A new publishing company wants regional writers

Dear Author: We have read your manuscript with great interest at Manhattan Press. Unfortunately, it does not suit our needs.

If editors at big publishing houses don’t recognize a writer’s name, a story or an article almost automatically lands in the reject pile.

Untried Four Corners authors may not have to face that problem because two writers with business backgrounds, Roberta Summers and Ron McDonald, got sick of receiving “Dear Author” Xeroxes. Last month, they opened Silverjack Publishing in Farmington, N.M., with music, a ribbon- cutting, and book-signings by local writers.

“What we plan to do is publish regional authors,” says McDonald, a Texas native with a voice that commands attention when he recites his cowboy poems or reads from his novels, “Armstrong’s War” or “Rough Justice,” written under the name Lee Pierce.

He knows how hard unknowns struggle to get into print. He published “Armstrong’s War” in England because no American house would touch the manuscript.

“It’s the chicken-and-the-egg theory,” his Silverjack partner, Summers, says quietly. “You can’t get a job without experience and you can’t get experience without a job.”

Silverjack Publishing will create jobs for authors by developing a line of books on regional subjects, bed and breakfasts, ghosts, outlaws, history, colorful characters, cooking, or mines. About 75 percent of the titles will be nonfiction, the remainder fiction.

“We’re looking for books that we can offer through venues other than the traditional bookstore,” says Summers, who gained a marketing background managing an art gallery in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Between there, Honolulu, and Farmington, she also ran her own public relations and consulting firm, represented artists, and worked as a stockbroker. “[We want] books that can be sold through visitors centers, kitchen stores, or sports stores.”

Silverjack Publishing’s first project, due out in January, fits the plan. McDonald and his daughter, Hollie Henley, have written a cookbook entitled “What Do You Mean the Cook’s Not Mexican?”

The volume results from McDonald’s 30 years in the restaurant business. He owns La Fiesta Grande in Farmington.

“People keep asking me, how can you cook that? You¹re not Mexican,” he laughs.

The question made him realize a lot of people believe they can’t cook ethnic foods. “What Do You Mean the Cook’s Not Mexican?” tries to change their attitude by offering simple recipes from his restaurant’s kitchen and from his Mexican friends.  In addition, the book comes with three ounces of a basic Mexican spice combination that he created. “It’ll give a nice twinge, without having to have two dozen spices in your cabinet.”

Besides the cookbook, Silverjack Publishing plans to produce a CD and book by McDonald under the working title, “Cowboy Poetry and Storytelling.”

The company also hopes to buy the rights to reprint regional author Bob Rosebrough’s “A Guide to Hiking and Camping in the San Juan Mountains.”

Silverjack Publishing will meet all printing costs. “The authors don’t pay a penny,” McDonald asserts. “We¹re a legitimate small publisher. We¹re going to put out as good a product as you’d get from one of the big guys.”

Summers picked the name “Silverjack” because it captures the feeling of the Wild West. “Up near Montrose, Colorado, there’s a Silverjack Lake and a Silverjack Mine.”

Silverjack is also the main character in McDonald’s novel “Rough Justice.” “Silverjack is his alter ego,” Summers grins. “So I asked his permission to use [the name].”

“Being the modest person that I am, I said why not,” Pierce banters back.

Silverjack Publishing will begin production by printing a thousand books at a time to test the market. Successful volumes will be reprinted in runs of 5,000 or more.

As the owners of the company, Summers and McDonald have put up the money to finance Silverjack. They will also use a concept called pre-publishing, offering books at a discount before publication date, to offset the costs of printing.

Summers believes they will spend the next three years developing Silverjack into a viable entity, with help from the Quality Center for Business at San Juan College in Farmington.

Through its Enterprise Center, the QBC provides office space, equipment, computers, phones, and secretarial staff to new businesses until they they are established enough to move into their own quarters.

Business owners can also take seminars at the QBC’s Small Business Development Center to learn about marketing, budgeting, or tax rules.

“Probably the hardest thing was building a web site, and the other hardest thing was I guess I didn’t realize that I was going to have to learn a complete publishing program,” says Summers.

“It’s been like pulling teeth to get the first project out,” admits McDonald. “But it’ll be creative and rewarding.”

Silverjack Publishing has been working with the San Juan College QBC since last July, and both McDonald and Summers have learned a lot about starting a business on a solid base. “I feel like we’re going to have a real quality product,” McDonald says. “I’m excited about Silverjack.”

In addition to its current projects, Silverjack Publishing is considering three novels, and welcomes author submissions. Interested writers should send a query letter to robertasummers@msn.com or go to www.silverjackpublishing.com

“If you have something you feel you want to take a shot at getting published, we’d love to talk to you,’ grins McDonald.

“Consider it an open invitation,” adds Summers.


Published in Arts & Entertainment, January 2008

A high-density subdivision high on a mesa gets a ‘no’ vote

For the second time, the planning commission rejects a Granath Mesa proposal

For the second time, the Montezuma County Planning Commission has said no to a proposed major-impact subdivision on Granath Mesa about 2 miles above Dolores, Colo.

On Dec. 20, the planning group voted unanimously to recommend denial of Summerhaven Subdivision, which would consist of 36 lots on 160 acres at roads 31 and W.

Back in February 2007, the planning commission had said no to a very similar proposal by the same developers for a subdivision of 44 lots on the same property. That time, the vote was 5-1.

“Last time, you wanted 44 lots,” said commission member Drew Gordanier. “We asked for larger lots. They kind of did that, but not exactly. I would still like to see more, larger lots.”

DEVELOPERS WOULD LIKE TO SEE A HIGH-DENSITY SUBDIVISION ON THIS 160-ACRE PARCEL ALONG ROAD W ON GRANATH MESAThe original 44-lot proposal had also been turned down — somewhat reluctantly — by the Montezuma County Commission in June after developers appealed to that board. (The planning commission can only make recommendations, not final decisions.)

Technically, the developers weren’t seeking approval for the subdivision itself, but for the zoning necessary for such a development. They were asking for AR 3-9 zoning, which means agricultural/ residential uses with lots of 3 to 9 acres in size.

Brothers Tim and Peter Singleton, real-estate agents representing Summerhaven (the property is owned by their father and brother), have repeatedly argued that a high-density subdivision on Granath Mesa would provide much-needed affordable land with easy access to the national forest.

Their original proposal had an average lot size of 3.6 acres, while the revised plan upped that to an average of 4.4 acres. Three acres is the county’s minimum lot size.

The second time around, they also eliminated guest houses, which were allowed under the original proposal. Neighbors had argued that such houses would effectively double the density of the subdivision.

Scarcity of water and the danger of wildfire were major concerns with the original proposal. The subdivision has no domestic water supply and originally would have relied on cisterns and a well or two for water.

This time, the developers proposed allowing each homeowner to drill a well. After some discussions, the state engineer’s office with the Colorado Division of Water Resources approved the plan for more wells, sending a letter dated Dec. 6, 2007, stating, “it is the opinion of this office that the proposed water supply is adequate and would not injure decreed water rights.”

However, the same letter, by water resource engineer Heidi Frey, also noted that an existing well drilled on the property “is permitted to provide water for not more than 3 single-family dwellings. . .” and that the state would have to considered “the cumulative effect of all wells which would be located in a subdivision. . . in determining injury to decreed water rights.”

According to the developers, there are two aquifers on Granath Mesa, one around 300 feet and a deeper one at 1,100 feet.

In addition, homeowners could still use cisterns, and the town of Dolores has stated it has adequate water at its water dock to supply those.

Attorney Kelly McCabe, representing the developers, told the planning commission he believes the water issue has been addressed satisfactorily.

“A single well has been drilled there, a very successful well,” he said. “None of us can tell what would happen upon additional wells being drilled,” but he said the engineer who drilled the well believes there would likely be plenty of water for future users.

Drawing down

However, planning-commission member Andy Logan noted that, so far, there is just “one well that’s been tested for a short period of time.”

“There’s other houses that have wells up there now. We need to make sure we don’t impact them,” Logan said. He said an aquifer draw-down test needed to be conducted.

McCabe argued that concern about other water users is why the state requires augmentation through the Dolores Water Conservancy District. “The premise is that the groundwater is from the Dolores River,” McCabe said. “So the state requires these people as they drill wells to go out and replace the water.”

Not all the Dolores River water coming into McPhee Reservoir has been allocated, so the district is able to sell to individual users as needed. If the users are above McPhee, they buy augmentation water just as someone in the Montezuma Valley would buy water.

The state engineer’s office has to issue a permit for each well and ascertain what the individual’s need is. Then the person enters into an agreement with the DWCD, which requires a minimum purchase of one acre-foot per year.

However, that arrangement doesn’t address the potential impact to other homeowners on Granath Mesa who have existing wells, the planning commission noted.

“The Dolores River is not recharging a reservoir [aquifer] in the Dakota Formation, which is the 150-foot reservoir,” said commission member Jon Callender. “It’s recharged by rainfall. There’s capacity there, but those types of aquifer clearly need to be aquifertested.

“If every landowner were to drill to 1,000 feet then I have no doubt the recharge into the Dolores River is relevant. I’m unclear what wells we’re discussing.”

Peter Singleton said the 1,100-foot aquifer is the primary aquifer, while the shallower one is “hit-or-miss.” He said there is little drawing-down of aquifers in the county at present.

McCabe said the “legal requirements” had been complied with.

But Tim Hunter, an alternate on the planning commission, said the state engineer’s letter did not completely address the situation. “If there’s a draw-down effect on the neighbors, they’re going to stop allowing wells,” Hunter said. He also said having to drill down to 1,100 feet hardly made the lots affordable.

McCabe said each new well application will have to be addressed on its own merits and that the issue was beyond the purview of the planning commission that night. “This is just zoning,” he argued. “This is not the time to consider the whole subdivision. Our obligation today is to comply with state law and we think we’ve done that.”

However, attorney Jon Kelly, representing three other landowners on Granath Mesa, disagreed. “The question is whether this application is in compliance with the Montezuma County Land Use Code,” not just state law, he said.

“What Mr. McCabe is trying to do is state that the burden of proof is on the neighbors to show they will not be injured by the proposed subdivision. . . . Quite frankly, we have a lot of smoke and mirrors here in regard to the adequacy of the water,” Kelly said.

David Doran, who owns 92 acres on Road W, also took issue with the welldrilling idea. “I question whether a well on Granath Mesa as a primary source can be trusted,” he said.

Dennis Miller of Mancos, who said he is buying property on Granath Mesa and is a water resource engineer, called the augmentation plan “not realistic” in addressing concerns of existing landowners on the mesa.

“The augmentation plan is designed to replace water that might be lost downstream for senior water rights,” Miller said.

Kathleen Butler of Road 31, who has lived on the mesa all her life and has two wells, agreed. “I really would resent having this subdivision draw down the water in my wells,” she said.

Lack of water for firefighting was a special concern of the county commissioners when they rejected the original, 44-lot plan. Several Granath Mesa residents spoke on Dec. 20 to say they were still concerned with fire danger related to the subdivision.

John Cowell of Road W said he assumed that, in the event of a fire on the mesa, firefighters would concentrate their efforts where the most people and property were. “If this means in the event of a serious fire the rest of the mesa goes unprotected. . . we should pursue any legal compensatory recourse available,” he said.

Christia Cushman of Road V.6 compared the situation to the wildfires that raged across southern California last fall. “I don’t think anyone could fail to see the parallels to the situation here,” she said. Although the vegetation is different, the land is similarly dry and winds can be high, she said.

However, McCabe countered that the presence of the subdivision would actually increase fire safety. Strict firemitigation and control of brush will be required in the covenants, he said, and a 10,000-gallon water tank will be installed on the property and would be available to fight any fire on the mesa.

But the biggest issue raised by many of the neighbors who spoke against the proposal was that of compatibility.

The future of large parcels

Most parcels on the mesa are large, and although there are some residents who have expressed a preference for AR 3-9 zoning, none have had it granted yet by the county.

“It’s certainly not within the character of the mesa up there now,” Miller said.

“If this passes it will set a precedent for the mesa,” said Doran.

Attorney Kelly also argued that the proposal is incompatible with surrounding uses. “This is a unique area, a rural area with large tracts,” he said.

John Granados of Road W said 3-9- acre home sites were not suitable for the area. Currently there are 56 dwellings on the mesa, he said, and the proposal would nearly double that number.

“The county needs to consider the future of large parcels,” he said. “The rezoning of any large parcel of land to AR 3-9 may cause irreversible impacts to the county taxpayers and the environment.”

“I think the heart of the issue is not the resource issues but the compatibility issues,” agreed board member Callender.

Peter Singleton, however, said that AR 3-9 zoning is “about the only thing left for the locals of this county” and that requiring the lots to be 10 acres or larger “would be removing the working class from the area.”

“Making smaller parcels from bigger parcels – that’s the nature of development,” McCabe agreed. He also said that if the county approved this proposal it didn’t necessarily mean it had to approve more high-density proposals on the mesa. “If you approve one subdivision that doesn’t mean you have to approve somebody else,” he said.

Commission member Casey McClellan said, however, “It would be hard to deny it if it’s right next door. On what grounds?

“I think each application is unique, but each neighborhood is unique and this is a neighborhood that has lowdensity development.”

Fellow member Guy Drew concurred. “I just don’t see that this is a place for 3-acre or 4- or 5-acre lots,” he said.

Under fire

The proposal will likely go to the county commission again to see if that board feels different about it. The current commissioners are strong supporters of private property rights but also have expressed concern about the cost to taxpayers of supporting large subdivisions in remote areas.

Granath Mesa is not far from Dolores and the road to the development is paved, but access is via Dunlap Hill, a steep and narrow route that is icy in winter. The commissioners had worried about how emergency vehicles would reach the homes during cold weather and how swiftly people could evacuate during a wildfire.

Whether these concerns have been adequately addressed in the new proposal the board will have to decide.

So far, the commissioners have been loath to turn down development proposals solely on the basis of incompatibility with neighbors, although the county’s land-use scheme, Landowner- Initiated Zoning, allows them to do so.

LIZ has come under fire from area residents who prefer a more traditional zoning system, and recently it was dealt a blow in the courts as well.

In November 2007, the Colorado Court of Appeals struck down the county commissioners’ approval of a warehouse expansion near Mancos.

That decision reversed one by District Court Judge Sharon Hansen, who had upheld the county’s approval for the high-impact permit in 2004.

Jay and Lea Stringers, owners of an Internet sales operation, had proposed building a 30,000-square-foot addition to an existing warehouse on land zoned for agriculture, but neighbors had objected on the basis of traffic and incompatibility.

The Court of Appeals said the commission had “exceeded its jurisdiction and abused its discretion in approving the expansion of a nonagricultural, commercial enterprise in an area zoned for agricultural and residential use.”

The high-impact-permit process for commercial enterprises is separate from the process for residential subdivisions, but the latter has also come under its share of criticism.

Confusion?

Foes of LIZ, the unconventional zoning system under which residents choose their own zoning subject to county approval, have said it has led to high-density developments being scattered around the county without regard to compatibility.

Its supporters maintain, however, that it’s a flexible system that fits with the sentiments of the populace.

The process for getting subdivisions approved has also been criticized because it is somewhat non-traditional.

Under the Montezuma County landuse process, developers first obtain approval for the zoning and a “presketch” plan for their proposal, then come back for approval of the actual site plan. This allows for a public hearing early in the process, so citizens can express concerns about the proposal, giving developers time to alter lot sizes, roads or other features.

In the past, however, this process was sometimes compressed, leading to confusion over what the planning commission was actually voting on and what powers it had.

Also, developers wanting high-density subdivisions frequently argued at the first hearing that they were only asking for zoning approval and their lots might not actually turn out to be as small as shown on the pre-sketch plan. Then, when their AR 3-9 zoning earned an OK, they contended that their specific proposal, with 3-acre lots, couldn’t be rejected because they already had the zoning established.

That confusion was exemplified in 2006 during discussions over Lebanon Estates, a controversial 19-lot subdivision on 65 acres on Road 25 (Lebanon Road). Developers argued it would provide affordable lots for locals; neighbors objected strenuously, saying it didn’t fit the rural area.

On May 25 of that year, the county planning commission could not agree on what was termed the “development plan” for Lebanon Estates and ultimately provided no recommendation at all to the county commissioners.

Neighbors said they had had no chance to tell the planning commission their concerns about density and other factors. County planning staff admitted the process had been somewhat streamlined, but the commissioners ultimately approved Lebanon Estates.

‘Not pleasant’

Neighbors’ distaste for a subdivision is rarely enough to sink it, as was shown with Lebanon Estates.

On March 22, the county planning commission voted 3-2 against recommending approval for a zoning request by developer Don Etnier for a proposed 51-lot subdivision on 199 acres on Road L in the Totten Lake area. Several neighbors voiced concerns about traffic on the narrow Road L, changes to quality of life, and so many septic systems in a wet area.

However, unlike Summerhaven, the property lies just a couple of miles from U.S. Highway 160, and domestic water will be available.

The county commissioners have granted preliminary approval to the first phase of Etnier’s proposal, which would consist of 19 lots on 63 acres.

In 2006, some of the largest subdivisions approved by the county included Mesa Sky, 14 lots on 49 acres, Piñon Hills, 47 lots on 291 acres; and Red Tail Meadows, 12 lots on 120 acres off Highway 184 near Narraguinnep Reservoir.

In 2007, other large subdivisions that were approved included Juniper Lane (Polston), 15 lots on 74 acres; and Cottonwood Ranch, 10 lots on 120 acres. Also in the works is a 22-lot development by Sisters Two Hofsan on 155 acres on Road H south of Cortez.

Tim Singleton told the planning commission that such subdivisions could prove less compatible than Summerhaven. “I feel there are subdivisions that have been passed in other areas that created more impacts than ours would,” he said.

He mentioned Cedar Mesa, a huge subdivision across from the entrance to Mesa Verde National Park, and the 47- lot Mildred Estates a few miles north of Cortez.

Peter Singleton said the county’s subdivision process is not too lenient but rather too stringent.

“If anyone else wants to split, they can come to me and I’ll tell them what the process was really like. It’s not pleasant,” he said grimly.

Published in January 2008

Gift of the magpie

In 1906 O’Henry published a short story, “The Gift of the Magi,” about a couple that scrimped and saved to buy each other the perfect Christmas gift. The story’s end has a twist, because the woman cuts and sells her hair to buy a fob chain for her love’s pocket watch. Unknown to the wife, the husband sells his prized watch to buy her a set of combs for her long beautiful hair. It’s really a story about love and the awkwardness that flourishes when our desire to surprise each other overwhelms the need to communicate. It’s also important to understand that at the turn of the 20th century when this story supposedly took place, standard retail exchange and return policies did not exist, with or without a receipt.

I have a similar story to tell, and while it’s still about love, it lacks the innocence of O’Henry’s classic tale. Pam bought me a special gift: A small writing desk that would fit in our living room near the propane stove. I own two other desks, situated in my study, but in the winter it gets cold at that end of the house. She wanted to buy me this gift because I love words and writing is close to my heart.

Unlike the woman in the story, she told me what she intended to buy, even going so far as to show me on the Internet some desks priced within our budget. Which desk did I prefer? she wanted to know. I looked over her shoulder and nodded, but in the end I said, No, thank you very much, I could get along just fine with the desks in the writing room that never got above 62 degrees. Good writing is born of suffering, I said. She sighed.

I wanted to replace a cashmere sweater, the one she bought from a local thrift store a few months before Christmas. She loved it, because it was warm and exquisitely soft. She’d never owned cashmere. Sadly, the sweater had very tiny moth holes across the back, which were not obvious until she wore it. I asked her if she’d like a new sweater, but she explained how new cashmere is overpriced – ridiculous at best. She’d rather throw the sweater away and find something more conventional in cotton or wool. I believed her. She’s a woman of passion and conviction. I knew better than to spend our money on foolish fashion.

How the story managed to take its O’Henry twist is difficult to say. You see, I decided the desk would be nice, so I ordered one of those discounted products made of pressed sawdust from the jungles of industrial China off the Internet site we’d scouted. I even told Pam that I went ahead and ordered it, and she smiled, said she was glad. That evening I talked with my brother on the phone and he asked if I had any ideas about what Pam might like for Christmas. I mentioned the demise of her cashmere sweater, copied its size surreptitiously off the tag in the rag bag where it ended up, and speculated on the color, a kind of burnt orange. He thanked me for the idea. I smiled.

When the desk arrived, I unpacked the box, got my screwdriver and hex wrench and went to work, erecting my ivory tower. I had to drill a pilot hole where the Chinese had missed one, but overall it assembled nicely and I had a new desk to sit beside in the warmer climate of our living room. It was almost perfect, except for one detail: I couldn’t get my knees under it. I had carefully measured the space in the living room before ordering it, but only the distance between the propane stove and the wall. It would fit, I remember telling myself, with a few inches to spare. What I hadn’t checked was if would fit.

When the cashmere sweater arrived, wrapped beautifully in a box with a ribbon, I put it under the desk with all the other presents. You see, I had decided to decorate the desk with lights, since it was rather pointless as a desk. On Christmas Eve she unwrapped her present and her eyes grew wide as she held up what could have doubled for an extra-large, bright orange cashmere hunting vest. I covered my face to keep from laughing. She glanced at me with suspicion in her eyes.

Since then the sweater has been exchanged for a gift certificate, and the desk has been turned into a small bookcase near the door. In our household we have resolved to give up trying to surprise each other. Personally, I am working on reducing the number of times I end up surprising myself.

David Feela is a teacher at Montezuma-Cortez High School.

Published in David Feela

Showing respect on Veterans’ Day

Veterans’ Day has come and gone. The small, guilty parades have passed. The old veterans have been trotted out in their wheelchairs and helped into flag-draped convertibles attended by pretty young girls, all waving to the crowd. Those that remember where to put their hand or how to salute the flag do so as the Honor Guard passes, and we hear hollow speeches by politicians who didn’t serve, extolling the sacrifices and bravery of those who did.

Then it is home to the barbecue and on to the Veterans’ Day sales! I have always resented those sales and thought it a strange way for the capitalistic system to honor those who gave their all in foreign countries so that the system can then come in and profit from cheap labor to bring us inferior foreign products. One would think that on that One Day designated for paying respect to our fallen youth the shops could close their doors and forgo profit.

As I remember, this was first called Armistice Day to commemorate lost lives and the War to End All Wars. Businesses closed; people went to church and made their way to cemeteries to place wreaths and flags on the graves of these defenders of freedom. These young sons or daughters lost too soon — which of them could have made great strides in medical research or invented a combustion engine that did not pollute the air? Which could have become great statespersons, politicians or leaders, people who could bring about the world peace that every beauty-pageant queen seems to want? We will never know because they are the unknown and forgotten, except for One Day of the year when we celebrate their heroic deeds with great sales.

I would be pleased when I am to be remembered if they would have a halfprice sale on manure. Now, don’t laugh — what a tribute! It is used to grow beautiful flowers and to make our vegetables nutritious. So don’t underestimate the power of manure. It is just when it is turned into bullshit coming from the speeches of our bought-and-paid-for politicians that it becomes harmful. Blasted at us from the parade stands to make us feel guilty to the point we can hardly wait to cut and run to the great sales bringing us merchandise from countries where our youths have given their lives so that the corporate entrepreneurs can make deals with dictators we agreed to leave in power. Freedom, as they say, is not free, nor is it cheap, but we have made it cheap with the sales promos and ballyhoo of our corporations at a time when we should be paying tribute to the brave and contemplating the savageries of war.

I am a veteran, not of a war, but of a “police action,” as it was deemed by politicians, but it did the same thing: It killed our young, made whores out of young girls, killed fathers and sons, and destroyed the homes and businesses of civilians. After 53,000 casualties we walked away and began to trade with the enemy, China.

They slipped us in to Pusan, South Korea, in the dark of the night in a sampan from Japan, our past enemy, on Thanksgiving Eve. My Thanksgiving dinner was in a mess kit: turkey, potatoes, dressing, cranberry sauce, and a half a peach, topped with a tasty brown gravy over the whole thing. It was prepared by military cooks under harsh conditions, not by private contractors overcharging the American taxpayers.

Let’s face it: The only winners in a war are the corporations. One would think that One Day out of the year they could close their doors and pretend they care about the fallen and maimed veterans.

You will not see me at any of their mattress sales. I’ll be hanging my head in shame for those who go, and asking myself, Why war?

Galen Larson lives in rural Montezuma County, Colo.

Published in Galen Larson

Extremism and the culture defense

“I don’t approve, but it’s their culture.”

Oh, if only it were possible to fine everyone who says that a dollar or two — then there might be enough money to help people who find themselves victimized by “their culture.”

But the defense is cropping up all over, and not just from the mouth of Whoopi Goldberg, who suggested Michael Vick’s animal cruelty was part of “his culture.” The culture defense is being used to justify — at least in part — the crimes human beings commit against one another.

Case in point: Polygamist cult leader Warren Jeffs.

“I’m not saying polygamists are right or wrong, but what they are doing is part of their culture, their religion,” St. George, Utah, resident Randy Shaw told Time magazine in September. Shaw wanted to know why the government was suddenly interested when polygamy had “been going on forever here.”

His question is a fair one, but it’s the opening statement that gives pause. Because we shouldn’t give a damn whether something like child rape — to which Jeffs was convicted of being an accomplice — can be seen as part of a culture. We should give a damn that it happens and we should stop defending it out of a reluctance to offend its practitioners.

Not all polygamists are Jeffs’ brand of polygamist, of course, and polygamy’s “rightness” when it occurs between truly consenting adults is a matter of opinion. The issue is Jeffs’ particular practice, in which very young girls become the plural wives of (usually) older men. They are frequently put on the state’s dole, along with whatever children they produce, since the man may have only one legal marriage. They can, at Jeffs’ whim, be “given” to another man. And that is because, to Jeffs and “their culture,” they are nothing more than breeding stock.

You bloody well should have a problem with that.

You should also have a problem with people inclined to protect radical Islam (also called Islamism) as “cultural.”

Debating the particular merits of Islam is beyond the scope of both this piece and its author’s knowledge. And — anticipating critics here — fighting Islamism is not why we truly went to war in Iraq; it’s merely one of the everchanging justifications for both this war and the ongoing assault on civil liberties. (Indeed, if the latter is taken to its logical conclusion, America will be no freer than an Islamist state. But take comfort. The rest of the world will acknowledge it as our “culture” and won’t dare criticize.)

But the debate isn’t beyond the knowledge of Ayaan Hirsi Ali, born and raised a Muslim. In both “Infidel” and “The Caged Virgin,” Ali eloquently tells the world how the strictures of Islam are abusive to women and how the Islamist “culture” itself is in need of enlightenment.

She says it’s critical for Muslims living freely in Western countries to push that enlightenment, but it hasn’t been pushed hard enough.

Only a comparatively few Muslims are trying and “these attempts to liberate Muslims in the West are being frustrated by vehemently negative reactions, from, of all people, secular Westerners. The few enlightened Muslims run into direct opposition from Western cultural relativists who say, ‘It’s part of the culture, you shouldn’t detract from that.’” (Emphasis added). “Or ‘If you criticize Islam, you hurt your people and that makes you a racist or Islamaphobe.’”

Ali nonetheless takes issue with quite a few “cultural” practices within Islam that specifically affect women.

Hers is not a theoretical argument. Ali is opposed to forcible, arranged marriages (at which the bride need not even be present — it’s purely a transaction amongst men); female genital mutilation (not remotely comparable to male circumcision, by the way, as it involves the excision of genitalia and sometimes infibulation, or sewing together of the vaginal walls); physical abuse and so-called honor killings.

Ali suffered the first two practices mentioned. All practices mentioned are specifically about female obedience and a religious obsession with “purity” that falls completely on the backs of women. Ali argues the practices are sanctioned by Islam, even those practices (like FGM) that began as non- Islamic tribal traditions.

Bear in mind, too, that even though she’s now “safely” in the West, Ali’s views have brought her death threats. The murder of her filmmaking partner, Theo Van Gogh, proves those threats are not idle.

The least we can do is consider Ali’s fundamental question: Why can’t we talk openly and honestly about Islam?

Indeed, why is there so often an attempt to rationalize the unthinkable? Cultural differences make for gray areas, but there are some things that are black and white.

Forcing girls to become sex slaves as part of “plural marriage” is wrong. Tying it to religion is wrong. Treating women as brood mares that can be rotated to another stud whenever the pen-keeper decrees it shall be so is wrong. Cutting girls’ genitalia is wrong. Viewing them as nothing more than dangerous sexual objects that must be rigidly controlled, lest the world come to a screeching halt, is simply insane.

And, guess what? We don’t have to tolerate it. We should, as Ali counsels, reject it outright and emphatically.

This does not mean we have to make a point of spitting in the face of anyone who believes differently. It means we have to be strong enough to defend our own beliefs and to counter insanity with reason.

