Coyote Gulch

 



















































































Subscribe to "Coyote Gulch" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

e-mail John: Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.

 

 

  Monday, September 10, 2007


Quillen: As natural as Mt. Rushmore
A picture named arkansasriverleadville.jpg

Check out Ed Quillen's essay about the Arkansas River, in this month's issue of Colorado Central Magazine. He writes, "The river bed often lacked flowing water in eastern Colorado and western Kansas. So it might be more accurate to speak of two rivers. One rises in the Rocky Mountains and dissipates on the plains. The other picks up around Dodge City, and by the time it gets to Tulsa, Oklahoma, it has enough water to carry barge traffic. Sometimes the two rivers connect, but frequently they don't."

"colorado water"
7:40:51 PM     


? for U.S. Senate?

Grand Junction Daily Sentinel: "After several weeks testing the waters, Delta County Commissioner Wayne Wolf is preparing to take on fellow Republican Bob Schaffer for the GOP nomination for the U.S. Senate. Wolf is planning an announcement tour this week, he said Saturday during the Club 20 fall meeting in Grand Junction. Colorado GOP Chairman Dick Wadhams told him 'you really need to look at the reality of this,' Wolf said.

"Wolf's bid would make him the only Western Slope resident not currently in Congress to seek federal office in 2008, and he acknowledged his bid is a 'huge undertaking.' He wants to move ahead because, he said, federal officials don't really understand the burden they're placing on local governments with mandates such as expensive storm-sewer requirements that are set without federal funding. Those officials might be sympathetic with local government problems, 'but they don't understand.'"

Thanks to Colorado Pols for the link.

"denver 2008"
6:38:09 PM     


Women's Health

Medical News Today: "Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who is running for the Republican presidential nomination, on Wednesday at a debate in Durham, N.H., said that he supports a constitutional amendment that would ban abortion, the AP/Philadelphia Inquirer reports. The debate at the University of New Hampshire was moderated by Fox News' Brit Hume (Quaid, AP/Philadelphia Inquirer, 9/6). Huckabee said he would "love to see" the U.S. adopt an amendment similar to one in the Arkansas Constitution "that says that we believe life begins at conception and that we ought to do everything in the world possible to protect it until its natural conclusion.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who also is running for the Republican nomination, was asked by Fox News' Wendell Goler about his abortion-rights position (Fox News debate transcript, 9/5). Top advisers last month said Romney supports a two-tiered process in which states first would obtain authority to regulate abortion after Roe v. Wade -- the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court case that effectively barred state abortion bans -- is overturned. The second step would be a constitutional amendment that bans most abortions nationwide (Kaiser Daily Women's Health Policy Report, 8/23)."

Thanks to Oliver Willis for the link.

"2008 pres"
6:30:36 PM     


Iraq

Andrew Sullivan has video of Hillary Clinton questioning General Petraeus. From Mr. Sullivan, "After blaming the previous 'supine' Congress and Rumsfeld for our current impasse, she repeats that skepticism of Petraeus's report is merited. She seems to have conceded that there's no chance that the Congress can stop the continued escalation. That won't inspire the netroots, will it?"

The Moderate Voice:

In an exercise in lowering already low expectations, General David Petraeus told lawmakers today that U.S. troops levels in Iraq may be able to return to their pre-surge strength by next summer without jeopardizing what he characterized as hard-won progress. Then, lowering expectations further still, the top American commander in the bitterly divisive war tried to close the door on any decision on wholesale withdrawals until next spring when he said he would give another progress report.

The long-await report by Petraeus before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and the House Armed Services Committee was anti-climactic and will do nothing to silence critics on the left and congressional Democrats not cowed by statements by he, President Bush and others that the surge is working, albeit slowly, and the U.S. can still succeed in Iraq.

Taking casualty trends since the surge began into account, another 500 or so Americans at minimum will die in Iraq and perhaps 20 times as many Iraqis before Petraeus returns to Capitol Hill in March to provide an update.

"2008 pres"
6:24:24 PM     


? for President

Political Wire: "A new SurveyUSA poll in California finds Rudy Giuliani leading the Republican presidential race with 28%, but Fred Thompson has closed the gap in the days after the announcement of his campaign and is just two points behind at 26%. Last month, Giuliani led by 20 points. Thompson now leads 'among men, Conservatives, Pro-Life voters, among those opposed to stem-cell research, among those opposed to same-sex marriage, among gun owners, among those age 65+, and among those who think global warming is made-up.'"

