Coyote Gulch

 



















































































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  Wednesday, July 18, 2007


San Luis Valley: Confined aquifers
A picture named slvdischargerecharge.jpg

Here's an update on last year's ruling on confined aquifers down in the San Luis Valley, from The Valley Courier. From the article:

Judge Kuenhold presided over a six-week trial in Alamosa early last year to hear arguments from the proponents and opponents of the state's confined aquifer rules. In November of last year the judge issued a ruling in favor of the state and in December amended his findings. Opponents appealed his ruling in February of this year.

On the basis that the basin is overappropriated and new withdrawals could harm senior water rights and the state's ability to meet its Rio Grande Compact obligations, the state's confined aquifer rules restrict new groundwater withdrawals from the confined aquifer in the San Luis Valley. Judge Kuenhold agreed with the state that the rules were necessary for the sustainability of the aquifer.

The judge also found that a state-sponsored computer model that was key to the state's case was adequate for its intended purposes although it needed continued refinement.

The water district board on Tuesday discussed that continued refinement process at length when the board was presented with a request for an additional $50,000 from Rio Grande Decision Support System Modeler Dr. Willem Schreüder.

The board approved the funding request from its special projects budget line item so Schreüder could continue refining the model for purposes of the water management sub-districts being formed in the Valley to reduce groundwater depletions, repair injury to senior water users and assist the state in meeting its compact obligations to downstream states.

Rio Grande Water Conservation District Engineer Allen Davey said Schreüder indicated the $50,000 would keep his work going through the end of the year. The district board requested that Schreüder meet with the board to discuss his progress in the near future.

Rio Grande Water Conservation District Board President Ray Wright said he did not expect the model would ever be completely finished. He suggested that funding for further refinement be sought through the new statewide and basin-designated pots of money set up by the legislature for water projects.

Thanks to SLV Dweller for the link.

"colorado water"
9:44:42 PM     


Gay rights

Andrew Sullivan is pointing to a YouTube asking about the use of religion to deny gay rights.

"2008 pres"
7:11:33 PM     


Religion and politics

The Right's Field: "In many ways, the members of NICHE would probably just want to be left alone. But they've discovered that closing themselves off from the world is not likely to have the effects they might hope for. NICHE is the Network of Iowa Christian Home Educators, which acts as a clearinghouse for all things Christian home-school-related. The members, if not the organization itself, also act as a force in monitoring and shaping state and federal legislation concerning home education and intend to influence the outcome of the Iowa caucuses through their staunch support of a socially conservative candidate."

"2008 pres"
6:51:59 PM     


Iraq

Yahoo! News: "The U.S. command said Wednesday the highest-ranking Iraqi in the leadership of al-Qaida in Iraq has been arrested, adding that information from him indicates the group's foreign-based leadership wields considerable influence over the Iraqi chapter. Khaled Abdul-Fattah Dawoud Mahmoud al-Mashhadani, also known as Abu Shahid, was captured in Mosul on July 4, said Brig. Gen. Kevin Bergner, a military spokesman."

Thanks to The Moderate Voice for the link.

Mt. Virtus: "...you get the picture that our new strategy in Iraq is making a serious dent into our savage foe. So why of all times lose one's nerve on Iraq now? Give the surge a chance, and let's assess the situation in September."

"2008 pres"
6:14:50 PM     


U.S. Supreme Court

David Schraub (via The Moderate Voice): " Obama's Judiciary: The qualities he says he's looking for are not what you'd expect from a guy whose been very keen in presenting himself as moderate, mainstream, and not wedded to the interested of the disadvantaged. I approve, though."

The makeup of the U.S. Supreme court post January 20, 2009 is one of the issues that should shape the 2008 election.

"2008 pres"
6:06:47 PM     


? for President?

Patrick Ruffini: " Ron Paul will place second at Ames. You heard it here first." Thanks to Andrew Sullivan for the link.

Talking Points Memo: "Hillary campaign officially responds to Elizabeth Edwards' criticism of her record on women's-rights issues."

Jason Bane (via 5280): "I've written before about why fundraising numbers matter in more ways than the obvious, and it has to do with perception. Much of politics is about perception, because you have to look like a winner before you can be a winner. Candidates need money in order to get their message out next summer, but the amount of money they raise in the early going helps indicate how much support they have already."

Pollster.com:

A new CNN/WMUR statewide survey of likely voters in New Hampshire (conducted 7/9 through 7/17 by the University of New Hampshire) finds:

* Among 307 Republicans, former Gov. Mitt Romney (at 33%) leads former Mayor Rudy Giuliani (18%), former Sen. Fred Thompson (13%), and Sen. John McCain (12%) in a statewide primary.

