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Plowing the Sun Road, Many Glacier 'slow going'

Chris Peterson/Hungry Horse News | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 16 years, 9 months AGO
by Chris Peterson/Hungry Horse News
| April 24, 2008 11:00 PM

It's been a slow go plowing the Sun Road and Many Glacier over the past week as the weather went from bad, to great, to lousy again in the past few days in Glacier National Park.

Crews on the east side are still working in Many Glacier and the road is not expected to open to vehicle traffic this weekend, according to Park Spokeswoman Melissa Wilson. On the west side, crews are at Swede Point and are pushing to Granite Creek and beyond ?about a mile further than they were last week at this time. The road is closed to cars at Lake McDonald Lodge on the west side and Rising Sun on the east side.

In addition, construction crews looking to get to work on the road were also removing snow at higher elevations near the Loop and Crystal Point.

As such, hikers and bikers can use the road as far they want on the west side on the weekends, but on Mondays it is now closed at Packer's Roost. Tuesday through Friday the closure for hikers and bikers is at Avalanche Creek.

There are no current hiker-biker closures on the east side of the Sun Road any day of the week. One lane is plowed to Sun Point. The word of caution on the east side is that melting snow runs across the road surface as water, then freezes at night, making the road icy in spots.

Late last week saw snow and rain, but the weather was good Friday through Monday. Crews, however, work a Tuesday-through-Friday shift.

This week is supposed to dish up more bad weather, with rain in the valleys and snow in the mountains with highs in the 50s during the day and lows in the 20s and 30s at night.

The snowpack in the Flathead River Basin is now 122 percent of average snow water equivalent for this time of year and 97 percent of average for precipitation.

In short, there's still an awful lot of unmelted snow in the higher terrain. The Flattop Mountain Snotel in the Park currently lists the snow depth at 132 inches ?or 11 feet. In Many Glacier, there is still 29.2 inches of snow at the Snotel site, which is on a level surface in the trees out of the wind. The snow drifts in some places are much, much higher.

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ARTICLES BY CHRIS PETERSON/HUNGRY HORSE NEWS

April 10, 2008 11 p.m.

Montanans for Multiple Use loses suit against Forest Service

A federal court in Washington, D.C. has struck down all the claims brought by Montanans for Multiple Use and other multiple use groups that claimed the Flathead National Forest was closing roads and revising its forest plan in an illegal manner.MFMU filed the complaint in June of 2003, claiming the Flathead wasn't following several federal laws when it amended its forest plan some 23 times in more than 15 years.The multiple use group claimed that the amendments amounted to a "de facto" rewrite of the forest plan.The court disagreed on several different fronts, the most damning being that MFMU and other groups simply didn't follow administrative procedures when they brought their claim. For example, if an amendment to a forest plan is brought forth, a group that opposes it must go through an administrative appeal process ?by writing letters of protest, etc. ?before it can file suit.The court found the groups simply didn't do that ?they just decided to sue the federal government. In their defense, they claimed they didn't know what the amendments meant until they were already in place ?but the court didn't buy that argument. In fact, the court likened it to the parable of the frog in a pot of boiling water. The frog, as the story goes, is placed in a pot of cold water. Raise the heat a degree at a time and the frog doesn't realize it's being boiled.But if you throw the frog in the boiling water it jumps out ?or at least tries to.In this case, however, MFMU never proved its case that it was futile to go through the administrative appeal process.MFMU also claimed the Forest wasn't following the law because it hadn't revised its forest plan in the past 15 years as required by law. But the court noted that forest plan revision was well under way and that Congress had extended the deadlines to rewrite forest plans.MFMU was supported by several other groups, including Flathead County, Northwest Montana Gold Prospectors, Owens and Hurst Lumber Co., the Flathead Snowmobile Association and several other multiple use and motorized land use advocates, including Leland's Honda."We are pleased with the court's ruling and will continue working to achieve the balance that multiple use management requires on National Forest System lands," Flathead National Forest Planning Staff Officer Rob Carlin said in a prepared release.The case was heard in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.MFMU chairman Fred Hodgeboom could not be reached for comment. The case was decided by chief judge Thomas F. Hogan.

May 29, 2008 11 p.m.

Dupont beats Hall in primary; Democrats support Obama locally

Former Flathead County Sheriff Jim Dupont beat incumbent Gary Hall in the Republican primary for Flathead County Commissioner by a wide margin Tuesday, 7,837 to 3,475.

April 24, 2008 11 p.m.

Plowing the Sun Road, Many Glacier 'slow going'

It's been a slow go plowing the Sun Road and Many Glacier over the past week as the weather went from bad, to great, to lousy again in the past few days in Glacier National Park.