Even if it’s offensive.

Katharhynn Heidelberg is a journalist in Montrose, Colo.

Published in Katharhynn Heidelberg

Despite storm, forecasters worried about dry weather

Weather’s capricious nature makes it a challenge to predict accurately, a case in point this month.

Snow finally arrived Dec. 1, after weeks of unseasonably warm, dry days. Long-term forecasts are an inexact science, to be sure, proving perhaps that you really don’t need a weatherman to tell which way the wind blows.

But, anyway, much-needed moisture finally arrived in the Four Corners, making it the proper start of the winter season. For the Montezuma Valley, the southern snow squall dropped more than 1 inch of precipitation in the first eight hours of December, quickly exceeding the month’s total average, reports Jim Andrus, a local observer for the National Weather Service.

The mix of rain and snow brought the year-to-date average to 89 percent, with a whole month to go to reach the average annual 13.21 inches.

Prior to the rain and snow, many people had been enjoying the mild temperatures of this year’s extensive Indian summer. But according to the National Weather Service, such warming trends are a bad sign for winter snowpack levels.

“We’re pessimistic this year, but we would be happy to be wrong,” commented forecaster Joe Ramey.

The NWS Grand Junction office predicts below-average winter snowfall this season for the San Juan Mountains, Southwest Colorado and southeastern Utah.

They blame La Niña, a still-unexplained climate phenomenon that causes significant cooling of the Pacific off the coastline of Peru. Climatologists say that this occasional drop in sea temperature at the equator forces the jet stream to push storms farther north.

“We are heading into a moderate La Niña winter, and that means storms will likely track along the Pacific Northwest and Northern Rockies, leaving the Southwest and Four Corners dry,” Ramey said, adding that the pattern is already happening.

The impacts of La Niña, and her brother El Niño (the opposite effect where the equatorial Pacific warms, causing more snow locally), are seen less in Colorado than in northern and southern regions.

Weaker La Niña patterns don’t affect us much, Ramey explained, but this one looks stronger because the Pacific cooling has been occurring steadily since last spring, and is expected to last into March.

“The Four Corners area has a fairly strong correlation to drier-than-normal conditions under moderate to strong La Niñas like this one.”

Yet Mother Earth doesn’t always comply. In 2001-02, for instance, there was no El Niño or La Niña, yet it was one of the driest years on record, fueling the destructive Missionary Ridge, Hayman and Coal Seam fires in Colorado. Then in 2003-04 there was an El Niño winter (Pacific waters warmed) but instead of a huge winter like the model predicts, the San Juans had below-average snowpack.

“With climate change starting to influence everything, we’re not quite sure what normal means now,” Ramey noted. “There is always the chaotic nature of weather. The probability is that it will be below normal this winter, but it is not guaranteed.”

In arid Colorado, often just one storm can bring precipitation averages back to normal levels, as was the case Dec. 1.

That storm dropped 2 feet at Telluride, 20 inches at Purgatory and 40 inches at Wolf Creek. The sudden accumulation prompted avalanche warnings and control measures.

Durango received 1.95 inches of precipitation and Cortez received 1.1 inches of rain.

The last moderate La Niña winters like the one now happening were in 1998-99 and 1999-2000. Both years had below-average snowfall.

Locally, precipitation averages were down significantly for October and November, which featured a run of 70- degree days, very little rain and one small snowstorm Nov. 23.

Andrus reported that October and November were particularly dry, showing 25 percent and 7 percent of normal respectively. Those warmer-than-normal conditions have forecasters concerned.

“I’ve got strong misgivings this year. It could be as bad as the winter of 2002,” Andrus said.

In addition to hurting agriculture and causing wildfires, La Niña conditions can hit wildlife hard as well. Bears are expected to suffer higher cub mortality this year from lack of sufficient food resources prior to hibernation, said Andy Holland, a wildlife biologist with the Division of Wildlife’s Durango office.

“It’s a tough year for bears,” he said. “They were involved in more road accidents because they had to roam into populated areas searching for food. And we expect the population to take a hit from food failure and lower reproductive rates. But they’re adaptive and will be there when conditions improve.”

Ironically, it was a late spring frost, not drought, that destroyed the berry and acorn crops relied on by bears. But drought conditions deplete vegetation critical for the omnivores’ longterm health.

Even with no snow, bears still hibernate, Holland explained. “Lack of food in the winter months triggers the hibernation, but with so little snow and warmer temperatures they went in later and may wake up and wander in and out of their dens a bit more.”

In the short term, elk and deer benefit from milder winters. This hunting season went especially well for them and harvest numbers were way down.

“They were scattered everywhere this year,” reported David Peterson, a local hunting and wildlife author. “There was no snow up higher to push them to lower feeding grounds.”

Published in -December 2007

Victory for a view: Commnet opts not to put a cell tower on Bluff’s ridgeline

A 150-foot cell tower once proposed to be built on a scenic ridgeline near Bluff, Utah, apparently will have a different home.

A PHOTO ILLUSTRATION OF HOW A 150-FOOT CELL TOWER WOULD HAVE LOOKED ON THE RIDGELINE ABOVE BLUFF, UTAHIn response to widespread community objection among Bluff residents to despoiling one of the town’s most prominent geologic features, Commnet Wireless recently announced it is pursuing an alternative site on the Navajo reservation for the cell-phone tower rather than the initially preferred Bluff location, which only weeks ago appeared to be pretty much a done deal.

But organized opposition — including a petition signed by more than 200 people and a website vividly portraying the tower’s impact — culminated in a crowded town meeting in late October where the overwhelming sentiment was against construction of an antenna that would dominate what’s referred to as “the viewshed” for miles in every direction.

“In response to that community in put, Commnet is currently evaluating a new location for its proposed tower location on the south side of the San Juan River, near the San Juan County TV site which is on land owned by the Navajo Nation,” the company announced in a paid advertisment in the Nov. 28 San Juan Record. “Citizens stated that they viewed this site as being impacted by the existing structures [electric power lines and towers run nearbyl] and therefore their choice as the best location for a cell towner in the Bluff vicinity.”

Supporters of the Bluff location, including San Juan County Sheriff Mike Lacy, had emphasized the need to have communications improved as quickly as possible for public-safety reasons, and predicted gaining approval for the tower on Navajo land could be a cumbersome process involving years of dealing with the Diné bureacracy.

But apparently efforts are under way to expedite that process, according to Charles DeLorme, head of the county’s economic development office.

“[CommNet] responded in a very positive and concilitory fashion to the majority of residents’ concerns over the viewshed issue,” DeLorme said, adding that Commnet representative Jack Doggett had informed him a survey of the new site was under way and a resolution for the authorization had been introduced through the Mexican Water Chapter of the Diné Nation, as well as a support resolution from the Red Mesa Chapter, many of whose residents would benefit from the service.

“To be perfectly blunt,” DeLorme added, “NTUA — Navajo Communications — could move forward without chapter resolution on these particular types of issues, but the prudent thing to do, in my opinion, was to network it from the chapter level from the beginning and find out if you’re going to run into opposition.

“So that’s what they’ve done, and they’ve received chapter resolutions supporting this.”

He said officials of the Trail of the Ancients Scenic Byway, which wends through the Four Corners states, had also received e-mails objecting to building the tower above Bluff.

“Commnet is undertaking environmental surveys of the new site and consulting with the Navajo Chapters,” the release said. “As with the first [Bluff] location, the public notice will soon be issued including information regarding the specific tower and location.” The site would be located on an area of Red Mesa known to some as Echo Mesa.

There are still those in the Bluff area opposed to a cell tower being built anywhere because of health concerns and a belief that the transmissions disrupt the flight patterns of honeybees, DeLorme noted.

“There may be some issues there,” he said. “To be frank, there are probably some long-term effects that we may not know of . . . until 40 or 50 years down the road.”

DeLorme, himself a resident of the Bluff area who said he’d supported the tower there even though it would have been visible out his bedroom window, came under severe criticism by fellow Bluffian Bob Bushart, one of the organizers of the opposition, for an email DeLorme had sent to some Navajo reservation residents prior to the Oct. 23 meeting.

The e-mail urged them to support the original location and accused white opponents, who were referred to as “the belagana,” of having little regard for the Native Americans’ plight.

“All the protestors have their land line telephones and could not care less that many don’t have that option,” DeLorme wrote in the widely circulated e-mail, urging them to “mobilize our pro-Bluff forces among the Dineh community.”

Bushart wrote a detailed, acerbic letter to the San Juan Record castigating DeLorme for his statements and pre- sented a petition to the county commission asking for DeLorme’s termination, which the commission declined to accept.

DeLorme said Bushart had a personal axe to grind because of prior conflicts between them, but conceded the e-mail went beyond good taste.

“There’s no excuse, perhaps, for some of the statements that have offended people that I may have made, which were on my personal email and personal time, but there’s also no excuse for personal attacks,” DeLorme said.

He said the e-mail had been investigated by the county and discussed in a meeting with the human-resources head.

“I expressed my apologies for offending anyone and I was censured in that meeting for the use of my language,” he said. “It was dealt with in a proper HR fashion in accordance with our policies, and that was it.

“But it wasn’t it as far as Bob was concerned — he says I’ve created divisiveness among the Anglo and Diné communities,” he added, saying that the wide circulation by Bushart of an e-mail intended for just two people only fanned the flames.

“If he’s concerned about divisiveness, he’s certainly added a tremendous amount of fuel to the fire I started.”

Bushart said he and the other opponents are “pretty happy [Commnet] decided to move it, if indeed they do. The public notice certainly implied they’re moving it, so I think we’re pretty much believing it.”

He denied his opposition to the tower and criticism of DeLorme were rooted in any personal conflict and scoffed at the idea DeLorme had been disciplined by the county.

“This was never personal, and it was always in conjunction with his position as a county employee,” Bushart said. “If he apologized publicly at a commission meeting, I must not have been there,” said Bushart, who said he attends nearly all of the meetings.

DeLorme said he had no clear idea of any timeline for completion of the new tower, but apparently Commnet is expecting fairly smooth sailing, according to its public notice:

“Commnet looks forward to providing this cellular service in 2008,” it says.

Published in -December 2007

Monumental issues: Reaction varies to the draft plan for Canyons of the Ancients, but defining roads is a contentious point

 

THE PAINTED HAND SITE AT CANYONS OF THE ANCIENTS NATIONAL MONUMENTIt’s a pair of documents totaling around 900 pages, but so far the main points of dispute involving Canyons of the Ancients National Monument’s draft resource management plan boil down to two issues:

• What, exactly, is a road?

• Is it appropriate to consider a cultural “landscape” and “community” when making decisions about specific projects?

“The biggest issues are the ‘community’ discussion and the definition of a road,” said monument Manager LouAnn Jacobson. “At the open houses [in October in Durango, Cortez and Denver] there wasn’t much other than those two – just some isolated concerns.”

With the public comment period on the plan and its accompanying draft environmental impact statement not ending until Jan. 30, however, there is plenty of time for more issues to emerge.

The draft plan, which has been in the works for five year, offers five alternatives for managing the 165,000-acre monument. Alternative I is “no action,” meaning to leave things essentially as they are.

Alternative II is the most restrictive and strongly emphasizes protection of resources at the price of closing many roads and trails and restricting uses. Alternatives III and IV are friendlier to resource use and development such as oil-drilling, grazing and recreation.

Alternative V, the BLM’s preferred alternative, seeks a compromise between extremes.

So far, most reaction to the longawaited plan, and the BLM’s preferred alternative, has been cautiously approving.

“It looks to me like the preferred alternative was a pretty decent attempt to reflect what our committee came up with,” said Chuck McAfee, who served on the monument advisory committee, a group started in 2003 to help shape the management plan, for three years.

“Our overall take is that we’re pretty happy with the preferred alternative, both the transportation plan and the way they’re dealing with recreation,” said Amber Clark of the San Juan Citizens Alliance’s Cortez office, “the main exception being the definition of a road.

AN ANCESTRAL PUEBLOAN SITEO N CANNONBALL MESA“We’re very displeased with how they’ve decided to define a road and, more than that, we’re concerned about the far-reaching impacts it could have.”

A bad precedent?

The road issue stems down to efforts by the BLM, the m o n u m e n t ’ s m a n a g i n g agency, to wrestle with a line in the presidential proclamation that created the monument in June 2000. The proclamation states: “For the purpose of protecting the objects identified above, the Secretary of the Interior shall prohibit all motorized and mechanized vehicle use off road, except for emergency or authorized administrative purposes.”

“Mechanized vehicles” obviously would include bicycles – but mountainbiking in the Sand and East Rock canyons area on the monument is enormously popular. The single-track trails there are considered world-class by fat-tire enthusiasts.

The issue of whether the practice is consistent with the monument’s proclamation was raised in a Jan. 15, 2004, letter from the National Trust for Historic Preservation, a national nonprofit. The trust considered suing over the issue, but a compromise was reached that re-routed some bike trails and let cycling continue while the BLM developed its management plan.

The draft plan attempts to handle the problem by saying, “…a ‘road’ is defined as an open way for the passage of vehicles, persons or animals on land, regardless of the type of travel; and ‘off-road’ is defined as cross-country travel between designated roads.”

That would mean that mountain-biking in Sand Canyon was not actually “off-road” because the trails would be labeled roads.

The problem with that, Clark said, is the definition could be used nationwide to mean that any foot or animal path acquires road status.

“We’re not against mountain-biking in Sand Canyon, but we’re concerned that a legal definition of a road like that could be used on public lands all across the West,” she said. “It’s a really bad precedent to be setting.”

At a Nov. 30 meeting of the monument advisory committee, which has become a subgroup of the Southwest Resource Advisory Committee (a citizens group that advises the BLM in Southwest Colorado), members of the committee likewise voiced concerns about the definition.

STANDING WALLS OF ANCESTRAL PUEBLOAN SITES SUCH AS THIS WOULD BE ALLOWED TO DETERIORATE NATURALLY UNDER THE BLM'S PREFERRED MANAGEMENT ALTERNATIVE FOR THE NATIONAL MONUMENT“Public foot and horse trails are listed as roads?” asked Bill Lipe, an archaeologist. “That really does seem to open it up.”

Chris Majors, a rancher who holds grazing allotments on about one-quarter of the land on the monument, expressed incredulity as well. “This loophole was all created for the mountain bikes in Sand Canyon?” he asked.

Jacobson said that was correct, adding that all the plan’s official roads are two-track or wider except those popular single-track routes in Sand and East Rock canyons. However, she said, the Sand Canyon trail was authorized in 1987 and has always been used by cyclists – though their numbers have exploded in recent years.

She said the BLM is getting numer- ous suggestions on how to clarify the language so it would allow biking without being so broad, and she is hopeful of finding a solution.

Landscape planning

The other broad issue that has been raised about the draft plan is its emphasis on protecting cultural resources on a “landscape” scale. The monument was established to protect the many Ancestral Puebloan and other historic artifacts and ruins it contains; it has the highest known density of archaeological sites in the United States.

“The Monument . . .. was established to preserve these objects on a landscape scale,” the plan’s executive summary states. “The scientific value of the objects is enhanced when their relationship is examined in a broad comparative context rather than individually. . . Therefore, protection of the objects at this landscape level is critical.”

There is likewise an emphasis on protecting cultural “communities” rather than just individual sites. Under the BLM’s preferred management alternative for extraction of fluid minerals (oil and gas), for instance, “no direct impacts to cultural resource communities and/or sites would be allowed.”

At the Nov. 30 meeting of the monument subgroup, committee member Bob Clayton of Kinder-Morgan CO2 Co., which extracts carbon dioxide in much of the monument for transport to the Texas oil fields, argued that protecting “communities” could be a hardship for oil and gas companies and did not always make sense.

For instance, he said, the area lying between two cultural sites might have been cleared for farming by the Ancestral Puebloans, making it an artificial landscape anyway, “so why not drill there?”

“To me it maybe looks like what it did in those days,” Clayton said. He added that oil and gas disturbance is not permanent but generally lasts “20, 30, 40 years, which in time is small, so I guess I have trouble looking at how that [drilling] is having an effect.”

MANAGING RECREATION IN GENERAL AND MOUNTAIN-BIKING IN PARTICULAR IN THE POPULAR SAND CANYON AREA IS A THORNY ISSUE FOR THE BLMArchaeologist Mark Varien, also on the committee, said researchers define sites as areas with the densest concentrations of artifacts, but areas between them still contain artifacts that show how that area was used. Farming areas might have a scattering of tools, plus pollen in the soil to show what was being farmed.

“So the impact [of drilling] is erasing that information,” he said. “It’s not just how it looked, but the fact there is some evidence in those areas.” However, Varien emphasized he was not saying all such areas should be protected.

Montezuma County Commissioner Gerald Koppenhafer said he would like to see the language about “community” and “landscape” removed entirely from the plan because the terms are too broad. “Any decision you make could be challenged,” Koppenhafer said.

Varien and Lipe likewise had concerns about the terms. Varien said the concept of Geographic Area Development Plans (GADPs), which is also used in the plan, would be preferable. GADPs are developed when an oil or gas project is proposed and identify optimal locations for wells, production facilities, access and utility corridors.

“Seems to me you have the tools you need,” Varien said. “You don’t need the community and landscape concepts.”

Lipe agreed. “They’re useful, but it’s hard to say how you would use them on an actual landscape.”

Even Clark told the Free Press she had doubts about how the BLM would apply the concepts on the ground. “As it is, they just look at the immediate area [when considering a project such as an oil or gas well],” she said. “They can grant a well pad between two cultural sites rather than looking at a larger area. I think [considering the landscape] is a really good goal, but it’s not completely clear to us how they would do that.”

A lot of zeroes

Of course, other possible points of contention are emerging about the draft plan. The document addresses five main planning issues: Cultural resources, oil and gas, rangeland resources, recreation, and transportation. The BLM’s preferred alternative contains potentially controversial recommendations in each category.

Concerning cultural resources, under the preferred alternative, 13 to 25 Ancestral Puebloan sites would be categorized as “developed” for public visitation, including Lowry, Sand Canyon, and Painted Hand pueblos, Saddlehorn Hamlet in Sand Canyon, and the Escalante and Dominguez pueblos at the Anasazi Heritage Center. Such sites would be publicized, stabilized, and provided with some infrastructure.

Other sites would remain for visitors to explore on their own in the backcountry. In addition, the standing walls of ruins would be documented and then allowed to deteriorate naturally, with some stabilization allowed at the discretion of the monument manager, such as in cases where walls were damaged by vandalism.

Jacobson told the monument committee Nov. 30 that Native American tribes had said their preference was “to allow sites to deteriorate and go back to the earth.” But also, she said, the BLM simply doesn’t have money to stabilize ruins.

The 1985 management plan for the monument, then managed as an Area of Critical Environmental Concern, identified 240 sites with standing architecture and called for stabilizing all 240, Jacobson said. “We’re talking millions and millions,” she said, “a lot of zeroes, to stabilize that many sites.”

The BLM has spent more than $1.5 million just to stabilize Lowry Pueblo, she said. “And then you have to maintain it year after year,” she said. “To stabilize 240 sites is an unimaginable investment to begin with and to continue to maintain them is even more unimaginable. Right now we have no funding for stabilization at all.”

Addressing multiple use

The preferred alternative for oil and gas management would allow up to 880 acres of new leases for the purpose of protecting against drainage, which is when a well is draining a fluid resource from under lands that aren’t leased. In that case, those acres could be leased.

Clark told the Free Press the San Juan Citizens Alliance is fairly pleased with the plan in regard to oil and gas “Overall that’s a pretty small number [of acres] and it comes with a no-surface-occupancy stipulation,” she said. Also, no new roads would be allowed.

But at the Nov. 30 meeting, Clayton, who is production supervisor for Kinder Morgan’s carbon-dioxide operation, said he is concerned the plan would be too restrictive. “Any developer trying to use public land for natural resources is doing it because of public demand,” he said. “We’re not just out there for the fun of it.”

He reiterated concerns about the use of the term “landscape,” saying the monument “should protect identified sites, not whole landscapes.”

“Most of the survey work and discoveries were done because of our presence,” Clayton said.

Kinder-Morgan is seeking to drill a new well on Burro Point on the monument. “We thought we pre-planned well enough, but we’re running into the words “cultural community’ and ‘cultural landscape’,” Clayton said.

Varien asked whether Burro Point would not have posed problems for the CO2 company anyway because of its high density of sites. Clayton said the sites are indeed dense but said the company wants to locate there because “of its geology and the richness of the CO2 source.”

Jacobson said there are 43 sites within 100 feet of the proposed area of disturbance. She said the BLM is having trouble getting a good environmental assessment regarding the Burro Point proposal and is concerned about cumulative impacts there, not only to cultural resources but to recreation and natural resources.

“Just because the monument addresses multiple use doesn’t mean the monument managers don’t have the responsibility of making sure that multiple use is done right,” Varien said.

Cutting AUMs

The preferred alternative would cut the number of AUMS (animal units grazing for one month, defined as a mature cow and a suckling calf) permitted on the monument from the current 8,492 to 6,437. Five grazing allotments totaling 124 AUMs would be eliminated, but four of those are not being used now anyway. All are north of McElmo Canyon in an area seeing heavy recreation and considered to have low forage potential.

Also a rotational grazing system would be implemented, with spring grazing allowed within an allotment no more than one year out of three, and minimum standards for stubble height would be set in riparian systems.

Those ideas meet with approval from the environmental community. “We hope that the agency will actually carry out the improved grazing regimes that it is proposing,” said Roni Egan, executive director of Great Old Broads for Wilderness.

She said much of the monument’s rangeland is in poor condition and “full of noxious weeds.”

“The riparian areas are hammered, by virtue of their having been totally mismanaged long before the monument was ever proclaimed,” Egan said.

“We support what they’re proposing,” Clark agreed. “The five allotments are so small and have been vacant, so it’s not affecting people’s livelihood. I think the BLM was conscious of that. It sounds like they have really worked with the leaseholders and come to an agreement.”

However, some members of the monument subgroup voiced concern about the grazing proposals, particularly the stubble-height standard.

“If we’re going to be judged on that,” Majors asked, “what about when there are 500 or 600 elk on it?”

Jacobson agreed that the movement of elk westward onto the monument has become a concern. She said in regard to the stubble standard and other concerns, she would have to check to see whether the monument had flexibility or whether those standards were set by the agency statewide.

An end to target-shooting

For average citizens, the plan’s recreation and travel components are probably of the most interest.

THE PROXIMITY OF OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENT TO CULTURAL "COMMUNITIES" IS APOINT OF DISCUSSION REGARDING THE DRAFT MANAGEMENT PLAN FOR CANYONS OF THE ANCIENTSPenny Wu, recreation planner for the monument and San Juan Public Lands, said there are some significant differences among the five alternatives in terms of managing recreation.

The preferred alternative would define the monument in terms of recreation management zones, each of which would be managed differently.

The BLM’s proposal would allow 169 miles of access roads open to motorized and mechanized uses, as well as non-motorized. A number of user-created roads would be closed.

In contrast, under Alternative II there would be only 139 miles of motorized/ mechanized roads, and under Alternative IV there would be 213 miles and no user-created roads would be closed.

Under the preferred alternative, the popular trails in Sand and East Rock canyons, East Fork and Rock Creek all would be designated for foot, bike and horse. Under the most restrictive alternative, II, only the Sand Canyon trail would be open, and it would be limited to foot travel.

At Pedro Point on the far western edge of the monument, the BLM proposes to have public access by foot and horse only. But under Alternative IV the route would be open to all vehicles, as it is now.

At Woods Canyon, under the preferred alternative, there will be no designated routes. “You can explore on foot and by horses but there would be no motorized or bike trails,” Wu said.

That prospect pleases Clark, who said some old maps showed roads in the area, but really there are none. “It’s a pretty remote part of the monument and it didn’t make sense to have public roads in it,” Clark said.

Under the preferred alternative, camping is allowed throughout the monument except in pueblo sites such as Sand Canyon, Lowry and Painted Hand, Wu said. Under Alternative II, camping would be banned in all Special Recreation Management Areas, of which there are six designated in the plan.

The plan would ban recreational shooting throughout the monument, although hunting would still be allowed in accordance with Colorado law. Target-shooting is causing problems such as vandalism, littering and danger to passersby, monument planners say.

“There are pieces of clay pigeons everywhere, especially at a site near Moqui Lake,” Wu said, “along with cans, bottles and trash. People are plinking at rock faces and signs.”

Clark believes the ban is a good idea. “There is a definite potential for it to impact cultural sites, and it makes sense for safety reasons,” she said.

But Majors told the monument subgroup the ban was “a little extreme” and wouldn’t stop vandals anyway. “Anybody who’s going to shoot an Indian ruin or a sign or a cow is going to do it regardless of whether it’s legal,” he said.

Rock-climbing is also emerging as an issue on the monument. The preferred alternative would allow rappeling, bouldering and rock-climbing in designated areas only.

Ivan Messenger of the new Four Corners Climbing Coalition told the subgroup the number of designated areas should be broadened, adding that the coalition would work with the BLM on access and other issues.

Squeezed out?

One concern related to transportation is that voiced by private citizens owning inholdings on the monument. There are about 17,500 acres of private inholdings under 31 different owners.

“The biggest concern I’ve heard from private landowners is making sure their access is identified and they have the right to use their private property as they want to,” Koppenhafer said.

He suggested the BLM meet with the county planning department to develop consistency among maps and establish a procedure for such landowners to acquire a formal right-of-way.

One private inholder, Gala Pock, said she is concerned about the BLM’s stance on not widening access roads. “As farm equipment becomes wider, if we can’t widen the roads we won’t be able to farm our land,” she said.

Jacobson noted that it is illegal to widen roads across public lands without a permit, regardless of whether the land is in the monument.

Pock also said, “I think closing usercreated roads, which is all of them, is going to be the death of agriculture.”

Carl Knight of the Ute Mountain Ute tribe, a member of the subgroup, also voiced concern about the impacts of the monument plan. He said regulations — “endangered species, wilderness areas, road closures and decreasing the permittees and their livestock” — are “squeezing people out” of their private land.

The monument subgroup agreed to work on language for recommendations it will make to the Southwest RAC regarding changes it wants in the plan.

The document is not final, Jacobson emphasized.

“It’s a draft,” she said. “It’s something to be put out there for discussion.”

Published in -December 2007

A life on canvas: Celebrating the art of Stanton Englehart

Montezuma-Cortez High School art teacher Sharon Englehart recalls her father, Stanton Englehart, studying art in the 1960s. “I can remember living in a Quonset hut. There was always an easel there.”

OnSTANTON ENGLEHART'S PAINTING "BATTLE ROCK, MCELMO"ce he earned both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in fine art from the University of Colorado, Boulder, Stanton Englehart spent over 50 years founding the art department at Fort Lewis College, becoming a master fly fisherman, and producing more than 5,000 paintings, mostly related to what he loved best, the Four Corners landscape.

This month, the Anasazi Heritage Center near Dolores opens a show of Englehart’s work entitled, “Seasons on the Plateau.” The exhibition runs from Dec. 9 through March 30.

Put together by Englehart, his wife, Pat, and his son, Michael, as well as Sharon, “Seasons on the Plateau” centers on 10 large oils, 60-by-72-inch paintings from a calendar series inspired by light and landscape of the Colorado Plateau. The exhibit’s name derives from another huge painting in four parts, which will also be on display.

“I think they’re the epitome of his technical ability as an oil painter,” says Sharon Englehart.

They also demonstrate his connection to the land. “The art is tied to his life,” says Pueblo Community College teacher, artist, and writer Jules Masterjohn.

She has assembled a book, “Stanton Englehart: A Life on Canvas,” under the auspices of the Durango Art Center, Fort Lewis College, and numerous private donors. Celebrating his life and work, the volume will complement the show with a biography, chronology of the artist’s life, and essays on his paintings.

Stanton Englehart declined to be interviewed for this article.

“My understanding of Stanton’s work is that his connection to the landscape, and more specifically the horizon line, has been a stabilizing force throughout his art work,” says Masterjohn.

In addition to the large oil landscape paintings, “Seasons on the Plateau” contains 10 long narrow mixed-media landscapes, six or seven figurative images, including one of Pat Englehart at Lake Powell, where the family spent 30 summers, and 25 mixed-media pieces called the Women Series.

Sharon Englehart describes the Women Series as “just incredible drawings of women that have some kind of restrictions with them. There are lines. There are boxes. There are beautiful shapes that they’re emerging out of.”

Created in the 1960s and ’70s, the Women Series expresses Stanton Englehart’s concern with the environment. Masterjohn believes he uses the female figure to symbolize the earth, and to suggest that misuse of technology would destroy the planet.

In addition to the Woman Series, Sharon Englehart hopes to add six or seven of her father’s animal paintings to “Seasons on the Plateau.” In these images, goats, dogs, and buffalo show the scale of Four Corners geologic formations, or explore human folly.

