Coyote Gulch

 



















































































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  Wednesday, August 16, 2006


Peace is a conversation

MTV: "One of Israel's leading bloggers, Lisa Goldman, thinks the proliferation of blogs covering the border war is a sign that a change is coming. 'If you follow the voices, you can see that several Israeli bloggers switched from Hebrew to English early on to reach out to Lebanese bloggers in the hope that they would get in touch and leave some comments,' said Goldman, a Canadian freelance journalist who moved to Israel in 2000 and runs the On the Face site."

Thanks to Doc Searls for the link.

"2008 pres"
6:22:38 PM     


Ritter for governor?

Bill Ritter's campaign has started blogging more frequently, including the latest Critter for Ritter. RSS is a fine way to keep fresh content in front of readers.

"denver 2006"
6:17:31 PM     


Beauprez for governor?

ToTheRight.org: "...Beauprez has been getting nothing but bad press for as long as anyone can remember. Not even his lieutenant-governor announcement has allowed Beauprez a day of respite from the press' persecution, as every major newspaper in the state, including Janet Rowland's local daily, ran stories about her comments on gay marriage. Surprisingly, a piece by one of The Denver Post's most liberal columnists was one of the only that featured a substantial response from Rowland."

Meanwhile Bob Beauprez is sponsoring the Partnership for Academic Success in the States Act (PASS Act) From the article, "In July, Representative Bob Beauprez (R-CO) introduced the Partnership for Academic Success in the States Act, or PASS Act, to restore greater state and local control in education. With bipartisan frustration with No Child Left Behind growing, the PASS Act could garner support across the political spectrum.

"The PASS Act would give up to ten states greater freedom and flexibility to control federal education spending without being tied down by the typical web of federal regulations. In exchange, the states would have to demonstrate improved academic achievement. And if a state reduces the achievement gap, it would receive a performance bonus from the federal government."

Thanks to Mt. Virtus for the link.

"denver 2006"
6:08:33 PM     


Preschool Matters

The Cherry Creek News: "Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper's 'Preschool Matters' campaign is similar in mind to California's Proposition 82, a universal preschool program that California voters defeated in June.

"Both programs sought to expand preschool for four-year olds, although the California measure was much broader and built upon an income tax increase on people making more than $400,000 a year.

"Proposition 82 went down in flames at the polls, with 60% of voters against, and was partially derailed by an alternative measure championed by California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.

"Studies such as 'The Economics of Investing in Universal Preschool Education in California,' a recent Rand Corp. report, which found that every dollar California invests in preschool would return $2.62 in savings later on through lower juvenile crime and high school dropout rates. Other studies cited show that children are more likely to read by the third grade and are less likely to need remedial education. They are also more likely to graduate high school and go to college...

"But opponents are likely to contend that Hickenlooper is creating another bureaucracy with administrative overhead, rather than seeking to expand Early Childhood Education oportunities already in place through Denver Public Schools. Hickenooper's program will be administered through a yet to be created non-profit organization."

Here's the link to the National Institute for Early Education Reseach website.

"denver 2006"
6:03:20 PM     


Legal Marijuana on fall ballot

Colorado Confidential: "An initiative to decriminalize up to an ounce of cannabis for adults 21 years and older in Colorado will be up for a vote this election season, as the Secretary of State confirmed today that the over 129,000 signatures gathered are sufficient under state law.

"The group that gathered the signatures, Safer Alternative For Enjoyable Recreation (SAFER), successfully passed a similar measure in the city of Denver last year, and will now campaign to have it extended to the state level in a vote that could make history and set a precedent for the future.

"Currently, no state has successfully decriminalized cannabis-a drug declared illegal under federal law. And, while Republicans and Democrats alike have come out criticizing the measure, SAFER claimed at their last press conference that support did not come solely from the more liberal Denver-Metro region, but from cities like Colorado Springs."

"denver 2006"
5:52:23 PM     


Cooperative conservation and environmental partnerships
A picture named highmeadow.jpg

KTVZ.com: "The Secretaries of Interior, Commerce and Agriculture, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality have announced the dates and locations of several listening sessions on cooperative conservation and environmental partnerships...Some two dozen sessions are being held around the country, including...Colorado Springs, Colorado, 9 a.m., September 15, 2006, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, the Gymnasium. United States Department of Agriculture Under Secretary, Natural Resources and Environment, Mark Rey will attend."

