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A growing body of research and analysis offers a counterintuitive message for the West: plan to live with fire. By Mark Blaine • Fires in Forests by Mark Blaine Also:
• Giving Good Weight: Public Comment, the Forest Service and You. What do those millions of letters, post cards and e-mails mean to the U.S. Forest Service? by Cheri Brooks |
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The noisiest, most destructive and perhaps least popular form of recreation on the national forests of California is the best funded. But Bob Libershal, a forest protection officer with twenty-three years of experience, didn't realize that and ran afoul of the entrenched off-road vehicle interests on the Angeles National Forest. By Mark Blaine Also:
• Standing Up for a Sense of Place. An embattled former forest Supervisor—Gloria Flora—continues to fight for land ethics. by Jamie Passaro |
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The Canada lynx, and the messengers of science who bear its tidings, are a threat to the authority of the U.S. Forest Service. By Mark Blaine Also:
• Coming of Age for the Quincy Experiment. Quincy's heralded model for cooperation is frustrated by conflicting U.S. Forest Service policy. by Jane Braxton Little |
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The training preached safety so much that Devin Weaver wondered if he’d ever get near a fire. Now his father wants to know how all those rules were broken and ignored. By Ken Weaver Also:
• A Young Stand. Gifford Pinchot's century-old split with John Muir tells much about how government still manages wild places. by Char Miller |







