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Sunday, December 11, 2005
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RSS for Congressional votes
Coyote Gulch knows that y'all want to keep tabs on the votes cast by your representatives in Washington D.C. Now you have the chance to track their votes using RSS thanks to the Washington Post. Here's the feed for Senator Allard, the feed for Senator Salazar and the feed for Representative DeGette.
9:10:27 AM
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Water Park in Glenwood Springs?
Glenwood Springs is hoping to build a whitewater park, according to the Glenwood Springs Post Independent. From the article, "A five-year dream of local kayaking enthusiasts to build a whitewater park in town is starting to look as if it might become a reality. A tentative plan is taking shape for building the attraction in West Glenwood. A conceptual design prepared by an engineering firm lays out a vision of a big-wave feature in the river just west of the bridge crossing the Colorado River at Midland Avenue. On either bank, terraces formed by boulders would offer vantage points to spectators, as would a pedestrian bridge on the west side of the bridge. The area would link to a trail that might someday extend to South Canyon, already an attraction for whitewater enthusiasts. A parking lot would be built on city property on the southwest side of the bridge..."
Category: Colorado Water
8:53:46 AM
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Snowpack
Snowpack in Colorado is looking good for 2006. Here's an article from today's Denver Post detailing where we stand [December 11, 2005, "Rebounding waters"]. From the article, "Three years of well-timed snowfall, record stream flows and water conservation have raised the levels of reservoirs and significantly improved Colorado's water prospects since the 2002 drought...As of Friday, snowpack for the Colorado River and South Platte River basins - where most of the ski resorts are - was 143 percent and 135 percent of average. This time last year, the basins were below average...Drought is - and always will be - a frequent, unwelcome visitor to Colorado, where 'normal' means about 17 inches of rain a year, experts say. In fact, tree-ring data indicate the 2002 drought and the Dust Bowl years of the 1930s pale in comparison with much longer, widespread Western droughts about 1,000 years ago."
Category: Colorado Water
8:38:02 AM
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Immigration Reform?
The Denver Post editorial staff speaks out against the immigration reform bill to be considered next week in the U.S. House of Representatives [December 11, 2005, "Knee-jerk immigration reform]. They write, "Considering that Congress hasn't approved a comprehensive immigration package in almost 20 years, the sudden sense of urgency to approve an immigration bill in the House within two weeks is unsettling and unwise. We understand that lawmakers have been getting hammered by some constituents for not doing anything about our porous borders, so there's political urgency to approve something, anything, before the holiday break. But illegal immigration, which has had huge impacts on the United States, is a complex issue and warrants a full and open debate. It can't be 'solved' in mere weeks, and Congress' piecemeal approach is troublesome. The House bill, to be voted on as early as Wednesday, has a gaping hole in it: It doesn't include President Bush's guest- worker program. Bush wants to let illegals already here work for another six years before going home."
Here's an article on the Western Primary from Democrats for the West.
Colorado Luis: "It's big news that the Democratic Party task force that is studying changes to the presidential nomination process has approved the idea of adding one or two caucuses between the Iowa caucus and the New Hampshire primary. That's good because it has obviously hurt the party to let two primarily rural, overwhelmingly white states have so much weight in the process. Heck, those two states practically nominated John Kerry by themselves last time."
Political Wire: "'A Democratic commission took the first step toward dramatically revising their nomination calender today, voting to recommend that the party add caucuses before New Hampshire's primary and suggesting that more be scheduled the week after,' Hotline On Call reports."
Political Wire: "Craig Crawford notes that the propsective Democratic rivals for the 2008 presidential nomination face a strategic problem with Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY)."
Category: 2008 Presidential Election
8:31:32 AM
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Lake Powell water levels
So how is Lake Powell doing? The reservoir in Utah is the major storage for Colorado's deliveries to the downstream states under the Colorado River Compact. The Denver Post reports that Lake Powell's water levels are still way down [December 11, 2005, "Lake Powell still a glass half-empty"]. From the article, "Flows into Lake Powell were slightly above average this year, but the giant reservoir in Utah remains far from full, officials with the Bureau of Reclamation say. In 2005, flows into the reservoir were about 105 percent of average. Even with that increase, Lake Powell is only about half- full, holding 12 million acre-feet of water...Some Western environmental groups are skeptical about the chances of Lake Powell ever refilling again. They say the insatiable thirst of booming cities in Arizona, California and Nevada will outweigh any gains in flow the reservoir may experience."
Category: Colorado Water
8:06:59 AM
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© Copyright 2009 John Orr.
Last update: 3/14/09; 7:54:03 PM.
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