Blog — Colorado Trout Unlimited

Minturn resort may lose water bid

Melanie Wong - Vail Dailymwong@vaildaily.com

MINTURN, Colorado — It appears highly likely the developer of the proposed Ginn project in Minturn will have to find a plan B to provide water for the project. The city of Aurora was expected to vote late Monday night to buy 1,337 acre-feet of water from the Columbine Ditch near Leadville. Read more

Ritter revisits Colorado forest plan

By Jeremy P. MeyerThe Denver Post

"It's good, and we congratulate and thank him for doing that," said David Petersen, Trout Unlimited's director of a sportsmen's conservation project in Colorado. "We would like to see them take this extra time and continue to work to improve the state rule." Read more.

Ritter: Natural gas ‘vital part’ of new-energy economy

Denver Business Journal - by Cathy Proctor

“That’s why I encouraged Congresswoman DeGette to consider authorizing a comprehensive study of this issue instead of going directly to a new and potentially intrusive regulatory program. She agreed, at that time, to go instead to something that would be more in the way of a study instead of an amendment that would prescribe every state having to put in place these rules,” Ritter said, adding, “I thank the congresswoman for having done that.”  Read more

Lawmakers want reclamation bureau to oversee Leadville tunnel

The [Colorado Springs] Gazette

On Thursday, U.S. Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., and Rep. Doug Lamborn, R-Colorado Springs, held a conference call with reporters to announce legislation that would give responsibility for the tunnel to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. That agency runs the treatment plant at the tunnel's mouth but has disputed that it is responsible for maintaining the tunnel or removing backed-up water.

Udall, Rep. Salazar back Colorado roadless plan

Vail Daily - Associated PressDenver, CO Colorado

Conservation, hunting and angling groups recently asked Colorado's congressional delegation to urge Gov. Bill Ritter to delay completion of the state's plan while the Obama administration considers a long-term policy for 58 million acres of roadless forests nationwide. Read more

Denver’s Water Conundrum: Balancing Rapid Growth/Diminishing Supply

Washington Park Profile - by Ben Gerig Despite our sophisticated water delivery systems, demand both in Denver and downstream is an escalating drain on the availability of water for posterity “Future needs for water are beyond what the current supply is,” claims Bob Steger, Manager of Raw Water Supply at Denver Water. Read more

California Gives Desalination Plants a Fresh Look

Process to Make Seawater Drinkable Gains Traction, but Environmentalists Object to Heavy Energy Use, Harm to Marine Life Wall Street Journal By SABRINA SHANKMAN

Desalination is most commonly used in such places as Saudi Arabia and northern Africa, where fresh water is scarce.

But in Southern California, authorities are increasingly desperate. Huntington Beach, in Orange County, is planning to break ground on its own desalination plant in 2010. Another plant is in the works at Camp Pendleton, just north of Carlsbad, in San Diego County. Read more

Wild and scenic river study creating tensions

Landowners worried about effects on property, water rights on parcels adjoining protected riversBy LE ROY STANDISH/The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel - Tuesday, July 07, 2009

The Bureau of Land Management is moving forward with a plan that could ask Congress to set aside up to 155 miles of rivers and creeks on BLM areas in northwest Colorado as wild and scenic. Read more