Dear HCN, I am a third-generation Western Republican troubled by recent letters accusing HCN writers of “divisive rhetoric” and a “socialist or even communistic view” (HCN, 12/23/02). I had hoped that the incoming Bush administration would have the courage and leadership to promote economic growth and ecological sustainability. Instead, the administration launched an aggressive campaign […]
Letter to the editor
Real environmentalists don’t support immigration
Dear HCN, Michelle Nijhuis sounds generous when she writes: “I can’t say I deserve the many benefits of living here more than the people in line do” (HCN, 12/23/02: Holding open the door to the good life up north). But as she helps the Mexican government encourage illegal immigration into the United States, by providing […]
Stock Farm does help nonprofits
Dear HCN, This past September, I was contacted by one of your reporters who was doing a story on the Stock Farm, a gated community in Hamilton, Mont. (HCN, 11/11/02: Behind the gate). The reporter contacted me because I am the director of a local nonprofit organization and she wanted to know if, in my […]
Corporate colonizers in the ‘last, best place’
Dear HCN, As a longtime resident of the Bitterroot Valley I found the article concerning the Stock Farm development particularly poignant (HCN, 11/11/02: Behind the gate). Copper baron Marcus Daly used his Bitterroot estate, now the Stock Farm, as a retreat from the poisoned air, land and water of Butte and the Clark Fork Valley, […]
HCN misses the mark on gated communities
Dear HCN, Florence Williams’ article (HCN, 11/11/02: Behind the gate) on gated ranch communities was probably the least thoughtful article published by HCN in quite a few years. The clear theme of the article was that it is somehow unfair for wealthy outsiders to own land in the West. Contrary to Ms. Williams’ perception, there […]
Land-use planning makes Oregon great
Dear HCN, As a longtime subscriber and supporter of HCN, I was very disturbed by your recent article on Oregon’s land-use planning system (HCN, 11/25/02: Planning’s poster child grows up). The writer took way too much of the opposition to land-use planning at face value. Just about everybody has heard about some land-use bureaucratic nightmare, […]
THE GREAT RANCHING DEBATE
Two recently released books, Welfare Ranching: The Subsidized Destruction of the American West and Ranching West of the 100th Meridian, offer very different visions of ranching’s place in the West. In a special feature, High Country News’ Ed Marston and Forest Guardians executive director John Horning, review the books and reopen the debate on the […]
Oregon has been mis-zoned
Dear HCN, Rebecca’s Clarren article about Oregon’s 30-year-old land-use system was well-done and covered many of the pluses and minuses (HCN, 11/25/02: Shadow creatures). However, it did not include some basic statistics that reveal the widespread mis-zoning imposed on rural landowners throughout the state. The reality is that 97 percent of all rural private land […]
Oregon: Love it or leave it
Dear HCN, Lynn and Janis Wood of Lebanon, Ore., display an insidious perspective emblematic of the contemporary West (HCN, 11/25/02: Planning’s post child grows up). Oregon formed its bedrock land-planning policies over 30 years ago. The Woods moved to Oregon three years ago. They knew — or should have known — the rules when they […]
Cheap shots at Cheney
Dear HCN, Cheap-shot personal hatchet jobs such as Paul Krza’s article “What Dick Cheney might have learned in Rock Springs, Wyoming” (HCN, 12/9/02: What Dick Cheney might have learned in Rock Springs, Wyoming) are out of order for a quality publication. You need to understand that your readership embraces a wide swath of thinking united […]
An ode to the Marstons
Dear HCN, Your readers are probably drowning you in Marston tributes, as they should. Here’s mine: Ed and Betsy: Thanks for coming West, And caring so much, and working so hard, on behalf of the paper and the region. You cared about the people here, and about all our prickly Western dilemmas. And you loved […]
Seattle Times is not independent
Dear HCN, Freedom of the press is eroding before our very eyes. So speaks Stephen Lyons, citing as authority, Robert Blethen, publisher of the Seattle Times (HCN, 11/11/02: Freedom of the press is eroding before our eyes). Couldn’t he have found a better example? Blethen’s idea of independence is to run full-page ads in his […]
Mormons don’t recognize history
Dear HCN,Bigotry is an easy label to apply to Ray Ring’s piece on the Martin’s Cove land exchange (HCN, 9/30/02: This land holds a story the church won’t tell), but most Mormons don’t recognize a lot of their own history. Of course, the violence against them in their years in Illinois was terrible. One of […]
Ego-pumping capitalism at its best
Dear HCN,I found the latest cover story about gated communities (HCN, 11/11/02: Behind the gate), both amusing and sad. Bob Arrigoni and the other “simple, low-key” Stock Farm residents like him exist in a different reality, and it reinforces my theory that in most cases, the more money people have, the less practical they become. […]
HCN’s agenda – envy and socialism
Dear HCN, Normally, when you read the paper, you should have the feeling of becoming informed on issues which affect us all. After reading the last few papers, concerning the issues of the LDS church purchase and the gated communities, I have to say these are not issues, but agenda items of your reporters. As […]
Darwinism on the Klamath River
Dear HCN, I have seen several articles in your paper regarding problems with water on the Klamath River (HCN, 10/28/02: The mesasge of 30,000 dead salmon). All of the articles fail to mention just how much water is running into the lake behind the dam. The dam was built to store excess water for human […]
Leave your political passions at home
Dear HCN, I’m pleased to enclose my first-year renewal card; however, I do so with a note of caution, prompted by the current issue in front of me. Be careful. One might get the impression, from headlines like “Democrats kick back” (HCN, 10/14/02: The politics of growth) to some of the election coverage inside, that […]
Gas debate needs common sense
Dear HCN, The “Backlash” article (HCN, 9/2/02: Backlash) was one of the best I have read yet concerning CBM development in the West. I have served as commissioner on the Colorado oil and Gas Conservation Commission, La Plata County Oil & Gas technical advisor and consulting environmental geologist to the gas industry and property owners […]
Rowell devolved to kitsch
Dear HCN, The wording of your accolade to the late Galen Rowell (HCN, 9/2/02: Farewell to a great mountain photographer) was misleading. In recent years, his “transcendental approach to capturing the natural world” meant descending from fine art downward, past popular art into the dubious world of kitsch. His Mountain Light Gallery in Bishop, Calif., […]
Bay is an environmental treasure
Dear HCN, Susan Zakin’s article, “Delta Blues” (HCN, 9/30/02: Delta blues), is perhaps the best and clearest explanation of the complex issues involved in California’s attempt to be all things to all people when it comes to demands for water. She mentions that the San Joaquin-Sacramento River Delta region is “virtually invisible to most people […]
