential disaster for many Westerners.


Witnessing injustice

Ruxandra Guidi’s exceptionally good piece “Los Promotores” (HCN, 8/7/17) could be subtitled “Welcome to America! Harvest Our Food and We’ll Give You a Nice Little Place Next to the Dump.” Her article takes us into the remote desert corners of Southern California where the nearly concealed sins of environmental and social injustice become so terribly…

Healing the landscape, healing ourselves

I felt compelled to share these thoughts with you after  I read “Down the Dark Mountain” by Brian Calvert (HCN, 7/24/17). I spent seven years working for the U.S. Forest Service cleaning up logging slash in clear-cuts. Although I actively provided input to timber-sale projects, the decision was always to log. My personal answer to…

Into the dark miasma

As a former HCN board member and former journalist, I write to express my disappointment and frustration with the lead article “Down the Dark Mountain” (HCN, 7/24/17) which was headlined on your front page as a guide to the ongoing ecocide of the planet. This article trivializes the coming disaster. For nine pages it wanders…

Listen deep, be silent

A Response to Brian Calvert’s article “Down the Dark Mountain” (HCN, 7/24/17): Yes, all these famous men these deep thinkers we revere make laments in beautiful words while the world goes on. While women give birth, nurse babies care for sick and dying parents. While nuns shelter the poor, teach in ghettos, visit death row…