Blog — Colorado Trout Unlimited

Feds release Glade analysis

http://www.coloradoan.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080429/UPDATES01/80429032

... Written comments will be taken on the document for the next 90 days. Comments also will be taken during public hearings scheduled for 6 pm. June 17 at the Fort Collins Senior Center and June 19 at the University of Northern Colorado University Center in Greeley.

Water study arrives

Glade Reservoir's impacts unveiled 

The Reporter-Herald - 4/30/2008

Northern Colorado will face harmful effects caused by growth in the coming 50 years with or without a new reservoir northwest of Fort Collins, a federal report issued late Tuesday states.

http://www.reporterherald.com/news_story.asp?ID=16488

Summit a green light for alliance

"We increasingly find mainstream environmentalists joining wildlife action organizations such as Trout Unlimited and Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation in rushing to the aid of local action groups when the inevitable brush fires explode."                        [thank you, Charlie!  tk]

http://www.denverpost.com/avalanche/ci_9019321

Grand County fishermen celebrate: Ritter signs instream flow legislation into law

By Katie LoobySky-Hi Daily News April 22, 2008

Gov. Bill Ritter signed HB 1280 into law Monday.

    The legislation, dubbed the “Protect Lease Instream Flow Water Right Bill” among supporters, allows water rights owners to leave their water in a stream or river without the risk of losing it, said Kirk Klancke, Winter Park Ranch Water & Sanitation District manager.

http://www.skyhidailynews.com/article/20080422/NEWS/441584195

Summit a green light for alliance

The times they are a-changing. How rapidly the process occurs in Colorado depends in large part upon the initiative that could go far toward uniting the diverse elements keen on protecting our eroding wildlife resources.

Activists anxious over various issues vital to the state's fish and game have proposed a Wildlife Conservation Summit, perhaps in early autumn when all the Democratic dust has washed out of Denver.

http://www.denverpost.com/avalanche/ci_9019321

Gov. Bill Ritter signs river-protection bill into law

By Joe Hanel | Herald Denver Bureau "The stream that I knew in my youth is not the stream I'm introducing my grandson to," said Kirk Klancke, manager of the Winter Park Ranch Water and Sanitation District. "We now have the ability to put water rights in the river, which is something I thought I'd never see - more water in the river."

http://durangoherald.com/asp-bin/article_generation.asp?article_type=news&article_path=/news/08/news080422_5.htm

Ritter signs water-rights bill — a win-win for holders, rivers

John Ingold, The Denver Post

Gov. Bill Ritter on Monday signed into law a significant revision to Colorado's water law to allow water-rights holders to leave some of their water in the river without penalty.

http://www.denverpost.com/legislature/ci_9007791

Western & Colorado Water Project Staff Notes

April 2008

 

 

We worked with a National TU staffer on a terrific set of new CSI maps that look at Colorado cutthroat with an eye towards the strategies and costs of restoration in a warming environment full of energy development.

 

TU led a retreat of the environmental and recreational representatives to the water basin roundtables regarding the state's effort to identify the priority river reaches for environmental and recreational instream flow needs, and to quantify those needs.

 

We wrote yet another Rapanos presentation and helped counter some of the paranoid arguments of Colorado's water community against the Clean Water Restoration Act.

 

TU and the other parties to the Colorado water court proceedings to quantify the Black Canyon reserved water right are engaged in mediation. The court has stayed proceedings to allow negotiations to continue.

 

TU and others from the conservation community have helped to draft a bill that would that would more closely tie land use development (growth) to sustainable water supplies. The bill has created much debate. Chances of success are fair.

 

The Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) has released its Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) on Colorado Springs Southern Delivery System. TU will work on preparation of comments on the EIS and will be discussing mitigation measures with BOR and CO Springs. We met with the Pueblo Chapter to discuss the EIS and possible impacts to the local fishery.

 

We have been advocating for three bills to strengthen the instream flow program in the 2008 legislative session. One bill has passed and is headed to the governor for signature. The other bills are in the General Assembly process, but appear to have good chances for success.

 

We are continuing to try and make sense of the proposed temperature standards for the Colorado and Yampa River basins in preparation for the upcoming standard setting meeting.

 

TU continues to participate in the Rocky Mountain Climate Organization efforts to address the impacts of climate change will have on Colorado streams, and is following progress on a number of water supply projects.

 

TU staff spent much of the month preparing for and embarking on a trip to assess the Dolores River below McPhee Dam. Once a prized tail-water fishery, fishing in this stretch has been on the decline. The Dolores River Dialogue is eager to try and restore the fishery but unsure of the cause of the decline. Some hypotheses have been raised including decline in the invertebrate community, unspecified problems related to algae, and poor spawning habitat related to channel armoring. We worked with the Colorado Department of Wildlife to develop a study design that will help address this last hypothesis. During four days on the river, we conducted extensive surveys, set out sediment traps, painted rocks (really, this is science), and set up a transect to evaluate channel migration along a meander bend. We will return to the river after runoff and, with luck, will find some of the traps and painted rocks. In any event we will resurvey the reach to quantify any changes caused by the huge spill that is now underway.

Sportsmen's Caucus April 24th

 Sportsmen’s Caucus at the Colorado State Capitol - Thursday April 24, 2008 - 12 to 1:15 PM

Committee Room 35 

Hosted by:

  • Senator Lois Tochtrop
  • Senator Dan Gibbs
  • Representative John Soper

 

Agenda

  • The Habitat Stamp: Where are the proceeds going? 
  • Open Conversation: current issues facing Colorado Sportsmen
Lois Tochtrop, State Senator SD 24 Colorado State Capitol 200 E. Colfax Denver, CO 80203 303-866-4863