“Animals are doing these ridiculous things,” says Masterjohn. “He used his art as a way to make sense of the world.”

“He is a prodigious reader,” adds his daughter. “As far back as I can remember he was not only reading, but studying other artists’ work. He also writes all the time.”

The son of a Lewis, Colo., dairy farmer, Stanton Englehart grew up understanding that people did not receive educations; but pursued them, both in and out of the classroom.

He also knew how to work for what he wanted. Married to Pat while still in high school, he held many jobs before attending college. While working on his degrees, he held down a night shift at a Conoco station in Boulder. When he finally became a teacher, he considered art a continuous growth process.

As he chose the paintings for “Seasons on the Plateau,” Sharon Englehart saw him touching them, as if considering how he might have better shaped composition or color.

“Stanton Englehart wanted his work to be understood as a whole,” says Masterjohn. “He didn’t consistently title or date his works. He didn’t want to make a living from paintings. He had his living as a teacher.”

“The work also changed and grew rapidly,” says his daughter.

Yearly shows at Fort Lewis College would become “a rite of spring” to see his latest season.

Masterjohn believes Stanton Englehart’s mixed-media pieces served as both emotional and technical studies for his large paintings. Once he knew what he wanted to say and how he wanted to say it, he used big oils as a public forum for his ideas.

Stanton Englehart received national recognition in the 1980s. Southwest Art Magazine wrote a feature article on him. He had a solo exhibition in the Kansas Gallery of Fine Art in Topeka, and participated in the Second Annual Western Art Classic at The Art Center of Minnesota, Wayzata. Durango’s Toh-a- Tin gallery began representing his work.

In the 1990s, he had a solo show at CU in Boulder. Denver’s Mile High Center featured him in a one-person show.

“Anybody in the art field who is aware of his work recognizes that he is one of the finest contemporary oil painters in this part of the country, and probably the United States, in the last 50 years,” says his daughter.

Masterjohn believes that coming from an agricultural background that honored work, Englehart understood his place in his community and in the landscape. He enfused the joy of self-discipline and accomplishment into his oils.

“It’s been just like Christmas to go back through these stacks of paintings,” says Sharon Englehart. “He’s just as excited about the show as we are.”

“Stanton’s life is very deep and rich,” adds Jules Masterjohn. “Many things have interested him, topically as well as visually.”

Published in -December 2007, Arts & Entertainment

The landfill poet

As election season draws near, I want to announce my candidacy, to put my own name forward, to nominate myself for a prestigious title: Poet Laureate of the Montezuma County Landfill.

The truth of the matter is this: There are only three driveways located closer to the landfill gates than my own, and none of these neighbors writes poetry. I think I’m the most qualified for the position.

During the entire history of literature I don’t think there has ever been a landfill poet. And no wonder. At the landfill, Americans spend their energy getting rid of things, not memorializing them. Poetry, however, is written to capture intense moments in words and, like nuclear waste, preserve them for what feels like a million years. Somebody responsible needs to be in charge. Poetry’s half-life demands an attentive ear.

I know people will ask, “What’s the point of designating a landfill poet?” I would answer this fair question by encouraging non-readers to pick up a book of poetry once in awhile, not just the trash. My campaign motto is this: Choose what thinks, not what stinks.

As a grassroots advocate, I would remedy our county’s confusion concerning poetic expression. La Plata County residents only respect the word “meter,” because it’s enforced when it comes to parking tickets, not Wordsworth or Keats. I want something more for Montezuma County, to be able to recognize beauty, even at the point of absurdity.

Another question to surface during my nomination process no doubt will have to do with the awkwardness of associating poetry with a landfill. Why do I want to bring poetry, a form of literature with a reputation for grace and sophistication, into a collision with trash-compacting and sewage? And once again, my reply is simple: Poetry must be recognized as language distilled, condensed, trimmed, and uncluttered – composted, for lack of a better word. What better place to celebrate poetry’s power than at the location where our lives are compounded with the dust?

Of course, not everyone has positive feelings about poetry. Voters have despaired because some poets bury their poetic sensibilities so deeply, the point of what they’ve written can’t be excavated. I promise, if I receive this nomination, to make poetry an uplifting experience. If it’s legal and I can manage it without having to pay an additional dumping fee, I’ll distribute copies of local handpicked poems at the landfill gate, or have them printed on the back of landfill receipts. I say, it’s about time we feel illumination, not just elimination.

Now that I’ve gone public, I suppose there’ll be a barge full of candidates vying for my position. So be it. There’s nothing better for politics than a healthy debate over ideals, philosophies, and ethics. What better way to challenge anyone than a public forum for those who would dare to sit quietly in a room full of poets.

Let me close with a small contribution from my apocrypha, a ditty that prompted me to consider running for this position. Readers, if you can hold in your minds the rhythms of the William Tell Overture, you will hear not just a poem but an anthem.

To the dump,
To the dump,
To the dump dump dump,

In my truck,
In my truck,
In my truck truck truck,

With my junk,
With my junk,
With my junk junk junk,

And I pray
It won’t take all day.

David Feela is a teacher at Montezuma-Cortez High School.

Published in David Feela

A pound of flesh

There is a club out there of which I am not a member.

Although, so I don’t come across as sour grapes, I was a member for over 13 years and chose to leave on my own.

It’s the club of folks who have made a conscious choice in their lives to refrain from eating Flesh. You know them…

The Vegetarians.

Yes, we all know someone who is or was, or someone who knows someone who is. They have a lot of members, but it is really the only group based on food choices that I can think of that is so hierarchical.

First you have the plain old veggies, many of whom still eat fish, chicken and eggs. Often these folks are in because they want to lose weight (beware the veggie that only eats salad), or because they went off to some groovy liberal-arts college and they want to make life a living hell for their mother when they visit on Thanksgiving Day. These folks are often unable to articulate exactly why they don’t eat meat and really struggle trying to explain why some white meat is justifiable when red is not. It displays a lack of earnestness.

Next up in line are the folks who eat no meat, but still do milk, cheese and eggs (which makes one question, why are liquid chickens OK when solid ones aren’t?). These folks seem to be a bit clearer on their reasons and tend to “slip up” a bit less frequently than the first group. Although you don’t often find them asking if the base of their French Onion soup was made with meat stock.

Then there are the vegans, of which I was a proud member along with my husband. At this point in our lives, we were one of those disgusting in-love couples who only spoke in the “we” and were therefore dubbed “the Wegans.” We ate no meat and no dairy. To remain in this league takes a fair amount of commitment. No Ben and Jerry’s, movie theater popcorn or chili rellenos (which are invariably fried in boiling lard so they are a no-no on so many levels). Being a vegan often means making changes in your social life; in other words, if you want to have dinner with friends, expect to cook for yourself. We stopped being invited to friends’ because we were too difficult to feed, and going to a restaurant was completely out of the question.

Beyond vegan there are the extreme upper echelons of which I could only fantasize due to my weak nature and lack of spine. Macrobiotic, raw-foodsonly, locally-grown-organic-picked-byhand- never-touched-plastic-shippedby- biodieselonly foods. The really hardcore folks are those who won’t even wear leather shoes. You’ve gotta admire that kind of commitment. Those eaters were my idols. Although, I can proudly say that for two years, I only ate out of wooden bowls with a wooden spoon.

But the issue here is that no matter where one falls on the vegetarian scale, there is still “on the scale” and “off.”

Those of us who are “off” are faced with discrimination, judgment and ostracism. Even if a person claims that they don’t eat meat for their “own personal reasons,” that they “would never apply to anyone else,” just observe the look of horror on their face when you gnaw on that gigantic turkey leg at the Renaissance Faire, or better yet, bite into an Oscar Meyer Weiner. Then you’ll know what they are really thinking.

Seriously, is there any other food-eating or food non-eating group that is so elitist? Ever been snubbed by a person who doesn’t eat potatoes, lectured by your friend who has chosen to give up apple juice? No, it’s only the veggies.

And is any thought given to how these “pure” folks affect others? Like I said, we stopped getting dinner invitations. The novelty of freaking my mother out on Thanksgiving wore off after one turkey dinner.

Back when the Moosewood cookbook was the bible of vegetarian cuisine, I must have eaten 300 gallons of ratatouille. It was the standard, “Oh, the vegetarians are coming over, I’ll make a big pot” meal.

Now, just the word makes my burger- loving insides groan.

And it’s not just dinners, it’s all about the lifestyle: sneaking tamari-covered popcorn into the movie theaters, buying the more expensive canned beans which do not contain lard.

Traveling even becomes more difficult. We had to buy the “Tofu Tollbooth” so we could plan in advance where we could stop and find something acceptable to eat when we were on cross-country climbing trips with our friends. Imagine saying, “Oooh, good news you guys, there’s a place close by where I can get a grilled eggplant sandwich. It’s only about 170 miles off-route. You don’t mind, do you?”

But I was enthusiastically in the club and a bit holier-than-thou, until I got pregnant and it all went to hell in a hand basket. At seven months, I began my morning ritual of bacon and smoothies, which soon morphed into bacon in smoothies. And I have yet to stop my flesh feeding frenzy.

But here’s something to keep in the back of your mind, especially when you order a burrito with chorizo instead of raw carrots (who’s ever heard of a carrot burrito in Mexico?). When the waiter places your greasy plate in front of you, remember this…

Even vegetarians love bacon.

Suzanne Strazza writes from Mancos, Colo.

Published in Suzanne Strazza

Thou shalt not touch: The soldier as sacred

First, the disclaimer. I do not hate America. I’m perfectly aware that a Wahabbist nutjob brainwashed several disaffected men into murdering more than 3,000 innocent people. And, though I disagree with the ever-changing premises behind the (unrelated) Iraq War, I admire and appreciate the men and women who put their lives on the line to carry out the orders of our feckless leader. After all, these folks include my own brother, now on his second Iraq tour.

But when admiration strays across the line demarcating respect and deification, we’ve got a problem. And I shouldn’t have to adopt the cringing “don’t freak out on me; my brother’s a soldier and I love my country” pose in order to say so.

It seems people have, in a rush of rally-round-the-flag fervor, forgotten how to think clearly. I’m at a loss how to otherwise explain the e-mail that puts the “U.S. soldier” on equal footing with Jesus Christ.

“Only two people,” the missive informs, “ever died for you. (Alternately: ‘… ever offered to die for you’). One is Jesus. The other is the U.S. soldier.”

Come again? Since when are the senseless deaths of people from strife generated by the sins of others comparable with God coming to earth to save men from their sins?

Further, it’s hardly objectively true that “no one” other than soldiers has ever died for anyone else — not even those credulous enough to think this current conflict is somehow all about them (or their safety) in the first place should believe that.

The countless people who forward this drivel probably regard it as harmless, even poignant. To me, it’s proof of an almost willful refusal to engage in critical thought simply because we’re talking about soldiers!

Examples of the mythologizing of the U.S. soldier run the gamut. On the illogical-but-harmless side, we have Maj. Bruce Lovely’s 1993 “Soldier’s Night Before Christmas,” in which one glimpse of a stock figure (a soldier) by a legendary character (Santa Claus) triggers the latter’s night-long bout of weeping and sentimental hand-wringing.

There’s also the not-so-harmless. As everyone not living under a rock knows, the evil MoveOn.org vilified Gen. David Petraeus by suggesting, in a New York Times’ ad, he might better be named “General Betray Us.” A reasonable person would have carefully considered MoveOn’s various claims and subjected them to rigorous and independent investigation. Then he would’ve reacted.

True, we Average Joes and Janes do not do this often ourselves, but we do expect our leaders to take the time to be rational, even when they are offended. (We’re endearingly naïve that way).

The reception the ad received, though, proved this a pipe dream. Presidential candidates and other politicians tripped over one another in the hurry to denounce it. And Rudy Guiliani upped the ante, buying an ad that denounced Hillary Clinton for not sufficiently denouncing MoveOn! Specifically, he accused the Democrats of “orchestrating” an attack on Petraeus, and said Hillary “continued the character attack on General Petraeus and refused to denounce MoveOn.org’s ad.”

Hillary said Petraeus’ Iraq progress report demanded the “willing suspension of disbelief.” In other words, after four years, billions of misspent dollars and thousands of deaths, Hillary was skeptical. The nerve! Petraeus is a fourstar general, the ad foams. He’s won medals! So: “Who should America listen to…A decorated soldier’s commitment to defending America, or Hillary Clinton’s commitment to defending MoveOn.org?”

Did you see what Rudy was able to do? (Apart from also falsely claiming elsewhere the NYT gave MoveOn a deep discount on its ad, that is.) He was able to spin the whole flap into being all about his opponent’s fitness for command. All he had to do was invoke “a soldier.” Are we this pathetic?

Apparently, Congress is.

In late September, the Senate voted to condemn MoveOn’s ad.

“Who would have ever expected anybody to go after a general in the field at a time of war, launch a smear campaign against a man we’ve entrusted with our mission in Iraq?” Senate Minority Leader Mitch Mc- Connell whined to the AP.

I wish I were joking. Our Senate — which can’t find the stones to stop Bush’s ill-conceived war, or rein in executive power, or take a long, hard look at Gitmo — sprang into action to fight what amounts to free speech, and on our dime.

The Democrats had their turn next, heaping fury on talk-show host Rush Limbaugh, who had the audacity to call a man who’d pretended to be in the armed services a “phony soldier.” The Democratic leadership spun this into an assault on all soldiers, even though Rush’s gripe had in general to do with soldiers-turned-war-critics (in which case, labeling them “phony” is just vintage Rush) and specifically to do with a man convicted of fraudulent activities relating to his non-existent wartime service (which was perfectly accurate).

The majority of Limbaugh’s listeners, at least, had the common sense not to buy the spin — but that spin would not have been possible in a climate absent hysterical reverence centered on the soldier.

That no one seems to view all this as surreal indicates a collective obsession about the warrior during wartime: he’s sacred property, and don’t you forget it.

As if you could.

At every turn, we’re told soldiers are “dying for our freedom.” Which of course “is not free.” Thus, any question of the war — or its leadership — is seen as ingratitude, even treason, rather than an attempt at honest discourse.

Central to this mindset is yet another willing disregard, this time, for nuance. Thus, it becomes “soldiers gave us our rights” and not, “our rights are inalienable and we, the governed, require the government to uphold them.”

It’s perfectly reasonable to acknowledge and respect the role soldiers play in protecting our rights, but it’s critical to our republic’s very survival that we remember neither they nor any man “gave” us those rights. In any case, the greatest gratitude to the U.S. soldier is surely expressed in the exercise of those precious liberties — not in platitudes that enshrine fallible human beings as gods among us.

How did we lose sight of something so simple?

Katharhynn Heidelberg writes from Montrose, Colo.

Published in Katharhynn Heidelberg

Imagining a life on the river

Having just moved to Colorado, I have been on the Colorado River only once. After reading “The Very Hard Way,” I will have Bert Loper on my mind the next river trip I take. I will be imagining the route he would have chosen through a rapid, picturing smoke billowing up from his campfire alongside the river, and imagining what it must have been like to maneuver a rowboat 162 miles UP the Colorado River in January.

“The Very Hard Way” by Brad Dimock is a chronology of Loper’s life, peppered with the story of the legend he became. Loper came to the Four Corners in the late 1800s, fell in love with the Colorado River and spent his life in a relationship with it.

The book is interesting, informative, and fun to read without being bogged down with too much detail. Dimock’s inserts of Loper’s personal writings and correspondence are charming. While acquainting us with Loper, the book also brings to colorful life the rivers in and around the Four Corners. I would recommend this book to anyone, especially if you love rapids.

Dimock demonstrated a great deal of respect for Loper when writing “The Very Hard Way.” Others who have written about Loper go to great lengths to offer opinions about him and what he may or may not have done on various river trips. Dimock purposefully took his extensive research of Loper and presented it in such a way so as not to lend his own opinion, showing respect for his readers by granting them the intelligence to form their own opinions.

Loper’s is an inspiring life. I see someone who took the hardships that were dealt him from an early age and formed them into the courage and rock-solid grit it took to become the unquestioned best upriver traveler in the West, the first man to ever run all the rapids of the Grand Canyon.

It struck me what a shame it is that so many of the rapids he traversed and the canyons he rowed are now gone, under the water displaced by dams. And how ironic that many of the opportunities Loper had to be on the river were provided due to the Bureau of Reclamation and USGS, who were mapping the rivers in search of the perfect places for dams.

As Dimock does, I wonder what Loper would think about the disappearance of so much natural geography and the role he played in it.

The fact that Loper died of a heart attack at the age of 80 while running Rapid 21 of the Grand Canyon, his body seemingly swallowed up by the river, is very poignant.

Loper once wrote, “If I knew that on a certain day I was to pass on I would get in my boat and would land in Grand Canyon on that day for it seems to me that it would be such a nice place to pass on to one that loves the whole set up as I do.”

Lucky Loper.

Published in -December 2007, Arts & Entertainment

Pieces of silver: Book tells history of Native American earrings

One day, New Salem, Mass., silversmith Bobby Bauver was chatting with a friend from New Mexico, Robert Gallegos, a connoisseur of Native American and Hispanic art. Gallegos was about to sell a collection of Navajo and Pueblo earrings.

Bauver made a suggestion. “I said, ‘You know, before you disperse this, let me look at it, because I think there might be something important.’” At the very least, he thought he could catalogue the earrings.

Gallegos agreed to let him examine the pieces. After a year of arranging and rearranging them so “they made sense,” Bauver discovered that they told a historical tale of Southwest silver work, techniques, and design.

The catalogue turned into the book, “Navajo and Pueblo Earrings 1850- 1945,” published last year by Rio Grande Press in Albuquerque.

“The earrings in their earlier forms were very, very simple,” he says.

History, necessity, cultural exchange, technological development, and world events helped shape their evolution into something more complex.

The process began in the mid-19th Century, when Navajo artisans, and Laguna and Acoma smiths learned to forge silver from itinerant Hispanic metal-workers. The Navajo taught the craft to the Zuni, and later the Hopi.

Smiths hammered ingots from melted American or Mexican coins, flattening them into sheets. Bauver describes early earrings as little more than large hoops, weighing as much as two ounces, with silver balls at the bottom. Native wearers reported that “when you rode a horse, you sometimes had to hook them over the top of your ears so they wouldn’t hurt as the horse jogged along.”

Then, jewelers learned that deft hammer blows could broaden a hoop into a flat circle, or create crescents, like Hispanic women wore.

Lacking the technology to make fine wire, Native Americans didn’t do much filigree work. They engraved, punched, and stamped designs into the shaped metal. When they began setting turquoise into silver around 1880, earrings became perfect for experiments with technique and design.

Zuni artists developed a love for stones, especially small ones. By the 1940s, they created earrings with dozens of well-cut studs, arranged in tiers with dangles at the bottom. “That style persists to this day,” says Bauver.

Zunis also adapted inlay to silver. “That comes from a prehistoric tradition,” he explains. Archaeologists have found shell or cottonwood earrings set with small turquoises, glued in place by piñon pitch.

Jet and shell inlay arrived during World War II, when silver and turquoise became hard to get. “They had to rely on ingenuity to make jewelry to sell and maintain a living.”

The Navajo adapted Zuni techniques, inlaying larger stones into sturdy bracelets and broaches. But always “more involved with the metal itself,” they fashioned beautiful silver concho belts and earrings, setting few studs into them.

Traders, anthropologists, and ethnographers also influenced earring development. Some designed their own pieces, hiring smiths to create them. “We see [them] making [silver work] a commodity instead of a simple native art form,” muses Bauver.

As the tourist market burgeoned around 1900, traders encouraged artists to make lighter earrings. “Native peoples like very heavy jewelry, where as the Victorian ladies couldn’t handle some of that.”

Traders also identified designs that visitors would consider “Indian”: whirling logs, good luck arrows, lightning bolts, or thunderbirds. Artists stamped these into earrings.

In the 1930s, an ethnographer suggested that Hopi smiths put prehistoric pottery designs on jewelry. The artisans rejected the idea, but after World War II Hopi GIs took governmentsponsored silversmithing classes emphasizing this style.

People now regard prehistoric designs on jewelry as Hopi, though the Hopi have always explored other ideas as well.

“There are a number of styles of earrings that are considered traditional,” says Bauver. “But there are innumerable jewelers doing modern things.”

Bauver came to his knowledge of Native American silver because of his love of Indian art and culture. He attended the University of New Mexico in the 1970s, a time when Native American jewelry enjoyed rising popularity. He visited pawn shops, galleries, and reservations, asking questions and learning about silver.

“As Mark Twain said, I never let school get in the way of my education,” he chuckles.

Eventually, he met a Navajo woman from a family of silversmiths, and learned her techniques in their hogan. When he returned to Massachusetts another woman taught him to make hollow ware, and to do enameling on silver. Now he restores early Southwest jewelry, and occasionally makes his own pieces, including a spoon for his nephew’s baby daughter.

Bauver met Gallegos 35 years ago at an Indian art show. They became friends. Today, they often travel the Southwest together. So when Gallegos’ collection of earrings “dropped into [Bauver’s] lap,” he had the knowledge to write about it.

Writing “Navajo and Pueblo Earrings 1850-1945” took months. Early histories of jewelry mentioned earrings in passing. Ethnographers and anthropologists had more interest in concho belts and squash-blossom necklaces. But when he gathered the existing material on earrings, he could see patterns of development.

‘I took over the dining-room table and had stacks and piles, and told everyone to stay away and not touch anything.”

He then wrote nonstop, “not moving” from the table for months.

“You need to just get through it,” he says. “And then perhaps once you’re finished, you put it aside, then go back and reread, to make sure it still makes sense.” Bauver exhales slowly. “And so far, it all does.”

 

Published in -November 2007, Arts & Entertainment

Growing practice

Clinics held in Durango make it easier to get a state permit for the use of medical marijuana

Suffering from cancer? Smoke some marijuana. How about from multiple sclerosis, AIDS, hepatitis, glaucoma, nausea or chronic pain? You too can light up a joint to help numb the agony. And if you have a friend in need, sell them some weed, or better yet, give it away.

It’s all perfectly legal under Colorado’s medical marijuana law, passed by voters in 2000.

But while marijuana is becoming a drug of choice for some medical conditions, the federal government, including the Drug Enforcement Agency, doesn’t recognize the weed as legally legitimate.

This contradiction is shaping a national public-policy debate between conventional and alternative medicines, and over the issue of whether a state has a right to trump federal drug laws.

It may come as a surprise to residents that the Colorado Department of Health is legally obligated to issue permits for qualifying patients to cultivate, possess, use and sell marijuana.

Under the constitutional amendment, cardholders can legally possess up to 2 ounces of marijuana and cultivate up to six plants, three in vegetative state and three in the mature budding stage.

Since 2000, the health department has issued 1,672 permits under the law. The program has been received well by the public “and is slowly growing,” says Ron Hyman, health department registrar for vital statistics.

Several clinics that help facilitate this process have sprung up along the Front Range and a new chapter arrived in Durango this fall.

“We were called by someone in your area who wanted to help a friend get legal access to cannabis for relief from chronic seizures but was forced to travel 400 miles to Denver,” explained Paul Stanford, executive director of The Hemp and Cannabis Foundation (THCF), based in Portland, Ore.

“That didn’t seem right, so once there were enough appointments our staff drove over [to Durango] and we had a great turnout. We’re planning another clinic in November.”

Colorado is one of 13 states that allow use of marijuana for medicinal purposes. Advocates such as the hemp foundation say marijuana is a safe alternative to conventional medications, such as morphine, which are expensive, highly addictive and have multiple side-effects.

“A lot of our patients are on really debilitating narcotics like Oxycotin or morphine that just knock them out to the point they can’t function any more,” Stanford said. “With cannabis they can control their pain without getting high by eating capsules of the leaf, or through new devices that use vaporization.”

THCF promotes, defends and assists in the implementation of medical marijuana laws that exist in the states of Hawaii, California, Nevada, Colorado, Rhode Island, Washington, Oregon, Alaska, Maine, Montana, New Mexico, Rhode Island and Virginia.

Stanford dedicated his career to debunking myths about medical marijuana laws and is often at odds with federal law enforcement agencies that oppose the trend.

But, he says, detractors like the DEA are fighting a losing battle because public perception is shifting from cannabis as the forbidden foliage towards an accepted holistic herbal remedy.

“It’s been a grassroots effort,” he quipped of Durango’s successful effort to open the clinic. “But, seriously I think we’re seeing a generational change take shape where citizens are sophisticated enough to realize the medical benefits of cannabis.”

However, critics, including the American Medical Association, Food and Drug Administration and the federal government, disagree. They argue that conventional medicines are just as effective and safer than pot, and that medicinal marijuana laws are a propaganda smokescreen meant to eventually legalize the drug completely.

“Federal law states that there is no such thing as medical marijuana — it does not exist,” stated Mike Turner, a special agent with the Denver office of the DEA. “If we did come upon someone [with pot] claiming medical marijuana they could be arrested, but whether that would happen would be on a case-by-case basis.

“In Colorado it is not on the radar screen, but that could change if we saw clinics showing up everywhere like is happening in California.”

The agency focuses its limited resources on large drug trafficking rings, he said, “not someone smoking socalled medical marijuana, but technically they are in violation of federal law.”

“Legalize it, don’t criticize it.” — Peter Tosh

Colorado’s populace seems to agree. At a hotel conference room in Durango this September, a retired heart surgeon with THCF waited to see 35 patients seeking a state permit for marijuana use.

Appointments are required, and applicants must follow strict guidelines to comply with the law. Prospective patients are first screened over the phone to determine if they meet the requirements.

Documentation is required from a physician not affiliated with THCF that a patient suffers from one of the conditions warranting medical marijuana under the state law. These include chronic pain, seizures, glaucoma, AIDS, cancer, severe nausea and hepatitis. Medical records must be faxed to THCF for review by their medical staff.

Stanford said that it is not necessary for patients to inform their doctors that they are seeking medical marijuana for treatment.

“We leave that up to the patient. We find that about half of our patients do not want to let that information out because it would be on their medical record,” he said.

THCF recommends that patients simply inform their doctors that their medication is not working and want to see a specialist who needs their medical records. Doctors routinely fax medical records to other doctors as a professional courtesy. Or, a patient can obtain his or her own medical charts and fax them personally to the clinic physician, Stanford said.

Once the THCF physician receives the medical records he reviews them and if the patient qualifies he is given an appointment. At the clinic an exam is conducted, paperwork is filled out and an educational film is shown. The clinic physician writes out the prescription, then sends the originals to the Department of Health, which issues the registration card.

“Once our doctor gives the recommendation for medical marijuana, it is a done deal. The permit is automatic according to the law,” Stanford said. The cost for this service is $290 per year. Of that, $90 is the health department’s fee, paid annually for renewal.

The prescription or “recommendation” from THCF costs $200 and is also required to be updated yearly. Medical records verifying the condition must be updated every three years from a doctor not affiliated with a medical marijuana clinic.

Prescription filled

Under the state marijuana provision, cardholders can grow their own marijuana legally. Also, the drug can be sold between cardholders within the quantity limits of the law. In addition, patients can specify they require a “caregiver” to provide the drug for them, explained Hyman of the state health department.

Caregivers do not have to have a medical marijuana card, he said, but must be listed on the patient’s card to legally grow, sell and possess the drug. This is critical if patients are found with the drug by law enforcement.

Without the paperwork shown upfront, the marijuana can be confiscated and the person charged until valid documentation is provided.

Police reaction

Montezuma and La Plata county sheriff’s departments and district attorneys report that they will respect the state medical marijuana laws if patients are in compliance.

“If they are following the state law, and they have their card, then there is nothing we can do because the state does allow it,” said Montezuma County sheriff Gerald Wallace. “So they must be careful to stay in compliance with the statute or they can be charged like anybody else.”

He has seen only one case in the county involving medical marijuana. Wallace cautioned that possessing a card does not give users the right to drive a vehicle while on the drug.

“They could be charged with driving under the influence, just like with other medications,” he said. Use of marijuana in public is prohibited as well, he said.

A provision in the law allows law enforcement to verify with the health department a particular person’s status regarding a medical marijuana permit.

District Attorney Jim Wilson, representing Montezuma and Dolores counties, echoed Wallace’s policy.

“If they provide proof they are a treatment provider or a cardholder allowing use of marijuana then we do not prosecute the case,” Wilson said, adding that officers are educated on the law.

The DEA, on the other hand, does not recognize medical marijuana as legitimate.

“Medical drugs need to go through years of testing and receive approval from the FDA so that the public has a reasonable expectation that it is safe. Marijuana has not gone through that process,” said Special Agent Turner.

“I don‚t think the public is fully aware of the dangers of marijuana. If you have to smoke something to get a medical result, that should tell you there is something not right there.”

Cases do come up, he said, but are not common or a priority. At any rate, the final decision to prosecute a medical marijuana case is with the U.S. Attorney’s office.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Dave Gaouette, of the Denver office, said pot possession cases for the small amounts allocated by the state for medical uses are not generally prosecuted.

