Squirrels Killed by the Forest Service, or the Courts?

by Greg Walcher on March 19, 2025

In 2017 the Arizona Game and Fish Department estimated that there were only 252 Mount Graham red squirrels left. They only inhabited a few hundred acres in the 10,000-foot Pinaleño Mountains, not equipped to survive the heat of the surrounding deserts. Then, a lightning strike started a 48,000-acre fire in that section of the Coronado National Forest, incinerating all but 35 of the Mount Graham squirrels in existence. Federal and state wildlife officials thought the species faced likely extinction.

It is a more common story than you might think. The Journal Science published a study in 2020 called “Fire and biodiversity in the Anthropocene,” analyzing the danger of wildfires to threatened and endangered species. Across nine taxonomic groups, the study found that “at least 1,071 species are categorized as threatened by an increase in fire frequency or intensity…” That included 16 percent of all endangered mammals, nearly 20 percent of listed birds, and almost a third of non-flowering plants such as evergreen trees.

Recent wildfires in California reportedly pushed dozens of species to the brink of extinction, utterly devastating miles of habitat that will take decades to recover. Less widely reported was how many endangered birds and animals were burned in those fires (nobody really wants to see that on TV), but as the study euphemistically concluded, “wildlife often cannot adapt quickly enough to escape rapid changes in fire patterns.”

In Colorado we know the extreme fire seasons of 2002 and 2020 destroyed much of the habitat for the Mexican spotted owl, and the Hayman Fire alone destroyed over half the known habitat of a rare yellow butterfly called the Pawnee montane skipper. In California the same is now said of the mountain yellow-legged frog and the Amargosa vole, both of which are now nearing extinction. Burning most of them alive certainly didn’t help.

If we consider protecting all God’s creatures part of our duty as stewards of nature, then we cannot ignore the role mankind has played in the destruction of the great western forests. Wildlife is a part of nature, but what the study’s authors call “rapid changes in fire patterns” are not. The catastrophic fires that have destroyed over 150 million acres of national forests in the last 20 years are not natural – they are a consequence of negligent forest management.

Not all of that is the fault of federal forest managers, whose hands are often tied by lawsuits and court orders. In fact, the anti-forest environmental industry, and the activist judges who follow their lead, are every bit as responsible. Nor does the intense press coverage of fires like those in California discourage these groups from their constant legal onslaught.

A Forest Service emergency plan to remove burned trees in danger of falling on California highways across nine national forests has been held up for four years by an environmental lawsuit. A federal court upheld the Forest Service plan, but the enviro-groups immediately appealed to the 9th Circuit, where it is still pending. An average of three such environmental lawsuits are filed every day, while the devastating forest fires continue, their deforestation far worse than any ever caused by active forest management, including logging.

This trend against forest management worsened significantly in 2015 because of a 9th Circuit ruling, siding with the Cottonwood Environmental Law Center in a suit requiring the Forest Service to pause all forest management plans every time any new information arises about any endangered species. Thus, any person or group can delay any forest management project by simply coming up with new information on any listed species. That has been done hundreds of times since the ruling, and it has been disastrous – both for the forests and for many endangered species. It has required a rewrite of at least 87 national forest management plans, most of which will take over a decade, as the agency testified before Congress.

Senator Steve Daines and Representative Matt Rosendale have introduced legislation to overturn the Cottonwood ruling, but it seems unlikely that Congress can get its act together to pass much of anything these days. Meanwhile, California says over 50 endangered species were “impacted” by its recent fires, and the environmental industry is still getting paid to stop managers from doing anything about it.

One bit of good news: contrary to the dire predictions, there are more than 200 Mount Graham red squirrels again, apparently more adaptable than the “experts” expected. One wishes these environmental litigation groups could learn to adapt to changing circumstances, too.

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Can the Switch Be Turned Back On?

by Greg Walcher on March 11, 2025

It is ironic to see preservationists lobbying to save power plants with smokestacks, but that is the strange case of the Zuni power plant in Denver. The coal-fired steam plant was built in 1901 and provided electricity to a growing metropolis until decommissioned by Excel Energy in 2021. Excel doesn’t want it anymore, having switched from coal to natural gas, and wants to tear it down to avoid future liability issues.

Neighborhood preservation activists, with Denver city council support, have been working to convince Excel not to do that, hoping to turn it into a market, restaurants, galleries or something. Excel delayed demolition while it tried to convince Denver that if it wanted to save the industrial site the city could buy it. Denver has now been given 30 days to make up its mind, as Excel reminds leaders that it is in the power business, not the community development business.

What is the highest and best use of such a unique facility? Here is an idea: turn it back into a power plant. Not the old facility that spewed black smoke into the air a century ago, but a more modern installation that includes clean-burning technology – like the one Excel was operating there until deciding to flip the switch in 2021. Hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent building new power plants that use natural gas instead of coal, while the old plants were simply switched off.