Political Wire: "According to a new Albuquerque Journal poll, Gov. Bill Richardson leads the Democratic presidential race in his native New Mexico with 44% support, followed by Sen. Hillary Clinton at 17 percent, John Edwards at 8% and Sen. Barack Obama at 8%. However, 52% of those surveyed thought Sen. Hillary Clinton would eventually win the Democratic nomination."

Josh Marshall: "Hmmm. Seems Fred Thompson logged a few law firm hours for the Libyan intel agents who blew up the plane over Lockerbie."

Guardian Unlimited: "Richardson, one of two candidate who speak fluent Spanish, objected to the debate rules that required all candidates to answer in English. The rule was designed to make sure that no candidate had an advantage in appealing to the Spanish-speaking audience.

"I'm disappointed today that 43 million Latinos in this country, for them not to hear one of their own speak Spanish, is unfortunate," said Richardson, the governor of New Mexico. "In other words, Univision is promoting English-only in this debate."

Political Wire: "The new USA Today/Gallup Poll shows Rudy Giuliani leading the Republican presidential field with 34%, followed by Fred Thompson at 22%, Sen. John McCain at 15%, and Mitt Romney at 10%. For the Democrats, Sen. Hillary Clinton continues to lead with 45% support, trailed by Sen. Barack Obama at 24% and John Edwards at 16%. Key finding: Republican voters are somewhat more satisfied with their candidates: 70% say they're pleased with the choice; 26% would like a new candidate. In April, a third wanted additional choices."

"2008 pres"
6:17:34 PM     


State38

Say hello to State38.com. Our blog pal Jason Bane writes over there. We hadn't noticed it before. Thanks for the link y'all. Here's their RSS Feed.


6:11:00 PM     

Greenback Cutthroat recovery program suffers black eye
A picture named cutthroat.jpg

The argument against socialism got a boost recently. A study from the University of Colorado showed that 5 of 9 populations of Greenback cutthroat trout, being used by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for the recovery of the species, are really the more common Colorado River cutthroat, according to The Denver Post. From the article:

A 20-year government effort to restore the population of an endangered native trout in Colorado has made little progress because biologists have been stocking some of the waterways with the wrong fish, a new study says. Biologists called the finding a setback and a potential black eye but said there is still hope for restoring the greenback cutthroat trout because at least four pure populations of the fish have been identified. The three-year study was led by University of Colorado researchers and published online in Molecular Ecology on Aug. 28. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which is heading the recovery effort, said it is reviewing the findings. The study said that out of nine populations of fish believed to be endangered greenback cutthroat trout that were descendants of survivors, five were actually the Colorado River cutthroat trout, which look similar but are a separate and more common subspecies. The other four populations were greenbacks.

The recovery effort by Colorado and federal biologists was thought to be close to its goal of 20 self-sustaining populations of at least 500 fish each. Bruce Rosenlund of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Denver said federal and state agencies working on restoration believed the fish were found in 142 miles of waterways, including in Rocky Mountain National Park. Researchers, though, said that based on genetic test results, the greenback cutthroat trout's range is only 11 miles of streams. The study said the results imply that the effort has "failed to improve the species' status." Rosenlund said other scientists will read and comment on the research. He said biologists working on restoring the greenback trout want to see "the science played out."[...]

The study's lead author, Jessica Metcalf, who recently completed her doctorate in ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of Colorado, said scientific advances continue to shed new light on the program. She said there's reason for optimism about the findings. "Four of the native populations appear to be pure greenback cutthroat trout," Metcalf said in an interview from San Francisco, where she was set to present the research Thursday at an American Fisheries Society meeting. Greenback cutthroat trout were historically found in the drainages of the Arkansas and South Platte rivers in Colorado and a small part of Wyoming. They were declared extinct in 1937 due to overfishing, pollution from mines and competition from nonnative fish. Researchers said remnant populations were found in the 1950s in tributaries and provided brood stock for fish raised in federal and state hatcheries and released in their native habitat. The fish was added to the federal endangered species list in 1978...

The greenback, the Colorado River cutthroat trout and the Rio Grande cutthroat trout all evolved in Colorado. A fourth subspecies, the yellowfin cutthroat, is believed to be extinct. Metcalf said although the greenback and Colorado River cutthroat are closely related, they've likely been different subspecies for about a half million years. One of the challenges facing biologists, she said, was the lack of baseline information about the greenback, which was already "in major decline" when first described in detail in the late 1800s. In June, federal officials rejected efforts to designate the Colorado River cutthroat trout as endangered, citing a substantial increase in the number of known populations.

More coverage from The Environmental News Network.

