Coyote Gulch

 



















































































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  Monday, February 27, 2006


Intent to annoy

Wash Park Prophet: "A recently passed law that makes annoying people over the internet a criminal offense, with some clear unintended consequences that didn't apply in the context of telephones where the language was first used in a statute and upheld, is being challenged on First Amendment grounds in Nevada. I wish the Plaintiffs the best of luck."

Category: 2008 Presidential Election


6:31:33 PM     

Dubai Ports World

The Indepundit: "But that's Dubai. This tiny city state at the southern end of the Persian Gulf, one of seven that make up the United Arab Emirates, is without a doubt one of the most free-wheeling, westernized cities in the Islamic world. Dubai is all about money: making it, banking it, and spending it. Unlike most Arab states, Dubai gets less than 10 percent of its gross income from oil revenue. Instead, this emirate has established itself as a center of banking, investment, tourism, commerce, and trade. In this sense, Dubai more closely resembles Zurich, Hong Kong, or Singapore than Riyadh, Damasus, or Cairo."

Category: 2008 Presidential Election


6:27:44 PM     

Beauprez for governor?

Beauprez for Governor Blog: "Congressman Beauprez spent Saturday traveling the Western Slope and discussing the need for more water storage in all corners of the state with GOP activists in Mesa and Grand County."

Category: Denver November 2006 Election


6:23:25 PM     

Interview with Dave Winer

Ed Cone: "Dave Winer is a visionary of the user-driven Web. He is a software developer who made his name in the 1980s by contributing key elements to the Mac and PC operating systems.

"Winer was publishing his "Scripting News" Weblog in 1997, before the term "blog" was even coined, thus helping to define and popularize the new medium. And Winer recognized the value of a content syndication technology developed by Netscape, reworked it into the format known as RSS, and evangelized its widespread use in the publishing industry and beyond.

"He also collaborated on the development of podcasting. The outspoken ex-CEO of Userland Software, and former fellow at Harvard Law School's Berkman Center for Internet & Society, spoke with Senior Writer Edward Cone about what's next.


6:16:48 PM     

Mangrove Forests and the Carbon Cycle
A picture named highmeadow.jpg

Science Blog: "Mangroves, the backbone of the tropical ocean coastlines, are far more important to the global ocean's biosphere than previously thought. And while the foul-smelling muddy forests may not have the scientific allure of tropical reefs or rain forests, a team of researchers has noted that the woody coastline-dwelling plants provide more than 10 percent of essential dissolved organic carbon that is supplied to the global ocean from land, according to a report to be published 21 February in Global Biogeochemical Cycles, a publication of the American Geophysical Union."

Category: Colorado Water


6:03:33 PM     

Survey on blogging

Blogs for Bush: "A PhD student in the Department of Communication at the State University of New York at Buffalo is asking for bloggers and blog readers to participate in a survey on blogging. The survey is designed 'to discover American political bloggers, media consumption habits and the reasons behind their blog use.'"

Click here for the survey.


7:14:08 AM     

Healthcare

Oval Office 2008: "I'm not entirely sure we've worked out what the big issues are going to be for this year's election, but Richard Benedetto, in this column in USA Today, has skipped right ahead to 2008."

Category: 2008 Presidential Election


7:00:52 AM     

8th Grade Math

Could you pass 8th Grade Math? Thanks to NewMexiKen for the link.

In case you're wondering Coyote Gulch scored 10 out of 10.


6:51:02 AM     

Colorado Luis: Unintended Consequences

Colorado Luis: "I agree with Jonathan Singer at MyDD that the best interpretation of the polls in the Colorado governor's race is that Democrats generally are on the upswing (or perhaps that Republicans are making themselves unpopular) -- it's the best way to explain why Bill Ritter is handily beating both the Republican candidates (and even Gary Lindstrom is running even) despite having low name recognition. This probably means we will see an extremely negative campaign from the Republicans. It also means the Republicans ought to think really hard about whether they want to go ahead with their federal court lawsuit to reinstate the 2003 re-redistricting plan that was thrown out by the Colorado Supreme Court in the Salazar v. Davidson case now that the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that the suit can go forward."

