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Hazy Horizon for West’s Roadless Lands PDF Print E-mail
Written by DAVID FREY, New West   
Thursday, 06 March 2008
A decade after the federal government sought to ban new roads on millions of acres of national forest across the country, the future of those lands remains in question.
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FWS proposal expands critical habitat for Canadian lynx PDF Print E-mail
Written by PATRICK REIS, Land Letter   
Thursday, 06 March 2008

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service last week proposed drastically expanded critical habitat for the Canadian lynx. The new proposal calls for 42,753 square miles to be categorized as critical habitat, more than 20 times more than the agency's 2006 proposal of 1,841 square miles.

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As EPA approves new Mont. water standards, effects to Wyo. industry feared PDF Print E-mail
Written by ERYN GABLE, Land Letter   
Thursday, 06 March 2008

U.S. EPA has approved strict new water quality standards sought by Montana despite fears that the new rules could hamper the energy industry in neighboring Wyoming. The coalbed methane industry has been booming in the Powder River Basin, which straddles Montana and Wyoming, for the past decade, with more than 20,000 wells drilled in northern Wyoming alone.

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BLM, groups push permanent protection of Western conservation system PDF Print E-mail
Written by APRIL REESE, Land Letter   
Thursday, 06 March 2008
LAS CIENEGAS NATIONAL CONSERVATION AREA, Ariz. -- Atop a rocky hill in the heart of this mountain-ringed expanse of undulating grasslands and cottonwood-lined creeks, rancher Mac Donaldson gestures toward a stretch of bottomlands below.
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As border fence is erected, effects to wildlife, land, rivers raise concerns PDF Print E-mail
Written by APRIL REESE, Land Letter   
Thursday, 06 March 2008
PALOMINAS, Ariz. -- The path of the border fence is continuing to cause great consternation. With a new section of the fence being erected in the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area, many fear the effects to wildlife and their habitats, river flows and scenic vistas will be irrevocably altered without providing the security the fence was intended to create.
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Man-induced flood released from Glen Canyon Dam PDF Print E-mail
Written by JERD SMITH, Rocky Mountain News   
Wednesday, 05 March 2008
Hundreds of people drove across the northern Arizona desert this week, intent on reaching Glen Canyon Dam for today's torrential release of water, designed to mimic spring snowmelts from the days when the mighty Colorado River roared unimpeded through the Southwest.
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USDA chief proposes energy harvest on conservation land PDF Print E-mail
Written by ALLISON WINTER, Greenwire   
Wednesday, 05 March 2008
Agriculture Secretary Ed Schafer said today that farmers should be allowed to plant and harvest switchgrass on millions of acres set aside for conservation -- a move that environmentalists say could undermine a program that sets aside vital bird habitat.
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Why save water? More ag incentives needed PDF Print E-mail
Written by CHRIS WOODKA, The Pueblo Chieftain, Brown and Caldwell's Waternews   
Monday, 03 March 2008
Conserving irrigation water could benefit water quality and might make more water available for all uses, a study shows.
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Conflict seen in smelt rules PDF Print E-mail
Written by MATT WEISER, The Sacramento Bee, Brown and Caldwell's Waternews   
Monday, 03 March 2008
As water contractors join the rule-making on Delta pumping, group says 'fox is guarding the henhouse.'  Water users who benefit most from tapping the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta have been given an unprecedented role in drafting new rules to manage water diversions.
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Water an issue in energy development in New Mexico basin PDF Print E-mail
Written by PHAEDRA HAYWOOD, The New Mexican   
Monday, 03 March 2008
How do you drill through a drinking water aquifer and extract oil from the earth below without polluting that water with oil — and threatening public health?  That's a question Galisteo Basin residents have been asking since last fall, when Tecton Energy announced plans to drill for a million barrels of light, sweet crude in the area.
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Dam-building era may not be over in West PDF Print E-mail
Written by NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS, Associated Press   
Monday, 03 March 2008
The Western states' era of massive dam construction — which tamed rivers, swallowed towns and created irrigated agriculture, cheap hydropower and environmental problems — effectively ended in 1966 with the completion of Glen Canyon Dam on the Arizona-Utah border.
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Vail Resorts hopes to inject trees to ward off Pine Beetles PDF Print E-mail
Written by DAVID O. WILLIAMS, RealVail.com   
Monday, 03 March 2008
Most experts agree the war against the mountain pine beetle in Colorado is all but lost, but Vail Resorts hopes to at least win a few battles against the voracious tree-eating bugs using a new repellant injected into the trunks of healthy lodgepole pines.
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Loophole in Colorado law restricts probe into conservation easements PDF Print E-mail
Written by MARGARET JACKSON, Denver Post   
Monday, 03 March 2008
Efforts to investigate questionable conservation easements in Colorado where tax credits are traded for protection of land from development have been hindered because the state Division of Real Estate doesn't have jurisdiction over subdivisions involving fewer than 20 parcels, and counties don't have jurisdiction over parcels larger than 35 acres.
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Critical habitat expanded for Canada lynx PDF Print E-mail
Written by MIKE STARK & CLAIRE JOHNSON, Billings Gazette   
Monday, 03 March 2008
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Thursday proposed a sweeping expansion of the amount of "critical habitat" for the threatened Canada lynx, including an additional 21,000 square miles in Montana, Wyoming and Idaho, a move that would increase the area of critical habitat from 1,841 square miles in the lower 48 states to 42,735.
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Interior will decide on 71 endangered species listings proposals this year PDF Print E-mail
Written by ALLISON WINTER, Greenwire   
Monday, 03 March 2008
The Interior Department will decide this year on proposed endangered species listings for 71 species, a nearly tenfold increase in the number of species listed in the Bush administration's first seven years.
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National Park Service Budget Cuts Face Questions From House Panel PDF Print E-mail
Written by ERIC BONTRAGER, E&E Daily   
Monday, 03 March 2008
When National Park Service Director Mary Bomar appears before the House Interior Appropriations Subcommittee this week, she will likely be asked how the operations budget can be so high while other agency functions face major cuts.
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Fed court rules that Navy sonar training not exempt from environmental laws PDF Print E-mail
Written by Greenwire   
Monday, 03 March 2008
A federal appeals court ruled against the Bush administration's attempt to exempt Navy sonar training from court-ordered restraints that safeguard whales and dolphins from harmful sonic blasts, backing up a lower court's orders.
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Idaho Senate panel approves $20-million aquifer plan PDF Print E-mail
Written by AP, Headwaters News   
Thursday, 28 February 2008
A bill that would give state water officials $20 million to study, monitor and develop plans for future management of 10 aquifers scattered across the state cleared another legislative hurdle Wednesday.
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The skinny on streamside setbacks in western Montana PDF Print E-mail
Written by BRIANNA RANDALL, New West, Headwaters News   
Thursday, 28 February 2008

Would you set up a tent on an empty highway? Paul Hansen, a former University of Montana professor, asked this question at a February streamside setbacks workshop in Kalispell.  Though the answer may be a simple one for many folks, a similar question has generated extensive public comment across several western Montana counties: would you build a house in the flood plain?
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New clean water guidance threatens waterways, wetlands in Southwest -- report PDF Print E-mail
Written by APRIL REESE, Land Letter   
Thursday, 28 February 2008
The most water-challenged region in the United States has the most to lose under new federal guidelines governing which bodies of water fall under the safety net of Clean Water Act protections, according to a report from environmental groups.
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