The Colorado U.S. Attorney’s office has never taken a case involving medical marijuana, he said.

“But if someone were growing a marijuana crop on the back forty with hundreds of kilos and then they produced a marijuana card, that could be a case we would take a look at.”

For more information or a prescreening call The Foundation for Hemp and Cannabis at 259-0837 or 1- 800-723-0188.

Their website is www.thc-foundation. org.

Published in -November 2007

Volunteer shortage worries fire departments

Fewer young people stepping up to provide emergency services

LESLIE JOHNSON AND RYAN CARTER OF THE CORTEZ FIRE DEPARTMENTIn Elm City, North Carolina, in January 2007, first responders to a structure fire have to wait 10 minutes for extra help to arrive. While they wait, the house burns down.

In West Virginia, the state firemen’s association considers whether to offer a retirement plan to attract new volunteer firefighters.

In New York, U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer proposes a $1,000 tax credit for active members of volunteer firefighting and emergency medical service (EMS) organizations.

Across the country, volunteer fire departments are facing a crisis: They can no longer attract and keep enough people to fulfill their mission.

And the problem is hitting Montezuma County as well.

“We’re at a crossroads,” said Cortez Fire Chief Kent Lindsay.

“Everybody is looking for volunteers. We have to beg, borrow and steal. When the city council has openings they have a tough time filling, it’s hard to find people that will really dedicate the amount of time required to be a volunteer firefighter.”

The Cortez Fire Department currently has 38 volunteers, five of them rookies, Lindsay says. “My magic number is 60,” he said. “I don’t know how to get 60.”

Cat in the tree

Montezuma County is divided into five tax-supported volunteer fire districts: Cortez, Dolores, Mancos, Lewis- Arriola and Pleasant View. (The Ute Mountain Ute tribe has its own, paid fire department.) Like their counterparts across the country, these volunteer fire departments provide a host of emergency services, racing to car wrecks, structure fires, brush fires, and medical emergencies – which make up by far the bulk of their calls.

“We go to the cat in the tree, the kid in the tree, fire alarms, carbon-monoxide alarms,” Lindsay said.

Responders beg for clear addresses

One problem with which rural fire departments perennially have to contend is that of rural addresses – more specifically, the lack of them. Many homes don’t have addresses clearly posted.

“It can be a real problem, especially on an EMS [medical] call,” said Dolores Fire Chief Don Setser.

He said all the departments sell green-and-white reflective signs. “We would like to see more people with those,” he said.

At any rate, make sure your address is clearly visible from your road. It could mean saving someone’s life in an emergency.

They respond to medical calls where the situation is life-threatening, he said, such as in the case of heart attacks, seizures, severe trauma, and births. Southwest Memorial Hospital has an ambulance service that also responds to emergencies, “but they’re running two guys on an ambulance and it takes more than two guys to deliver a baby,” Lindsay said.

About 10 percent of the calls turn out to be false alarms or are canceled, he said.

In 2006, the Cortez Fire Department responded to about 700 calls. As of early October this year, they had had about 460, Lindsay said, which represents a slower pace. “We didn’t have the wildland brush-fire season we’ve had in the past,” he explained.

Still, over time, the number of calls is increasing just as the population of the city and the county is increasing. Yet the number of volunteers typically remains the same or drops.

According to one report, emergency calls are up nationwide but the number of volunteer firefighters has dropped by 10 percent.

That could mean, in a situation where several calls occurred at once, one might not be answered.

“Fortunately we’ve been able to cover everything so far,” Lindsay said. “No call has gone unanswered yet but we know that’s coming.”

Generally, though, the volunteer shortage is more likely to mean delays in response – delays that can spell the difference between a home being saved or destroyed or, even worse, between someone living or dying.

“When units regularly fail to get out of the fire station in a timely manner because of inadequate staffing resources, the community is endangered,” states a November 2005 report by the International Association of Fire Chiefs’ Volunteer and Combination Officers Section. The report, known as the Red Ribbon Report, urges departments to start moving from being allvolunteer to having some paid staff.

Lindsay said that early this fall there was a structure fire south of Cortez that strained the resources of his department. “It was one of those hot, humid days,” he said. “I think we ended up with 12 [personnel] on scene. Usually it would take 15 to 18 to work a structure fire. We had guys just getting worn out. Finally Lewis-Arriola sent us in four guys, but they’re stretched as far as we are.”

Dolores Fire Chief Don Setser recalled a big fire in Hartman Draw a couple of years ago. “We fought it and fought it and then one broke out on the edge of Lost Canyon,” he said. “There were plenty of people [on scene] but they were so worn out from fighting that other fire. We took care of it, but that was a long few weeks.”

Never convenient

According to the Red Ribbon Report, there are 26,354 fire departments in the country, and about two-thirds of them are staffed by volunteers. Yet the number of volunteer firefighters – about 800,000 – is down 10 percent from two decades ago.

At the same time, these firefighters are expected to provide more complex and sophisticated services than ever before. Longtime volunteers, the report notes, “recall a time when training was much less demanding and time-consuming and the local fire department had fewer responsibilities. Fires and accidents were pretty much the game.”

Today, however, “the fire department is not just a group of people trained to suppress fire and render first aid. It has become the premiere provider of choice for different levels of emergency medical services and in many cases transportation, as well as the provider of . . . hazardous materials response, high-rise and belowgrade rescue, inspections, prevention and education, and community emergency planning. . .”

To some extent, citizens realize the importance of their fire departments. Locally, they have supported mill-levy increases or measures to allow the departments to avoid TABOR tax limitations.

“We have a good community that supports us,” Lindsay said. “We have good equipment though it’s almost a full-time job to keep the equipment up and running.”

The Cortez, Lewis-Arriola, and Mancos fire districts have de-Bruced, meaning they get to keep their mill levies at the same level even if their total revenues go up.

Dolores has yet to do so, Setser said. “We keep getting asked to do more and more with a little less money each year,” Setser said.

However, the Dolores district managed to get a mill-levy increase passed a few years ago. So did the Lewis- Arriola Fire District, according to its chief, George Deavers.

The smaller districts generally have to get by with used trucks and other equipment, but they manage.

“The most difficult part is the people, not the money,” said Mancos Fire Chief Tony Aspromonte. “Any kind of budget restraints you can deal with – you budget around them – but recruiting and retaining quality volunteers is becoming more difficult.

“A lot of people today want to volunteer but they want to do it when it’s convenient for them and in this business it’s almost never convenient.”

‘Like a crapshoot’

The Mancos Fire Department has 22 volunteers, but there is room for 30 on the roster, according to Aspromonte. For his district, the real problem is not so much an overall shortage of people, but a shortage during the days.

“I only have about four of my volunteers that actually work here in Mancos within the district,” Aspromonte said. “I drive to Farmington every day – I’m gone from 5 a.m. to 4 p.m.

“Typically, Monday to Friday, 8 to 5, it’s like a crapshoot [finding people to respond to calls]. You roll the dice and see what happens.”

The Mancos Fire Department runs a full ambulance service, the only other licensed ambulance service (besides the hospital’s) in the county, Aspromonte said. The department has three ambulances and does patient transports.

But during days, that service may not be available.

“Seventy-five to 80 percent of our calls are medical-related, so that’s where we usually get in a bind,” Aspromonte said. “In the middle of a day when I don’t have a medic available, we may have to have Southwest come over with an ambulance and rendezvous with us.”

Daytime shortages are a problem in Cortez as well. “A lot of our guys are working or going to school,” Lindsay said. “It’s really tough for our guys to leave their jobs now. And at least four of them are working out of town.

“I know I can’t run out on my wife and leave her with a houseful of customers, either.” Lindsay owns El Grande café on Main Street. The situation has grown so worrisome that the Cortez Fire District Board is considering hiring a paid chief and possibly some additional paid personal to cover during the days.

There is “barely” enough money to pay for such changes, Lindsay said. “We have a pretty good operating budget,” Lindsay said, “but to shift from what we’re doing would not be cheap.” Wages would have to be competitive if Cortez doesn’t want to become a “training ground” for fire departments in other areas such as Farmington and Durango, he said, with paid staff leaving for better jobs as soon as they got experience in Cortez.

The district is researching the matter and will decide whether to proceed with the plan for some paid personnel.

Growing older

Setser said he shares Lindsay’s and Aspromonte’s concerns. The Dolores Fire Department has been fairly stable at about 30 volunteers for the past six to eight years, he said, but the number of emergency calls is steadily rising and is now about 300 a year.

Setser worries about the upward age shift among volunteers as well.

“The trend across the country is the average age of firefighters is increasing,” Setser said. “I think it’s in the 50s now. The younger people don’t seem to be stepping up. We just don’t seem to know how to attract and retain them.”

Dolores has volunteers as young as 21 and as old as 73, Setser said, “and we are definitely over-represented in the older ages.”

A number of factors may be playing in to that trend. As noted previously, more people are commuting to jobs out of town than in years past, and employers may be less tolerant of employees leaving their jobs to respond to an emergency. Also, many families have parents who work more than one job and simply have no spare time for training.

And newer generations may feel less compulsion to help their community. With all the tempting recreational pursuits available today – from video games to mountain bikes – younger men and women may be pursuing a more self-indulgent lifestyle.

And many people may simply not have realized the need for volunteers.

“A lot of people are moving in here from places that are bigger and that have paid fire departments, and they don’t seem to understand that we are all volunteer,” Setser said.

Lindsay said a number of years ago, the fire districts considered combining forces into one countywide district and made some phone calls to citizens to get their reaction. “About 30 percent of the people we talked to thought we were paid,” Lindsay recalled.

‘Daunting challenges’

Being a volunteer firefighter or EMS provider is not a responsibility to be taken lightly.

The Cortez Fire Department requires its rookies to attend a training meeting every week, Lindsay said. Regulars meet once a month and have a work detail once a month, plus a monthly training.

“And there are always specialty schools – firefighter classes, EMT classes – it’s quite an involvement,” he said. Then there is responding to the actual calls.

“We are on call 24/7 and 365 days a year,” Setser said. “As long as you’re in the district, you’re basically on call and expected to respond [to an emergency].”

Some people find the demand too much, but others remain for years. “We’ve had a number of guys stay on 20, 25 years,” said Lindsay, who has been with the department 17 years himself. “Right now we have a lot who have less than five years with the department and some over 15, but there is a big gap there. Those are the guys that are hard to replace.”

The districts vary as to how many female volunteers they have. “I have some very good women firefighters,” Lindsay said, including Claudia Apkin, a former fire chief at Pleasant View. However, he has just a handful. “I hope they don’t think it’s some kind of clique,” he said. “Nationwide there are a lot of women firefighters.”

He noted that in rural departments, wives traditionally provide invaluable support for firefighters, bringing water and food and setting up triage during big blazes.

Deavers said Lewis-Arriola has four women among its 30 volunteers. At Mancos, there is just one woman, Aspromonte said – his daughter.

But about half of the Dolores Fire District’s volunteers are female, Setser said. “Most are EMTs, but several of our women are some of the best fullcombat firefighters around,” he said. “They put on their packs and go to the fire. They’re as good a firefighters as men are.”

Volunteers over 50 are not uncommon for any of the districts. “I have seven people over 50,” Lindsay said. “They’ll know when it’s time to quit.” The department requires annual physi- cals for people over 45.

The future of volunteer fire departments remains very much an unanswered question.

Small rural fire districts such as Lewis-Arriola, with a smaller population to serve, may be able to function well for some time to come. Deavers said he has about 30 volunteers – 35 would be ideal – and not much trouble retaining them. “Seems like if they make it through the first year we don’t have a problem holding on to them,” Deavers said.

But for other departments, there will be a continual scramble to provide services communities have come to expect.

“Many areas of the country that traditionally have relied on citizen volunteers to provide fire protection and emergency medical services are finding fewer people available or willing to carry on the honorable tradition,” the Red Ribbon Report states.

“How are communities’ needs to be met? Finding the answer to that question is one of the most daunting challenges facing local governments and fire service leaders all across the country.”

Published in -November 2007

A towering dilemma: Bluff, Utah, debates putting a cell antenna on its scenic ridge

Even while cell-phone towers are spreading like cheatgrass in other areas of the Four Corners, some residents of a bucolic Bluff, Utah, are trying to stave off locating an antenna on the pristine sandstone ridgeline north of their tiny town, even though it would vastly improve service to the area.

Their message is clear: don’t mess up the cherished view.

At a town meeting Oct. 23, the consensus of about five dozen concerned citizens at the crowded community center was strongly against that proposal and in support of an alternate site south of the San Juan River on Red Mesa, part of Navajo reservation lands just across the border in Arizona.

SIMULATION OF WHERE A CELL-PHONE TOWER MIGHT BE LOCATED IN BLUFF, UTAH

One advantage to this alternative site would be that more Diné residents would be able to get coverage. Additionally, that location already has utility lines nearby.

The proposed Bluff location would be leased by CommNet Wireless from SITLA (the School and Institutional Trust Lands Administration), an agency that is charged with managing thousands of acres of Utah trust lands to produce revenue for the public school system.

Jack Doggett, representing CommNet, which specializes in building towers in sparsely populated rural areas, discussed those two options for the new tower, which, in addition to the Bluff area, would serve a large area of the Navajo reservation on the south side of the San Juan River.

Doggett, a real-estate agent from Flagstaff, Ariz., said at this point CommNet prefers the Bluff location because of easier access and the shorter length of time involved in getting permits. He said he’d negotiated “dozens” of agreements with the Navajo Nation bureauracy, and would expect the permitting process to take at least a year, compared to six months or more in dealing with the various government entities for the trust-land lease.

As far as the range and quality of the signal, “either one is going to give great coverage,” he said, although a 150-foot tower on Red Mesa would provide the best option, but another drawback to that site is that the last mile or so of the road is in terrible condition.

Under-served

CommNet has contracts with more than 100 cell-phone service companies worldwide, Doggett explained, both common domestic ones such as Verizon and Alltel and international ones used by foreign tourists. The company was attracted to southern Utah because of the dearth of existing service.

He pointed out that until recently, when Alltel installed a tower outside Blanding, all of San Juan County, an area of about 10,000 square miles, had been served by a solitary antenna near Monticello, which resulted in large areas with no service. Even with the addition of a tower in the Bluff area, many spots along the main roads will stilll be without service, he said, because of the “wonderful, dramatic geology here.” Like FM radio frequencies, cell-phone signals are sent and received line-of-sight, he explained, which means any intervening land mass will block them.

“It just doesn’t lend itself to (complete) coverage,” he added, “and besides that, no one should be talking on the phone — those roads are too dangerous.”

In deference to local concerns about the “significant” visual impact of the tower, he said, CommNet has agreed to lower the proposed structure from 150 feet to 100 feet.

Charlie DeLorme, head of San Juan County’s economic-development office, reminded the Bluff residents that SITLA had no obligation to hold any sort of public hearing before making its decision, and had only done so at the county commission’s request.

During a conference in January attended by more than 50 key players representing law enforcement, health care, the school system, public lands and the telecommunications industry, DeLorme said, it became clear that southern San Juan County was the most under-served area, with no landline service and “poor to non-existent wireless service.” Among the cellphone companies, CommNet expressed the most interest in providing wider coverage and recently installed a tower in Monument Valley that is already being heavily used by tourists, the majority of them from other countries and 70 percent of whom use wireless devices for voice, text-message and photo transmissions. And just last month, a tower near Mexican Hat was also activated.

Unending demand

While the primary function of SITLA is to make money for the school system, with 70 percent of its revenue coming from gas and oil leases, resource specialist Gary Bagley said, the driving force behind the increase in tower leases, currently earning around $500,000 a year, is the demand for wider coverage.

“People ask, ‘Why are you doing so many cellphone tower leases nowadays?’” he said. “True, part of it is to make more money for the school trust, but probably the biggest reason is because we have an unending demand from the public saying, ‘We want service there, and we want service there.’” He pointed out that the towers are used for emergency communications and broadcast signals in addition to providing phone service.

Those demands are particularly strong on the reservation, where there is little copper-wire service and many folks live in remote and isolated spots where wireless communications are the only practical option. (Doggett jokingly claimed the Navajo words for cell phone are roughly translated as, “The little thing that makes you run to the top of the hill.”)

Public comment at the meeting ranged from the whimsical, with one man asking if the tower could be painted blue to match the sky, to the acerbic, with another man chiding the Bluff residents and reminding them that residents like himself who live in remote areas of southeast Utah have to drive long distances just to make a phone call.

“Everybody in Bluff has got copper lines — they don’t depend on cellphone service,” he said. “Anyone who wants to be bull-headed about this, take your copper-line phones out, and take your Internet out and live without it for one month — 30 days — and do like what me and my wife and all my neighbors have done for years.

“When we got to make a phone call, it’s 20 miles to town, and it’s 20 miles home when you get done,” he said. “It seems kind of one way for a few people to deny a whole bunch of people a little bit of a luxury.”

But the majority of those expressing opinions at the meeting concurred with a woman who stressed that the town residents were not against cellphone service, but rather the location of the tower. When she asked those who agreed with her to stand, threefourths of the audience rose to their feet.

“Please seek another location and allow us to continue to preserve this beautiful place and these beautiful cliffs,” she said, “and I’m sure the Navajo Nation, San Juan County and other people may see the benefit also and help us if there are log jams, red tape and whatever else — it’s not an impossibility.” Her remarks were followed by loud applause.

Looming over the town

San Juan County Sheriff Mike Lacey expressed his concern about the lack of coverage related to stranded motorists and those involved in car accidents and other emergencies.

“We need service now — we can’t wait five or ten years,” Lacy said. “I don’t doubt that on the south end (on Navajo land) might be a better place, but as far as the permit process goes, I’ve been through it and you can’t get it (in a timely manner).

“Public safety is a key thing we’re looking at here — I have many people who get broke down or have accidents and cannot get out on a cell phone. Search and rescue people have had cell phones in their pockets, but could not contact anybody.”

But many disagree. Opponents of the Bluff site, including local environmentalist Bob Bushart, have created a website at www.ProtectBluff.com that includes several views of the sandstone ridgeline with a superimposed tower dominating the landscape.

The website also catalogues the impacts of the tower on various cultural and historic features, noting that “the town still retains a largely uncluttered visual landscape and a vivid connection to a cultural past that streatches back to ancient times.

“. . . the tower would loom nearly 450 feet above the town (and) would be visible for miles in every direction and from nearly every historic site and ancient ruin,” it states. “The introduction of this structure into the landscape would forever alter the character of the town and detract from the unique tapestry of natural wonder and history that defines it.”

The website also includes a petition against the location, although it had been signed by only 19 people as of Oct. 30.

Excessive optimism?

County Commissioner Lynn Stevens, who attended the Bluff meeting along with Commissioner Kenneth Maryboy, offered another account of the bureaucratic morass involved in getting landuse permits from the Navajo tribal government. According to the superintendent at Lake Powell National Recreation Area, Stevens said, it had taken six years to get approval of a permit for improvements on a tower at Navajo Mountain.

“So if Jack can get it done in a year, that’s really wonderful,” he said, “but we’ve got another point of reference.”

And Maryboy asserted that providing comprehensive service to the Navajos is “not a luxury for us — it’s a necessity.

“If the decision is to take it back across the river (to the reservation), by all means let’s do it,” he said, “but if it’s going to be here, just as the sheriff indicated . . . whether you like it or not, it’s something we have to have.”

After hearing from all parties, Doggett said he would take the comments to the company.

“I’m going to report back to CommNet on your preferred site,” he said, a pledge that was met with loud applause as well. He said he’d already attended a Red Mesa chapter-house meeting in April and met with Commissioner Maryboy.

“The Red Mesa chapter is aware this is going on, but I haven’t asked for their approval (yet), because I wouldn’t do that unless we were serious.

“But I have the general impression they prefer a site (on the reservation).” In a phone interview after the Bluff meeting, Stevens said the location of the tower was not as important to the commission as how quickly a tower could be installed.

“We need to increase the coverage on that unserved area on the reservation,” he said. “We are a little concerned — including the Navajo commissioner — that there was excessive optimism expressed in that meeting about how rapidly they can get approval from the Navajo Nation to do anything on the reservation.”

He said in a conversation after the meeting, Maryboy, who is also a legislator on the tribal council, said it would be “a miracle” if Doggett could get through the approval process in a year.

“The sheriiff’s problem is probably as well defined as any,” he said. “They are now expected to be on the scene in a few minutes or an hour because the belief is that with cell phones and radios, they can be notified.

“When we didn’t have cell phones, the pace of expectations was different.”

Stevens said the Bluff residents at the meeting may not have reflected the town’s majority opinion.

“There are a lot of people in Bluff who have lived there for long years who will not attend one of those meetings because they’ve been shouted down and insulted and attacked (in the past) by a relatively new group so that they just stay away.

“So the consensus of those there was to put it on the south side, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that’s the consensus of the people of Bluff.”

Published in -November 2007

Trickle-out economics

I went to the store to buy a replacement garden hose, because a fairly new but totally inept one had developed a leak. Of course, I know hoses are supposed to leak – from one end – but this hose had an ailment: Multiple Directional Dysfunction (MDD). Namely, it let water loose in a half dozen directions before the water ever reached the sprinkler. It had to go.

I can speak with authority on the subject of hoses, because in my neighborhood I have a shareholder’s interest in their manufacturing. To be specific, I buy tons of hoses; I have 20 sprinklers going at any given moment during the summer, with at least four hoses coiled and poised, waiting to be uncoiled and coupled into service. I know some people would recommend installing an underground sprinkler system, but I covet my position as the Sheik of sprinklers, the Viceroy of vinyl, the King of kinks.

If Alan Greenspan had to water his own lawn, he’d have known the American economy was more than a collection of statistics. With a name like Greenspan, after all, you’d expect a lush future, which is why I’m offering a few observations based on my own watering experiences. Traditional economists employ a variety of indicators to predict how the country is doing. They cite the Dow Jones average, unemployment rates, housing sales and construction, cost of living indexes, the price of consumer goods, and inflation. Much to a statistician’s dismay, I rely entirely on garden hoses.

With an accuracy of roughly 50 feet, I can say with confidence that my observations have been field tested, and they usually hold water. As with all economic discussions, if you get bored, go out and water the lawn.

Hint #1: Don’t use the word “watering” when you mean irrigation. Irrigation is for profit; watering refreshes. Money may be the compost that keeps us eating, but plant life is what keep us breathing.

Hint #2: No matter where you exist in the economic terracing of America, remember that keeping things alive is why you are here on this earth. A light duty hose costs you less, but it holds water like pantyhose. A medium weight hose costs a little more, but it still buckles under pressure. Heavy duty hoses claim they’re guaranteed, but don’t buy it; nothing besides death is guaranteed. When it comes to money, stay flexible.

Hint #3: Turn off the water before checking to see why the sprinkler’s not working. Bending the hose or stepping on it to reduce water pressure looks easier, but in the end you’ll get an eyeful of the unexpected. People who are good with money know precisely when to let their money go.

Hint #4: Neighbors won’t come over anymore to ask for a cup of water. Instead, they’ll steal your hoses, especially if you buy the expensive ones. The lesson, if you can afford it, is to bury your sprinkler system. If you can’t afford it, bury your neighbor.

Hint #5: If you’ve been saving that expensive hose for a rainy day, remember that rain is God’s way of saying hoses are stupid. Xeroscaping in the West makes better sense than spending your money on pipe dreams. If making oodles of money is your pipe dream, then you better go into irrigation.

Hint #7: Evaporation is watering’s greatest enemy, which is why whatever you planned unexpectedly disappears. No matter how much water you’ve saved, don’t count on it – continue to save. Turn your sprinklers on in the early morning or late evening. During the heat of the day, keep your head out of the sun.

Hint #8: When you leave your hoses stretched out on the lawn, exposed to the sun, or don’t cover the tires on your RV or trailer, the rubber gets brittle and becomes checked with exposure to the weather. I say, so what! It’s likely the only free checking you’ll ever receive. Take whatever you can get for free.

Hint #9: Don’t forget hint #8.

Hint #10: Before you place all your faith in the bank, remember that the color green comes from a deeper place. A grassroots portfolio is always the best financial advice, which is why I still have a shareholder’s interest in hoses.

David Feela is a teacher at Montezuma-Cortez High School.

Published in David Feela

Kindergarten

Praise be to Kindergarten Teachers!

They have chosen a career that in terms of stress, overload, over-stimulation and pressure far exceeds that of an air traffic controller.

Last week I began my day as a kindergarten substitute full of vim and vigor; I ended it a deflated balloon.

I began, determined to be a fun, warm, caring, effective educator-for-aday. Dressed in my best comes it-in-my-lap, sweet-kindergarten- teacher blue dress, I sat down in front of 16 cherubic little faces, 14 of which had fingers in various stages of traveling between nostril and mouth, and smiled benevolently,

“Hi, I am Miss Suzanne and I love to pick my nose but I do it in private” (expectant pause) “and, I guess you all prefer to do it in public.” Next. Time to start learning…

“You need to play the CD”

“Jane needs to say the day.”

“We have to sing the Days of the Week song.”

“We have to do the Macarena.”

“Can you tie my shoe?”

“I have to pee”

“I forgot my folder”

“Can I put my snack in my cubby?”

“Where’s our teacher?”

“Why do you pick your nose in private?”

Well, 30 seconds had just elapsed, only 26,970 more to go.

So, we did the Macarena, sang the Days of the Week song and the Months of the Year song, knocked the calendar off the wall, stepped on the chalk, crushing it, and said s#$% three times.

Snack time! Interesting fact about Kindergarten Snack Time; it lasts all day long, thanks to the fact that 5-yearolds have a tendency to spill their goldfish crackers all over the floor and then have no qualms about scraping the crumbs back up and into their mouths as the day wears on and their little tummies grumble.

Thoroughly grossed out, I decided to move into reading. I approached this task with confidence, knowing that I can read a story to adorable little children. Or so I thought. I had one child crawling under the tables, one girl flashing us all, two girls having a tea party in the corner, a boy pulling every single book off the shelf, three kids snacking off the carpet and 29 untied shoes in my face needing attention.

“Okay kiddos, we are learning a new word today. Repeat after me…VEL-CRO. Now, go home and say it to your parents.”

As the day wore on, my nerves were worn. I was being sucked dry by my own ineptitude and lack of innate talent. And besides the fact that 5-yearolds can’t tie their own shoes, I had some other challenges.

For example, around 11:30 I figured out why two little girls kept mentally flipping me off, not doing a thing I asked. One approached me, hand between her legs, eyes pleading, “Baño?”

Ohhhh, she doesn’t speak English.

Fortunately, she hit on the singular word in my Spanish repertoire.

Got that one cleared up – now if we could just get Johnny out from under the table.

I performed playground duty. “Can you push me on the swing?”

“No, sweetie, I can’t because I am hanging by a thread here and pushing would require energy, of which I currently have none. I am so sorry. Do you have any Valium?”

The end of the day finally did arrive. My voice had gone from syrupy sweet to sourly screechy. I had sweat stains down my front, back and armpits, ruining my Maria Von Trapp dress.

I was oozing fear.

I hadn’t killed anyone, either by accident or by choice (although I did lose one into the depths of the boys’ room). Only one child had cried and the only thing they had all learned was to dread the substitute teacher.

I went home with the full intent of drinking heavily and I raised my first glass to the Kindergarten Teachers of the world.

Suzanne Strazza writes from Mancos, Colo.

Published in Suzanne Strazza

Septic systems: Should we be concerned?

After reading the article in the September Free Press about Bluff, Utah’s, septic problems, I decided to do some research on the regulations of the same in Montezuma County.

We could very well be in the same fix 30 years down the road with the sparse regulations on septic systems and coming development.

First off, I find that the state leaves the permits and regulations up to the counties. Also, that some counties are fairly stringent and others lackadaisical about them. Park County has 86 pages of guidelines and permit requirements. Now, that might seem excessive to some, but it does protect their pristine area and water supply. I believe anyone with common sense would support that.

Colorado may seem like a mountainous green state. It is also a state with limited potable water. Beneath the surface is a geologist’s treasure. Here in Montezuma County we have a number of problems to address. There are different soil types in the area from sandstone, clay and sand. Some are more porous than others, which the engineers who design these systems should be more concerned with. Do they have the knowledge to make these decisions?

I attended a commissioners’ meeting some time back on a proposed development a large number of residents of the area were opposed to, stating the same rhetoric: speeding cars, more dogs and cats, fences torn down, accidents, noise in a rural area. All these concerns can be addressed with law enforcement, but the subject of septic systems never came up.

I took the time to look up the meaning of septic and here’s what Webster’s says:

Septic: putrefactive 2: relating to or characteristic of Sepsis. Sepsis: a poisoned condition resulting from the spread of bacteria or their poisonous products from a center of infection.

