Denver November 2008 Election

 












































































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  Friday, January 25, 2008


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Congratulations to Don Ament for receiving the Colorado Water Congress' 2008 Aspinall Water Leader of the Year Award today. Mr. Ament has had a long and distinguished career in service to the citizens of Colorado, especially the farmers. After a career in the Colorado General Assembly he was Governor Owens' pick to lead the Department of Agriculture in 1998.

The first speaker at Friday's General Session was Thomas F. Donnelly, Executive Vice President of the National Water Resources Association. His topic was Water Issues in the U.S. Congress and the 76th Year of the National Water Resources Association.

His organization, after a prioritization process that includes the issues raised by members, plans to work on several issues during the 110th Congress. He named federal funding for water projects, modernization of existing infrastructure, modifications of the Clean Water Act along with education of the Congress and administration on the issue of planning for climate change.

Donnelly talked about the battle over last year's Water Resources Development Act. The act was in a long line of core authorization bills but since there had not been one passed since 2000 the size of the bill put a target on it. Readers may remember that the president's veto was overridden by Congress late in 2007.

Federal funding is tough to get and Mr. Donnelly says, "As long as there is a struggle in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the economy is struggling," funding will continue to be in short supply. He added that he expects, "funding to be very much greatly reduced," when the president introduces his budget later this year. "This does not bode well for Animas-La Plata," he said.

Funding needs for the West's aging infrastructure is a neglected area in current federal policy, he remarked. Many projects, although they are still performing well, have "exceeded their design life," he said, adding, "some need major repairs." The NWRA is working on determining the scope of the needs. Mr. Donnelly identified three categories of projects: Projects with available funds, usually multi-purpose, providing electrical power and municipal water in addition to irrigation and flood control; Projects with no chance of paying back repair costs since they may have been heavily subsidized in the first place (primarily Reclamation irrigation projects); Projects that can pay back the costs over time (i.e Minidoka in Idaho) but where there is no current mechanism to allow for loans and delayed payment.

The national issue that keeps Mr. Donnelly up at night is the Oberstar-Feingold bill (Clean Water Restoration Act of 2007) currently winding it's way through Congress. While it may not pass the 110th Congress the current long-term outlook for this year's election is that the Democratic party may add significantly to their majority, and set the stage for passage in the 111th, he said. His position is that the bill will, "expand the scope of federal control and undermine states rights." The bill, according to Donnelly, "Removes the nexus between navigable and jurisdictional waters," and will encompass any land that, "was wet, is wet or will be wet in the future."

With respect to climate change Mr. Donnelly said, "Something is going on, we don't know exactly what, or what is causing it," but he and the NWRA are educating the Congress and administration to develop a, "No regrets strategy." He went on to say that after 1994 the Congress, when moderate Democrats were largely purged from both chambers, and the, "ideological center was ripped out of Congress," it's almost impossible for them to function. There is now a, "distinct lack of comity and decency," he said.

More Coyote Gulch coverage here.

Category: Colorado Water
4:09:02 PM    


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Former Congressman Bob Schaffer will not have an easy run at U.S. Representative Mark Udall in the fall. He's already drawing criticism from one environmental group according to The Fort Collins Coloradoan. From the article:

A national environmental group is already weighing in on Colorado's U.S. Senate race, expected to be among the most competitive nationwide, by naming Republican candidate Bob Schaffer of Fort Collins to its "Dirty Dozen" list. Tony Massaro of the Washington-based League of Conservation Voters said Thursday that the decision was based on Schaffer's track record as a congressman for six years and his subsequent business experience. "The open Senate seat is one of the best chances of picking up a pro-conservation vote," Massaro said...

"It's important early on to let people know that Bob Schaffer is too extreme," said Massaro, who was in Denver to make the announcement. "Bob Schaffer is way out of step with Colorado." Schaffer's campaign didn't return a call to The Associated Press on Thursday evening.

Colorado GOP Chairman Dick Wadhams called the environmental group's announcement "as predictable as the sun coming up...This is a regular partisan sideshow by an extreme environmental organization," Wadhams said. Wadhams predicted the effect of the group's decision to target Schaffer will be negligible. "It is a joke," he added.

Massaro said, while in Congress, Schaffer voted to give $33 billion in tax breaks to the energy industry, opposed increasing vehicle fuel efficiency and protested the Clinton administration's protection of roadless areas in national forests, including more than 4 million acres in Colorado. Schaffer continues to promote "big oil and dirty coal" as an energy company executive, Massaro said. The environmental group also denounces Schaffer's support for a failed statewide ballot proposal that would have provided $2 billion in bonding for large water projects. Western Colorado residents saw it as an attempt to grab their water for development on the Front Range and helped defeat it...

The League of Conservation Voters calls itself an independent political voice on environmental issues. Its board includes representatives from some of the country's largest conservation groups. The group focuses on competitive races where the stakes for the environment are high, said Massaro, a Glenwood Springs native who formerly headed the Colorado League of Conservation Voters. He said Colorado's race is important because of the close losses on renewable energy and other conservation measures in the Senate last year. Former Colorado GOP Congressman Bob Beauprez was the first gubernatorial candidate named to the group's list. Beauprez lost to Democrat Bill Ritter in the 2006 governor's race. The group targeted the opponents of Sen. Ken Salazar, D-Colo., and Rep. John Salazar, D-Colo., who both won election in 2004. Nine of the 13 people on the "Dirty Dozen" list in the 2006 election lost, Massaro said.

Coyote Gulch would remind voters that Governor Ritter hung the defeated Referendum A around Bob Beauprez's neck in 2006, so it's an issue with some traction. We would also remind voters that almost everyone is looking for more storage in 2008.

Category: Denver November 2008 Election


6:13:53 AM    



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