* 71% of Republicans are "still trying to decide" who they will vote for in the New Hampshire primary; 22% are "leaning toward someone," 7% have "definitely decided."

* Among 333 Democrats, Sen. Hillary Clinton (at 36%) leads Sen. Barack Obama (27%), Gov. Bill Richardson (11%), and former Sen. John Edwards (9%) in a statewide primary.

* 64% of Democrats are still trying to decide who they will vote for in the New Hampshire primary; 26% are leaning toward someone, 10% have definitely decided.

John Heilemann (via New York Magazine): "Though it's not impossible to conjure a narrative in which McCain wins the nomination, doing so requires half a bottle of Maker's Mark, followed by a nitrous-oxide chaser."

"2008 pres"
5:56:14 PM     


Economic Policy

From The Denver Business Journal: "Falling gasoline prices contributed to the 0.2 percent drop in the Consumer Price Index for the western United States from May to June, according to figures released Wednesday by the U.S. Department of Labor. But the western index was up 3 percent from June of 2006. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) for the West hit 212.680 last month. That means a market basket of goods and services that cost $100 from 1982 to 1984 cost $212.58 in June."

"2008 pres"
5:51:07 PM     


Anti-abortion amendment on fall ballot?

Here's an article about a proposal to put an abortion ban on the November ballot, from The Denver Post. The write:

An anti-abortion group is working on an initiative that it hopes will eventually ban all abortions in Colorado. The ballot, planned for November 2008, will ask voters to define human life as beginning at conception. "If the state or the federal government ever defined when life began, then the rights of the unborn would be superior to the woman's right to have an abortion," said Mark Meuser of Colorado Equal Rights, who is pushing the constitutional amendment. "If personhood was ever defined, then the case for Roe would collapse." A title board hearing to approve the measure's ballot language is scheduled for today. After a one-week window to appeal the language, the group will begin gathering the 76,000 signatures needed to place it on the ballot, Meuser said...

"The proponents of this initiative have certainly been clear that their goal in Colorado is to make abortion illegal," said Lizzy Annison, a spokeswoman for Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains. "We believe that a woman's right to control her own fertility is a fundamental human right." In Roe vs. Wade, the landmark 1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion, Justice Harry Blackmun wrote that if "personhood is established, the appellant's case, of course, collapses, for the fetus' right to life would then be guaranteed."[...]

Focus on the Family officials said they will support the initiative if it makes it to the ballot. There are similar measures taking shape in Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi, said Carrie Gordon Earll, a spokeswoman with the Colorado Springs- based group. She added that amending the U.S. Constitution has been a goal of the pro-choice movement since 1973. "The state efforts are just a different tactic to that strategy," she said. "It's a fresh and novel approach to the issue."

"denver n2007"
7:05:53 AM     


Bond issue on November ballot?

Here's a look at the bond proposals for the fall ballot from The Denver Post. From the article:

Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper will release a revamped bond and tax-increase proposal for infrastructure today that cuts nearly $80 million from the most recent plan. The plan scales back funding for a renovation of Boettcher Concert Hall and transportation projects and removes a $20 million project for homeless housing from the bond altogether. The mayor plans to make up the difference on those projects with money generated separate from the bonds. Also new in the mayor's plan is a reconfiguration of the funding package. A task force appointed by the mayor had recommended a property-tax increase and two separate bond packages that expired at different times. Hickenlooper's new plan keeps the property- tax increase and combines the two bonds into a single, $550 million bond that expires in 20 years...

The plan must be approved by the City Council before it can go on the ballot. But council President Michael Hancock, who worked with the mayor's staff and Councilwoman Jeanne Robb on the changes, praised the plan as a compromise. "I think there is something for everyone in this bond," Hancock said. "What I think people will see is a greater use of the capacity of our bond and less of an increase in the tax rate." Under the mayor's proposal, a resident with a home valued at $255,000 would pay an additional $12.41 a year for the bond increase. The same resident would pay an additional $49.25 a year for a property-tax increase to fund annual maintenance. To make up funding he removed from the proposal, Hickenlooper said he will look elsewhere. For instance, he plans to fund a $20 million homeless housing project using certificates of participation, allowing the city to use the project as collateral. In theory, the city would pay off debt for the housing with savings it generates in the Human Services budget.

