Because of outdated tax assessment methods, the state of Wyoming has lost about $10 million in uranium severance tax payments since 1977.
The Magazine
January 23, 1981: Water watchdogs neglect the Navajo
A congressional investigation has found that there may be serious undiscovered drinking water problems on the Navajo Indian Reservation.
January 9, 1981: ‘I’m a juggie’
The author reflects on work “jugging” — seismographic exploration for oil and gas. “I had reservations about the work, but that $100 a day talked louder.”
December 26, 1980: Jeffrey City: “I don’t know a person in town who isn’t thinking of leaving”
In Jeffrey City, Wyo., a 25-year-old boom town that lies in one of the most hostile environments in the country, the local union struggles to hold the town together amid layoffs caused by a downturn in the uranium industry.
December 12, 1980: Rebels revel in new power, polish
Now that the Sagebrush Rebels have a president and half a dozen conservative senators sympathetic to their cause, their goal of turning over federally managed lands to the states looks more tangible than ever.
November 28, 1980: Channeling the stream of toxic wastes
Environmental regulators are perplexed as they grapple with what they’re calling the most pressing environmental problem of the 1980s — hazardous waste.
November 14, 1980: Anaconda: The smelter shuts down, and so does the town
Citing antiquated equipment, pollution control problems and foreign competition, Atlantic Richfield Co. announced recently that it will not reopen its Anaconda, Montana, copper smelter, which employs nearly 1,000 people.
October 31, 1980: Archeologists dig for points, paydirt
Requirements that energy companies inventory archeological sites when they disturb public lands are creating plenty of good-paying jobs for archeologists.
October 17, 1980: Politics 1980
Increasing pressure for resource extraction in the West would suggest that the 1980 election would hinge on natural resource issues. Yet in most political races, natural resource issues are not at the forefront.
October 3, 1980: Tampering with the elements: success or failure?
The issue of who is legally responsible if something goes awry when cloud seeders and other weather changers are at work is unresolved in Colorado and elsewhere.
September 19, 1980: Dinosaur dynamos?
The Bureau of Land Management says that energy conservation and renewable energy sources could produce twice as much power as the Allen-Warner power plants proposed for Utah and Nevada.
September 5, 1980: Ailing uranium millworkers seek recognition, aid
Millworkers helped produce uranium for the nation’s nuclear defense program in the 1950s and ’60s. Now many are ill from exposure to radiation, but getting compensation is difficult.
August 22, 1980: Focus on the sun
A special issue on the solar technology movement, with articles on do-it-yourself builders, making photovoltaic panels economically competitive, greenhouses and more.
July 25, 1980: Squeezing the daylights out of Zion
The author reflects on childhood visits to Utah, the history of the Mormons and the National Miners Union, and the state’s perhaps bleak future.
July 11, 1980: States, courts, cutbacks put pressure on strip mine agency
Even as strip mines multiply throughout the Rocky Mountain states, the federal agency responsible for overseeing reclamation of mined lands — the Office of Surface Mining — is reeling under a series of blows.
June 27, 1980: Mining mishap could spell future trouble
Public officials’ response to a spill of toxic water at the Alumet phosphate mine is stoking criticism of the expanding phosphate industry in southeastern Idaho.
June 13, 1980: Digging up the West for shipment to Japan
Western states band together to open the door to mammoth coal exports to Pacific Basin countries, a trend driven by federal trade policies.
May 30, 1980: Indians in the melting pot: ‘old ways’ don’t melt
For more than 25 Western tribes that hold vast quantities of coal and uranium, the energy crisis is another source of pressure to abandon their cultural identity.
May 16, 1980: Solitude seekers disagree about open spaces
More than 174 million obscure acres in the West have been spotlighted by the Bureau of Land Management’s wilderness inventory, which is now the subject of public scrutiny.
May 2, 1980: Park Service director ousted in continuing policy strife
In a move enveloped by political controversy, Secretary of Interior Cecil Andrus has fired the director of the National Park Service, William Whalen.
