Coyote Gulch

 



















































































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  Wednesday, May 14, 2008


Denver August ballot

Wash Park Prophet: "I have to remember to vote on August 12, 2008, Denver, Colorado's primary election date, despite the fact that there are no contested primaries in the Democratic party for voters in my precinct. Why? Denver has an initiative on the ballot. Worse yet, the title that will appear on the ballot is deceptive."


6:31:12 PM     

Edwards endorses Obama

John Edwards endorsed Barack Obama today.

"2008 pres"
6:08:19 PM     


Climate Change: The earth is a beautifully complex system
A picture named polarbear.jpg

Dirk Kempthorne and the Bush administration surprised us today by placing the polar bear on the threatened species list. Will this actually drive some climate change research and response? We'll see. From ZDNet: "The U.S. Department of Interior has just listed the polar bear as a 'threatened' species, that is legally and technically different than being listed as 'endangered.' The Feds based their announcement on studies by government scientists. Global warming is reducing Arctic sea ice off the Alaskan and Canadan coasts. This is expected to result in two-thirds of the polar bears disappearing by mid-century. Polar bears depend on polar ice floes to aid their hunting of seals and other under-ice prey. Without the arctic ice sheets the polar bears are not going to be able to find food, according to the predictions. Not every polar bear can live at the city landfill in Churchill on Hudson's Bay."

Harry Fuller: "I spoke briefly with Andrew Wetzler, he's Director of the Endangered Species Project with the Natural Resources Defense Council. He said today's polar bear decision is a watershed event. It means the federal government has now openly acknowledged the effects of global in the Arctic. How big a deal is this? Real big, as in big business. Bloomberg News caters to the moneyed and professional investor. Their headline says it all, "Polar Bear Is First Species Protected Because of Climate Change." And this has happened while Dick Cheney is still in office. Can you foresee what could happen in 2009?

Here's the Interior press release.

"2008 pres"
5:50:27 PM     

Iraq

Juan Cole: "No sooner had the truce between the Mahdi Army and the US & Iraqi military been signed than it appeared to break down. Clashes broke out Monday night into Tuesday morning between the Mahdi Army militiamen and US troops, leaving 11 Iraqis dead and 20 wounded. The militia also targeted some government ministries with mortar fire."

"2008 pres"
5:46:02 PM     


? for U.S. Senate?

Colorado Pols is pointing to Mark Udall's new TV ad and also to Bob Schaffer's new TV ad.

Colorado Confidential: "Schaffer moves mountains; Dems make typos."

"denver 2008"
5:45:09 PM     


Using 'States Rights' to Restrict Abortion

Here's Part I of an in-depth look at the proposed "Personhood" Amendment Colorado voters will see on the fall ballot, from Colorado Confidential. Here are a couple of excerpts:

Hard-line, socially conservative activists are gearing up to enact state laws to restrict abortion since President Bush and Congress have all but abandoned the federal cause. To that end, Colorado is once again serving as a political incubator in yet another attempt to chip away at Roe v. Wade. But for all the hue and cry, do efforts at the state level have a chance of success and at what cost do they exact from the larger conservative movement in a watershed election year?[...]

"States rights" has been the battle cry of modern-day social conservatives over the last 50 years to oppose everything from racial desegregation and gay marriage to gun control. But no issue has raised culture warrior hackles more than abortion.

Less well-known than the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, the Supreme Court's 1989 ruling on Webster v. Reproductive Health Services set the stage for a series of state skirmishes on restricting abortion and influencing public opinion through constitutional amendments, efforts that continue to this day. Webster is a Missouri state law that restricts the use of state funding, employees and facilities to provide abortions. However, the real test lies in the language. The law added a strict Christian construct to the preamble of the Missouri constitution -- that life begins at conception and therefore unborn children have protectable rights. Now 20 years after Webster became law, a similar initiative is being attempted in Colorado through a proposed ballot measure to amend the state constitution:

Be it Enacted by the People of the State of Colorado:
SECTION 1. Article II of the constitution of the state of Colorado is amended BY THE ADDITION OF A NEW SECTION to read:

Section 31. Person defined. As used in sections 3, 6, and 25 of Article II of the state constitution, the terms "person" or "persons" shall include any human being from the moment of fertilization.