"colorado water"
7:09:10 AM     


Mike Collins named new Reclamation Eastern Colorado area manager
A picture named reclamationlogo.jpg

The Bureau of Reclamation's Eastern Colorado Area has a new manager, according to The Pueblo Chieftain. From the article:

Mike Collins of Billings, Mont., has been appointed to replace Fred Ore as Eastern Colorado area manager for the Bureau of Reclamation...Collins will be responsible for managing 20 water-storage dams and seven power plants that are part of the bureau's Colorado-Big Thompson and Fryingpan-Arkansas projects. The area office is located in Loveland...Collins has been manager of the Resource Services Group in the Great Plains Regional Office in Billings since September 2004. Prior to that he was deputy area manager for the Yuma, Ariz., area office. His background includes electronic support, field research and desalination projects. Ore's new position is special assistant deputy commissioner for policy, administration and budget in Washington, D.C.

"colorado water"
6:57:20 AM     


More Union Ditch shares for Florence?
A picture named measuringwithweir.gif

Florence is trying to wrap up a deal for shares of the Union Ditch, according to The Pueblo Chieftain. From the article:

An attempt to convert ditch shares into part of Florence's water supply appears to be close to settlement after eight years in water court. "We thought we had finally reached settlement with the Southeastern Water Conservancy District last year. We thought they were the cop on the river, but then the Pueblo Board of Water Works came out of the woodwork," said Florence City Manager Tom Piltingsrud Thursday. Florence is buying part of the Union Ditch, which flows for about three miles through the city. The city has long purchased rights in the ditch as it expanded onto nearby farm land. In a 1980 case, it converted 2,793 of about 30,000 shares in the ditch to municipal use from agricultural use. In 1999, along with Williamsburg and Coal Creek, Florence sought to convert another 1,000 shares, and since then about 500 shares have been added.

Southeastern objected to the possibility that other shares in the ditch, largely owned by Rocky Mountain Steel Mills, might expand the water right outside the area. The 1861 water right on the Union Ditch is among the oldest on the Arkansas River, is always in priority and could potentially divert more water, lawyers argued. A stipulation was reached last year with Southeastern to satisfy those concerns, but the Pueblo Board of Water Works filed a motion on a point of law that was rejected. For more than a year, water board and Florence lawyers have been in discussion over settlement of the case. "I think we'll have it resolved in 30-45 days," said Alan Hamel, executive director of the water board. Hamel said the water board's concerns are similar to Southeastern's...

Rocky Mountain Steel owns about two-thirds of the shares in the Union Ditch, leasing a small amount for irrigation, according to court records. Of the more than 20,500 shares in the ditch owned by Rocky Mountain, about 17,500 are labeled as industrial and flow to Pueblo through the Minnequa Canal, which has its own set of water rights and is also owned by Rocky Mountain Steel. Union's 1861 decree calls for diversions 48 cubic feet per second, which could, theoretically, generate 35,000 acre-feet per year, for agricultural use. The amount is far greater than needed for the 1,200 acres near Florence that have historically been irrigated. Engineering in the case showed that 761 acres were irrigated on average from 1983-99. By 2005, the estimate was reduced to about 380 acres, as Florence, Williamsburg and Coal Creek continued buying shares. Municipal use under the proposed decree would be about 20 cfs (based on 32 percent consumptive use) for about 12,500 shares, or all the nonindustrial shares in the ditch. In its engineering reports, Pueblo argued it should be less...

The city traditionally relied on three ditches from the Wet Mountains, Newlin, Mineral and Adobe, for water, but they are not reliable year-round, Piltingsrud said...

Florence also faces water pressure from lack of storage. For several years, the city has been looking at a flood-control and storage reservoir on Oak Creek west of the city. Recently, the Army Corps of Engineers estimated the cost to build the reservoir would be $93 million, rather than earlier estimates of $18 million. Florence has signed up under the Preferred Storage Options Plan for both excess capacity storage and enlargement in Fryingpan-Arkansas Project reservoirs in hopes of gaining storage space as well and Piltingsrud frequently has expressed frustration in delays of PSOP. Lake Pueblo could offer the city exchange possibilities in Lake Pueblo and reliable long-term storage if Turquoise Lake is enlarged.

"colorado water"
6:48:52 AM     


Clear Creek Reservoir repairs
A picture named upperarkansasvalley.jpg

Here's a update on the closure and repairs at Clear Creek Reservoir, from The Pueblo Chieftain. From the article:

A nearly empty Clear Creek Reservoir is closed to fishing while maintenance work is done to the dam. Water levels have been slowly drawn down during the past few weeks. The water will remain low until repairs are completed by the Pueblo Board of Water Works, which owns storage rights in the reservoir. Muddy shorelines and safety concerns related to the heavy equipment used for repairs are the primary reasons the reservoir is closed to anglers...