Category: Denver November 2006 Election


6:36:01 AM     

Sustainable Water Interest Group
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CBS4Denver.com: "Environmental activists have formed a coalition to oppose new reservoirs in northern Colorado. The group, which calls itself the Sustainable Water Interest Group or SWIG, said the focus should be on efficient use of existing supplies. Three reservoirs are proposed for the region, adding 400-thousand acre feet, near Fort Collins, Greeley and Loveland. SWIG's steering committee includes representatives of Friends of the Poudre, Poudre Paddlers, Sierra Club, Audubon Society and Trout Unlimited."

Coyote Gulch salutes the group's effort to promote the wise use of water that we already have. We note however that more often than not efficient use means "dry up more farms."

Category: Colorado Water


6:14:45 AM     

SB37
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The Denver Post editorial staff weighs in on SB37 - Concerning the Adjucation of Recreation In-Channel Diversions. The write, "One of this year's most entertaining pieces of legislation is a bill that pits kayak parks and other recreational users of water against developers who are fearful of future shortages.

"The Colorado Supreme Court has ruled that recreation is a beneficial and legitimate use of water and that enthusiasts are entitled to the minimum flow necessary for a 'reasonable recreation experience.' Senate Bill 37 is bogged down in a heated debate over how to define 'reasonable.'

"Each side accuses the other of wanting too much control over the available water. Recreational users and local governments whose economies revolve around tourism need enough water flowing through their rivers and streams to serve local river rats and tourists who come from all parts of the country. Developers say recreational users are claiming more water than they need...

"Colorado's 'first in time first in right' water law grants rights in priority order. If a town has a right for a whitewater course along River X, it gets first dibs on water over a developer who wants to build new houses upstream. State engineers operate headgates that ensure a 'senior' water right holder gets their water before someone with a 'junior' right. Agriculture and older cities have rights far senior to anyone else...

"SB 37 limits its definition of a reasonable recreation experience to kayakers. It would restrict recreational use from April 1 to Labor Day, from a half-hour before sunrise to a half-hour after sunset. The bill contains two other provisions that threaten whitewater courses - one would withdraw water rights if the flow is below 90 percent of its right, and the other gives water courts an incredible 20 years to reconsider their initial issuance of a water right if it is challenged."

Category: Colorado Water


6:07:42 AM     

Southern Utah pipeline
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Here's a story, from the St. George Spectrum, about a proposed pipeline from Lake Powell to southern Utah. The project is interesting technically and legally. The water would be moved from a lower basin state (Arizona) back up to an upper basin state (Utah). It would be Utah's water of course but ...

From the article, "Senate Bill 27, sponsored by Sen. Tom Hatch, R-Panguitch, cleared the Legislature and is awaiting the governor's signature for the 120-mile pipeline that will stretch from the south end of Lake Powell, through Kanab and Fredonia, Ariz., and then back into Utah, pumping water into the Sand Hollow Reservoir. It is anticipated to generate 74,000 acre-feet of water a year for Southern Utah communities whose population rate is growing at three times the national average.

"Cost estimates for the project are $500 million, but no state money has been appropriated because the two bills that allocate state subsidies from either the general fund or revenue from sales tax - House Bill 47, sponsored by P. Knudson, and Senate Bill 39, sponsored by Rep. Mike Noel, Kanab - are awaiting committee action.

"The combination of property taxes, impact and users fees - and hopefully state funding - are expected to pay for the project that is estimated to be completed in the next 10 to 15 years, servicing a projected population of more than 600,000. In the interim, two strategies must be put into effect to best utilize the water resources currently available: conservation and wider treatment of wastewater for reuse for irrigation and agricultural purposes.

"Both plans must take effect long before the first drop of water runs through the Lake Powell pipeline. Residents must not rely on the pipeline or take for granted that it is coming. Though some may quibble that the pipeline will be an astronomical expense with an increase in property taxes, it will cost just has [sic] much without it when a scarce commodity becomes equally pricey with limited supply and high demand from a larger population."

Category: Colorado Water


5:57:36 AM     


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