Restoring the West: Multiple Use and Sustained Yield of Resources on Public Lands: Is it Still Possible?
October 16-17, 2018, Utah State University, Logan, Utah | www.restoringthewest.org
View the conference program booklet

Mark Brunson
Professor, Environment & Society, Utah State University, Logan, Utah

Rose McKinney-James
Managing Principal Energy Works LLC & McKinney-James & Associates, Las Vegas, Nevada

Ethan Linck
Ph.D. Candidate & High Country News contributor, Seattle, Washington

Laurel Glidden
Fuels Archaeologist, Bureau of Land Management, Cedar City, Utah

Leigh Kuwanwisiwma
Director Emeritus, Hopi Cultural Preservation office. The Hopi Tribe, Hotevilla, Arizona
In Defense of A Hopi Sacred Landscape. The Arizona Snow Bowl Controversy

Martin Nie
Director, Bolle Center for People and Forests & Professor, University of Montana, Missoula, Montana
A Primer on the Law and Politics of Multiple Use Management on Federal Public Lands
Don Sada
Research Professor, Division of Hydrologic Sciences, Desert Research Institute, Reno, Nevada
Desert Spring Restoration. Challenges, and Opportunities for Success

Ben Cate
Ecological Coordinator, High Desert Partnership, Hines, Oregon
Sustaining Multiple Use and Yield on Public Lands in Harney County, Oregon Through Collaboration

Evan Glenn
Trails and Travel Management Program Lead, BLM, Salt Lake City, Utah

Keith Karnes
Leech Lake (MN) Reservation Forester, Leech Lake Indian Reservation, Minnesota

Toni Ruth
Executive Director, Salmon Valley Stewardship, Salmon, Idaho
Rural Values and Multiple Use: Insights from a Community Based Organization in Central Idaho

Derek Scasta
Rangeland Extension Specialist, Assistant Professor of Rangeland Management, Plant - Herbivore Interactions Ecologist, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming

Jacqualine Grant
Associate Professor of Biology, Southern Utah University
Community-engaged Education: A Way Forward for Integrating Multiple Uses on Public Lands?

Casey Spackman
PhD Candidate, Utah State University, Logan, Utah State University

Sara Goeking
Biological Scientist, U.S. Forest Service, & PhD Candidate, Utah State University, Logan, Utah
Forests and Water: A Synthesis of Recent Effects of Forest Disturbance on Water Yield in the West

Nancy Brunswick
Regional Landscape Architect, Intermountain Region, United States Forest Service, Ogden, Utah
Saving and Sharing the Pando Aspen Clone – Taking Advantage of Social Media Interest
Hilary Whitcomb
Wildlife Biologist, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Salt Lake City, Utah

Sasha Stortz
Senior Research Specialist, Landscape Conservation Initiative, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona

Diane Tanner
Working Group Leader, Box Elder County, Utah

Ann Moser
Wildlife Staff Biologist, Idaho Department of Fish and Game, Boise, Idaho
Cooperative Restoration for Sage-grouse and Sagebrush Landscapes in Idaho

Craig Thompson
Landscape Wildlife Ecologist, Conservation Biology Institute, Corvallis, Oregon