Here's the link to the Cooperative Conservation website.

"colorado water"
10:54:35 AM     


Fountain Creek management
A picture named arkansasfountainconverge.jpg

Pueblo Chieftain: "The state has provided funds for a study of high levels of E. coli bacteria on Fountain Creek to determine if the cause is human or animal. A supplemental environmental project, part of the settlement in an earlier, unrelated clean-air violation by Rocky Mountain Steel Mills, will make $100,000 in seed money available to study DNA in E. coli on Fountain Creek, said Steve Gunderson, state water quality control director for the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment. The money could kick off a $450,000 project proposed by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with Colorado Springs-area governments."

"colorado water"
10:47:38 AM     


Habitat the number one priority?
A picture named coloradopikeminnow.jpg

Grand Junction Daily Sentinel: "A handful of anglers from western Colorado last week went in front of the Colorado Wildlife Commission to skewer the state's involvement in a controversial program aimed at reviving endangered fish populations in the Colorado and Yampa rivers. As part of the Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has since 2003 been removing non-native fish from sections of the Colorado and Yampa rivers. Lynn Ensley, executive director of the Grand Junction-based Colorado Sportsmen Wildlife Fund, told the commissioners that the program's current emphasis on removing non-native fish, particularly northern pike, channel catfish and smallmouth bass, not only has failed to revive endangered fish populations but is the wrong approach to recovery. 'Habitat should the No. 1 priority and everything else should be secondary,' Ensley told the commission. 'The more we can restore the original character of the river, the better our chances of recovery will be.' Ensley said the Fish and Wildlife Service should be removing tamarisk from riverbanks to help restore natural river flows and channels...

"Pat Nelson, the recovery program's non-native fish management coordinator, said habitat is one of five key elements in the recovery program. 'This includes restoring floodplain habitat to benefit endangered fish,' Nelson said. Other elements include fish ladders providing access to historic habitat, screening diversion canals to keep fish in the river, monitoring and managing water flows, and raising threatened and endangered fish in hatcheries. Ensley and others criticized the ongoing fish-removal aspect, which over the past three summers has taken more than 700 smallmouth bass from the Colorado River. Not only has that fishing opportunity been lost, Ensley said, but the Colorado Division of Wildlife is using its money and personnel to undermine rather than create sportfishing opportunities...

"The anglers found at least one ally in commissioner Rick Enstrom of Lakewood, who long has been a outspoken critic of the sportfish removal aspects of the recovery program. Last week he termed the 18-year program a 'boondoggle' in light of admissions from DOW personnel that the multi-million dollar program has no end in sight. 'I suggest that if we spent the millions and millions (that is going to sportfish removal) on (tamarisk) eradication, we[base ']d be further down the road to recovery,' Enstrom wrote in an e-mail earlier this week. 'Colorado leads the nation in T & E recovery success stories, and most have been accomplished through habitat manipulation or stocking, not the elimination of top tier predators.' Ensley agreed, saying sportsmen fear 'paying for eternity' on a fish-removal program. Nelson said the Colorado River program costs around $100,000 per year while the Yampa recovery efforts cost around $750,000 per year."

"colorado water"
10:44:42 AM     


Ritter or Beauprez for governor?
A picture named confluencegreencolorado.jpg

Durango Herald: "The two major candidates for governor have sharply different views on solving Colorado's water problems. Democrat Bill Ritter does not want to talk about big, new projects that shift water from west to east, while Republican Bob Beauprez said the state needs honest answers that work for 'all of Colorado,' which include both conservation and new water projects. 'We cannot conserve our way entirely out of this problem,' Beauprez said in a debate Tuesday in Lakewood. Beauprez supported 2003's Referendum A, a $2 billion bond for water projects that was widely opposed on the Western Slope...

"Ritter opposed Ref. A, instead favoring conservation, reuse, sharing water with farmers and building new storage for water that already is on the Front Range. 'The whole debate about Referendum A was water storage,' Ritter said. 'What we didn't talk about, and what we're talking about now because A failed, is conservation - conservation as an ethic.'"

"denver 2006"
10:33:48 AM     



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