"denver n2007"
7:00:40 AM     


South Platte River Basin Task Force
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Here's a recap of Monday's meeting of Governor Ritter's South Platte River Basin Task Force, from The Sterling Journal Advocate. From the article:

Ideas ranged from revamping Colorado's water court system to the absolute necessity for more water storage. And for nearly every idea, there was a counter-claim from someone else. Tom Cech, manager of the Central Colorado Water Conservancy District, offers suggestions at the task force meeting. The South Platte River Basin Task Force members held their second day of public testimony Monday at Northeastern Junior College. Appointed by Gov. Bill Ritter, the task force is seeking a solution for the well owners in the Central Colorado Water Conservancy District whose irrigation wells have been shut down since the spring of 2006...

Alan Fountz from Akron, president of Colorado Farm Bureau, said his organization also believes that to put Colorado's water to best use, the state needs more storage. "There are people downstream who want our water and have plans to use it," Fountz said. "I hear this more, every time I go to Washington, D.C." He said Colorado Farm Bureau has been asking its members about the senior vs. junior water rights issue. Farm Bureau's position is that pre-1974 wells should be put into the prior appropriations system. But members see the water court system as too cumbersome and too costly...

Don Fritzler, who farms near Sterling, owns wells and has an augmentation plan that allows him to run these wells. He also has surface rights. "I can run these wells as long as I don't injure the surface users below me," Fritzler said. "I ask that you stick to the priority system," he added. "Any attempt to change the priority system is taking water away from someone who has it and giving it to someone else."

Farmers from the Wiggins area who had their wells shut down offered a different perspective. One had a farm that had been in the family for generations, while the other bought a farm in 1990 and installed sprinklers to use the water from wells already on the land. Both thought requiring them to replace all prior depletions from their wells was unrealistic. When the wells were drilled many years ago, no such requirement was even considered, and there is no way to accurately determine what the depletion amount would be, they said. One of the men commented, "It's like asking my 2-year-old daughter to replace something her grandmother used."...

Tom Cech, manager for the Central Colorado Water Conservancy District, said nearly 1,000 wells have now been shut down in his district. Engineering can do wonders these days, Cech said, and suggested that the task force look at what new engineering might be able to do for the well owners. "There are 10,000 acre feet of water under your feet," Cech said, referring to the South Platte Aquifer. "What can we do to allow some more groundwater pumping in the basin?" The task force's first public meeting, also a testimony hearing, was June 29 in Greeley. Four additional meetings are scheduled: July 27, Aug. 13, Aug. 27 and Sept. 6, all at the state Capitol building in Denver. All the meetings are open to the public, but the task force does not plan to take more public testimony. People who are interested can still register their comments on the Web site: www.ag.state.co.us, click on the South Platte Task Force link. A final report from the task force is due Sept. 30 to Gov. Ritter, legislative leaders and the chairman of the Interim Committee on Water Resources.

More Coyote Gulch coverage here.

"colorado water"
6:55:26 AM     


Shutdown of Shoshone Power plant to effect rafting season along the Colorado?
A picture named shoshoneglenwoodcanyon.jpg

The shutdown of the Shoshone Power Plant is causing officials to scramble a bit to keep flows in the Colorado River high enough for this summer's boating season, according to The Glenwood Springs Post Independent "reg". From the article:

Officials with the Glenwood Springs-based Colorado River Water Conservation District and Denver Water say they are looking into ways to maintain adequate flows on the river despite the recent shutdown of the Shoshone power plant in Glenwood Canyon because of a ruptured supply pipe. The hydroelectric plant has a senior water right on the river, and traditionally that has guaranteed sufficient flows downstream to support a rafting industry in Glenwood Springs that provides 72,000 trips a year. Another 50,000 people make private trips on that stretch of river, said Rich Doak, recreation program manager for the U.S. Forest Service, which regulates commercial rafting in the canyon. About a dozen outfitters operate on the river in Glenwood Canyon, and combined they make $2 million in direct revenues off those trips each year, Doak said. Representatives for several of those outfitters appeared at a meeting of the river district board Tuesday afternoon at the Hotel Colorado to voice concern about possible lower flows due to the plant problems...

[Eric Kuhn] said he thinks he has an agreement with Chips Barry, manager of the Denver Water Board, to work on a target of keeping at least 1,250 cubic feet of water (cfs) flowing through Glenwood Canyon through Labor Day, which is near the end of the rafting season. Bob Harris, owner of Blazing Adventures, told the river district board that a flow below 1,000 cfs "pretty much puts us out of business." Dave Merritt, the district's chief engineer, said the river was flowing at more than 1,400 cfs Tuesday but was heading down fairly quickly. With the spring runoff season over, the river is expected to continue dropping unless action is taken...

