Coyote Gulch

 



















































































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  Monday, September 6, 2004



2004 Presidential Election

Electoral-vote.com: "Despite this being a holiday weekend, we actually have a real poll, and an important one at that. Bush has take a 3% lead in New Mexico, a major switch since the previous poll, where Kerry was 6% ahead. However, it should be pointed out that this poll was taken during the RNC and just after Bush campaigned there. Rasmussen has started publishing a 3-day rolling average every day. For Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, (all post-speech), Bush's lead nationally has shrunk to 1.2%. Rasmussen looked at the Time and Newsweek polls we had yesterday and said the samples had too many Republicans in them. When he corrected for this effect, he concluded that the Time and Newsweek data might support the conclusion of a 3% Bush lead, not more. This observation is noteworthy because it is relatively rare when one pollster says that his colleagues blew it."

Update: Daily Kos: "USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll results: Among Registered Voters: Bush 49, Kerry 48."
11:47:34 AM     



Creative Commons Benefit Concert

Lawrence Lessig is spreading the word about a benefit concert for the Creative Commons featuring David Byrne. Same as it ever was.
11:44:54 AM     



Colorado Water

The state needs to find enough dough to run the Water Quality Control Division, according to the Rocky Mountain News [September 6, 2004, "Water watchdogs running low on staff"]. From the article, "The state's 115-person Water Quality Control Division, charged with keeping streams clean and drinking water safe, falls 80 staffers short from what a program of its size and responsibilities typically employs, according to the report written by division officials. Compounding the problem, there's no clear source of money for the water quality division to make up for even some of the staffing shortfall." Couldn't Denver Water just add another surcharge or raise rates? Somehow this problem must be due to conservation.

Should the feds stop draining Lake Powell, asks the Denver Post [September 6, 2004, "Reservoir worries spill over"]? From the article, "Lake Mead and Lake Powell have already lost a combined 25 million acre-feet during the five-year drought, which is among the worst in centuries. That volume is equal to a full Lake Mead. The 1,450-mile Colorado River rises in Rocky Mountain National Park and supplies water to one of every 10 U.S. residents. But demand for the river's water is so great that it rarely reaches its mouth in the Gulf of California. Powell acts like a water bank for the Upper Basin states of Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico and Utah, releasing water to Lake Mead for distribution to the Lower Basin as required under the 1922 Colorado River Compact. If Powell's level falls low enough, Colorado and the other headwaters states would have to drain their reservoirs to meet the needs of the their Lower Basin neighbors - California, Nevada and Arizona. That could force Colorado to curtail water users on the Western Slope or even curb the transmountain diversions that supply the Front Range, George said."
7:48:54 AM     



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