Coyote Gulch

 



















































































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  Tuesday, March 28, 2006


Campaign tips

Political Wire: "Bold and aggressive campaigns add 'Click here to Contribute' links or buttons on every page of your website. The more you remind people that they can contribute, the more likely they are to do so. You never know if your bio, issue positions, endorsement list, or press room will inspire someone to contribute to your campaign. If you have a contribution link highlighted on every page it doesn't matter which page wins a person's support, because they're always only one click away from making a donation to help."

Category: Denver November 2006 Election


6:00:56 PM     

Jimmy Carter blogs

Jimmy Carter has another post up on the Daily Kos.

Category: 2008 Presidential Election


7:11:27 AM     

Immigration

Here's an article from the Denver Post about the immigration legislation winding it's way through the U.S. Congress. They write, "The Senate Judiciary Committee approved an immigration-reform package Monday that would allow an estimated 11 million illegal immigrants to stay in the country and seek citizenship. On a day filled with protests by immigrant-rights activists across the country, senators by a 12-6 vote approved the bill, which also would create a guest- worker program for immigrants. On the enforcement side, the legislation calls for doubling the Border Patrol in five years and adding surveillance measures at the U.S.-Mexico line...

"Colorado's Rep. Tom Tancredo, leader of the House's Republican group that opposes any legalization of illegal immigrants, predicted the Senate committee bill would crash full force into the House's bill [HR 4437], which passed late last year...

"The most impassioned speeches came at the end of the day when senators debated how to handle millions of illegal immigrants already living in the U.S. Many immigrants have established homes and families here, and "they don't know where to go" if they were forced to leave the country, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said. 'We have allowed that home to be established,' he added. But Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., complained that the bill would allow those in the country illegally to jump in line for citizenship in front of those who didn't break the law and applied from their home country, often waiting years to gain entry...

"Under the measure, guest workers could stay six years, then could renew for six more years but would have to leave the country first - though briefly - to do so. They could apply for permanent residency if they have an immediate relative who is a resident, are self-employed, for humanitarian reasons, are students who grew up in the U.S., or have been an immigrant in the U.S. more than 10 years who can show hardship...

"What the immigration bill would do: Allow 1.5 million foreigners to hold agricultural jobs for five years; Create a guest-worker program for 400,000 low-skilled immigrant laborers who could stay up to six years; Let illegal immigrants in the U.S. apply for permanent residency and citizenship after paying $2,000 and meeting other conditions; Shield churches and charities that help illegal immigrants from prosecution; More than double the number of Border Patrol agents; Authorize a 'virtual wall' of unmanned vehicles, cameras and censors to monitor the U.S.-Mexico border."

Here's the coverage from the Rocky Mountain News.

Category: 2008 Presidential Election


6:49:43 AM     

Springs' storm-water fees
A picture named lightning.jpg

Colorado Springs property owners will start paying fees to their new storm-water utility in October, according to the Colorado Springs Gazette. The city hopes to improve storm-water runoff facilities.

From the article, "Colorado Springs property owners will start paying for long-delayed storm-water improvements in October. The mini-utility will charge each city property owner a quarterly fee to pay for a $300 million backlog in storm-water maintenance and capital improvement projects, more than $60 million of it deemed critical. Ken Sampley, manager of the city's recently created storm-water enterprise, told the City Council on Monday that property owners will get two mailings this summer that will fill them in on what the enterprise will do and what it will cost them. The second mailing, sometime in August, will show the amount of impervious surfaces on each specific property and an estimate of what each property owner will pay when bills start going out in October. The fall billing will assess fees for the last quarter of 2006."

Category: Colorado Water


6:33:42 AM     


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