March 26, 2001: Teach the children well

In the West’s public schools, corporations and conservationists quietly compete to control what students will learn in the largely unregulated field of environmental education.

March 12, 2001: Divided Waters

El Paso, Texas, is dependent on the underground waters of the Hueco Bolson, but as the population grows and the bolson declines, both the city and its sister across the border, Ciudad Juarez, are turning to the already overtaxed Rio Grande.

February 26, 2001: Return of the natives

In Idaho, the Nez Perce have become the first tribe to oversee the statewide recovery of an endangered species, the gray wolf, an experience that is energizing the tribe’s own political and spiritual recovery.

February 12, 2001: Mr. Babbitt’s wild ride

In eight years as Interior Secretary, Bruce Babbitt has known some failures but more successes: reintroducing wolves to Yellowstone, halting the New World gold mine, and creating many national monuments, starting with the Grand Staircase-Escalante.

January 29, 2001: Power on the loose

Electric utility deregulation and California’s energy crisis hold promise and peril for the rest of the West, as conservationists seek to ensure that new energy systems are both efficient and easy on the land and water and air.

January 15, 2001: Plains sense

Ten years after Frank and Deborah Popper first proposed turning depopulated Great Plains counties into a ‘Buffalo Commons,’ their once-controversial ideas are getting more respect in the region as the population continues to decline.

December 4, 2000: Road Block

When residents of the village of Tome, N.M., challenged plans for a nearby four-lane highway and bridge to facilitate the commute from Albuquerque to the suburbs, they took on New Mexico’s huge “sprawl machine” – and won.

November 20, 2000: Water pressure

At the 10-year anniversary of William Reilly’s veto of Colorado’s proposed Two Forks dam, the continuing growth of Denver’s sprawling suburbs leads some to worry that the dam might well be brought back to life.

November 6, 2000: ‘Re-inhabitation’ revisited

The environmental and community challenges brought to Washington’s Olympic Peninsula by runaway sprawl and development have some ‘re-inhabiting locals’ almost nostalgic for the clear-cut timber companies of 30 years ago.

October 23, 2000: Stalking Slade

An unprecedented, informal coalition of angry Indian tribes, environmentalists and Democrats are going after Washington Republican Sen. Slade Gorton’s seat in November, and Gorton’s opponent – Democrat Maria Cantwell – may have a chance for victory.

October 9, 2000: The hunters and the hunted

As illegal immigration from Mexico increases, more people risk their lives crossing the desert into Arizona, while government agencies, anti-immigration vigilantes and human rights activists argue over how to handle the influx.

September 11, 2000: Holy water

A pastoral letter being prepared by the Catholic bishops of the Northwest calls Catholics and others to a new environmental, economic and spiritual relationship with a sacred river – the Columbia.

August 28, 2000: The mine that turned the Red River blue

Though the economic future of the area is uncertain, activists welcome a possible Superfund listing for the huge Molycorp molybdenum mine in Questa, N.M., as a way to save the town and the Red River from yet more mine-waste pollution.

August 14, 2000: Meth invasion

As methamphetamine moves into the small, isolated towns of the rural West, the waste left by its manufacture pollutes the environment while the drug’s abuse and the traffic in it strain the resources of local law enforcement and social services.

July 31, 2000: Out of the darkness

When Paonia, Colo., resident Richard Rudin challenged a local mine’s plans for expansion, the town was painfully divided, until the efforts of the North Fork Coal Working Group brought miners, environmentalists and agencies together for a solution.

June 5, 2000: Change on the Plains

The Great Plains ranchers who have long grazed the national grasslands face a growing push by the Forest Service to take over management and try to restore the prairie landscape.

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