Now that may be a little harder to control if it gets into the water supply. To my knowledge, there are numerous Third World countries already battling diseases brought about by this contamination.

I grew up in a farming area and we all had septic systems. These were not regulated by the county; just engineered by a person who made a business of their placement. We didn’t have the plastic or pre-manufactured concrete styles available now. So it was dig a hole, pour a slab, form up the sides with an inlet and outlet. I’m not sure there was a baffle in the tank as there are in more modern prefabs.

Now they are having problems with the groundwater and wells, some so contaminated they have to be sealed. In the past we have had some septic problems here in the county. As I remember, there was a trailer park that had raw sewage running through it — shades of a Third World nation. There was also quite an uproar over another problem in McElmo Canyon. To make mistakes through ignorance is understandable.

To make mistakes when one knows better is criminal. As much as we would like to think so, this is not our land. It belongs to the coming generations.

There is much said on television by financial advisors to invest our money wisely and leave something for our children and grandchildren. Money won’t mean much if the ecosystem has been destroyed.

One can believe what he or she wants, but all that keeps this planet habitable is the air, soil and water. The majority of the time it is the unseen that does the most damage.

Montezuma County will continue to grow, but if we are to prosper we must take note of the hidden dangers of uncontrolled development. We are now quite awakened to the bad air problems. It is getting some attention from forward thinkers, as stated by a number of people at the Towaoc hearing. Still, there was no one from the county commissioners or the governors’ offices of either Colorado or New Mexico. We were once again talking to the chair.

These events may relieve our conscience, but they achieve nothing; until we get the elected officials convinced, nothing will get done.

Perhaps if we had paid more attention to the direction our air quality was taking 30 years ago we would not be trying to fight a losing battle with Desert Rock and the other polluting coal-fired plants in the area.

This new plant is supposedly “state of the art” engineering, whatever that means. It’s just a small percentage more of pollutants; if the glass is already full, isn’t it common sense to realize with just a little more pollution it will run over?

With the lackadaisical attitude toward septic systems, 30 years in the future there will be a similar problem with the septic systems contaminating the meager water supply.

Our elected officials are supposed to serve for the will of their constituents. It seems that they just serve the few developers. They state that the air 50 years ago was not good, but refuse to see the contamination slowly seeping into the county. What one can see is bad enough; it is what one cannot see that does the most damage.

Anyway, the electricity being produced is not going to Montezuma County residents, it is likely going to Phoenix and Las Vegas, the two fastestgrowing cities in the West. With growth comes the need for water, and I’ll bet you can figure out where that will come from.

Why am I combining water, air and septic? Because the improper care of either can be disastrous to the future.

“Only a crisis — actual or perceived — produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around.” — Milton Friedman

But at that time we are usually too late.

Galen Larson writes from Montezuma County.

Published in Galen Larson

Yup – still obsessed with sex

Let’s get one thing straight. I don’t care if Larry Craig is gay, bi- or hetero as the day is long, and I don’t care what he was or was not doing in the privacy of a bathroom stall.

Nor do I care whether that Minneapolis cop correctly interpreted Craig’s “signals” as an invitation for hanky-panky when the Idaho Republican allegedly tapped his foot, then allegedly reached under the stall divider.

You shouldn’t, either. And that’s not because this teapot-brewed tempest effectively doused the senator’s career.

It’s because we’ve all got more important things to worry about. We should be worried about what elected officials are doing concerning subprime mortgage lenders, growing economic dependency on Communist China, civil liberties, restoring and protecting the Gulf Coast, the Constitution, the eroding bedrock of our republic, and Iraq, Iraq, Iraq.

Still, it was the Craig scandal that dominated airwaves and television programs for most of Labor Day weekend. And why?

S-E-X. Americans are obsessed with sex, and when it combines with politics, we talk out of both sides of our mouth. One side is shocked and appalled that anyone, let alone a U.S. senator, could do “such a thing.” Tsk, tsk, what a terrible role model!

The other side of the mouth, though, is hidden down our collective sleeve, giggling: “Sex! Hee, hee, hee! Gotcha!”

Unhelpful in any context, this type of puerility is risky when it’s the primary standard by which we judge our elected servants and their associates.

Remember sex, lies and Bill Clinton? Few would have cared about the lies had they not involved “sex with that woman” and the creative use of cigars. Don’t kid yourself.

According to Democracy Now host Amy Goodman in her book “Exception to the Rulers,” Clinton backed dictators in Nigeria (in the name of oil) and in Indonesia, which seems a far better reason to revile him than does what he did with a consenting adult and a cigar. So why is it we know more about that cigar than we do about Clinton’s Nigeria dealings?

It is fundamentally absurd to obsess over sexual peccadilloes while ignoring greater offenses.

Don’t get me wrong. Soliciting sex in a public restroom, while nowhere near on par with, for instance, preying on underage congressional pages, or even presidential adultery, isn’t the best way to exhibit fitness for leadership.

Also, the hypocrisy of Craig’s alleged activities vs. Craig’s politics on gay issues is both self-evident and territory well traveled by other commentators.

But why does it seem as though the only thing guaranteed to unseat a corrupt politician is a sex scandal?

Let’s veer down another well-traveled road and consider George Bush. He has continually changed his story about why we are in Iraq — and continually manipulated both our emotions and the evidence.

He has vilified his critics as traitors. He has “disappeared” countless suspects in the name of fighting terror and secured the power to declare American citizens “enemy combatants.” He has spied on us without due process. He has restricted our civil liberties, and the much-hated Patriot Act was his idea.

Bush started a war that is simply not fated to end well, and with reckless disregard for known facts about the Middle East. He has, for the past six years, let our real enemy escape, while creating more enemies elsewhere. This has caused more terrorism, more insurgency… and, not coincidentally, more warfare, which he can continue to use as justification for his agenda.

Bush has all but wiped his feet on the Constitution he swore to uphold; despite his folksy demeanor, he has nothing but contempt for the American people.

But, by Jove, he never cheated on Laura, and if he were to enjoy a ceegar, he’d probably keep it in his mouth! So, no impeachment for him!

The premium we place on the appearance of sexual morality — instead of on accountability for behavior that exposes us to constant danger — is apparent in our (over)reaction to the Craig flap. Networks analyzed him, while pundits questioned the media’s decision to inform the public of a public official’s public arrest and public plea (which might now be withdrawn) to disorderly conduct.

As for the GOP, it abandoned Craig because it feared the scandal would harm Republican political prospects — not because of the rightness or wrongness of the allegations. The GOP knew in the Clinton era what really pushed voters’ buttons and it knows it now.

The sex.

Katharhynn Heidelberg is a journalist in Montrose, Colo.

Published in Katharhynn Heidelberg

Something in the air: Exhibit celebrates Four Corners Plein Aire Painters

The artist heads toward the mesa, carrying easel and paint box. In summer, he dons a straw hat, and slathers on suntan lotion.

In winter, she wears layers, and tight-fitting gloves, open at the finger tips, so she can manipulate a brush.

Why? Because both love to paint en plein aire, French for in open air. Working that way gives their pictures a unique look, based on a special philosophy for drawing outdoors.

Four Corners oil painter Phillip West describes the style as loose, and less detailed than studio painting, which presents a more carefully-rendered finished product. “(Plein aire paintings) just have a look of catching the expression,” he says.

“(Artists) can’t do more than 10 percent touch-up in the studio,” adds his colleague, K. K. Walling, who works in several media. “Because often times, if you go to touch up, (a painting) changes.”

Water-colorist S a n d y Sabelman, chortles in agreement. “(You’re) on location as the light is at the moment, and you’d better be quick.”

Painting fast and loose with a minimum of detail can produce exciting results. About 75 examples currently hang at the Gateway Museum in Farmington, in an exhibit entitled “2007 Pleinly Art: A Juried Show of Recent Oils, Pastels, and Watercolors by Members of the Plein Aire Painters of the Four Corners.” West, Walling, and Sabelman belong to this group.

To assemble their images of mesas, river valleys, barns, and stands of trees for the show, the Plein Aire Painters of the Four Corners faced special challenges. First, they strove to finish paintings on location, to honor the 10 percent rule.

“But there’s always some kind of little touch-up thing,” says West, a tall, quiet-spoken man.

“The main thing is to have some degree of integrity.” He begins to laugh. “I have probably five paintings in my studio now that were supposed to be plein aire paintings, and I worked on them to such an extent, that it wouldn’t be honest to use them.”

But avoiding the studio is only one thing plein aire painters have to worry about. Sandy Sabelman, whose still life “Prickly Pear” won an Award of Honorable Mention in “2007 Pleinly Art,” recalls painting in New Mexico’s Bosque del Apache, when the chances “were real good” of getting hit as birds flew overhead.

Another time, as she painted near a hiking trail In Sedona, people stopped to watch and talk. “It’s almost like you’re a performer,” she says.

Mosquitos, gnats, flies, and June bugs swarm in summer, invading artists’ eyes and ears, and landing in paint. “(Gnats) love oil,” West affirms, with a smile. “Yellow and the light blue of the sky. The secret is: just let ‘em dry (then) pick ‘em off with a palette knife.”

Removing bugs from a canvas doesn’t count against the 10 percent rule, assures Walling. She doesn’t remember if she picked insects from “Morning on Chalk Creek,” which won the 2007 Pleinly Art Award of Juror’s Choice.

Besides critters, paint, water, and solvent present their problems outdoors. Watercolors dry too fast in the Four Corners’ climate, according to Sabelman. Near the sea, they “never dry.”

Getting enough detail can pose a dilemma. To work quickly, plein aire painters first create large shapes, then smaller ones. This means beginning with a thin layer of oil paint and building thicker and thicker layers for West. “That’s pretty tricky at times because the paint wants to not stay there. It wants to run.”

Still, plein aire artists manage to capture brilliant light and form, sometimes in extreme conditions.

“You see a lot more dimension and a lot more color than if you try to paint from a photograph,” says Sabelman. “The Southwest light — there’s nothing like it.”

She nods at one of her paintings. Created in March wind, it depicts Ship Rock, as if the monster lava outcrop might blow away in the powerful gusts. As she worked on the painting, clouds constantly shifted. She drew the basic shapes she saw when she looked up. Thereafter, she paid no attention to the real sky, but added detail to the one she created.

Roughly 34 artists belong to The Plein Aire Painters of the Four Corners. Most are participating in 2007 Pleinly Art, and they created many of the show’s pictures in group paint-outs. Working together has advantages.

“It’s rubbing elbows with like-minded people,” says Sabelman, adding that the Plein Aire Painters taught her to choose diverse subjects, and to experiment with small works.

Constructive critique sessions have let West learn new techniques and new painting tools. “This happens to be a group of real good people, caring and willing to help one another,” he says.

Besides Sabelman and Walling, several artists received recognition for contributions to the show. Dwight Lawning got the Award of Excellence, Gayle Lewis the Award of Merit. Honorable-mention awards went to Judy DiVincentis-Morgan, Mary MacAdams, Jan Goldman, Wanda Coffee, and Maryellen Morrow.

Published in -October 2007, Arts & Entertainment

A groundbreaking venture in Dove Creek

Ag community hopeful that biodiesel plant will bring new prosperity

COLORADO GOV. BILL RITTER AND U.S. REP. JOHN SALAZARThe saffron sunflowers that garnished the makeshift stage outside Dove Creek, Colo., on Sept. 8 represented more than beauty or even prosperity.

They were symbols of a better, cleaner energy future – a vision that Dove Creek’s much-heralded biodiesel facility is designed to help bring about.

“I am truly, truly pleased to be here today because this is the marking of a new era for Western Colorado,” said U.S. Rep. John Salazar (D-Manassa) at the groundbreaking ceremony for the plant. He said the facility represents a step toward lessening the United States’ dependence on oil.

“I certainly would want to bring our troops home as soon as we possibly can,” Salazar said, “and I can assure you if we want to win this war on terror, we have to become energy-independent. We do this by devaluing oil and encouraging other nations such as China to become energy-independent.”

Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter also came to the groundbreaking, which drew about 200 people from around the region. He spoke of the importance of the project to area farmers.

“This groundbreaking is very much a part of our economic-development strategy for rural areas in our state,” Ritter said. “It’s so important to a state like Colorado that we pay attention to the agricultural industry. It’s the thirdlargest industry in the state, but unfortunately it operates at a very slim margin.”

Biodiesel is an alternative diesel fuel produced using regular diesel (usually about 80 percent) and oil from plant sources such as canola or sunflower seeds. It will burn in regular diesel engines and is much less-polluting than regular diesel.

GROUNDBREAKING CEREMONIES AT THE BIODIESEL PLANT IN DOVE CREEK

Four years ago, the idea of a biodiesel facility in Dove Creek seemed like wishful thinking. But a confluence of one family’s generosity and one man’s vision led to the reality.

Dennis McMahon, chair of the Dolores County Development Corporation, told the crowd that a few years ago, members of the Weber family wanted to donate a 10-acre tract to the DCDC for an industrial park, “and we’re all sitting on it right now.

“We sat around a couple of years and scratched our heads and wondered what we were going to do with this piece of ground,” McMahon said, “and lo and behold, there came Jeff Berman out of nowhere.”

Berman, of Durango, became manager for the biodiesel project. He sketched out a rough plan, and Dove Creek Mayor Jay Allen planted 85 acres of test crops of sunflowers in 2005. That year a feasibility study, funded by many entities, was begun as well.

“This really set a precedent as a community-based event,” Berman told the audience.

Allen’s test crops did well. Allen tried three varieties of sunflower in 2005, with an average total cost per acre of around $53, plus a one-time cost for some equipment.

Yields averaged 1,280 pounds per acre. With a projected purchase price at 11 cents per pound, Allen’s harvest would net him a profit of $88 per acre — compared to gross incomes on wheat and beans of around $50 per acre or less.

By 2007 there were 11,000 acres of sunflowers growing on 41 different farms in the Dove Creek area.

“Next year we’re hoping to contract 25,000 to 30,000 acres,” Berman said. The year after that, the goal is 60,000 acres within a 200-mile radius. “We want to move up to 2.5 million gallons of oil (a year) to be turned into biodiesel,” he said.

The number sounds impressive, but the United States consumes some 56 billion gallons of diesel fuel a year, half of which comes from foreign sources. Biodiesel fuel, ethanol and other plantbased fuels will never put much of a dent in the nation’s ravenous appetite for fuel.

“Every gallon of soybean, sunflower, cottonseed, used fryer oil, beef tallow and just about everything else in the U.S. would only offset 15 percent of the diesel consumption in the U.S.,” Berman admitted to the Free Press in a previous interview, “so while biodiesel offers some solution it is not the whole solution.

“The No. 1 solution is still efficiency.”

But the production of biodiesel holds promise for many reasons, supporters believe, not the least of which is providing farmers a more profitable crop than beans or alfalfa. Though canola and soybeans don’t seem feasible to grow in Southwest Colorado, sunflowers have done well. The oil produced can be used in food as well as biodiesel — oils such as sunflower and canola oil are becoming highly popular for cooking.

And the facility itself will create 15 or so jobs, a significant boost for Dolores County, where 37 percent of workers travel out of the county to work.

JEF BERMAN, MANAGER FOR THE SAN JUAN BIOENERGY PROJECTAccording to Berman, a comprehensive study done by the National Renewable Energy Lab in 1998 found that biodiesel has an energy balance of 3.2, meaning producers get 3.2 units of energy out of biodiesel crops for every 1 unit of energy put in. That’s compared to 1.3 or 1.4 at the most for ethanol.

“We hope with the plant we are looking at to achieve a much better energy balance by having a number of efficiencies built in,” Berman said. “We plan on dehulling or partially dehulling sunflower seeds and using those hulls in a biomass-based boiler unit that would create the steam we need for our process rather than relying on natural gas.”

The entire project will entail constructing two buildings, Berman said – a seed-crushing plant and the biodiesel plant. Those will be built in Phase 1, and the sunflower seeds from the 2006 and 2007 crops will be crushed.

The biodiesel fuel produced will be available for sale at a competitive price to school districts to run their buses, to farmers for cultivating the next year’s crop, and so on.

“So this really becomes a circular, sustainable model,” Berman said.

An electric turbine will be installed to generate the electricity needed to run the plant, he said.

Also, an anemometer on the Frasier Elevator in Dove Creek is measuring wind speed to see whether wind power can be incorporated into the project during Phase 2. “We can turn the turbine down when the wind blows and when it doesn’t blow we turn our generator back up,” Berman said.

No longer will the project be San Juan Biodiesel, it will be San Juan BioEnergy, he said, reflecting the project’s broad scope.

There are about 43 investors so far in the project, which will cost $4 million to $5 million for construction of the two buildings and running the initial co-op, Berman said. Additional funds will be needed for operations and planning.

“These are not huge corporations,” Berman told the crowd Sept. 8. “These are individuals who see the value and the potential in a facility such as this.

“This is an opportunity for all of us – not only for renewable energy, not only for food production, but especially for the agricultural community.”

Berman said he received encouragement from Ritter’s support for renewable energy.

“When I first heard Governor Ritter speak about the new energy economy, I was just blown away,” Berman said.

“I feel that Colorado is really stepping forward as a leader in new energy economy in the U.S. and throughout the world.”

Published in -October 2007

‘Economic blackmail’ fueling power-plant push?

 

AN HISTORIC HOGAN SITS NEAR THE DRILLING SITE FOR THE PROPOSED DESERT ROCK POWER PLANTBuilding the controversial Desert Rock power plant to boost the Navajo Nation’s economy doesn’t make sense when there are cleaner options for generating energy, says the author of the critically acclaimed “Big Coal: The Dirty Secret Behind America’s Energy Future.”

The idea of coal mines and coal-fired power plants as economic boons “was only true 50 years ago when coal was one of the only ways to generate electricity,” Goodell told the Free Press by phone from New York.

“There’s no doubt that power has brought prosperity to regions,” he said. “It’s the juice our economy flows on.” But today there are a lot of other options for generating electricity. “It’s no longer a simple equation of ‘build the power plant for electricity and have jobs, or not’,” Goodell said.

“Big Coal,” published earlier this year, analyzes the coal industry from mining to power plants, as well as the consequences of America’s dependency on the black rocks. The readable, down-to-earth book developed out of an assignment that Goodell, a veteran journalist, was doing for the New YorkTimes Magazine on coal-mining in West Virginia.

Few Americans any longer burn coal in their own homes or have direct contact with the messy substance, but more than half the nation’s electricity is still produced from coal. And the industry touts coal as a means for reducing America’s dependence on foreign oil.

But Goodell argues that planning a future around coal, the most carbonintensive fossil fuel, is insanity in this era of concern about carbon emissions and global warming.

And the idea of building a 1,500- megawatt plant such as Desert Rock in the Four Corners area makes even less sense, he says.

“The really killer thing for New Mexico is there are so many other options, such as large-scale solar installations – things that are arguably as cheap as or cheaper than building a power plant but are pushed aside as a New Age techy thing.”

THE FOUR CORNERS POWER PLANT IN NORTHERN NEW MEXICO IS THE NATION'S NO. 1 EMITTER OF NITROGEN OXIDESGoodell said several solar-thermal facilities are on the books, including one in Arizona, that would create more jobs than coal-fired power plants.

“The idea of throwing up these power plants is all about industrial inertia and the power of these power companies,” he said.

Desert Rock is proposed on the Burnham Chapter of the Navajo Nation about 25 miles southwest of Farmington. It is a joint project of the tribe’s Diné Power Authority and Sithe Global, a private, multinational company based in Houston.

It’s no accident that Desert Rock is being planned in a remote, impoverished area, Goodell said.

“You don’t see a big coal-fired power plant in Beverly Hills and Westchester [County, N.Y.] and Grosse Point, Mich.,” Goodell said. “They put them in places where people can’t afford to fight them, where they’re desperate for jobs, where you don’t have environmental communities organized to fight them. They’re always in poor regions. Nobody else would tolerate them.

“They use that sort of economic blackmail – ‘We’ll bring you jobs, so please allow us to pollute your air and cook the planet for the next 50 years’.”

Desert Rock is expected to create 200 permanent jobs at the plant and another 200 at the Navajo Mine, which would fuel it. Promoters have said the plant will be the cleanest ever built. The plant will produce 3,500 tons of nitrogen oxides and another 3,500 tons of sulfur dioxides annually, Still, Desert Rock would be far less polluting than the nearby power plants, which together spew out some 67,000 tons of nitrogen oxides and 37,000 tons of sulfur dioxide.

Sithe Global also signed an agreement with the tribe May 15 promising to sponsor projects to reduce sulfurdioxide emissions at other power plants or sources near Desert Rock. The total reductions would be 110 percent of the sulfur-dioxide emissions from Desert Rock, meaning emissions would be reduced from their current level.

Goodell said newer coal plants certainly are cleaner than the old ones, such as the notorious Four Corners plant, the No. 1 emitter of nitrogen oxides in the nation.

“But just because you go from 10 quarts of whiskey a week to four doesn’t mean you’re clean and sober,” he said. “When you compare the new plants to the old, yes, they’re cleaner, but when you compare them to actual clean energy like solar and wind and things like that they’re still enormously dirty.

“They still emit tremendous amounts of pollutants and combustion wastes.”

JEFF GOODELLWaste such as fly ash remains a huge problem of coal-fired power plants, Goodell said. “Then you have the impacts from mining, the water depletion.” To reduce its water usage, the plant will use a “dry-cooling” system that cuts water usage by 85 percent, but will still require 4 million gallons a day.

“Clean” in the coal industry’s parlance simply means less-polluting than the plants of the 1960s and 1970s, he said, “but what they don’t tell you is these power-industry guys fought all these mandates for lowering emissions, saying they were going to put people out of work.”

Desert Rock would produce any- where from 100 to 550 pounds of mercury annually, it is estimated. (The Four Corners plant emits about 2,000 pounds.) Mercury levels are already high at numerous area bodies of water.

And it will generate tons of particulates, which are considered a particular threat to public health. Some 15 percent of the population of San Juan County, N.M., is estimated to suffer from lung disease, according to American Lung Association statistics, and numerous Navajos have said that asthma is rampant in areas near the existing plants.

The health risks of breathing pollutants are “as well-established as the impact of smoking,” Goodell said.

And regardless of how much coal-fired plants are able to reduce their emissions of other pollutants, there remains one enormous issue: carbon dioxide.

“That’s the big kahuna,” Goodell said.

Desert Rock would emit some 10.5 million to 13 million tons per year of CO2, a greenhouse gas scientists blame for global warming.

“Frankly, especially for people in New Mexico and the Southwest – you sometimes have to be blunt – it’s almost like a suicide wish, building a coal plant in the Southwest, when you look at all the drought projections and climate-change modeling, which are getting better and better. This is one of the places in the country that’s going to be impacted the most with increased heat and drought. The idea that we can ignore this and continue to throw up coal plants is just crazy. At some point people have to say, ‘No, this is wrong’.”

Because Desert Rock would be on tribal land, the state of New Mexico has no authority to reject or approve it. However, the state legislature last year refused to grant an $85 million tax break that the plant had sought.

Desert Rock has received a draft airquality permit from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, but is awaiting the final permit. Public comment is still being taken on a draft environmental impact statement by the Bureau of Indian Affairs that would give the go-ahead to the project.

But the tribe has chosen the design and construction contractor for the plant, Fluor Corp. of Irving, Texas, and is pushing to move forward.

Goodell said that’s because powerindustry operators want to get coal-fired plants approved before Congress passes legislation that taxes carbon-dioxide emissions.

“I think everyone now agrees the next administration is going to pass some sort of Kyoto-like legislation. When that happens, that will change the price of [coal-generated power] in a big way.”

Asked whether such legislation would not surely also tax plants that had been recently approved, Goodell laughed.

“You underestimate the power of our friends in the coal industry,” he said. “One-third of the old coal plants in America still don’t have scrubbers on them. There will be a huge fight for grandfathering.”

Desert Rock is a privately owned plant, not a public utility, he noted, so it is being built purely for profit. The power is expected to be sold mostly out of state.

“If you can get a traditional coal plant built and get it grandfathered, you’re building a gold mine, and it’s no more complex than that,” he said. “They want to push through the cheapest and least risky coal plant they can.”

New technology known as IGCC (integrated gasification combined cycle) offers another option for coalfired electricity. IGCC plants don’t simply burn coal, they use heat and pressure to “cook off the impurities in coal and convert it into a synthetic gas,” Goodell explains in “Big Coal.” The gas is then burned in a turbine.

IGCC plants are nearly as clean-burning as natural-gas plants, he says, plus they offer the option of capturing and storing the carbon dioxide emitted, if a feasible method for doing so is available.

But Desert Rock’s owners have rejected IGCC technology as unproven, although some 10 such plants are being built in the U.S., Goodell said. He said the power industry tends to reject anything different.

“All new technology in their minds is never quite ready,” he said, “and there’s always a reason to keep building the same old power plants.”

But opposition is growing to doing things the same old way.

“This has changed even since I fin- ished my book,” Goodell said. “At the beginning of 2006, there was nobody beating these plants and no real serious opposition, but just in the last six months to a year there’s been a real change.”

According to the Wall Street Journal, in the spring plans were on the books for 150 new coalfired plants nationwide, but many are running into major opposition.

Sen. Majory Leader Harry Reid (DNev.) stated recently, “No new coal plants should be built in my home state or anywhere else on the planet. There is no such thing as clean coal.”

And U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman (DCalif.), chair of the House oversight committee, recently asked the EPA not to approve Desert Rock or two other proposed coal-fired plants until it considers the impact of greenhouse-gas emissions on climate change.

Goodell said new coal plants are becoming mired in economic and political difficulties. One is the increasing awareness of global warming, something even President Bush has acknowledged. “This is not some sort of weird left-wing liberal conspiracy to shut down the global economy, it’s a real threat to life as we know it,” Goodell said.

Another problem is that construction costs are soaring because of rising prices for steel and concrete.

Also, there is increasing interest in renewable energy. “Now things are wide open,” Goodell said.

“There is an increasing sense that there is a better way to do things. An incredible amount of money is flowing into clean energy.

“I think all these factors are coming together to make it very clear that coal is the fuel of the past, not the future.”

Published in -October 2007

‘Carcass’ is not a pretty word

I don’t expect much from the new fall television season, but I don’t mean I’m bereft of hope. I just mean I have enough experience with the medium to know it’s not well done.

Sitcoms, soap operas, game, reality, and talk shows have pretty much worn me down with their antics. At least the crime scene investigations – the cadavers reminding me of the carcasses I have to live with near my home – keep me from chucking my TV into the dumpster.

My own television is an older one, connected to the public airwaves. It’s not a high-definition flat-screen plasma- pulsing digital-image/sound transfusion device, and I don’t have any immediate plans to upgrade my equipment. Maybe in a few years equipment like mine will prompt people to feel pity. They’ll invite me over to their houses for snacks and shows. You see, my signal doesn’t even arrive via cable or satellite. It trickles down from the roof, strained like spaghetti through a traditional aluminum antenna.

The reason I mention all this TV background is because I’d like to propose a new series for next fall, a show called “Auto Autopsy.” The piece could easily be filmed south of Cortez, where plenty of my neighbors have the carcasses of salvaged vehicles stashed in the weeds around their homes. It will be a CSI-style investigation drama, car detectives going door to door, trying to figure out if what went wrong can ever be repaired.

Here’s a synopsis for the first episode:

Burt has a fondness for classics. He’s seen it in the magazines, foldouts no doubt, and he gets excited talking about how its rear end is styled. It’s a ’53 something, with paint the color of a clear blue sky, and enough chrome to compete with moonlight.

One day, while driving to the landfill, Burt notices another old car with its trunk sticking out of an arroyo. It might have been there forever, but he never noticed it before. He stops his truck, climbs under a wire fence, and checks out the carcass. You see, Burt thinks any old car is worth resuscitating. It’s not that he has environmental leanings, upset over the irresponsible disposal of salvage vehicles. He just wants to winch that old beast out of the dirt and bring it home, park it beside his other junk cars, and brush up on its specifications.

Burt rushes back to town and assembles his car team. He tells them what he’s found, they speculate for over an hour about what it could be, and they agree to meet at the carcass to “take a look”. What the television viewers don’t know (but will eventually be forced to learn) is that to car people, every vehicle is connected to the great automotive family tree, a genealogy of makes and models. If they drag it home, it will be because it’s an offspring to the cars in their yards – a niece, nephew, cousin, uncle, aunt, great-grandparent, or bastard of some model they already own.

Burt and the boys examine every inch of the car. In the end (there’s a wife involved in a flashback scene, looking depressed), they decide to leave it where it’s been dumped, grilled into a hot desert arroyo. A squeak of elation (definitely a female voice) is heard while the credits roll.

I’m hoping this treatment for a new television show will go cable. If it gets as many viewers as “Car Talk” has listeners, I’ll be able to afford a new television and a dish antenna that can pull in a signal from as far away as, say, the Space Station. You see, I suspect the crew – just for kicks – tries to identify the carcasses of old satellites as they drift past and, as they say in the orbiting business, it could make a good spin-off.