"denver 2008"
5:43:27 PM     

Union backed initiatives on fall ballot?

Denver Business Journal: "A signature drive was formally kicked off Tuesday to collect enough support to place two union-backed initiatives on the November ballot. One initiative would hold top executives personally liable for fraud that occurs at their companies. The other would require employers to show "just cause" for firing employees."

"denver 2008"
5:39:59 PM     


2008 Democratic National Convention: Dean names State Blogger Corp
A picture named 2008dncccommitteelogo.jpg

Congratulations to SquareState.net for being chosen as the Colorado member of the State Blogger Corps for the 2008 Democratic Convention. SquareState is a daily read.

"2008 pres"
5:39:03 PM     


Energy policy: Nuclear
A picture named uranuim.jpg

Here's an update on uranium mining in southwestern Colorado from The Cortez Journal. From the article:

More than 6,500 new uranium claims were filed on Dolores Public Lands last year, as prospectors and corporations reacted to a sharp increase in uranium prices by laying claim to the mineral resource. The claims are located on U.S. Bureau of Land Management property administered by the Dolores Public Lands office, primarily in northwest Dolores and southwest San Miguel counties. In Dolores County, uranium claims are up from 396 in 2006 to 5,399 in 2007, the latest year for which data is available. In San Miguel County, claims were at 1,119 in 2006 and 2,633 in 2007. Information for the number of claims filed in Montezuma County was not available Monday, but Dolores Public Lands Manager Steve Beverlin said he did not believe there were many.

Most of the claims filed in 2007 are not active, Beverlin said. He only knew of a couple of claims that were being actively mined, likely those owned by Denison Mines Corp. Denison, the uranium mining company that owns the White Mesa Uranium Mill in Blanding, Utah, opened three mines in San Miguel County in 2007, said Ron Hochstein, president and chief operating officer of the company. "It's new activity," he said. In late April of this year, Denison began shipping material from the new mines, which are underground operations, to the White Mesa mill. This is the first time since 1999 the mill has processed conventional ore, Hochstein said. The mill processes 2,000 tons of ore a day, and Hochstein expects it to produce between 1.4 and 1.7 million pounds of uranium in the form of yellowcake, or U3O8, this year. Last year, the mill produced about 100,000 pounds of uranium from sources known as alternate feedstocks, which are substances like mill tailings from other decommissioned mills and mining sites. The total amount of uranium produced in the United States last year was just over 4 million pounds, Hochstein said. That uranium was mostly produced by in situ uranium mines, which remove uranium directly from the ground, eliminating the ore processing step that mills traditionally perform...

Denison's mines are located in Big Gypsum Valley, and most of the mining claims are on Bureau of Land Management property in that valley and in the Lower Dolores River corridor around Slickrock, Beverlin said...

Global supply of uranium has dropped as old stocks are used up, while demand has steadily increased, Hochstein said. Denison, which runs the only operating uranium mill in the United States, sells its uranium to utility companies in Asia and Europe.

More Coyote Gulch coverage here and here.

"2008 pres"
5:37:47 PM     


TABOR, Amendment 23 fix on fall ballot?

State Representative Andrew Romanoff is trying to get voters to approve a fix for TABOR and Amendment 23 this fall, according to The Pueblo Chieftain. From the article:

What Romanoff, Suthers and other supporters want to do is put a ballot question before voters this November that would retool how the state pays for public education. It would require that any state tax revenue that would otherwise be refunded to taxpayers (because it exceeded state income limits), be diverted into the State Education Fund instead. At the same time, it would remove the constitutional requirement that the General Assembly increase funding for public education each year by inflation, plus 1 percent.

"We aren't touching the heart of (the Taxpayer's Bill of Rights), which says voters must agree before the General Assembly can raise their taxes," Romanoff said. In recent years, state lawmakers had struggled with how to reconcile voter-approved limits on state revenue with voter-approved requirements that education funding be increased each year. Romanoff's ballot amendment would still provide money for public schools, but not a fixed formula that lawmakers would have to apply regardless of budget conditions.

