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& the West

Bill Lane Center for the American West, Stanford University

Published since 2016,  ‘& the West’ offers reporting, research, interviews, and analysis on the environmental future of California and western North America. It is produced by the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University.  More about us »

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Economic Development & the West

Economic Development & the West

Health & the West

& the Best

What we’re reading elsewhere.

What we’re reading: April 14, 2026 

By Catherine Wu

Snowpack measurement around the West deemed “pitiful”; pruning the U.S. Forest Service; industrial logging poised to make a comeback in the Pacific Northwest; “toilet to tap” wastewater recycling comes closer to reality in Arizona, and more environmental news from the West.

The April 1 snowpack measurement has long been a harbinger of the West’s water future. It is the single most important number in western water management, considered a strong proxy for how much water the mountains are holding in reserve. This year’s measurement was pitiful around the West, enhancing the risk of dangerous wildfires. The exceptionally warm winter of 2025–26 across much of the western U.S. delivered a powerful preview of what the regional water cycle in a warmer climate may increasingly look like: less snow and a fundamental reshaping of the chart showing how much water flows through streams over the year. THE CONVERSATION

The U.S. Forest Service plans to relocate its national office to Salt Lake City and implement further budget cuts. This will close or repurpose nine regional offices, create 15 state offices and terminate research facilities in more than 30 states. When the Trump Administration first announced its intentions last summer, many tribal representatives, conservation groups and former Forest Service staffers voiced opposition. “Nobody is asking for this,” said the former Department of Agriculture undersecretary. “None of the farm groups want this. No one in conservation wants this. Nobody.” ALASKA BEACON LOS ANGELES TIMES

Unusually high threat of summertime wildfires across the West. Recent snow drought, rapid snowmelt and unprecedented heat waves suggest above-normal fire risk across the Southwest and into the Rockies, Pacific Northwest and northern California, according to the latest projections by the National Interagency Coordination Center. A wet spring, however, could decrease fire risk dramatically. GRIST

Industrial logging about to make a comeback in the Pacific Northwest. President Trump’s executive order of a year ago mandating a 25 percent increase in timber volume from federal lands, coupled with the subsequent effort to eliminate the 2001 roadless rule, means that the opening of 25.7 million acres of untouched landscape to logging is getting underway quickly.  HIGH COUNTRY NEWS

The Trump Administration’s energy push runs roughshod over tribal consultations and safety concerns. An expedited process allowed construction of a uranium mine in San Juan County, Utah, a mine long opposed by the Ute Mountain Ute. The “emergency” declared to circumvent safety and public-comment regulations “is all predicated on something that isn’t true: We don’t have an energy emergency.” Tribal consultation requirements have been truncated to accomplish an ‘energy dominance’ agenda on ancestral tribal lands. HIGH COUNTRY NEWS

The Diablo Canyon nuclear plant, once set for the scrap heap, reauthorized for 20 years. The power plant, which provides roughly 9% of California’s electricity, had been scheduled to shut down by 2025 by PG&E. But extreme heat waves in 2020 and 2021 drove Gov. Gavin Newsom and state lawmakers to sign a state law directing PG&E to extend its license in 2022. This decision was approved by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission on April 2, granting PG&E license to continue supporting California’s energy needs until 2044 and 2045. SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS

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Stories by Topic

What we’re reading, Dec. 6, 2021

Disappearing snowpack in the West. Is the end of western mountain snowpacks in sight? San Francisco Chronicle Washington Post

Disappearing water in the West. Does groundwater have a future in California, or is its depletion inevitable? Stanford Earth Matters

Disappearing water, Part II. Water agencies serving 27 million Californians are on their own next year, getting nothing from state water projects. Los Angeles Times

Disappearing water, Part III. Small farmers in the Central Valley wonder: where is Kings County water going? SJV Water

Oregon’s proposed Jordan Cove liquified natural gas project abandoned. It was designed to include a liquified natural gas terminal and a 229-mile natural gas pipeline and send liquified natural gas to Asian markets. Oregon Public Broadcasting

Interior Secretary Haaland works to eliminate racist place names, like those using the word “squaw.” How names like “Chinaman Gulch” affected one Asian American. Grist KSUT

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Staff and Contributors

Felicity Barringer

Felicity Barringer

Lead writer

A national environmental correspondent during the last decade of her 28 years at The New York Times, Felicity provided an in-depth look at the adoption of AB 32, California’s landmark climate-change bill after covering state’s carbon reduction policies. MORE »

Geoff McGhee

Geoff McGhee

Associate editor

Geoff McGhee specializes in interactive data visualization and multimedia storytelling. He is a veteran of the multimedia and infographics staffs at The New York Times, Le Monde and ABCNews.com. MORE »

Xavier Martinez

Xavier Martinez

Editorial Assistant

Xavier graduated from Stanford in 2023 with a degree in economics and is currently a master’s student in Stanford’s journalism program. He has written about the high phone call costs faced by U.S. inmates, temporary Mexican workers’ interactions with the labor market and the efficacy of government healthcare assistance programs. A lifelong lover of charts and maps, he enjoys combining data journalism with narrative-style reporting. 

Logo of Bill Lane Center for the American West, Stanford University
Stanford University logo

‘& the West’ is published by the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University, which is dedicated to research, teaching, and journalism about the past, present, and future of the North American West.

Bruce E. Cain

Faculty Director

Kate Gibson

Associate Director

west.stanford.edu

Past Contributors

Rani Chor
Rani Chor
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2024
rchor@stanford.edu
@chorrani
 
Syler Peralta-Ramos
Syler Peralta-Ramos
Editorial Assistant, Spring 2022
sylerpr@stanford.edu
 
Anna McNulty
Anna McNulty
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2021
annam23@stanford.edu
 
Melina Walling
Melina Walling
Editorial Assistant, Spring 2021
mwalling@stanford.edu
 
Benek Robertson
Benek Robertson
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2021
benekrobertson@stanford.edu
 
Maya Burke
Maya Burke
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2020
mburke3@stanford.edu
 
Kate Selig
Kate Selig
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2020

 
Francisco L. Nodarse
Francisco L. Nodarse
Editorial Assistant, Summer 2020
fnodarse@stanford.edu
 
Devon R. Burger
Devon R. Burger
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2020
devonburger@stanford.edu
 
Madison Pobis
Madison Pobis
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2019
mpobis@stanford.edu
 
Sierra Garcia
Sierra Garcia
Editorial Assistant, Summer 2019

 
Danielle Nguyen
Danielle Nguyen
Editorial Assistant, Spring 2019
Carolyn P. Rice
Carolyn P. Rice
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2019
carolyn4@stanford.edu
 
Rebecca Nelson
Rebecca Nelson
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2018
rnelson3@stanford.edu
 
Emily Wilder
Emily Wilder
Editorial Assistant, Summer 2018
ewilder2@stanford.edu
 
Alessandro Hall
Alessandro Hall
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2018
ahall2@stanford.edu 
Joshua Lappen
Josh Lappen
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2017
@jlappen1
jlappen@stanford.edu 
Natasha Mmonatau
Natasha Mmonatau
Editorial Assistant, Spring 2017
@NatashaMmonatau
 
Alan Propp
Alan Propp
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2017
@alanpropp