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& the West

The State of the West: Q&A With Environmental Reporter Felicity Barringer

Through a newly launched blog at Stanford’s Bill Lane Center for the American West, former New York Times environmental correspondent Felicity Barringer explores people’s connections to western water, landscapes and other resources.

By Rob Jordan, Stanford Woods Center for the Environment

Felicity Barringer photographed on assignment on Mount Whitney in 2007
Felicity Barringer photographed on assignment on Mount Whitney in 2007. Erik Olsen

The West’s iconic open spaces, mighty rivers and jagged mountains hold powerful values and meanings for people. Through a newly launched blog at Stanford’s Bill Lane Center for the American West, former New York Times environmental correspondent Felicity Barringer explores people’s connections to western water, landscapes and other resources. The news blog, …& the West, combines research with journalism and features reports, interviews, and analysis on the future of California and the North American West.

We spoke with Barringer about the blog, people’s relation to their environments and more.

What will this blog offer readers in terms of a unique perspective?

I think what’s been missing in a lot of environmental coverage is voices from the other side of the coin. That is, the environment on one side and the economy on the other. The economic issues for real people, not huge industries, have been demonized. Coal, for example, may be a villain, but the livelihoods of people who depend on it are not villainous. I want people who have been associated with villainous things to be able to talk about their own lives. There are people in the rural West who love their land and must feed their families. They’re often asked to sacrifice land for income over time. I’d like to highlight the problems with that bargain. It is important to understand facts, but it’s even more important to understand people.

A Glance at ‘…& the West’

Launched in November 2016, the Center’s new blog features reports, interviews, and analysis on the future of California and the North American West.

Read more stories »

How can scientists and other researchers fill the information gap created by the devolution of traditional journalism?

The major asset of scientists and researchers is the trust people have in them. They can leverage that to explain different facts. They risk losing that trust when the facts are unpalatable, but they shouldn’t stop trying.

What do you consider the most under-reported environmental stories?

The extent to which our economic system, particularly the transport of goods, is an environmental hazard. Diesel pollution, oil spills, chemical-carrying train wrecks – there is little regulation and high risk.

What, if anything, is wrong with environmental journalism today?

Unfortunately, the business as a whole has, until recently, treated the environment as a soft subject that is not constantly put in front of people like economics is. In the presidential debates, there was no discussion of climate change.

What western water stories are you most interested to explore?

The best water story in California right now is the development of groundwater governance. Think about it this way – after the American Revolution, the country had to decide how to govern itself. California’s Sustainable Groundwater Management Act was a revolution for the state. To align with the new law, there are 127 constitutions currently being prepared at the groundwater basins. Stakeholders will argue about water quantity, management and how to divide water. Can you imagine anything more exciting than being offered the chance to cover the constitutional convention?

What – in a larger sense – do you want to do with this blog?

I think it’s important to understand how people in communities feel about their environment and how the very word ‘environment’ – a word connoting evil and distant control in some places of the West – could be understood differently as separate from political beliefs, as part of the stage on which people live their lives. I want to see if and how people in the rural West relate to the physical world they live in and the damage that could be done to it.

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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

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