Water used by the power plant also helps to provide adequate flows for endangered fish recovery in the Grand Junction area. Merritt said water rights and instream flow programs upstream also have been developed on the assumption that the Shoshone plant is using its water. "We're in a real delicate balance here, and Shoshone kind of holds everything together," Merritt said. Irrigators in the Grand Junction area also hold senior water rights that can help maintain flows higher up the Colorado River. But whether they have to issue their so-called "Cameo" call to release upstream water to meet their entitlement depends on water conditions each season. Also, that call often comes later in the summer, but the rafting industry needs water sooner. The river district directly controls only one reservoir, Wolford Mountain near Kremmling. As a result, a lot of its efforts to deal with the Shoshone problem involve lobbying other water entities...

One issue to be resolved surrounds releasing water from reservoirs for recreation uses. Kuhn wants to make sure the state engineer doesn't say that isn't a beneficial use, and that reservoir operators can't refill their reservoirs if they contribute water to the rafting industry. In a phone interview, Barry said Denver Water's concern is that releasing water from its Williams Fork Reservoir for any purpose - agricultural, industrial or recreational - could be deemed to be inconsistent with its water rights decree. "I'm not going to get stuck in that box and so we're going to need a written agreement from the state engineer on that," he said. He said Denver Water is willing to try to be a partner in dealing with the Shoshone situation, as long as other water entities pitch in as well. He doesn't feel the goal should be to supply all the water that would flow based on Shoshone's water rights, but he thinks Denver Water's supplies are adequate this year to try to help address problems caused by the power plant's outage. "I think for this particular summer time we are in reasonably good shape. We can afford to be charitable and generous with water to help the West Slope solve a problem," he said. Some Western Slope water interests are worried that the Shoshone incident could lead to Xcel closing the plant permanently. But Kuhn said the utility has told him it is working on reopening it. Despite the plant's old age and limited power generation, Merritt said it helps Xcel meet its requirements for alternative energy production as required by state Amendment 37.

More coverage from The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel. They write, "River district Chief Water Engineer Dave Merritt said if a Friday meeting in Glenwood Springs is successful, an agreement to make up for the potential loss of the Shoshone water could be reached. Along with rafting concerns, the district and others have to ensure enough water for endangered fish in the so-called 15 Mile Reach outside Palisade, and good water quality and low salinity levels for downstream municipalities like Silt and Rifle that remove Colorado River water for treatment, Merritt said."

Here's another article about the effects of the Shoshone shutdown from The Aspen Daily Times. They write:

Natural flows in the river might leave about 900 cfs in the river at this time of year, and the normally very reliable Shoshone water rights usually make up the difference...

Most boaters probably have no idea how dependent their white-water adventure is on Xcel Energy's Shoshone power plant and its senior water rights of 1,250 cfs, which date back to 1902. The plant diverts water upriver of the power plant and then transports it to a point high on the cliff above the plant. The water is then sent down tubes, or penstocks, into the plant to spin turbines and produce electricity. The water is then released back into the river just above the Shoshone put in...

With the plant idle and under repair, the facility can no longer, under Colorado law, demand that the 1,250 cfs of water it owns be sent downriver. And so the water is now available for the upstream owners of secondary water rights to use. To help keep the rafting companies on the river, the Colorado River District is appealing to the Denver Water board to help out by being flexible with its water. "Our goal is to cajole, encourage, push, whatever -- embarrass -- whatever is necessary to keep flows in that 1,200 to 1,300 cfs range in Shoshone," Kuhn said. Dick Merritt, chief engineer for the Colorado River District, said the reservoirs that Denver Water relies on are full this year...

But when it comes to Colorado water law, it's not always easy to be cooperative. If holders of water rights agree to try and help the local tourism economy by sending water downriver that they otherwise could put to their own beneficial uses, then they could potentially weaken their own water rights or complicate next year's water storage efforts. However, if the state's water referee, the state engineer, blesses some type of arrangement, the water may still flow and visitors to Vail, Aspen and Glenwood Springs will still have a chance to cool off by running through the white water in Shoshone. Kuhn said he received a call Tuesday morning from Chips Barry, manager of Denver Water, who said he was open to a solution as long as the appropriate safeguards and details could be worked out. And the Bureau of Reclamation was also interested in helping. "We're willing to step up and do our part where we can," said Mike Collins, acting area manager for Eastern Colorado and the Great Plains Region for the Bureau. "If there is a capability for us to make some water available, we're willing to take a look and see what that is."

More Coyote Gulch coverage here.

"colorado water"
6:29:29 AM     



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