Those decisions – on the part of Excel and dozens of other utilities around the country – were not based on economics or consumer demand. They were based on wrong-headed government policy. Newly appointed Energy Secertary Chris Wright is already calling attention to the problem, saying the U.S. should stop closing coal plants. He has no pro-coal bias, as a highly successful entrepreneur from the competitor natural gas industry, but he understands, and is now explaining to Washington politicians, that America’s cheapest and most abundant energy source is critical to meeting energy demand. Demand that is growing, not shrinking.

In fact, nearly $3 trillion in new investments in the U.S. by high-tech giants like Taiwan Semiconductor, Apple, and Stargate herald a new age of AI data centers, new factories, and other developments that require massive amounts of electricity, beyond the capacity of existing U.S. power grids. America is in dire need of more power plants, not fewer, so it makes no sense to shut down already existing infrastructure. 

Highlighting the need to reverse the course of federal policy, Secretary Wright says, “We are on a path to continually shrink the electricity we generate from coal. That has made electricity more expensive and our grid less stable.” Yet despite that stark reality, the war on coal has been remarkably successful. Twenty years ago, the U.S. got 56 percent of its electricity from coal, today barely 15 percent (Energy Department data). Wright adds, “The best we can hope for in the short-term is to stop the closure of coal power plants.” At a minimum. Over 60 coal plants with 64,000 megawatts of capacity, are scheduled to be shut down by 2030.

The President has said we might need major new power plants built alongside the coming new AI data centers, because they require so much power. New plants cost hundreds of millions, though, so first we ought to at least consider reopening shuttered plants that have not yet been torn down (the Zuni plant is one of over 700). Upgrading and modernizing some of those might be expensive but not compared to the cost of building all-new infrastructure elsewhere.

Alex Epstein, president and founder of the Center for Industrial Progress, testified before the House Oversight Committee last week on “opportunities to strengthen America’s energy reliability” and put a fine point on the problem. “Our electricity crisis is simple: government is artificially restricting reliable electricity supply, then artificially increasing demand.” Restricting supply by killing the coal industry; artificially increasing demand by mandating electric cars, banning gas appliances, and generally forcing electrification of the economy. That shifts the country away from its most abundant and affordable source, of which the U.S. has a virtually unlimited supply (coal underlies 80 percent of Colorado, and much of the rest of the country, too).

Epstein says, “Shortages are now routine throughout the U.S., and if we don’t start increasing reliable generation very quickly, our grid will get crushed by the exploding electricity demands of AI.” The first step should be to keep what we already have, perhaps starting with Zuni.

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Zombies That Can Never Be Killed

March 4, 2025

In Haitian folklore a zombie is a dead body reanimated through Vodou magic. The modern concept of zombies as flesh-eating creatures from the cemetery evolved more recently, from the 1968 comedy/horror film, “Night of the Living Dead,” and sequels like “Dawn of the Dead,” “Day of the Dead,” and “Return of the Living Dead.” Some call […]

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Paying For What Ought To Be Free

February 24, 2025

If I offered you a thousand dollars not to steal my car, would you be any less likely to steal it? What if I offered you a million? If you’re like most people, you would answer that you weren’t planning to steal it anyway. You’re not a thief so the discussion is pointless. Although if […]

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Fixing the Budget Process by Breaking It

February 21, 2025

A popular blogger called Taylor Cone gave some great advice for budding inventors, discussing the process of prototyping: build it, then break it, then fix it. That’s a strategy Congress ought to try. The House Appropriations Committee, Congress’s most powerful panel, has 63 members, only 8 of whom have ever voted to do what the […]

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How Many Border Guards Do We Need?

February 14, 2025

Police have an unflattering nickname, “Permit Patty,” for someone who calls police over frivolous complaints. It originated when a woman called the police on a little girl selling lemonade at a streetside stand – as generations of kids have done – without a permit. It illustrates a commonsense truth, namely that not everything in life […]

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Let’s Use What We Already Have

February 7, 2025

In planning the nation’s 1976 bicentennial celebration, Congress made one of its dumbest-ever boondoggle decisions. Recognizing the near death of railroad passenger service since the 1950’s, Congress decided to spend millions turning the aging and crumbling Union Station into the National Visitor Center. But they missed the obvious red flag – the millions of visitors […]

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Shovel, Baby, Shovel

January 29, 2025

My friend Amos Eno, one of the country’s leading conservation experts, spent a decade running the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and more recently the Land Conservation Assistance Network. His writing appears in all the right publications, and he is a popular speaker at conferences everywhere.  Writing about the old/new President’s endorsement of the almost-cliché […]

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DOE Throws Cold Water on Biden Legacy

January 22, 2025

Headlines this week claimed that “Heading Out the Door, Biden Seeks to Ban 40 Percent of Water Heaters.” It is highly unlikely that President Biden is even aware of the last regulation published by his Department of Energy (DOE). Though he supported their green agenda over the past four years, most details have been left […]

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Do It Now, Even If It’s Wrong

January 14, 2025

My grandparents were avid card players, spending many happy hours with family playing hearts, rummy, pinochle, and similar games. I remember occasionally, when Grandma was a little frustrated that someone was taking too long, she would say, “Well play something, even if it’s wrong.” That’s actually one of the oldest and most reliable strategies, especially […]

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