"This is a good year to ask voters because there isn't any TABOR surplus to be refunded, so the state won't lose anything financially if voters turn us down," he said.

"denver 2008"
5:36:54 PM     


? for President?

Political Wire: "With a week until Oregon's primary, a new Public Policy Polling survey finds Sen. Barack Obama ahead of Sen. Hillary Clinton, 53% to 39%."

Political Wire: "With one week until the primary, a new SurveyUSA poll in Oregon finds Sen. Barack Obama leading Sen. Hillary Clinton, 54% to 43%."

Political Wire: "A new Portland Tribune poll in Oregon finds Sen. Barack Obama "has amassed a nearly insurmountable lead" in advance of next week's primary. Obama leads Sen. Hillary Clinton by 20 points, 55% to 35%, among likely Democratic voters."

Political Wire: "A new Quinnipiac poll finds both Democratic presidential candidates beating Sen. John McCain in a general election match up. Sen. Barack Obama beats McCain, 47% to 40%, while Sen. Hillary Clinton is in front, 46% to 41%."

"2008 pres"
5:35:42 PM     


Climate Change: The earth is a beautifully complex system
A picture named meltwaterlake.jpg

David Roberts (via grist): "It comes as no surprise that the focus is on a cap-and-trade program, something McCain has supported for five years. In fact, there is virtually no mention of any emission reduction policies outside of cap-and-trade -- no efficiency or fuel economy mandates, no electrical utility decoupling, no mention of public transit. McCain obviously retains his conservative allergy to regulation and public spending. There is some discussion of funding research and incentivizing market deployment of new technology, but the details are tantalizingly vague."

Be sure to click through. There is a lot of discussion about McCain's plan, its utility and potential effectiveness. Thanks to Andrew Sullivan for the link.

Daily Kos: "The plan that McCain offers turns out to be an extremely weak one, one that's even less effective than the completely inadequate Lieberman-Warner Bill...So what is in McCain's proposal that differentiates him from Bush? Not much. In fact, the same article notes that McCain's positions puts him 'slightly right of center' on the climate change issue, which apparently means that McCain is willing to admit that climate change is a problem, but not willing to make any substantive suggestion on how to address the issue. What the Times article doesn't mention is that back in 2000, candidate Bush also said the climate change was an issue and pledged to regulate CO2. It wasn't until after his election that that cuddly, caring, compassionate conservative Bush's positions gave way to the standard GOP line."

"2008 pres"
5:34:45 PM     


Broomfield scores C-BT shares
A picture named bigthompson.jpg

Broomfield scored a bunch of Colorado-Big Thompson water shares in a recent real estate deal in Greeley, according to The Northern Colorado Business Report. From the article:

Broomfield, one of the metro Denver area's most aggressive seekers of Northern Colorado water, has closed a $7.65 million deal for 766 shares of water from the Great Western Sugar Cooperative in Greeley. The May 12 purchase is the largest sale of Colorado-Big Thompson Project water in 2008. The board of the Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District, which owns and manages the water project that draws Western Slope water to north Front Range communities, approved the sale during its monthly meeting on Friday. The purchase price is equal to just under $10,000 per share. "That's a fairly substantial purchase," water district spokesman Brian Werner said. "It's obviously the largest one for this calendar year." The water was part of a real estate package that includes the former Great Western sugar plant just east of downtown Greeley. Mark Bradley and Bernie Blach, partners in Realtec Commercial Real Estate Services of Greeley, brokered the sale for Great Western. Water broker Craig Harrison, president of Harrison Resources Inc. in Loveland, represented Broomfield in the transaction. The 766 C-BT shares are roughly equal to about 500 acre feet of water annually, sufficient to supply the needs of about 1,000 households. The water will be delivered from Carter Lake southwest of Loveland via a 32-mile pipeline to Matthew Glasser Reservoir, where Broomfield's water treatment plant is located.

