California rice farmers decide to destroy salmon-blocking dams in their Sacramento Valley irrigation district.
The Magazine
October 13, 1997: The land is still public, but it’s no longer free
The federal government’s new Recreational Fee Demonstration Program – which requires recreationists to “pay to play” in national parks, forests, BLM and Fish and Wildlife areas nationwide – receives both condemnation and kudos in its early trials.
September 29, 1997: The timber wars evolve into a divisive attempt at peace
The Quincy Library Group’s controversial forest plan comes out of a long struggle for consensus, and many environmentalists worry that the plan and its passage into law will set a dangerous precedent.
September 15, 1997: Yellowstone at 125: The park as a sovereign state
As Yellowstone National Park celebrates its 125th birthday, it continues to struggle with the surrounding states over wildlife management and other questions, including whether “natural regulation” is letting the park’s elk herds overgraze their ranges.
September 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia
Two whistleblowers – safety auditor Casey Ruud and geophysicist John Brodeur – find that radioactive waste from some of the biggest, leaking storage tanks has already reached groundwater and is heading toward the Columbia River.
August 18, 1997: The West that was, and the West that can be
A close look at the history of the West reveals that human beings have meddled with and sometimes changed the landscape for as long as they have lived on the continent.
August 4, 1997: Vanishing habitat
Who wins and who loses when Uncle Sam cuts deals with landowners to protect endangered species with Habitat Conservation Plans — the latest attempt to balance private-property rights with the protection of endangered species?
July 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills … and languishes
The state of Wyoming remains stuck in the Old West and trapped by its myths and boom-and-bust cycles, while outside its boundaries the New West comes to life.
June 23, 1997: On the trail of mining’s corporate nomads
The copper mining company Summo USA’s plans to mine in northern New Mexico and Lisbon Valley, Utah, lead a reporter to follow what happens when local communities resist – and don’t resist – a hardrock mining project.
June 9, 1997: Chaos comes to Costilla County
Costilla County, Colorado’s attempts to rein in logging and gain access to the Taylor Ranch their Hispanic forebears used as a commons are frustrated by a wave of mostly Anglo newcomers who want no part of any planning regulations.
May 26, 1997: The sacred and profane collide in the West
The growing desire of Native Americans to protect their sacred sites in the West leads to sometimes acrimonious debate over public access, the First Amendment and the definition of sacred places.
May 12, 1997: Planning under the gun: Cleaning up Lake Tahoe proves to be a dirty business
Is the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency going to clean up beleaguered Lake Tahoe and its surroundings – or simply drive a wedge between the elite and the working class in the community?
April 28, 1997: Evangelical Christians preach a green gospel
A new breed of green Evangelical Christians seeks to spread the good news of Bible-based environmentalism to their conservative fellow Christians.
April 14, 1997: Beauty and the Beast
As the small, conservative towns bordering Utah’s new Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument begin to adapt to the monument they never wanted, a new vision for what gateway communities and preserved areas might be begins to slowly emerge.
March 31, 1997: Big Sky, big mess in Montana
A Montana ski resort originally created by newsman Chet Huntley and intended to be a model of free-market, unconstrained development, is today a morass of lawsuits, environmental degradation and inefficiency.
March 17, 1997: Working the Watershed
An unusual group founded by environmentalists and logging companies, the Willapa Alliance seeks to bring economic and ecological healing to Washington’s Willapa Bay.
March 3, 1997: Hunters close ranks, and minds
The notorious self-censorship the hunting press showed when “Outdoor Life” pulled biologist Tom Beck’s article critical of bear baiting leads to speculations by an outdoor writer on why hunters are so thin-skinned about criticism.
February 17, 1997: No home on the range
The deliberate slaughter of bison straying from Yellowstone National Park – killed because the brucellosis they may carry might endanger livestock – provokes a storm of protest, and calls into question the concept of wildlife management in the park.
February 3, 1997: Bringing back the bighorn
The Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep has fought its way back from near extinction, but efforts to reintroduce it to all its former range are more difficult than they appear.
January 20, 1997: Bees under siege
Honeybees across the West – and the nation – are dying in huge numbers, and some think a pesticide, methyl parathion, may be the primary killer.