David Feela is a teacher at Montezuma-Cortez High School.

Published in David Feela

Hooked on books

I am the librarian who has lost library privileges.

Due to my easy access to the wonders of the Mancos Public Library and all that it has to offer, I have checked out everything from Crockpot Cookbooks to Castle-Constructing videos to Chicka Chicka Boom Boom (a beloved board book from the days of toddlerhood).

Each day, as I return books, tapes, CDs and videos to their rightful places on the shelves I am exposed to titles that spark my interest, inspiring me to bring them home for further investigation and exploration. I find politics for Tom, dragon tales for the boys and parenting, cooking and fluff for me. I bring home more books than I shelve. My card is constantly maxed out, as are my children’s. There are stacks of borrowed items all over the house – kitchen, living room, bathroom, my car.

And this is where I run into trouble.

Somehow or another, even though I am at the library multiple times a week, I find it very difficult to return things on time. Believe me, I have the very best intentions, but somehow, getting a book from the bedside table into the car and then into the drop box is a bit too much for me.

And usually, somewhere along that path, the item either regains my interest, gets a huge muddy footprint on its cover, or vanishes.

Some people ponder the mysteries of a single sock disappearing. For me, it’s library books.

I am meticulous in so many other areas of my life. I am anal about being on time (as many of my irritated, less uptight friends will attest to). When I have no children or husband in the house, it is immaculate and organized. My files are in order, as I have not one but two filing cabinets. And, I am a list-keeper-checker-off-er. Every morning I chart what I will do for the day (including returning library books) and have a brief moment of satisfaction as each item gets crossed out

So then, why the hell am I such a mess about returning library books?

Is there some deep-rooted childhood trauma that plagues me, preventing me from functioning properly in the world of public library? Did I burn that part of my brain out during my “experimental” years? Has motherhood just taken its toll?

There really is no logical answer.

In the past year, I have lost (and paid to replace) three books on tape, plus two books – and that is just here in Mancos. I have an outstanding fine of $16 at one library and need to replace a Nutcracker Ballet video at another. I have ILL’s (interlibrary loans) strewn across my coffee table which are missing the little tags that remind me when they are due back.

My name is mud.

Sometimes, I check things out under Tom’s name or one of the kids’, but Tom received a phone call the other day about an overdue and a lost book and I began to feel guilty about ruining his library credit.

Good god, if they checked your credit report before they let you have a card, I would be unmortgageable.

My boys, of course, have been dragged into this. My expectation is that if I bring a book or a tape home for them, they will somehow manage to keep track of it – since I have set such a fine example. Then, when a cover is torn off or a tome vanishes into the fray, I of course lecture them on responsibility for public property.

All of this led to my recent, traumatic, baffling and humiliating experience with “Midnight for Charlie Bones,” a kid’s book on tape. I brought it home three months ago for the boys’ listening pleasure. It disappeared off our radar about 30 minutes after I brought it home and was never even begun. As I went to work and it repeatedly appeared as overdue on my card, I just kept renewing it, having absolute faith that we would find it at some point. Two months into the ordeal, while cleaning Bowen’s room, we found all of the tapes and even the box that houses them. Within five more minutes, I had an empty box and the tapes were again…GONE.

Go Figure.

Another month was spent looking high and low, but to no avail. At staff meetings, one of the other librarians would bring up “the problem of the Charlie Bones tape.” and I would vow once again to find the damn tapes.

Finally, this week, I threw out the empty box and submitted, “OK, I give up, I’ll buy a new one.” Then I added, “And we won’t check out anything else for a while.”

The next morning, while searching through Bowen’s underwear drawer for two matching socks, we found the tapes! Perhaps if the drawer had been opened during the summer, they would have been discovered sooner.

Which, brings up another issue:

I don’t know which is worse – to be the librarian who loses books and privileges, or to know that my child hasn’t worn underwear in three months!

Suzanne Strazza writes from Mancos, Colo.

Published in Suzanne Strazza

We need to regain our nation

Did you have a good breakfast this morning? Did you see a beautiful sunrise? Were you hugged by your wife or greeted by an affectionate slap on the back from your father?

Were you able to ruffle your children’s hair and hear their happy prattle? Oh, isn’t it great to be alive?

Well, there are 3,600 mothers, daughters, fathers, sons and spouses who could not enjoy the day. They are the dead sacrificed in our nation’s disastrous war against Iraq. There are another 20,000 maimed beyond repair and a greater number living with mental anguish that will haunt them for years to come.

But, as Donald Rumsfeld, said, that’s collateral damage.

We have no idea how many Iraqi civilians we have killed — when you get hit with a 20-ton bomb it is instant vaporization. Two million or more upper-class Iraqis have left their homes and livelihoods behind, many choosing the sanctuary of a country deemed by this administration as one of the axes of evil, Syria. Due to the immigration laws of that country they cannot seek jobs or become employed. How do they survive? Their daughters have to take up the world’s oldest profession to support their families. Lurid hotels and brothels are springing up on the border with Iraq as girls as young as 8 sell their bodies to Saudi Arabians and others — all thanks to the war.

Whom should we blame for these atrocities? Clinton, for his stupid indiscretions? The Bush administration, for its self-righteous blundering? A group of zealous fundamentalists with a mindset no different from Al-Qaeda or the Taliban? Well, it is we the people who elected these war-mongers, supposedly to set our country on the path to righteousness. How right is the mayhem we have caused or the innocent lives we have killed?

We elected a group of cowardly draft-dodgers who ran for their holes after Sept. 11. We invaded a country that didn’t ask for our help and had not attacked us. As bad as our erstwhile friend Saddam was (and he was our buddy once, just ask Rummy), he kept order. Now we have created chaos in our effort to bring “democracy” to a tribal and sectarian people who had accepted rule by domination. Whether that is right is not up to me or George Bush to decide. But we let the pious and religious lead us into battle for no clear reason.

Let’s take a look at our religious leaders for the past few decades. The great and tearful Jimmy Swaggart, whom one would have thought might have sprung for a hotel room and given the lady providing the service he was seeking more than $25. Or Jim Bakker and Tammy Faye, who surely could have been a little more frugal with the dollars given to them by little scared pensioners. Let’s not forget the meth-inhaling, massage-receiving Ted Haggard or the pious James Dobson, who speaks of forgiveness but couldn’t bring himself to forgive Haggard. Then there are the politicians who have been caught with their hands in the cookie jar or in some other person’s pants besides their spouse’s. Rudy Giuliani, Newt Gingrich, Sen. Dave Vitter, to name a few.

And then there is the good old boy Clinton. Being a Democrat myself, I hold him equally responsible for the sad state of affairs we are in. In the ’90s we had a balanced budget with a surplus in the treasury, 97-cent gas, non-contaminated food, civil liberties, a foreign policy of negotiation instead of bombs, decent wages for the working class. And we were a world leader in innovation, technology and manufacturing.

But Clinton had to act like a hormone- crazed teenager, thus helping propel Bush into office. And this administration has destroyed 200 years of progress in six short years.

To make matters worse, our news media have become a propaganda tool to rival that of Goebbels’. There are no reporters, just Kens and Barbies reading from a prepared script. Their motto is, if you’re not cute you can’t toot. We are told only of terrorists, insurgents, the Taliban. Weren’t 19 Saudi Arabians at the controls of the bombers on 9-11? Lies took us to war and lies of omission keep us there. No pictures of the caskets coming home, no reports on how our wounded were treated after they were exploited — not until one brave person complained.

We are fast approaching an election that will decide our future and that of our children and grandchildren. Forget the sound bites. Watch the candidates and see when they speak out of both sides of their mouth. Electing someone solely because of party affiliation does not always get the best results.

Can I alone make a difference? No. But an informed populace can. Vote “none of the above” on both tickets. Just maybe we can get our country back.

Galen Larson writes from Montezuma County, Colo.

Published in Galen Larson

Me and my X-rated fantasies

Psst! Wanna know a secret?

Married people are morally superior to single people! And, guess what else? Married people with kids are morally superior to everyone!

Whaddya mean, you already knew that because it’s been beaten into your head since the time you were first aware of having a head? Well, I guess some recent studies — and reactions to those studies — just aren’t going to impress you the way they’ve impressed me.

In July, the Pew Research Center released its findings on the priorities of married people. Having children, it turned out, ranked ninth on a list of 10 things spouses thought were important to their marriage.

Horrors, the National Marriage Project cried. People marrying for reasons other than procreation? Oh, woe, woe, woe. And managing, as often as not, to stay married? Time for damage control!

Obviously, that isn’t what the NMP really said. No, what Barbara Dafoe Whitehead, co-director of NMP, really said was much worse.

“The popular culture is increasingly oriented to fulfilling the X-rated fantasies of adults. Child-rearing values — sacrifice, stability, dependability, maturity — seem stale and musty by comparison.”

Whitehead set the tone. She said these values are explicitly “child-rearing” values. They are not “values some people who raise children happen to have and values other people happen to share.” They are, by her definition, exclusive to parents and, implicitly, to married parents.

Guess who got a lot of play in the nation’s newspapers? Uh-huh. Guess how many of them exposed her statement for the idiotic propaganda that it was?

None.

Instead, we were treated to the giddy repetition of a quote that dissed every childless or unmarried adult. This often took the form of some candy-coated “babies are so precious” gusher, of the sort offered by none other than Cokie Roberts and her husband, Steven, in a syndicated column.

Of course children are magical creatures. But I’m pretty sure I could grasp the simple majesty of a golden orb rising above the sea without some tow-headed tot pointing to it and saying “ball.” Apparently, though, an accomplished journalist like Cokie Roberts would have been incapable of appreciating it without her granddaughter there to utter a precious saying. Or at least, the experience would’ve been diminished in importance. Kinda like your funeral, if you selfishly die childless. Who, the Robertses ask, will cry for you? And, yes, they were serious.

The clincher in the Robertses’ column was this: they claimed to “respect” people who “chose” to be childless, then set about showing what a bad, bad choice this was.

Real respect would’ve been acknowledging that the world is full of both good and bad people, and parents occupy both categories. It would have been respectful to acknowledge that, once people have children, many prefer that to their formerly childless state, which is OK — in fact, if you do indeed have kids, it’s ideal.

But parenthood does not automatically confer moral superiority

Proof?

Michael and Iana Straw of Nevada are parents. They’re accused of neglecting their children to the point of starvation. According to media reports, the Straws were “maturely” playing video games all the livelong day and “sacrificing” by never getting off their duffs long enough to feed their two kids, or clean the cat pee out of their baby daughter’s hair.

The example, though extreme, is sufficient to undercut the idea that parents, by virtue of being parents, are intrinsically better than adults without kids, or that they possess a unique set of values.

People with kids are supposed to sacrifice for them. Sorry — doing what’s demanded of you isn’t a virtue. If you have kids, taking care of them is a clear and basic part of the bargain; it’s not fodder for your sainthood candidacy.

But let’s not stop there. Here’s more proof, in two words, that marriage plus babies do not necessarily a stable, mature life make: Britney Spears.

Another example: Polygamy. Talk about fulfilling an X-rated fantasy! In fact, the way it usually works, polygamy combines the perverted fantasies of adult males with the institution of marriage, and throws an unhealthy dose of religious intimidation into the mix.

Those who have escaped this inherently misogynistic lifestyle tell stories of Dumpster- diving to feed their brood because the “man” of the house couldn’t give a damn. And most of mainstream America is by now aware of what “bleeding the beast” means. Certain polygamist sects openly advocate sucking taxpayers dry by sticking their dozens of children and junior wives on welfare.

Where, exactly, are those good child-rearing values of dependability, maturity and sacrifice? You’ll have to tell me. I’m just a singleton who’s selfishly childless; therefore, I am clueless and in need of guidance.

Now, please excuse me as I trot off to immaturely shop for groceries, so I can clean the house before bedtime and get up in time to go to work and there fulfill my cheap, X-rated fantasy of paying my own way — plus the taxes that benefit the children of all the Barbara Whiteheads out there who presume to judge my life. I’m just undependable that way.

Katharhynn Heidelberg writes from Montrose, Colo.

Published in Katharhynn Heidelberg

Is this any way to treat your ‘best friend’?

I got my first dog shortly after I learned to walk, and would waddle around with the fat little puppy named, for the obvious reason, “Blackie” clutched to my chest. So we grew up together, and became closer than many siblings do.

Since those early days I’ve had several other dogs of various sizes and personalities, and have fond memories of each. One thing they’ve all had in common, however, is that no matter how repulsive I might have been to others at any given time in my checkered past — dirty, smelly, drunk — these loyal friends have always been happy to spend time with me. (I believe it’s called “unconditional love,” something people claim to value and strive to achieve, although few do.)

Some find this slavish, unwavering canine devotion pathetic, but I’ve always felt it is quite touching, having an animal companion so trusting, who becomes positively joyful at my mere presence. (Not to mention being a real boost to my fragile self-esteem.)

This is, I’m sure, one big reason dogs have earned the dubious distinction of being dubbed “Man’s Best Friend.” (Along with, of course, their willingness to protect you with their lives, the innumerable times they’ve rescued people in dangerous situations, their tracking and herding talents, and their huge capacity to amuse and entertain.)

So I’ve never understood the emotional underpinnings of alleged humans who enjoy watching dogs tear one another apart, who are so much attracted to dog-fighting that they will risk arrest and jail time to attend these surreptitious displays of naked cruelty.

The issue — if it can be called that — has been much in the news lately, with former Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick recently pleading guilty to financing a dog-fighting operation in Virginia, of being present during the fights and agreeing to the executions of several dogs who weren’t sufficiently vicious. Under his plea deal with the feds, he didn’t admit to personally killing the dogs, which were dispatched by electrocution, shooting, hanging, drowning and being slammed repeatedly into the ground; or to gambling on the outcome of the fights, even though those additional heinous crimes were alleged by his cretinous partners, who pleaded guilty to their parts in the ring and had agreed to testify against the former superstar.

Sadly, a few fans have tried to defend Vick’s brutish behavior, and many more have made lame attempts to diminish its monstrosity.

One of his pricey lawyers, for instance, issued a statement saying Vick realized he’d made “a mistake,” which to my mind is like Hitler, had he lived, saying he, too, had just made a mistake. A mistake is turning left when you should have turned right (not likely for me, of course!) or buying whole milk when you meant to get fat-free.

Vick, on the other hand, fully intended to organize a dog-fighting operation, enjoyed watching the repulsive exhibits and, according to his cohorts, made money off them. So what was the mistake? Getting caught? Lying to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, to whom he swore the ugly rumors that preceded his arrest were false? Believing his career wasn’t in jeopardy and his fans would somehow save his sorry ass?

Still, in a brief unscripted damagecontrol statement, Vick, too, maintained he’d simply make a “mistake in bad judgment (whatever that means) and bad decisions,” adding the incredible claim that he’d suddenly become a born-again Christian and now believes dog-fighting is really terrible. It was simply a case of his own immaturity, he explained.

R. L. White, head of the Atlanta chapter of the NAACP, which is becoming more and more of an anachronism, also tried to paint Vick in the best light possible, initially equating shooting dogs with shooting deer, and saying his only mistake was “that it was a dog.” White argued Vick was probably innocent anyway, and pleading guilty doesn’t mean Vick is really guilty, that he was only copping a plea because his scurrilous friends had rolled over on him.

Why the NAACP chose to make this a racial issue remains a puzzle, although some apologists have tried to account for Vick’s behavior by saying it relates to a “cultural” difference, that African-Americans have a different “perception” of dogs than the rest of us colorless citizens. Other black professional athletes reinforced this view in their rush to protect a brother, one saying the dogs belonged to Vick and he should be free to do what he wanted with them, and another claiming there is no difference between Vick and hunters. (Hello! The goal of “ethical” hunting has always been a quick, clean kill, not prolonged suffering on the part of the animals.)

But I’m convinced the majority of blacks would be deeply offended by this stereotyping implying they are more amenable to cruel, depraved forms of “entertaiment” than the rest of us. Besides, there are plenty of whites and Hispanics and God knows who else that attend these blood-sport events.

So, no, I can’t understand the workings of the twisted minds of whatever racial, ethnic and cultural persuasion that derive enjoyment from watching the torture of animals who have given us so much.

But there are a couple theories I’d like to posit for the consideration of dogfighting enthusiasts. (And don’t think they don’t exist in the Four Corners.)

One is that the participants get a perverse sexual thrill out of the gory exhibitions, in which case probably little can be done to help them change. If this is what turns a guy on, reruns of “Lassie” just aren’t going to get it up.

The other is that they see the dogfights as making a manly statement about themselves: If their dog wins, it means the owner is a real tough cookie — as in, My dad can beat up your dad. You know, what Vick calls immaturity.

Either way, that’s not just pathetic, it’s really, really sick. And there ain’t no excusing it.

David Grant Long, a pet owner, lives in Cortez, Colo.

Published in -September 2007, David Long

Tiny Ophir works to preserve its beauty

The residents of Ophir, Colo., love their mountain views so much they’ve managed over the years to turn prime real estate into permanent open space.

Now the Ophir Valley Project is seeking to preserve another 1,200 acres of private mining claims scattered in the hills above town before developers have a chance to swoop in and change the nature of this scenic valley.

“Working to preserve these claims has been a grassroots effort that the whole town is behind,” says Ophir Mayor John Gerona. “The mining already scarred the land once, and people’s opinion up here is that putting residences on those sites is not an improvement.”

The town is getting a big boost from the Trust for Public Lands, a national conservation organization that taps the Land and Water Conservation Fund, which comes from oil and gas revenues, to buy private land and return it to public open space. An initial buyout is expected to close soon, officials report, and then the land purchased will be conveyed to the Uncompahgre National Forest. Purchasing the 1,200 acres is expected to cost between $2.5 million and $3.5 million and will likely take several years to complete.

Today the secluded town of Ophir is blissfully missing the hotels, restaurants, mansions, art galleries and coffee shops crowding the streets and hillsides of nearby Telluride.

In fact the town is all residential and has no commercial zoning. But it does have a nearby post office, conducts regular town meetings and features world-class backcountry skiing and rock-climbing.

It also sits along the popular Ophir Pass four-wheel-drive route, and has easy access to Highway 145.

For the future, it is literally what’s on the horizon that worries residents.

Privately held mining claims perched on the valley sides can be hot property for second homes and swank vacation villas, the new gold rush for the West.

But the hustle and bustle that accompanies construction and development threatens the scenery and simple mountain living that Ophir’s 175 residents cherish.

“We see on mesas elsewhere where people put up fences that keep people out and keep animals from migrating freely. To us it doesn’t seem right to build houses on these mining claims that are surrounded by wilderness,” Gerona says.

Growth is always a concern in mountain communities. Telluride — a ski lift away, as the joke goes — is booming, expanding its ski resort ever closer to Alta Lakes, right next door to Ophir.

“We definitely feel that pressure,” Gerona said. “We’re in a quiet little valley that is a 20-minute commute to Telluride, and that looks pretty good to people considering land prices over there.”

Ophir also has grown, going from 35 people in 1989 to 175 today. But it is their collective conservation ethic that has kept the area pristine. Financial and volunteer support for open space, even outside town boundaries, has kept the valley free of ridgetop homes that mar local views and block access to public lands.

“Ophir has an active open-space program, funded with town tax revenues,” said Nancy Craft, former open-space director for the town. “It is an important issue for us.”

The open-space money was used to purchase wilderness in Waterfall Canyon, in cooperation with willing landowners and a local land trust, the San Miguel Conservation Foundation.

Before agreeing to sell that land for open space, owners had considered building mansions and opening a private ski hill there, complete with a helicopter for a lift. That vision didn’t sit well with locals, who regularly hike that terrain and ski down.

“The people of Ophir do not want to see development on these claims, so the town itself has been buying them up for the last 15 years,” Craft said. “These 1,200 acres are the last big stumbling block, because the town is small and could never afford to buy all these claims. That’s why it is so wonderful that the Trust for Public Lands is interested in brokering the deal to the Forest Service. They’re like an altruistic realtor.”

The agency is hard at work in the San Juan Mountains because of a mining legacy that left private inholdings strewn throughout. The Ophir Valley Project is one of a few ongoing programs in the area and it is making good progress, said TPL project manager Hillary Merritt.

The first purchase involves 111 acres adjacent to town that have been identified as the most vulnerable for development because of old mining roads in the area and level terrain, she said. Negotiations for that Phase 1 purchase price are moving forward, pending ongoing appraisals.

“It is our intent to get the best deal for the public as possible, but we also pay fair market value,” she said, adding that funding looks positive for the initial purchase.

Most of the 1,200 acres are owned by Glen Pauls, a local who has expressed willingness to conserve his land by negotiating a price with the Forest Service.

“Ophir has had a good relationship with the Pauls,” Craft said. “They feel preservation is the best use for their land and that is very admirable.”

Such “conservation sellers” are ideal for federal buy-out programs, Merritt said. Other mountain towns are not as lucky, often battling inholders selling out to the highest bidder, or who hold the land hostage for outrageous exchanges for public land elsewhere.

To control this trend San Miguel County recently created a high-country zone in its land-use code to limit home size on mining claims and prevent road-building to remote ones.

In Ophir, it is the long-term commitment by residents to protecting the environment that made the difference, Gerona said.

“It takes years, decades, but we got a lot accomplished because of volunteers. And once it gets going, more and more people realize why this beautiful valley is worth saving.”

Published in -September 2007

County says maybe, Utes say no to Desert Rock

 

NEW MEXICO'S FOUR CORNERS POWER PLANT RANKS NO. 1 IN THE NATION IN NITROGEN-OXIDE EMISSIONSThe Montezuma County commissioners refused last month to either oppose or support the controversial Desert Rock power plant, opting instead to give it a complicated maybe.

But also in August, the proposed 1,500-megawatt, coal-burning plant got a thumbs-down from the Ute Mountain Ute tribe.

Meanwhile, the public-comment period on the draft environmental impact statement for the plant was extended at the last minute from Aug. 20 to Sept. 20, partly as the result of urging by Colorado Sen. Ken Salazar and Rep. John Salazar, both Democrats.

On Aug. 27, the Montezuma County commissioners passed a complex resolution commenting on the environmental impact statement for Desert Rock.

They had been asked by the San Juan Citizens Alliance, a Durango-based environmental group, as well as concerned local citizens to pass a resolution opposing the plant, which is to be built by Sithe Global on Navajo Nation lands southwest of Farmington, N.M.

The Durango and Cortez city councils, the Mancos Town Board and the La Plata County Commission all have passed resolutions opposing the project.

The resolutions are of course symbolic, since none of the Colorado entities have any jurisdiction over the decision. However, they are intended to indicate public sentiment on the project and concern about its effects on public health and regional air quality.

The commissioners opted not to vote against Desert Rock. Instead, they passed a two-page resolution expressing recognition for the need for more electrical power and concern about the pollution from existing plants.

The resolution comments that “electricity has become essential to humanity” and notes that the U.S. population is growing, requiring more power..

However, the resolution also states that “potential risks to human health caused by new energy production must be minimized to the greatest extent possible” and that “the natural scenic qualities of the American West and Montezuma County [are] also very important to the local economy and the overall quality of life of its citizens.”

It notes that two existing regional coal-fired power plants in northern New Mexico, the Four Corners Power Plant and San Juan Generating Station, have been ranked by the EPA as among the top 50 plants nationwide for emissions of carbon dioxide, mercury and nitrogen oxides.

These “unacceptably high emissions… need to be significantly reduced through modernization and retrofits by constructing and employing state-of-the-art technology,” the commissioners said.

They then resolved that Desert Rock should be required to utilize “the best technology and methods known to modern engineering and science” and that the two existing plants should be retrofitted “to the same exacting standards as Desert Rock within a period of three years after completion of the DR facility.”

There is no mechanism for tying approval of Desert Rock to clean-up of the old plants, as they are owned by different entities.

The Ute Mountain Ute tribal council weighed into the debate with a “no” vote on the issue Aug. 22.

Citing a need “to balance economic development, energy needs, environmental protection, and protection of public health,” Ute Mountain Tribal Chairman Manuel Heart said in a statement, “This proposed Desert Rock power plant fails to achieve the appropriate balance.”

The Utes had as recently as 2004 mulled the idea of starting their own coal-fired power plant with water claimed from the San Juan River.

The EPA has already issued a draft air-quality permit for Desert Rock and took public comment nearly a year ago, but has never issued the final air-quality permit. Now, the BIA, the entity with jurisdiction over the whole project, has issued a draft EIS. Public comments will be taken by the BIA until Sept. 19.

Opponents of the plant had sought a 60-day extension of the comment period, which originally was to end Aug. 20, because the EIS is 1,600 pages long and it was difficult for Navajos on the reservation to get hard copies of it, much less to have it translated into Navajo for those not speaking English.

However, until Aug. 17, the BIA said it would not lengthen the comment period. Then it abruptly announced that there would be a extension, albeit only for 30 days.

Colorado’s Salazar brothers had fought hard for the extension.

In an amusing tangent to the Desert Rock controversy, a Navajo filmmaker, Shonie De La Rosa of Kayenta, caused a flap with a short film called “D.C. Navajo,” available on YouTube.com.

The film humorously depicts a corrupt, greedy official in the tribe’s Washington Office who takes kickbacks and talks endlessly about money, but brushes off a consultant on the reservation trying to get paid for work he’s done.

De La Rosa said he and an actor in the film were told by a tribal humanresources officer that “some employees of the township were making a mockery of the Navajo Nation,” the Gallup Independent reported. The pair was allegedly threatened with termination.

Published in -September 2007

So many ways to die: Despite grim topic, ‘Death’ proves compulsively readable By Gail Binkly

FREE PRESS BOOK REVIEWSomewhere back in high school, Chris Becker missed the lecture in English class about not picking too broad a topic for your term paper. How else to explain the immensity of the subject he tackles in his new book, “Death in the West”?

This ambitious work, subtitled, “Fatal Stories from America’s Last Frontiers,” attempts to cover every type of demise possible – from backcountry accidents to animal attacks to death in underwater caves. Historic train wrecks are included, as are plane crashes, earthquakes, wildfires, mudslides, carbon- dioxide ventings, and attacks by serial killers. People die of thirst in the desert, they drown in flash floods, they are bitten by everything from brown recluse spiders to great white sharks. About the only type of death that doesn’t make the book, in fact, is that by natural causes.

“In writing this book, I struggled at times to come up with a reason for doing so,” Becker explains in the afterword. No kidding.

And yet, it must be admitted, the book is readable. Highly entertaining, as a matter of fact. For all that it lacks focus or purpose, it’s interesting, and not in a grim way. Becker doesn’t dwell on the morbid or the gruesome. He is mercifully brief, for instance, in relating the tales of a few of the West’s most horrendous (yet little-known) serial killers. His tone remains amazingly upbeat and chirpy throughout, considering some of the tragic stories he recounts.

One is the story of 19 students, teachers and guides with an Episcopalian high school who, in May 1986, set out to climb Oregon’s Mount Hood as part of the school’s graduation requirement. Despite unseasonably cold weather, all but six of the group marched grimly on toward the summit, only to encounter a blizzard. They built a shallow snow cave and hunkered down. The next morning, two brave souls ventured out and picked their way down the mountain to send for help.

The ensuing search found mostly “bodies stacked like cordwood,” Becker recounts. Two of the teens remaining on the mountain survived, along with the two who hiked out and the six who turned back. Nine died, one more than the number killed on Mount Everest in Jon Krakauer’s famous “Into Thin Air.”

Then there is the day in 1985 when a massive lightning storm hit central California. A 27-year-old man hiking in King’s Canyon took shelter under a rock slab resting across two boulders. He was found the next day by two more hikers who noticed that he seemed to be sitting unnaturally; he was, in fact, dead by a lightning strike.

Meanwhile, in Yosemite National Park nearby, nine intrepid climbers were mounting Half Dome, a steep granite summit. Four eventually turned back, but five ignored the lightning sizzling across the sky and kept on. Two were struck and killed instantly at the top. Three also were hit but survived with serious injuries that left them facing years of rehab and mental trauma.

There is an almost irresistible compulsion to read such stories and ask yourself: What would I have done differently in that situation? How would I have behaved so that I survived? Surely I would have been smarter, turned back at the first sign of lightning, found a better place to take shelter, taken more water into the desert — whatever.

It’s the looking for a way out, an alternate ending, that carries the reader through “Death in the West.” And Becker does lighten the somber subject by closing with a few stories about lucky survivors. He also observes that, despite the odds against them, most people in bad situations tend to come out alive. In the Loma Prieta earthquake of 1989 in San Francisco and Oakland, for instance, 62 died yet thousands more survived through heroic rescue efforts and amazing strokes of luck.

