The essay by Rebecca Clarren on Measure 37 strikes a particular chord with me, because I am an offspring of one of those rural Oregonians that have sacrificed a lot to allow those fine “enlightened” city folk from the Willamette Valley to experience the beauty and serenity of Oregon’s unspoiled countryside (HCN, 9/22/04: In Oregon, […]
Letter to the editor
After dollars are spent, destruction remains
Regarding Paul Larmer’s editorial “Storing fat from the feeding frenzy” (HCN, 11/28/05: Storing fat from the feeding frenzy): Wyoming may be doing a better job of managing oil and gas revenues; however, that revenue hardly compensates for the destruction of frenzied and uncontrolled development. Qwest, EnCana and coalbed methane drillers have the Bureau of Logging […]
Oregonians didn’t know what they were voting for
Measure 37 was not a referendum on Oregon’s land-use laws (HCN, 11/22/04: In Oregon, a lesson learned the hard way). The ballot measure was designed to make it impossible to have those regulations in place. However, that is not the question that was asked. The measure asked voters whether they would approve compensation to private […]
Oregon votes for fairness
Oregonians still have a reverence for Oregon’s features and future. What they signaled by passing Measure 37 is that they demand a government that is fair (HCN, 11/22/04: In Oregon, a lesson learned the hard way). Part of the problem is that land planners and environmental activists are never satisfied. The result is incrementally increasing […]
Take back the wilderness movement
The exchange between SUWA Director Scott Groene and HCN Associate Editor Matt Jenkins is a fine example of the strategic dialogue which should be taking place within all Western wilderness campaigns (HCN, 9/27/04: Utah’s wilderness warriors reply). Those campaigns increasingly favor what is best described as a “Let’s make a deal” wilderness strategy. The price […]
‘Paying for wilderness’ undermines environmental goals
In covering wilderness campaigns, HCN has invited us to party with Nevada “wilderness warriors” (HCN, 3/3/03: Wild Card); watch a rancher in Owyhee County, Idaho, kill a rattlesnake (HCN, 12/8/03: Riding the middle path); and learn the personal philosophies of the central players in Idaho’s Boulder-White Clouds proposal (HCN, 11/22/04: Conservationist in a Conservative Land). […]
Four more years? Help!
Well, now we can only watch to see if Bush’s administration cooks the entire elephant in its own oil. As my friend James says, borrowing from Robert Reich: “Middle-class workers voting for Bush are like chickens voting for Colonel Sanders. “Millions of chickens voted for Colonel Sanders on Tuesday. “What’s for dinner for the next […]
Wanted: Environmental Leaders
The HCN profile of Stewart and Mo Udall is an excellent account of their heroic achievements to protect and to save the resources of the West (HCN, 10/11/04: The First Family of Western Conservation). Perhaps Mark and Tom Udall, with the genes and the same determination, will continue the legacy of the fathers. But, as […]
Living poor and voting rich
Your two-part series on the plight of the ski bum inspired this letter (HCN, 10/25/04: As the town hollows out, one Aspen neighborhood thrives) (HCN,.11/8/04: A new breed of ‘ski bums’ is anything but). Aspen is what it is today because young bohemians who supposedly believed in equality among the classes, wanted to shut the […]
Lessons from the Netherlands
In response to Geneen Marie Haugen’s essay (HCN, 11/8/04: American — and proud of it): I’m sorry those Dutch were rude. As a Dutch-American woman, I know that being confronted with the Dutch sense of righteousness can be disconcerting. The population is well known for its ever-wagging “Little Dutch finger.” However, Holland — in fact […]
Nice work, Adam Burke
HCN arrived this afternoon and I’ve already finished Adam Burke’s “Keepers of the Flame” (HCN, 11/8/04: Keepers of the Flame). Excellent. Especially happy to have found it in HCN, given all those dark mutterings of a couple of years ago about making the paper punchier and more attractive to young ’uns by shortening articles. I’d […]
Hunting: It’s a lot about the gun
I read Tom Reed’s essay in the Oct. 11 issue and was struck with the anti-gun rhetoric and the doom and gloom about the state of hunting in the West. First, although Tom considers the National Rifle Association a mere dispenser of propaganda, he should understand that it’s one of the few organizations that fights […]
Everett Ruess lives!
I was delighted to see your story about the Udall clan (HCN, 10/11/04: The Coyote Caucus Takes the West to Washington). The story made me think about the time I first met Mark Udall. It was May of 1976, and my two buddies and I were camped on a bench above the Escalante River across […]
Memories of Mo Udall
Thank you so much for your wonderful article about the four Udall congressmen. I knew Mo as a child in Tucson, and worked on his presidential campaign. I often meet younger people who never heard of him, especially now that I live in Iowa, far from the West I love. Mo was a giant man, […]
Steward Udall wasn’t all green
I respect the sum total of Stewart Udall’s accomplishments and would certainly prefer him to the current administration’s secretary of Interior. But it is not accurate to portray his record as a string of “unambiguous environmental victories” as does Ray Ring (HCN, 10/11/04:Udall patriarch laments startling changes). In 1963, Secretary Udall supported damming the Grand […]
Mark Udall should step up
I enjoyed your story, “The Coyote Caucus takes the West to Washington” (HCN, 10/11/04: The Coyota Caucus takes the West to Washington). The question to me is, will Mark Udall step up and be a conservation leader? I have concerns, owing to an issue in a federal enclave largely in Mark’s district, Rocky Mountain National […]
Energy industry is rigged
In your recent story about Colorado’s renewable energy initiative, representatives of the big utility companies have faithfully called upon the magic of the free market, claiming that the citizens are “artificially picking winners and losers in the energy debate” (HCN, 9/13/04: Colorado voters hold the cards on renewable energy). Missing from this story, as usual, […]
Here’s a mosquito solution
An important ally was omitted from your article on safer ways of mosquito control (HCN, 9/13/04: Communities search for a safer way to kill mosquitoes). It’s a humble and reviled creature with considerable ability to patrol the skies between dusk and dawn: the bat. I sympathize with the interviewees in the article. Long ago, I […]
I’m celebrating!
Sorry that the politically correct police have spoiled your celebration of the Lewis and Clark expedition, but they haven’t spoiled mine! I’m both commemorating and celebrating the glorious achievement of the Corps of Discovery (HCN, 8/16/04: Journey of Rediscovery). It seems like our culture is no longer permitted to celebrate the seminal events of our […]
Kerry cares about Indians
In a recent question and answer session at a conference for minority journalists, a Native American panelist asked George Bush about his view of tribal sovereignty in the 21st century. Bush’s answer clearly showed he pays little attention to Native American issues. He babbled that sovereignty was “just that, sovereignty.” The audience laughed awkwardly at […]
