READERS' PICK: Local legend has it that a saguaro once
knocked off some guy who was using it for target practice by dropping
a big spiny arm on his head. But the truth is, the desert can't
defend itself against human destruction: It's disappearing at
the rate of a quarter-acre an hour. So this year 32 neighborhood
and environmental groups got together to draw up a plan for identifying
Pima County's vital pieces of desert habitat, linking them with
wildlife corridors and protecting them from the blade while encouraging
growth and development where it's more appropriate. On May 19,
1998, the Board of Supervisors went for it. The Sonoran Desert
Protection Plan calls for some pretty radical stuff--a whole
new approach to zoning, for example, and imaginative funding sources.
It will have to charm the conservative state Legislature, work
within constitutional property rights, and figure out its relationship
to existing endangered species laws. So, sure, its future is thick
with hairy problems. But hairy can be good. Ask any javelina.