So many stories are related in such a fast-paced way in “Death in the West” that you sometimes long for fewer tales and a little more detail, a little more drama in the telling. It also inevitably pops into your mind that the vast majority of these deaths could have occurred just as easily in the East – there are train wrecks, earthquakes, even wild animals there, too.

But never mind. Sit back and enjoy the guilty pleasure of this slim volume. You’ll not only be glad you read it, you’ll be glad just to be alive.

Published in -September 2007, Arts & Entertainment

Not-so-happy trails? A proposed travel plan for the Mancos-Cortez area draws diametrically opposed comments

 

THE VIEW FROM A LOOKOUT POINT AT TRANSFER CAMPGROUND NORTH OF MANCOSHow should trails and travel be managed on public lands in the Mancos- Cortez area? The public has plenty of answers — many of them diametrically opposed.

That much is clear from comments received on a proposal regarding travel management for one segment of the Mancos-Dolores District of the San Juan National Forest, according to Penny Wu, recreation planner for San Juan Public Lands.

“There was support and opposition to all components of the plan,” Wu said. “We got a lot of comments locally, which is great.”

The travel-management proposal was for national-forest lands around Mancos, such as Echo Basin, the Transfer area, and Haycamp Mesa, as well as BLM lands known as Phil’s World, east of Cortez and Sam’s World (Mud Springs) southwest of Cortez.

It considered issues such as where motorized uses should be allowed, which user-created trails should be adopted into the public-lands system, and how to handle dispersed camping.

Not surprisingly, the majority of comments were about motorized uses. “It’s safe to say that the comments were right down the middle on that,” she said.

Motorized recreation has emerged as an enormously contentious issue. The number of people buying ATVs, motorcycles and dirt bikes has soared, and many of them look to public lands to provide them a place to ride.

However, the number of hikers and mountain-bikers is also increasing, and many of them complain that motorized devices are noisy and intrusive, as well as damaging to trails.

The Mancos-Cortez Travel Management Plan is the first effort by land managers within the Mancos- Dolores District of the San Juan Public Lands (which include both nationalforest and BLM lands) to create a new plan delineating where motorized users can go.

Among other things, the plan proposes:

• Prohibiting ATV and motorcycle use on the first four miles of the West Mancos Road (NFSR #561) unless they are legally registered for highway use.

• Building a new motorized trail paralleling the West Mancos Road to provide ATVs and motorcycles with a safe alternative to using the road.

• Authorizing motorcycles, but not ATVs, on the following single-track trails: Box Canyon, Chicken Creek, Coyote Park, Rim, and Transfer Trail.

• Decommissioning Joe Moore Road (NFSR 236) and converting it to the Little Bauer Loop Trail, where ATVs and motorcycles would be allowed.

• Decommissioning Millwood L Road (NFSR 559L) and closing the halfmile road to motorized use.

• Authorizing ATVs and motorcycles on the Morrison and West Mancos trails, but restricting motorized use on various segments to be decided later.

The agency also proposed designating a mile-long connector link for ATVs and motorcycles from the Aspen Loop Trail to the Echo Basin area.

East of Cortez on BLM land, the popular mountain-bike trail known as “Phil’s World” and Stinking Springs Trail would be designated as nonmotorized. Chutes and Ladders, located off County Road 34, would also be a non-motorized route. In the Mud Springs area on BLM lands southwest of Cortez, “Sam’s Trail” would become a non-motorized route.

The plan generated considerable interest.

In press releases and e-mails to supporters, the Blue Ribbon Coalition and Colorado Off-Highway Vehicle Coalition, pro-motorized user groups, called the plan “a serious threat to single- track motorized recreation in the San Juan National Forest.”

Valerie Douglas of the Colorado Off- Highway Vehicle Coalition e-mailed supporters that, while the Mancos/ Dolores District “has, by and large, been good to work with,” the travel plan was a disappointment because it didn’t incorporate many user-created trails into the system.

Douglas called for “a strong letterwriting campaign” to alter the plan. “Without it, the proposal will surely be approved and the San Juan Alliance, Friends of the Forest and Sierra Club will chalk up another win in the elimination of our recreation on Public Lands. Fellow single-track riders and others, rest assured that this is only a glimpse of even further attempted reductions / eliminations on the next block of study, the Rico District.

“Special-interest groups are already preparing to heavily influence the elimination of motorized travel in the high country. These will be trails that motorized recreational people like ourselves have maintained and ridden for 40-plus years,” she wrote.

By the May 29 deadline, the Dolores Public Lands Office had received approximately 247 comments regarding various aspects of the proposal, about 100 of those via e-mail and the rest as letters, Wu said. All have been reviewed and will be considered in preparing the final plan.

A draft environmental assessment on the travel-management proposal is due in early to mid-September, Wu said. That will be followed by a 90-day comment period before the agency issues its final decision.

She said the agency received input from “a full range of user groups and individuals” with widely differing views.

“Some said there were already too many routes in place, and some said there should be more,” she commented. “Some said mixed use on trails was OK; some wanted to separate uses.

“We know we’re not going to please everyone, not every user group or type of user, but we will try to figure out what is a balanced mix of motorized and non-motorized trail uses.”

She said many of the comments concerned trails around the Transfer Campground area, northeast of Mancos.

There was also a great deal of interest in user-created trails throughout the Mancos-Cortez area that are not currently in the official system. “We’re trying to see whether any of those make sense to add to our transportation plan,” Wu said.

By far, most of the feedback centered on trails and trail use, she added, rather than dispersed camping and use of roads, which are also being addressed in the proposal.

The travel-management plan is separate from the San Juan National Forest and San Juan Resource Area (BLM) land-management plan, which is due to be released, at least in electronic form, in late September or early October. It’s also distinct from the management plan for Canyons of the Ancients National Monument, due in September.

The travel-management plan adheres to a 2005 Forest Service rule mandating that national forests across the country identify routes for motorized uses on roads and trails by the end of 2009.

Former Forest Service Chief Dale Bosworth famously said that unmanaged recreation, including the use of off-highway vehicles, was one of the top four threats to the health of national forests.

Because the San Juan National Forest and local BLM lands operate under a Service First arrangement, meaning that they combine management wherever possible to operate more efficiently, BLM lands are being incorporated into the local travel-management plan even though the directive came from the Forest Service.

The travel-management plan for the Mancos-Dolores District of San Juan Public Lands will involve about 600,000 acres of national forest and about 6,000 acres of BLM lands, Wu said. Wilderness study areas will not be included.

The district has been divided into five areas. The Mancos-Cortez area is the first to have a plan developed. Next, agency officials will turn to the West Dolores-Rico area, Wu said.

“From some of the issues and the comments we’ve received already [regarding that area] from community study groups and trail users, we feel it’s important to move into that area and address those issues,” Wu said. “There are some mixed-use trails we have in the Rico area that are ripe for a transportation-planning decision.”

After that, plans will be developed for the McPhee-Boggy Draw, Glade- Disappointment Creek, and Dry Creek- Gypsum Valley areas, she said.

“Even though we’re on a tight time frame we believe we’re going to meet the 2009 deadline,” she said.

Wu thanked the public for its interest in the planning effort.

“We appreciate everyone’s comments, and we will consider all of them in developing the plan,” she said.

Published in -September 2007

Gift of the Spider Woman: Exhibit celebrates Diné weaving of the 1800s

According to oral tradition, Spider Woman taught weaving to the Diné (Navajos). She also instructed Spider Man to build the first loom of wooden vertical and horizontal beams that represented the earth and sky; and reflected the sun, rain, and lightning.

“Spider Woman had — and still has — a profound influence on our people,” says Joyce Begay, director of education for the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture (MIAC) in Santa Fe.

Through April 6, 2008, the museum will honor Spider Woman with an exhibit called “Spider Woman’s Gift,” curated by Begay. The exhibit shows over 40 Diné weavings dating between 1860 and 1880. Three years in the making, the exhibit includes baskets, shoulder blankets, women’s dresses, and chiefs’ wearing blankets.

“I was very excited to do this,” Begay says.

The textiles represent a special time for the Diné. They were rebuilding their culture after the Long Walk of 1863, when Col. Kit Carson forcemarched them from their Four Corners homeland to prison at Fort Sumner, N.M.

The traditions they revived are vital to this day. “Spider Woman’s Gift” contains a photo-mural of Spider Rock in Canyon de Chelly to illustrate that point.

“I wanted people to have an idea of the place where they used to tell stories, and take us to, and say, ‘This is where Spider Woman is,’” explains Begay. “When I was a young child [the story] became believable because here’s this big rock formation coming out of nowhere.”

She uses “Spider Woman’s Gift” to tell museum visitors about living in a hogan, and how some people still survive without telephones or running water on the Navajo Nation.

She also wants to show how vast the Southwest is. “Some of my own family has to haul water for their own personal use, or for livestock. And I mean 30-40 miles.”

“Spider Woman’s Gift” also traces the history and psychology of Navajo weaving, which developed from basketry, according to Begay, herself an accomplished weaver, who learned the craft watching her mother’s people at their looms.

Early designs for both baskets and cotton textiles included crosses with squares at each of the four ends. The symbols had nothing to do with Christianity, but represented a spider’s eight legs.

When the Spanish arrived in the Southwest in the 1500s, the Diné learned to raise churro sheep and weave woolen blankets and garments with distinctive, naturally-colored white and brown bands.

“There’s a specific color for a specific reason,” Begay says. “Brown and white, that’s all they had to work with.”

Eventually, plant dyes produced a bluish-brown, but never a true black. Trade brought indigo from Mexico into Diné designs, and red, from unraveled Spanish cloth.

Weavers had — and still use — simple hard-wood tools, sometimes studded with turquoise or coral: long, slender batons to separate the warp threads on a loom, weaving forks, spindles, and carding combs. “They could weave inside or outside,” explains Begay. “All they had to do is hang the loom up.”

Weavers could also roll their looms into bundles and carry them from the valley camps they used in winter to the mountains, where they spent their summers letting their sheep graze in high pastures.

Above all, they used their looms to express a particular philosophy of life. Some of the blankets in “Spider Woman’s Gift” have diamonds in their centers, and half-diamonds on each side. Folded around a person, the side diamonds meet in perfect alignment.

“[That represents the] Navajo perspective of balance and harmony,” says Begay. “It’s more than weaving. There’s more to it in these old blankets, because people wove them for a purpose.”

Weavers have always had special status in Diné society. “It’s all about balance and symmetry for you and for the rug.”

Begay adds that Diné weavers carry their designs in their heads, and never draw patterns on their warp threads.

With an appreciation for weaving, Begay hopes that museum visitors will learn some of the correct terminology for textiles from “Spider Woman’s Gift.”

Certain blankets are worn like Spanish serapes, but are not serapes. “That’s a Spanish term,” she emphasizes. “We call them shoulder blankets.” A woven woman’s dress is a biil, made of two pieces of cloth.

While “Spider Woman’s Gift” contains chiefs’ blankets worn by Manuelito and the Ute Chief Ouray, Begay firmly states, “We didn’t have chiefs. That’s an 18th Century term from trade with Plains Indians.”

Begay also wants visitors to realize that individual weavers have unique styles, just as any artists do.

And she desires “Spider Woman’s Gift” to help preserve the Diné lifestyle.

Young Navajos need to understand the patience required to learn to weave.

“It’s too hard for them. They get too frustrated with it. They want to weave, like, now. I’ve been weaving my whole life, and I’m over 50. I’ve been around it since I was 5 or 6.”

In addition, she sees a need to protect weaving designs as cultural and intellectual property, from people who steal patterns, create “cheap knock-offs, and don’t give the weavers credit” for them.

Begay would like to see weavers incorporate unique hallmarks into their designs to identify themselves, and start a registry of these signatures, to protect the integrity of their work, and their ability to earn a living from it.

She shakes her head firmly. “My job is to educate at this museum. People need to know these things.”

Published in Arts & Entertainment, September 2008

The public’s right to know: E-mails, open meetings among isues that prompt conflicts

Mumbled conversations. Executive sessions for questionable purposes. Workshops where more gets done than in formal meetings. E-mail exchanges in which decisions are tacitly made.

There are many ways elected officials can skirt public scrutiny, if they choose to. At one point or other, many of the main governing bodies in the Four Corners have probably been accused of employing such techniques.

But, in truth, officials rarely need to bother trying to hide their deliberations and actions from the public – because the public isn’t paying attention anyway.

Do local citizens even care what governmental entities are doing? And when they do, can they readily find out?

No matter whom you ask, you’ll get a different answer.

An open window

Sheila Wilson of Cortez still remembers the evening in April 2000 when she stood outside an open window at Southwest Memorial Hospital in Cortez and wound up in a lot of trouble.

Wilson, then a candidate for the Montezuma County Hospital District board, was annoyed because she believed the current board had just gone into an illegal executive session. Two topics had been announced for the session, one of which concerned a request for an easement across hospital property to a doctor’s office that was yet to be built.

The doctor in question had written a letter to the MCHD board and a copy had been sent to the city of Cortez. Wilson herself had a copy, she said.

When the executive session was called, the audience — which was fairly sizable — went outside. However, the window to the meeting room was open and Wilson was able to hear much of what was being said.

“I was standing outside talking to four or five people and I could hear it,” she said. “They didn’t talk about anything that wasn’t public knowledge. How did I have a copy of the letter if it wasn’t public knowledge?”

She later wrote to the Cortez Journal accusing the board of having an illegal executive session. In her letter, she admitted she heard the discussion “through the window” and from “behind the wall.”

Controversy erupted. Some members of the board, and its attorney, maintained the session had been held in accordance with state law and that Wilson should perhaps be charged with deliberately eavesdropping on a governmental entity’s executive session, a felony.

In an editorial in the paper, Wilson was labeled “undoubtedly paranoid” and “overly dramatic.” She lost her race for the hospital board. Shortly afterward, she suffered a major heart attack that “left me with less than half a heart,” she said.

Now, Wilson says, she washes her hands of politics. “When you start losing parts of your heart, you use your head,” she said. “I’m just enjoying life with my husband.”

E-mail messages

Conflicts between citizens and government over open meetings or access to records rarely take such a dramatic turn, but they can be heated.

State law delineates what types of meetings are public, when and how notice should be provided of those meetings, and when it’s acceptable to go into executive (closed) session. The law also specifies which records are open to public review.

Beyond questions of legalities, though, there are broader issues surrounding the ways in which government entities make their doings accessible. What happens in official public meetings, whether open or closed, is only the tip of the iceberg of government operations.

For example, e-mail messages are emerging as a murky but significant issue.

This summer, an open-records request involving e-mails by commissioners in three different counties has stirred up controversy.

Luke O’Dell — until recently the executive director for the Republican Study Committee of Colorado — demanded to see several years’ worth of e-mails to and from San Miguel County Commissioner Art Goodtimes, all three Gunnison County commissioners, and Garfield County Commissioner Tresí Houpt. Goodtimes is a member of the Green Party, and the other four are Democrats.

O’Dell wanted to see all the e-mails involving public business, not regarding any topic in particular.

San Miguel County said it spent $2,300 researching the request and wants to be paid before handing the emails over, although it offered to make them available for review for free if O’Dell came to Telluride.

Garfield County said it wanted $3,700 before even researching the material.

Gunnison County, however, sent O’Dell the e-mails for no fee, even though the county attorney said the research had required about two weeks’ worth of staff time.

In a column for the Telluride Watch, Goodtimes discussed the matter, saying that O’Dell’s request would likely bring more clarity and openness to issues around e-mail correspondence. He said San Miguel County may soon begin publishing its commissioners’ emails on its web site.

However, he wrote, O’Dell’s “unfocussed ‘all the emails for the last 5 and half years’ aspect of this CORA [Colorado Open Records Act] request seems excessive. . . . I really don’t like the idea that a citizen from the Front Range with an axe to grind . . . can make taxpayers in Western Slope counties foot the bill for an email assembly process that costs several thousand dollars, at the least. That’s the amount we grant annually to many of our local non-profits to help them in their community missions.”

O’Dell wrote an “open letter to the people of Colorado” on Aug. 21, stating that, “For decades liberal operatives have used open-records requests as a tool to wage bureaucratic war against those with whom they disagree” and that he wanted to “test the principles of democracy” by seeking the records.

He said he couldn’t pay to get the records from Garfield and San Miguel counties but did not explain why he couldn’t go to Telluride to view those for free.

No requests

State law in Colorado says e-mails by elected officials involving government business should be available. However, the vast majority of those emails go unseen because no one ever asks to view them.

Ashton Harrison, Montezuma County administrator, said the county commissioners don’t even have public e-mail accounts, though other elected officials such as the clerk and treasurer do.

“The first time I ever e-mailed [the commissioners] was last week with the agenda and map for the CCI [Colorado Counties Inc.] meeting,” he said.

Harrison said the county hadn’t received any open-records requests involving e-mails during his tenure and he wasn’t sure how it would charge for them.

E-mails on private accounts but involving public business would likely be considered open records, and Harrison said it might be expensive sorting through those.

“You’d have to have an attorney go through them to make sure there was nothing confidential, like involving attorney-client privilege,” he said.

The Cortez City Council uses e-mail more extensively. City Manager Hal Shepherd sends out a weekly report to council members discussing numerous aspects of public business.

“Most of our e-mail is not between city council and myself,” he said. “We do the weekly report on Fridays updating them on what’s happened during the week and of course all the written documents for the council meetings.”

But whatever the source or subject, all city e-mails are available for inspection.

“I consider everything in city hall [to be] public documents except for the health records of employees,” he said, “or something legal where we’ve got a lawsuit going between parties.”

Shepherd said the city used to keep a log of the e-mails, but no one ever asked for them.

Cats at large

Even before e-mail, there were plenty of ways that public officials could discuss government business in private – phone calls, “chance encounters” at social gatherings, one-on-one discussions that don’t constitute an official meeting.

But for every time that a board, commission or special district has flouted sunshine laws, there are dozens of instances when public matters that ought to be of interest go ignored.

In Montezuma County, there are 24 special districts; in Dolores County there are nine. They handle matters including volunteer fire-fighting, libraries, mosquito control, cemeteries and soil conservation. And, of course, Southwest Memorial Hospital is operated by a special district.

These entities have boards with elected members who meet in regular public meetings. But members of the public or the press rarely attend.

Bob Diederich, whose many years of “community service” include stints on the Cortez City Council, the Cortez Sanitation Board, and the Cortez Planning Commission (a current member) said people almost never attend board meetings without a personal axe to grind “unless the person is interested in running for council, P&Z or the san board the next time.”

“You never saw anybody just drop in,” Diederich said, adding that increasing efforts to get the public more actively engaged in the process would be futile.

“People are just busy with their own lives and don’t get involved unless they got some ox to gore,” he said.

“For instance, the meetings that are going on now for [a new city] comprehensive plan — there’s a few people showing up, but they don’t seem to be at every meeting. They only come when a particular subject interests them.” Not even all members of the P&Z board attend those sessions, which are intended to plot the city’s future, he said, even though that board will be the “first ones to have to wrestle with the thing before it goes to city council.”

The council meeting with the largest attendance during Diederich’s tenure was over an unlikely topic, he recalled.

“It was a [proposed] cat ordinance that would have made cats equivalent to dogs,” requiring licensing and making owners responsible for not allowing felines to roam at large. The overwhelming sentiment among the overflow crowd was outrage, and the council dropped the idea like a hot coal.

Council meetings do have an at-home audience, however, as they are televised live.

Formal vs. informal

Although there have been calls for the county to televise its meetings, the commissioners have never been interested in doing so. Harrison said one problem is that state law says that if minutes are electronically recorded they must continue to be recorded in that manner.

Also, the county’s meetings are often lengthy, lasting from 9 in the morning to mid- or late afternoon. Whether people would tune in to meetings so long – and which often include stretches where little is happening – is unknown.

Harrison said he does find it odd that so few people attend the commissioners’ Monday meetings. There are times when there is not a single person in the audience, whether a citizen or a reporter.

“It’s not typical in my experience,” said Harrison, who was town manager of Kremmling, Colo., and Rico before coming to Montezuma County in 2006. “It does surprise me sometimes.”

Montezuma County has historically conducted its meetings very informally, except during official public hearings. People coming before the commissioners are greeted with handshakes and sit with the board around a rectangular table – rather than standing in front of a podium addressing the whole room.

“It’s more informal than other places I have had experience with,” Harrison said. “At Rico, the architecture of the room is more formally laid out – but because it’s Rico, it’s still pretty laid back.”

Montezuma County’s unusual arrangement has both advantages and disadvantages.

“I think some people feel more comfortable approaching the commissioners when it’s not so formal and intimidating,” Harrison said.

On the other hand, the table arrangement means he sits with his back to the audience, as do the people coming before the board. “It has been a big difference for me, having people talking behind my back,” Harrison said. “I like to look at people when I talk to them.”

Harrison said Dolores County has a more formal arrangement “where there’s a demarcation between the audience and elected officials, and they face the audience.”

In San Juan County, Utah, the commissioners and staff sit around a rectangular table, but it’s much larger than Montezuma County’s, allowing everyone but people coming before the board to face the audience.

Montezuma County’s laid-back approach has drawn sporadic criticism. Montezuma Vision Project, a grassroots group pushing for changes in the landuse code, complained that the board’s agendas were too vague and that important matters came up with little warning.

Harrison said the county has made its agendas more specific, although there is still some wiggle room in a section that says “and any other business that may come before the board.”

Cortez’s Shepherd finds fault with the brevity of the county’s minutes.

“I’ve been pretty disgusted with the county minutes because I look back on an issue and they can have an eighthour meeting and they’ve got one page of minutes, and our minutes for a 30- minute meeting can be eight pages.

“I don’t know how their minutes could be legal, because I’ve looked back at issues we’ve had over there and I can’t find out anything because it’s not reflected in the minutes. Our minutes aren’t word-for-word but they’re very thorough.”

Working in workshops

In contrast, municipalities’ meetings are generally more structured. But municipal boards, such as Cortez, Dolores and Mancos, also have “workshop” sessions that are open to the public but almost never draw spectators. Workshops thus can be used to hash out subjects in a fairly private fashion; minutes don’t even have to be kept, under Colorado law.

Diederich said workshops have both advantages and disadvantages in advancing open government. While the sessions give some council members a chance to become more informed about agenda items – “to not look stupid” at the formal meeting — they also sometimes forestall a thorough airing of issues at council meetings.

“A lot of times, things are said at the workshops that wouldn’t be said in front of the public,” he said. “Depending on the strength of the members, the council can be swayed in the doggone workshop and when they go into the public meeting they’ve already got their minds made up – and that isn’t right.”

Interestingly, although town boards, school boards, and other such entities regularly have to go into executive session to discuss personnel matters, property purchases, or student discipline, the Montezuma County commission has never – at least in anyone’s memory – held an executive session.

Disseminating information

Greg Kemp, a member of the steering committee of Montezuma Vision Project, says just hearing the county meetings is a problem because acoustics in the meeting room are “terrible.”

“There’s a lot of background noise,” he said. “You get the swamp cooler going, the traffic noise, and especially when there’s a room full of people [for a public hearing], you can’t hear. But he praised the county for making information readily available on all aspects of planning.

Montezuma County gets good marks from most observers for information availability. Its web site, www.co.montezuma. co.us, offers the agenda for each county-commission and planningcommission meeting, plus minutes from meetings dating back years. Documents such as the county land-use code and comprehensive plan are available online too, and the budget and audit soon will be, according to Harrison.

San Juan County, Utah, (www.sanjuancounty. org) likewise has an impressive site with the commissioners’ agenda, detailed minutes, and many documents.

In contrast, the towns of Mancos (www.mancoscolorado.com) and Dolores (www.townofdolores.gov) don’t yet post their town board’s agendas or minutes on their web sites.

But the city of Cortez’s site offers a plethora of information – dates of meetings of the council, planning and zoning, and city committees; agendas; building codes and public notices – but no minutes. Council meetings can even be viewed on-line.

The increasing depth of web sites reflects a change in how information is disseminated to the public. Newspapers, once the central source for information about local areas, are losing their dominance. Strapped for money, papers have cut back on staff and overtime, and rarely send reporters to meetings unless they’re sure in advance that they’ll get a story.

Teaching civics

Lack of press coverage may exacerbate apathy about government, but it’s long been a problem.

“It’s true for everything – church and meetings and all,” commented Helen Rohrbaugh of Cortez. “It’s the old people carrying on, mostly.”

Helen and her husband, Earl, long active in the Democratic Party, have attended numerous county-commission and other meetings.

Helen Rohrbaugh agreed that the set-up and acoustics of the commission room discourage observers. “I think they could make a U-shaped table so we could see everybody that’s speaking instead of their backs,” she said. “And they need a good sound system.”

But she said the commissioners have been unfailingly courteous and helpful when she does attend.

Rohrbaugh is one of a very few citizens who make an effort to sit through all parts of county meetings, not just the controversial topics. But “watchdogs” such as her are growing scarce.

“There doesn’t seem to be anyone from the Republican or Democratic Party or the Green Party or the League of Women Voters to go to meetings,” Kemp said. “It’s gotten to the point where there’s nobody who wants to take on that observer role.”

Earl Rohrbaugh said the causes of apathy are myriad.

“I’d say it’s a combination of things. There’s a feeling among the general citizenry that they are powerless,” he said. “People don’t have much knowledge of how things really operate.”

Also, most meetings of local governments are “business meetings,” with little opportunity for citizens to just voice concerns. More open-ended forums such as the ones Cortez has been having on its revised comprehensive plan draw more interest, Rohrbaugh said.

Another factor may be that publicschool students are rarely taught much about how local government works. They aren’t exposed to town-board or special-district meetings and don’t know how they can take part.

Rohrbaugh said he used to teach public school and once was assigned to teach a ninth-grade civics class. “We were given a textbook and told to go at it,” he said. “That drove me back to graduate school.”

He said in too many places, social studies is considered a “second-rate” discipline, and may be assigned to a teacher who isn’t interested in the topic. “You go through the textbook, and that’s the beginning and end of it. The students just memorize facts to pass the test.

“When you teach only the format of government or the structure of government, you leave out the whole process of decision-making. No wonder you come out with people who have no idea how that relates to controversies that occur in their neighborhood.”

What they want

Harrison said he wishes he knew how to generate more interest in public issues and county government. “I don’t know. I would like to know.”

“You have some topics that create their own interest, like Desert Rock [the power plant] and building codes,” Harrison said, “but there are big things we’re doing where there is no interest.”

Meetings the county sponsored last year to gather input about which roads should get improvements drew only a handful of participants. And annual budget hearings rarely attract any citizens. Harrison said he winds up explaining things to only the commissioners “because nobody’s there.”

Shepherd agreed that the annual budgeting process, which decides the way millions of dollars will be spent, elicits no interest from taxpayers.

“I’ve always found it humorous, in a way, that the single most important document passed by city council in my 35 years [of managing city governments], hardly anyone has spoken for or against the budget document [and] nobody ever reads it,” he said.

Government can’t force citizens to get interested, of course. Public meetings can’t compete with video games and action movies in terms of entertainment.

Wilson said she doesn’t think most people have any idea what’s going on in local government, but it’s up to them to change that.

“People get what they want in their government,” she said. “It’s up to the people to decide what they do want.”

Published in -September 2007

Bathing beauty

Tuesday night is girls’ night at the pool. Really, it’s moms and small boys, but it’s fun to think that it’s girls’ night out. So, last week I went attired in my unmatched bathing suit top and bottoms while all of my friends had on really cute matching, fitting suits. In the summer, the majority of my swimsuit time is spent on the river which means that 1) I don’t really care what I look like as long as it’s functional and 2) I am not going to spend a bunch of money on a suit because it will only turn brown and fray in the muddy river and under a PFD. Normally, I don’t think twice about my suit, but when I saw all of my cute friends in their cute suits, I began to rethink things.

But I moved on fairly quickly, caught up in the thought of diving off the diving board and sliding down the slide.

I sauntered over to the board, mind reeling with memories of my youth, when I spent hours perfecting my jackknife, back flip and swan dive. I climbed the ladder, threw my shoulders back and executed a perfect jackknife, slipping silently under the water.

Then I realized that my bikini bottoms were about to float to the surface without me. I grabbed the fabric just as it was slipping over my ankles and yanked it back up to its rightful place.

Maybe it’s time to suck it up and buy a new suit.

So, seeing as I had to go to Farmington for some other necessities, I decided to look at suits. TJ Max, Target, Dillard’s – I thought that I’d hit them all.

Let me start by saying that I still kid myself into thinking that it’s appropriate for me to wear a two-piece although I am beginning to think that the ones with the blousy tops and little skirts are quite stunning.

So, I begin to flip through the racks and I find myself wondering how anyone’s butt could possibly fit into a 3×3 square of fabric.

I have become my grandmother.

But the real issue here is the top half. You ask, Suzanne’s top half or the tops of the suits? Well, it depends on how you look at it.