"colorado water"
6:33:54 AM     


Energy policy: Oil Shale
A picture named shelloilshaleprocess2.jpg

From Examiner.com: "Sen. Ken Salazar, D-Colo., said Tuesday that he will introduce a bill to slow down moves toward commercial oil shale development in the region. His announcement came the same day that an amendment intended to speed up oil shale development died in the Senate. Sen. Wayne Allard, R-Colo., co-sponsored the amendment. Salazar's proposal would provide another year to analyze a plan to open nearly 2 million acres of federal land to development in western Colorado, eastern Utah and southwest Wyoming. It would allow a year for development of a commercial leasing program after the analysis is finished."

More Coyote Gulch coverage here and here.

"2008 pres"
6:28:19 AM     


Ruedi operations public meeting
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From The Aspen Times: "The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation will manipulate water releases as best it can to avoid contributing to potential flooding in the Roaring Fork Valley this spring, but its abilities are limited, agency officials said Monday night. The reclamation bureau has some flexibility in the amount of water it releases from the Ruedi Reservoir dam, said Carlos Lora, a water resources engineer. The agency will work with emergency management officials in the valley to try to coordinate flows...Kara Lamb, public involvement coordinator for the reclamation bureau's district that includes Ruedi, noted that the dam shouldn't be counted on to influence runoff in the valley. "The project's not authorized for flood control," she said."

More from the article:

Bureau officials held their annual meeting Monday night at Basalt Town Hall to discuss annual operations of Ruedi Reservoir. About 20 interested members of the public attended. "Ruedi is expected to fill by the middle of July," said Lora. "Of course, we're expecting to fill the reservoir without any problem." In fact, operators began releasing more water from the reservoir earlier than usual to make way for the anticipated deluge during runoff season. Releases into the Fryingpan River have topped 300 cubic feet per second (cfs) for about one month. The reservoir is down to about 55,000 acre-feet. By comparison, its lowest level last spring was 69,000 acre-feet. By drawing it down so low, the reservoir will fill later than usual. It likely will reach capacity in the middle of July, according to the bureau's projections. "We're two or three weeks behind," Lora said...

In addition, the upper Fryingpan Valley will supply about 100,000 acre-feet to the Eastern Slope via the Bousted water diversion tunnel. That amount is unusual but not unheard of, officials said. It's about 110 percent above average. Water is diverted as part of the Fryingpan-Arkansas Project. The upper Fryingpan water goes to the Pueblo and Colorado Springs area for municipal and agricultural purposes. Anglers got some good news at the meeting. Ruedi Reservoir water probably won't be needed this spring for a program to improve endangered fish on the Colorado River. Nature will take care of the habitat with high flows this year. Releases on the Fryingpan River will probably peak at 550 cfs to 600 cfs for as many as 12 days in June and possibly into early July, Lora said.

"colorado water"
6:20:39 AM     


Pitkin County 'Water Fund' on fall ballot?
A picture named roaringfork.jpg

Here's a recap of a recent Basalt Town Council meeting where using taxing authority to purchase water rights was discussed, from The Aspen Times. From the article:

The Pitkin County commissioners floated ideas for two new taxes past the Basalt Town Council on Tuesday and, perhaps not surprisingly, received a warm reception. The commissioners are leaning toward asking voters in November to approve a property tax increase for road improvements and a sales tax increase to secure existing water rights and possibly acquire new ones to ensure minimum flows in streams and rivers...

The county commissioners also are contemplating a 0.1 percent sales tax increase to raise $1 million annually for a "water fund." County officials said they need at least $150,000 annually for technical and legal advice to verify and enforce water rights and to negotiate water rights purchases. Commissioner Dorothea Farris said she believes that the tax hike will appeal to voters because it helps maintain minimum water levels in streams and rivers. Unappropriated water in the Roaring Fork River is gazed upon with envious eyes by water authorities in Colorado Springs and Pueblo, county officials claimed. The message to voters, Farris said, will be something like: "This is important. If you want to see water in our streams, you need to approve this."

"colorado water"
6:14:24 AM     



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