Dear HCN, Rebecca Clarren’s article on the Klamath River Basin (HCN, 8/13/01: No refuge in the Klamath Basin) gives readers the most in-depth portrait of the real people engaged in the Klamath water conflict – farmers, Native Americans and commercial salmon fishermen – that has appeared to date in the national, regional or local press. […]
Letter to the editor
Check for your wallets
Dear HCN, I was surprised at the thoughts reflected in two articles in the Aug. 13 High Country News. In “The man in the rubber boots,” Paul Larmer states that in western Colorado, where he lives, 12 inches of rain falls. He says he lives in a desert. He says he used to use his […]
Responsible ranchers obey the law
Dear HCN, Your recent story, “Showdown on the Nevada Range” (HCN, 8/27/01: Showdown on the Nevada range), was timely and objective. Whether from the extreme left or right, I think most Nevadans are getting a bellyful of dissident groups that peddle fear and distortion. More importantly, individuals like Mr. Colvin jeopardize the future of grazing […]
The facts about fish control
Dear HCN, In a May article titled “Debate rages over fish poisoning” (HCN, 5/7/01: Debate rates over fish poisoning), very subjective views of the impacts of fish-control chemicals antimycin and rotenone on the environment were presented. It’s ironic that despite the article’s recognition of the growing fears of the uninformed public toward fish-control chemicals, it […]
Carla and Greg Woodall not the whole story
Dear HCN, The July 30 front-page piece titled, “Not in our backyard” was well-written and informative, except for one important detail: It gave the reader the impression that Greg Woodall and his sister, Carla, invented the campaign to preserve Scottsdale’s McDowell Mountains and are practically doing it by themselves. That isn’t the case. Greg and […]
Coverage appreciated
Dear HCN, We are so delighted when HCN arrives in our mailbox. It provides well-written and excellent information – though often disturbing – about our changing world and Western landscapes. Some of these changes are very positive, however, like the most recent article about the Salish and Kootenai tribes whose stewardship principles should be carried […]
Rainbow family vs. environment
Dear HCN, I find the “essay” on the back of the July 30 issue full of hypocrisy. Writer Bill Cope would have the reader believe that the Rainbow Family of Living Light was a very environmentally conscious group. Come on, now. I saw firsthand what that group did to the lands of the national forest […]
Yucca Mountain coverage biased
Dear HCN, Nobody has more distrust of the government in affairs radioactive than I do. My credentials are impeccable. My brother and I both had occurrences of thyroid cancer 20 years after leaving Richland, Wash., where we grew up at the Hanford plant in the ’40s and ’50s. Most likely we were contaminated by drinking […]
Dave Skinner’s red herrings
Dear HCN, Ed Marston’s essay (HCN, 6/04/01: Environmentalism meets a fierce friend) regarding future strategies of the conservation movement was dead-on, and sparked a predictable response from Dave Skinner (HCN, 7/02/01: Greens are still a minority) with a list of red-herring comments that completely ignored the important facts in the fight to protect America’s heritage […]
Lots to see in Carrizo
Dear HCN, Sam Kennedy, in his article on the grazing controversy in the new Carrizo Plain National Monument in California (HCN, 6/4/01: California monument welcomes cattle) starts by saying “The first thing you notice … is, well, there’s not much to see.” How wrong he is! Carrizo Plain is a premier world site for seismology, […]
Fire as ‘tool’ an arrogant concept
Dear HCN, After reading Louise Wagenknecht’s essay (HCN, 5/7/01: The year it rained money) and Mark De Gregorio and Lester Wood’s responses (HCN, 6/18/01: Smokey’s secret is out), I am more than ever convinced of the danger and arrogance of the use of the word “tool” for the practice of prescribed burning. How can we […]
Tribes doing most for salmon, feds least
Dear HCN, I cringed at the photograph of myself on your June 18 cover, but I guess it is churlish to blame HCN for the distance between my self-image and how I actually look. So on to substance. It was a good article on the complex intersections of salmon, dams, energy and money. I’d like […]
Plenty of fallout from a Yucca Mountain delay
Dear HCN, While Jon Christensen did a great job of detailing Nevada’s battle against the permanent storage of nuclear waste (HCN, 7/2/01: Can Nevada bury Yucca Mountain?), the story unfortunately was not broad enough to tackle the question of what if Yucca Mountain’s opening is delayed. That issue, too, encompasses the West. The fact is […]
‘Mormon’ stereotyping not helpful
Dear HCN, Tim Westby’s article on Rocky Anderson highlighted well some of our mayor’s controversies, political integrity and impressive achievements (HCN, 7/2/01: A maverick mayor takes on sprawl). However, it also presented a stereotypical caricature about “Mormons” and the “Mormon” Church. Anderson’s “lapsed Mormon” status is emphasized along with the “polar opposite” of an influential […]
Sovereignty: never having to say ‘may I’
Dear HCN, I want to comment on Bruce Selcraig’s article, “Tribal Links” (HCN, 6/4/01: Tribal Links). Someone – Charlie Rose, I think – asked Sherman Alexie about the morality, the vibes of Indian casinos. Like, is it a “good” thing to do? Alexie said he was more concerned with the morality of having enough to […]
Greens are still a minority
Dear HCN, High Country News publisher Ed Marston reacted to Sacramento Bee reporter Tom Knudson’s unflattering “Environment, Inc.” series on the fancy finances of the professional Green movement (HCN, 6/4/01: Environmentalism meets a fierce friend) by declaring “environmentalists must be led by relatively well-paid leaders backed by professional staffs,” just like their corporate PR enemies. […]
Ed Marston’s revisionism
Dear HCN, Ed Marston wrote: “Environmentalism in the West is no longer a puny movement struggling to get the attention of the American public. For eight years, we sat at the right hand of power in the Clinton administration, working a revolution. “We had that power because the American people have bought into environmentalism and […]
Not all tribes like golf
Dear HCN, It isn’t often I see a story so well-written and, at the same time, so accurate as “Tribal Links” (HCN, 6/4/01: Tribal Links). Mr. Selcraig is to be complimented for managing the nearly impossible, colorful, sometimes flip characterizations and turns of phrase that are right on the money! I enjoyed reading that article […]
Rocks that look like chimneys
Dear HCN, Couldn’t help but notice the page 7 photo, “Power Site: Chimney Rock, New Mexico (Dale Schicketanz photo),” in the recent issue I received (HCN, 5/21/01). The Chimney Rock in the photo framed by those “National Scenic Powerlines,” is six miles north of New Mexico in Colorado (on the Ute Mountain Reservation lands, along […]
Smokey’s secret is out
Dear HCN, With veiled amusement I read Louise Wagenknecht’s essay, “The year it rained money,” (HCN, 5/7/01: The year it rained money). You did it now, Louise. The cat’s out of the bag. Heaven forbid the American public should understand what those of us in the fire-suppression game have known forever, but do not like […]