Admittedly, my top half does not look quite like Pamela Anderson’s, but it seems as if the message is that it should. Each and every bathing suit that I looked at had padding in the chest. Clearly, I cannot look OK lounging on the beach in Saint Tropez unless I am of a certain size, shall we say. Skinny, flat-chested women are a thing of the past, the waif look is gone and those of us who haven’t evolved along with the fashion are going to need a bit of help.

Now, I happen to be OK with my endowment. I have no interest in having an augmentation, so why would I want my bathing suit to do just that? When the point is that is hot out and I want to wear as little fabric as possible, why would I want quilting over my boobs?

Perhaps it aids in flotation.

I decided to try a few on anyway, thinking that perhaps “they” were on to something that I was too quick to judge. As I said, I was happy with my body… until I put on the first tankini. There I was, padding up around my neck and everything else sinking quickly to the bottom of the sea. I tried on three more but with no more promising results. Horrified, I ran from the dressing room and headed to housewares. We can all look smashing in a good apron, don’t you think?

I ask, “Do men’s bathing suits have built-in ‘augmentation’”?

Depressed and suitless, I returned from my shopping spree, determined to bring back into fashion bathing dresses. Until that happens, I will invest in a couple of really long t-shirts.

Thank God winter is almost here!

Suzanne Strazza writes from Mancos, Colo.

Published in Suzanne Strazza

A nation of lemmings

In 200 short years we have ruined the greatest nation in history.

In our headlong rush to be the best, we have become the worst. Born with a silver spoon in our mouths, we pretend to be benevolent toward other nations, yet step on their necks to pay for our road to ruin. We are an uncaring, uneducated, boorish group who only see in material visions. We let money and greed guide us. We want the most with the least labor and cost, not even concerned with saving for the future.

We’re in the fifth year of a disastrous war that has accomplished nothing but the ruination of Iraq. Our health-care system turns sick people onto the streets if they don’t have insurance. Our leaders lie, cover up their lies, then defy Congress when it tries to investigate the cover-ups.

Why aren’t people marching in the streets over these outrages? Because we have become a nation of lemmings, heedlessly following one another along a preset path.

Our leaders take us down that path so they may reap obscene amounts of profits and power. The problem is they care nothing about others’ well-being, only their own, and expect to be revered for it. And damned if we the people don’t accept that!

“We the people.” I cringe when I hear the term. It shouts to me of that passage in the book of babble that refers to people as sheep. There is no other animal stupider than man. Sheep raise their heads so it is easier to cut their throats — as does man, bravely and honorably going to wars started by those who seek more profit and power but never show up for the battle themselves.

Why is it that the youth of other nations can seek their education here and find it while we make excuses for the dumbing-down of America’s young? We ply our children with sports and couch games that require dexterity of only the fingers. This may come in handy as we ignorantly thumb our noses at the Third World nations that are overtaking us.

We have become a nation of lemmings, not leaders. We are encouraged to be led by a few in our eating habits, living accommodations, transportation, expenditures and a mindset to serve and protect them without question. We are no longer individual thinkers or doers; we follow a preset road to the Holy Grail of greed.

We have also become a society of right-nowers. We want our food, our entertainment, our health right now without any effort. There is no future or past, just now. There is no allegiance to family, friends, employers or employees. We refuse to take responsibility for our actions. Everything is always someone else’s fault.

Through our laissez faire attitude we have invoked the old axiom, Let George do it, and has that come true! George and his cronies sure did it to us.

We have become corporationized. Multinational corporations run our country. And that’s OK with us lemmings. As long we are entertained by news of Paris Hilton and her ilk, we are easily diverted from events that should concern us.

We are no longer the United States of America; we are divided over trivial matters we can or will do nothing about anyway.

Divide and conquer is the corporate strategy. First, get us out of rapid transit — buses, trains and street cars — and into individual means of transportation — automobiles that use a commodity easily controlled by a few, petroleum. Make us depend on it. Next, put small food providers out of business, squeezing out small grocers and farms. “Big is better” supermarkets sell us not a choice but what provides them with the most profit.

Control seeds through genetic engineering. Use tons of artificial fertilizers and insect repellants manufactured by — who else? — the petroleum industry. Not only has that industry taken control of us, it has changed the atmosphere of the world, sterilized our soil, polluted our water, and now is in the process of commandeering the world’s remaining potable water.

In a worst-case scenario, we can abandon our cars and walk, we can maybe grow our own food again, but we cannot do without water.

Corporate interests buy the politicians through lobbyists (there are some 40 lobbyists for every Congressperson). Who is your elected official listening to? You, who gave your sweat and blood and $10 campaigning for him, or the corporate lobbyist who can deliver hundreds of thousands of dollars to get him elected?

Of course, in the end, it doesn’t make much difference whether your candidate or the opponent gets elected they are both bought and paid for.

In the distant past, some people ran for office to do something for their constituents. Now they run for themselves and the corporations. They have changed the slogan, “No guts, no glory,” to, “No guts, more money!” There are no more great statesmen, no Jeffersons, Churchills, Franklins, to give us the quotes that used to inspire us, such as, “United we stand, divided we fall.” Well, they have divided us through religion, race, sexual preference and politics. Now the meek shall inherit the earth — yup, in a space just 6 by 6 by 3.

We’ve allowed our country to be torn from our hands. Our corporations have fled overseas. Cheap, poisonous foods and toothpastes, dangerous toys and merchandise are imported from China. India has taken over cyberspace. Unions are a thing of the past. Everyone is buying foreign-made vehicles because they’re better-made. We have become a service industry supported by minimum-wage jobs selling fast food to an overweight nation with no national health insurance.

The cliff is just over the horizon, fellow lemmings! Come run with me!

Galen Larson writes from rural Montezuma County, Colo.

Published in Galen Larson

Desperate GOP woos outed commie

I recently got a letter from the Republican National Committee asking for money. (Me, an outed commie, being solicited by the GOP! What’s next? An appeal from Jerry Falwell? Oh, wait, I forgot . . . )

Anyway, to say the letter was an insult to human intelligence is a gross understatement, because it would be an insult to the intelligence of an amoeba if only such a beastie had a mailing address and a modest command of English.

Instead of putting the touch on me up front, the mass-mailed missive pretended to be a survey – entitled “Republican Party Census Document” — that allegedly was going to help the committee formulate GOP policy positions for the next decade.

“You are among a select group of Republicans who have been chosen,” I was informed. “Your answers will be used to develop a NEW BLUEPRINT . . . to rebuild our Party from the grassroots up.”

My chest swelled, not with pride, but with the air I then used to guffaw as I read on.

The next paragraph was underlined, which meant it was very important.

“. . . because it is cost prohibitive for the Republican Party to print and mail an official Republican Party Census to each and every one of the 62 million Republicans nationwide,” explained Chairman Robert M. “Mike” Duncan, “your answers will represent the views and opinions of ALL Republican voters living in your voting district.”

So, I chuckled to myself, I get to speak for the Montezuma County commissioners, our state representative, a U.S. senator, and maybe even Boy George himself depending on just what district “Mike” was talking about. The buttons on my shirt were about to pop.

“Mike” then went on to lambaste the “big labor union bosses, the radical environmentalists, the gun grabbers and the trial lawyers” as the evil allies of the soulless Democrats. In fact, he went on for four pages telling me what I ought to think about this and that before I finally got to the all-important census, which pretended to seek my opinion in six categories ranging from Homeland Security to Social Issues.

It asked, for instance, if Republican legislators should “fight back” when Democrats “try to gut the USA Patriot Act.” I was to use a black or blue pen to indicate “Yes,” “No,” or “Undecided.”

Being no fan of this unconstitutional and ineffectual assault on our civil liberties, I fielded that one easy enough. Don’t fight back, you gutless, craven solons of the right.

“Should we do everything we can to stop the Democrats from repealing critical border and port security legislation?”

Let’s see . . . you mean like selling our ports to Dubai? Wait, that was Bush’s idea. But how about the comprehensive immigration reform el presidente wanted? Darn, the GOP itself put the boot to that so that now Osama’s henchmen can just hike north through the Cabeza de Prieta and commit unholy terrorist acts. Unfortunately, there was no place to mark, “Stop the Republicans,” so I left that one blank.

“Should Republicans in Congress oppose the new wasteful government spending programs proposed by the Democrats and their leaders, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid?” As opposed to the wasteful government spending programs already put in place by the former GOP leaders, like tax breaks for big oil, enhanced profits for big pharmaceuticals, no-bid contracts for Dick Cheney’s benefactor Halliburton and all the other types of corporate welfare for friends of the administra tion and their right-wing stooges? Where was the spot to indicate “spend more on the working poor (me, for instance) and less on the already rich?” You know, for such frivolities as decent, affordable health care dished out by doctors who care more about their patients than their Porsches.

On to Social Issues – “Do you think Congress should pass the Federal Marriage Amendment?” Since the bogus survey doesn’t explain just what this is, I was nearly tricked into reacting with a hasty “yes!”, meaning I think everyone should be required to get married before having sex, since this would cut our birth rate at least in half. But then I realized it was only the GOP’s homophobic appeal to the religious right, which believes gays shouldn’t be allowed to marry OR have sex, so that one was easily answered with a swift “no” dot.

“Do you support President Bush’s initiative to allow private religious and charitable groups to do more to help those in need?” What this really asks is if I support religious groups using my tax money to promote their agendas in direct violation of the First Amendment, like needy Satanists buying snacks for their full-moon orgy on the village green with my hard-earned dollars. I say, keep it truly private and let them spend their own money on the hors d’oeuvres! Charity begins by sticking your hand in your own pocket, not other people’s. A thousand times no!

“Defense Issues” included, “Do you agree that our top military priority should be fighting terrorists?”

Indeed I do, which is one reason I believe the Iraq war has been so damaging and dangerous to this country. Instead of capturing Osama bin Laden and the other terrorists who destroyed the Word Trade Center, Bush and his cronies decided to pre-emptorily invade a country that presented no threat to the U.S., thereby cultivating a whole new generation of terrorist groups, who are now growing stronger and, as recent government reports have documented, are gaining many new recruits as a result of our presence there.

Then, after asking if I voted in the last few elections, came the whole point of this otherwise meaningless exercise, which was to ask me to join the Republican Committee by giving it as much as $500, or a lesser amount if my budget wouldn’t stand that strain.

And even if I didn’t want to cough up any big dough, I was given one last chance to advance the cause.

“Yes,” I could check, “I support the RNC but am unable to participate at this time. However, I have enclosed $11 to cover the cost of tabulating my survey.”

But instead, I chose to make my mark on the final option:

“No, I favor electing liberal Democrats over the next 10 years.”

Yes, it’s come to that.

David Grant Long writes from Cortez, Colo.

Published in -August 2007, David Long

More controversy over Canyons of the Ancients

On the eve of the appearance of the long-awaited management plan for Canyons of the Ancients National Monument, Montezuma County commissioners are voicing concern about the future of grazing on the monument – and, in a broad sense, on all public lands.

In recent years, many grazing permits on the monument have been sharply cut either as to numbers of animals or the time they are allowed to graze.

LOUANN JACOBSON, NOW MANAGER OF CANYONS OF THE ANCIENTS NATIONAL MONUMENT, TALKS WITH THEN-INTERIOR SECRETARY BRUCE BABBITT IN 1999 ON A VISIT TO LOWRY RUINS.While many environmentalists and recreationalists welcome the cutbacks — some, in fact, would be happy to see public-lands grazing disappear — the commissioners say that could be disastrous for the county’s economy, culture, and open spaces.

They also point out that, during discussions just before the monument was created in 2000, then-Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt repeatedly assured local citizens that traditional uses could continue on the land.

The difference in philosophy between the commission and publiclands managers led the commission to send a sharply worded letter to the local congressional delegation that effectively blocked a possible purchase of some private inholdings by the monument.

In the letter, dated April 30 and sent to Sen. Wayne Allard, Sen. Ken Salazar, and Rep. John Salazar, the commissioners said they opposed efforts by the BLM “to acquire private property in the McElmo Canyon area for incorporation in the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument (CANM).”

Canyons of the Ancients, unlike most other national monuments, is managed by the BLM.

“A persistent reason for opposing the creation of the Monument . . . was that creating a Monument would provide a pretext for pressuring livestock grazing off of public land, setting up the acquisition of private ranches by the BLM National Monument,” the commissioners wrote. “We were repeatedly assured that grazing management would be handled in the same manner as on other BLM lands.

“In spite of these assurances, a series of EAs [environmental assessments] began to be released using selective rangeland monitoring and assessments, conducted during the worst drought on record, to justify deep and permanent AUM [Animal Unit Months] cuts. As a County Commission, we commented on the bleak and negative tone of these documents, and the threat that they represented to the future of ranching in Montezuma County. . . .

“We wish to make it clear that we are not opposed to good range management practices and compliance with the rules. But given the history of the creation and management of the Monument since 1999, we want no part in any effort to ‘encourage’ any rancher with his back against the wall to sell to the government. If this succeeds, who is next? And how big will the Monument eventually grow?”

Listed for sale

The inholdings in question involved several parcels owned by Wesley Wallace and his family that lie within the monument’s boundaries. Wallace, a longtime rancher, recently decided to move to New Mexico and put his lands up for sale.

BLM officials were interested in acquiring the tracts, which lie in the Hamilton Mesa, Flodine Park and Yellow Jacket Canyon areas, part of the monument, so they sought money from the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund, which can be used for land acquisition. But Wallace reportedly told the commissioners he did not want to sell to the BLM.

Commissioner Larrie Rule said Wallace was angry because he’d heard a rumor the commissioners had written a letter supporting the sale, so at its next meeting the board drafted the letter they sent.

“If Wallaces wanted to sell, we probably would have gone along with it,” Rule said. “But they said, no, we don’t want to sell to them.”

He said the commissioners’ fear was, “If we said OK to begin with, that’s what they’d sure enough try to do to everyone. We really didn’t want to set a precedent like that.”

But LouAnn Jacobson, monument manager, said the land was for sale and the monument was simply acting like any other potential buyer.

“The property was listed with a Realtor,” Jacobson said. “If the property is listed for sale I have to think that’s a willing seller. A lot of those property owners have come to us and said, ‘I’d like my property to be part of this monument.’ We actually have a waiting list of individuals interested in selling their property to the BLM.”

She said the use of eminent domain to condemn the land was never considered.

Split and sold

But the commissioners all told the Free Press they believe that publiclands policies – in particular on the monument – are edging ranchers toward selling, simply because they can’t make a living if their grazing permits are reduced radically.

“They make it so hard on these people and then they turn around and want to buy their land from them,” said Rule, who was once in the cattle business himself.

Chappell said that while the BLM was never seeking to condemn the Wallace inholdings, “they position themselves as the only buyer.”

“It’s really concerning that the whole trend of all these grazing permits that have come up for renewal, every one of them they’ve cut the numbers down or the time down,” said Commission Chair Gerald Koppenhafer. He said AUMs in the monument, and some on San Juan National Forest land, are being cut 20 to 30 percent, sometimes 50 percent. He understands the need for cuts during droughts, “but these are permanent cuts – not to see if it comes back. I find it hard to believe that every one of these allotments is in that kind of shape. I know they’re not.”

Koppenhafer said he’s getting an earful from constituents about the situation.

“Our whole community is based on agriculture to a large degree,” he said. “When you start taking one part of that away, it’s a big problem. Without those permits to run on, you’re eroding the foundation of the whole community.

“The ranchers cannot survive any more. They sell their permits and then their ranches. Then all that open space that was sitting there is going to go away. By their [the agencies’] policy on these grazing permits, they’re going to change our whole community.”

Koppenhafer cited property along the road to Jackson Lake near Mancos. Much of it was owned by the Bader family, longtime ranchers. But they decided to leave the area, and the land was split and sold.

“Look how many houses we’ve got up there now,” Koppenhafer said. “It’s sad to me to see it get broken up like that. It’s one thing when people want to sell it, but when they’re forced to [because of economics], it’s sad.”

The Wallaces decided to sell out, Koppenhafer said, because their grazing permits were either eliminated or severely cut, both on the monument and on the national forest.

A buffer zone

Ranchers with grazing permits in the monument own approximately 35,250 acres of private land in Montezuma County, according to Mike Preston, federal-lands coordinator for the county. Private lands owned by all BLM permittees in Montezuma County amounts to about 53,000 acres, he said. In addition, many of the permittees own land in Dolores and San Miguel counties.

The county contends if grazing permits are cut much, many ranchers will no longer be able to keep that private land and will sell it for development.

Preston said viable ranching is a boon to the monument. Many permittees’ lands lie on the monument boundaries, especially in McElmo Canyon. “The discussion has been that these ranchers staying viable and staying intact is the most important protection for the monument boundaries,” Preston said. “The county has always argued the best buffer zone is working ranches.”

Jacobson agreed. “Certainly we prefer to have open space and ranchland around the monument as opposed to subdivisions.”

But monument officials say they are acting in accordance with BLM policies.

Mike Jensen, a BLM rangeland specialist, said the agency conducted a comprehensive rangeland health assessment in 2001 on all the grazing allotments within the monument. Based on that data as well as 20 years of previous monitoring, an interdisciplinary resource team found that in many cases, the allotments were not meeting standards set by the BLM state office.

There are five types of standards, Jensen said, and three were particular problems: upland soils, riparian areas, and healthy, productive plant and animal communities.

“Upland soils and healthy plants are sort of tied together,” he said. “Riparian areas can improve a lot quicker if you make changes, but the other two take longer to come back because of the fragile soils and [scant] precipitation.”

Jensen said there are currently 28 grazing allotments on the monument with 20 permittees holding permits, although that number changes. Permits are typically issued for 10 years, though they can be for shorter periods.

As a result of litigation in the 1990s, the BLM must do an environmental assessment or analysis before renewing permits.

If problems are found and a cause is determined, officials must “make whatever changes are appropriate to make progress toward meeting rangeland standards,” Jacobson said.

She and Jensen said there is no intention to pressure ranchers off their lands. “Absolutely not,” Jacobson said.

Jensen said each allotment is considered on a case-by-case basis and that the agency tries to balance concerns for land health with economic impacts on the operator.

Reductions are not the first measure looked at, he said. “We see if it could be fixed by implementing a more intensive management system – rotations, shifting the season of use, fences. Can we put some range improvements in that will solve things? We try to get the permittee to identify what they can do.”

Usually two or three permits come up for renewal each year. “On the last permit we had, we didn’t adjust the AUMs (Animal Unit Months),” Jensen said. “There were no cuts.”

“Mike has worked really hard with the permittees to negotiate ways we can achieve our goals and balance those with the impacts on the permittee, and I think with one exception we have come to pretty satisfactory agreements,” Jacobson said.

‘Efforts languishing’

But the commissioners painted a different picture in their April 30 letter, writing that the county’s efforts to work with the agencies on range monitoring and stewardship “were largely met with dismissal or resistance.”

The letter continues that the commission supported the appointment of a monument advisory committee, but the management alternatives it recommended have been “sidelined.”

“With all of these local efforts languishing ‘where the sun don’t shine’, we have recently been confronted with requests to support the acquisition of 4,500 acres of land for sale by the first rancher to bite the dust,” the letter states.

“We strongly support private property rights, including the right of a property owner to sell to whoever he or she chooses. However, we strongly oppose any attempt to pressure private property owners into selling to the government out of desperation.”

The letter’s final paragraph does state that there have been “many positive working relationships and collaborative efforts that the County is involved in on the San Juan Public Lands. . .”

“The issues that we raise in this letter are specifically in response to efforts to draw us into something that we in no way condone,” it states.

More consideration

The board maintains that land-management policies have changed radically in the last 10 or 15 years and it makes no sense to suddenly say lands are in bad shape when they’ve been grazed for decades.

Chappell said he understands cutting animal numbers during drought years, “but to not let them back on – it just looks like an intentional effort to put them in a financial situation to where they can’t survive.”

He said some ranchers may have been “a little sloppy” in their management but he didn’t think that was reason to kick them off the range.

“I would think ranchers who have been in the area and owned land and have been in the monument for years deserve a little more consideration and a little more opportunity to make it right. To just take them off the BLM land and then position themselves to be the only buyer of the private property they have left – it stinks.

“That’s why the private citizens, especially in the West, have mistrust of the government.”

Chappell reiterated that he is not asking for leniency for poor range management. “I think there should be some dialogue,” he said. “I think our BLM should go the extra mile.”

Accommodating recreation?

But in the case of the Wallace grazing permits, public-lands managers expressed concerns about their condition even before the monument was established. In 1998, representatives from the Colorado Cattlemen’s Association’s BLM Liaison Committee toured the Wallaces’ spring and winter allotments and found they were in need of rest and rotation. An environmental assessment done by the BLM in 2001 found that conditions on the Wallace allotments in Flodine Park and Hamilton Mesa had been “poor” or “fair” for 15 years, a contention disputed by Wallace.

Rule said cattle on open rangeland will tend to overgraze certain spots where terrain is easier or forage is better, but they’ll leave patches of grass, and then move on. He said overall range health has to be considered, not just test plots.

BLM land is critical to ranchers because it provides winter range, Rule said. “If they keep cutting those winter ranges it’s going to keep cutting the cattleman out,” he said. “If anything it should be going the other way” as the drought eases.

Rule said cattle had always done well on the allotments in question and that cattle can reduce wildfire danger by eating cheatgrass – which is highly flammable when it dies – early in the spring.

But Jensen said cattle aren’t much help with weeds. They tend to spread noxious-weed seeds, and using cattle to control cheatgrass is problematic because the timing has to be just right.

Koppenhafer believes agencies are being pushed to favor recreation over traditional uses. “I think the recreation stuff gets by with murder.”

Recreational use on the San Juan National Forest is harder on the land than cattle-grazing, he said. “You look at the amount of damage done by fourwheelers running on the forest. I could have my cows there for 100 years and they wouldn’t do the damage those four-wheelers are doing,” he said.

The forest’s Mancos-Dolores District is now creating a travel-management plan, he noted, but “they have no way to enforce it,” he said. “With grazing, it’s one guy, they can come and fine you, but they have no way to police all those four-wheelers.”

But Jacobson said the situation is different on the monument. Off-road vehicle travel is banned and officers are strict about citing violators. She said she hasn’t gotten any sense of pressure from environmentalists to eliminate grazing.

Wait and see

Jacobson said monument officials are in a “wait-and-see mode” regarding the Wallace inholdings, although they would have to wait for another funding cycle to get money to buy the land. “The property is still for sale, and there are some very significant cultural-resource values on it and we’re pretty concerned about what happens to those.”

Meanwhile, the monument’s resource management plan/draft environmental impact statement — the monument has operated seven years without one — is due out the end of September. The commissioners say they are concerned about how it may affect ranchers.

Chappell said the public-lands allotments are “more important than ever before” to ranchers these days, considering the high cost of fuel and corn in feed.

“Ag is still a cornerstone of this community,” Chappell said.

Published in -August 2007

Fatally flawed: ‘Sicko’ shows the holes in our health-care system

Back in the 1990s, I heard one of Rush Limbaugh’s radio shows in which he took a call from a woman concerned about health care. She said her friend had full health coverage because she was married to a man with a good job; the caller, however, being a self-employed entrepreneur, couldn’t afford coverage at all since she wasn’t part of a group. This seemed unfair.

Old Rush harrumed and hawed, trying to think of some way to blame the situation on Evil Liberals, but wound up saying, “Just keep voting conservative and things will get better.”

Well, Americans have been voting conservative for more than a decade since then, yet our health-care system is worse than ever – a fact hammered home very effectively in Michael Moore’s film “Sicko.”

This riveting documentary is far more emotional and touching than many of Hollywood’s works of fiction. People at the theater where I saw it laughed, clapped and cried as Moore unwound his tales of ordinary citizens battling a corrupt, cockamamie system where decisions are truly life-or-death.

I was laughing and crying along with everyone else – but then I’m prejudiced, having come to the conclusion long ago that health insurers serve no function other than to drive medical costs upward. Certainly “insurance” is no assurance of good care or even payment.

I recently had the following surreal conversation with a representative from my own alleged insurer after I’d been told that my routine annual exam with a “preferred provider” would cost me the full amount instead of the $25 co-pay promised in my handbook.

Me: “When does [the insurance company] pay – you know, let you pay the $25 co-payment only? What kind of visit would that be? . . . It says ‘$25 copayment for office visit’ and this was an office visit.”

Representative: “Yes, ma’am, but it wasn’t just an office visit. . . See, ma’am, an office visit is just like going and seeing the doctor for like five minutes and leaving. That’s what they consider an office visit. Any time you’re in there and the doctor has to do any sort of examination, any extended evaluation of any kind, then that’s more than an office visit. . . ”

Me: “So the only time that you would pay would be if I went to see the doctor and he didn’t look at me at all.”

Representative: “Yeah, ma’am. . .”

I suffered no great harm from the denial; I appealed it and won. But the folks in Moore’s movie don’t fare as well. They’re denied life-saving care because it was deemed experimental, or because in an emergency they happened to be too far away from a hospital that was “in-network.”

Although some 50 million Americans are uninsured, “Sicko” focuses on those who are insured, serenely believing that their health-care needs will be therefore taken care of. Of course, this is largely a delusion, Moore explains. Most of us – insured or not – are just one car wreck or one chronic illness away from bankruptcy and ruin.

“Sicko” shows plenty of good Americans – not deadbeats, not illegal immigrants – whose lives are ruined because of gaps in the coverage they thought they’d paid for. We meet an older couple forced to move into one of their children’s spare rooms because medical bills eat up their savings and home. We see volunteer 9-11 rescue workers with chronic pulmonary illnesses (acquired at Ground Zero) that aren’t covered by the government. We see a woman whose insurance companyretroactively denies her coverage for surgery – demanding she pay them back because she forgot to report an unrelated yeast infection as a “preexisting condition” on her application.

But these are the lucky ones. They’re alive.

And they’re in homes — not being turned out in Los Angeles’ Skid Row, like the confused, feverish old woman deposited there, barefoot and in her hospital gown, by a Kaiser Permanente hospital in 2006, or the paraplegic man left crawling in the gutter this year by workers from Hollywood Presbyterian. Both were literally dumped because they couldn’t pay their bills – a fairly common practice.

Why does our supposedly compassionate and certainly wealthy country tolerate such behavior? Moore makes it clear that the answer is greed – greed so raw and insatiable that insurers, bigcity hospitals and pharmaceutical com panies are willing to see people die rather than risk reducing their profits.

His solution is government-run, universal health care. Sure, he says, the powers-that-be have done an excellent job scaring us away from “socialized medicine,” brainwashing us to picture Communists grimly marching in lockstep when we hear the term “socialism.” (Never mind Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, of course!)

Then he shows us France, Canada, Great Britain – democracies where people who need care simply go to a doctor or hospital and get treated. No applications, no co-pays, no deductibles, no exemptions for preexisting conditions.

But wait! Don’t they groan under unbearable taxes? Don’t their best doctors flee here to make more money? Don’t the people get sub-standard care?

Well, no, no, and no, according to Moore. Citizens in Western nations with socialized medicine are largely happy with the system and certainly don’t want it overturned. Yes, they pay higher taxes, but they don’t have medical bills or insurance payments!

Doctors live very comfortably, though they aren’t obscenely rich. (Why do we assume the greediest doctors are the most skilled?) People do get to choose their own doctors (here, our insurance companies essentially choose them for us).

Meanwhile, the U.S. ranks No. 37 in the world in health care, according to the World Health Organization. Many countries, including tiny Communist Cuba, have lower infant-mortality rates and higher life expectancies than ours.

“You would have to be dead to be unaffected by Moore’s movie,” admitted a Blue Cross executive in a recent memo bemoaning the potential “negative impact on our image” that “Sicko” could cause insurers such as his company. (The memo was passed on to Moore and is published on his web site.) The exec accuses Moore of “cultivating misperceptions” but doesn’t say anything is actually incorrect in the film.

Yet despite all its ugly wounds, our health-care systm remains like the Mark Twain adage about the weather: Everybody talks about it, but nobody does anything about it. Until people experience the system’s shortcomings themselves, until they need a cancer treatment and their insurance company turns them down, they tend to think it’s someone else’s problem — nothing too serious.

Worried that “Sicko” might change that perception, insurers are now rushing around saying most everything that’s wrong with our health-care system is because of our own “lifestyle choices.” Of course, that doesn’t explain why even thin people get multiple sclerosis, say, and then have to fight to make their insurance companies actually pay for their treatment — but never mind, it’s all our own fault.

Our political leaders realize how massive the problem is — but don’t expect them to do anything to remedy it. They have excellent, comprehensive health care, after all, and they’re busy jetting around the country, collecting campaign donations from the pharmaceutical industry and the insurance companies.

Meanwhile, working folks are forced to put jars in convenience stores begging for spare change to help pay for surgery for their kids.

Could “socialized medicine” really be worse than a system like that? See Moore’s film, and decide for yourself.

Published in -August 2007, Arts & Entertainment