More coverage from The Pueblo Chieftain. They write:

The reservoir has been drawn down completely and closed to fishing or other recreational uses for the past month. There is still a flow of 65 cubic feet per second flowing down Clear Creek and the water is being collected during non-construction period to allow sediment to settle, since the flow is too high to simply filter with straw bales...

The water board is replacing hydraulic lines and repairing gates that were installed in 1909, O'Hara said. The hydraulic lines were put in back in 1970...

Work is being undertaken this year in preparation of an increase in water demand, expected in 2009 when Xcel brings the third unit of the Comanche Power Plant online. The water board leases about 8,000 acre-feet of water to Comanche each year now, but the demand is expected to increase by about 5,000 acre-feet in 2009, when the third unit is scheduled to begin operation. "By doing the work this year, we can make sure everything is in order. That gives us a year to fill it up," [Bud O'Hara, water resource manager] said. Pueblo has increased its storage requirements to 40,000 acre-feet from 15,000 acre-feet prior to the drought of 2002. Part of the reason was to provide a better cushion for future droughts, and the water board also wanted to make sure there was enough water to meet the Comanche demands. Pueblo uses roughly 28,000 acre-feet of water in its potable system annually.

It also has a long-term lease agreement with Aurora for 5,000 acre-feet through 2013, and a paper trade agreement for a minimum of 4,000 acre-feet through 2011. There are more than 20 smaller long-term leases for about 3,000 acre-feet. Pueblo also leases water through one-year competitive bids. All told, the leases bring in more than $4 million a year, or about one-sixth of the water board's operating revenue. Pueblo also has two storage accounts in Pueblo Reservoir, as well as Twin Lakes and Turquoise Lake. The dam across Clear Creek was built in 1902 by the Otero Ditch Co. The Pueblo water board purchased it, along with the transmountain Ewing Ditch northwest of Leadville, from Otero in 1954.

The water board has filed an application in Division 2 water court to expand Clear Creek to 30,000 acre-feet, but the current work is not related to the expansion, O'Hara said. Improvements on Clear Creek Dam now will allow it to remain in operation when a larger dam is constructed essentially on top of the existing dam, O'Hara said. That work isn't expected to occur until about 2023.

More Coyote Gulch coverage here.

"colorado water"
6:38:18 AM     


Iraq

Juan Cole: "Everybody's got a status report on Iraq these days. The consistently best and most clear-eyed wire service on Iraq, whose Pentagon correspondents are pointedly not invited to fly with the Secretary of Defense, is McClatchy (formerly Knight-Ridder). It has a long article on Sunday on how the security situation is not in fact better in Iraq now than last January. I'm going to pull out snippets below, some of them out of order...

"2008 pres"
6:24:40 AM     


Rural voters

Here's a look at rural voters from The Denver Post. From the article:

"You ask most of rural America, and they will say neither party has a vision or game plan for us," said Rich Campbell, a doctor, waiting for an early-morning coffee at Java Jar on Main Street, where most of the stores are independently owned. "There is no respect for agriculture. No planning for our infrastructure. No understanding of the long distances people have to go to access medical care."

That sentiment has many political and rural experts predicting a bitter battle between the political parties to capture the votes of rural America. Although these areas tend to lean Republican, support for President Bush and the Iraq war has waned, according to a bipartisan poll commissioned by the Center for Rural Strategies and released in June. Asked if they support a generic Democratic or Republican presidential candidate, rural voters narrowly picked the Democrat. Rural America remains conservative, with social issues in the forefront, but these voters are also consumed by economic concerns and the lack of job opportunities. Regardless of what party they belong to, many say they vote for the candidate who can help them, not the party...

Clinton, a Democrat, appealed to enough rural residents to receive almost 50 percent of their votes in 1992 and 1996. President Bush won in 2000 and 2004 by netting 60 percent or more of the rural vote. "It shows that to win as a Republican, you need the lion's share of rural votes. For Democrats to win, you have to neutralize those voters," said Seth McKee, a University of South Florida professor who analyzed rural voters in presidential elections from 1992 to 2004. Exit polling shows that religion, gender and what region of the country they live in take a back seat to the residents' rural status in voting, Mc Kee said.

"2008 pres"
6:15:41 AM     



Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2009 John Orr.
Last update: 3/14/09; 9:34:35 PM.

September 2007
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30            
Aug   Oct

Google


e-mail John: Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.