For those folks questioning the need for the COGCC's new proposed protections for our mountains, rivers, communities and wildlife, read no further.
Those two spills occurred about two to three weeks after one man went to the hospital after drinking his cabin’s spring water, which was allegedly contaminated by a release from area drilling operations.
One of the discharges reportedly caused water contaminated by oil and gas waste to emanate from several springs in the area of Cascade Canyon, northwest of Parachute, and to flow into nearby tributaries, according to state records.
A sheen was visible on water discharging from the spring, according to the NOAVs
Just another reason to move back down to the lower 48, she ranted.
With electricity prices through the roof, Juneau is an amazing test case for what happens when energy costs skyrocket. Consumptive patterns do in fact change. Shocking. I know.
Stores, though open, went partially dark. Neon signs were switched off and vending machines unplugged. At home, residents of this former Gold Rush town began living a little bit like pioneers, dusting the snow off the grill, stringing clotheslines in the backyard and flicking off their TV sets. Within a week, electrical usage across town was down as much as 30 percent.
With oil prices reaching a record $120 a barrel, Alaska Electric Light and Power said customers might have to pay for an extra $25 million in diesel over the three months it would take to repair the lines. The utility warned that rates would probably leap from an average of 11 cents per kilowatt-hour to more than 50 cents, or about five times the 10.3 cents that is the national average.
While Juneau is an extreme case because of its inaccessibility, it raises a critical question: how do we get average people to make different choices about reducing consumption without natural disasters as catalysts?
There's more though. It seems Schaffer is hiding behind the Catholic Church, claiming that "None of them could confirm any examples or episodes" of forced abortions.
Yet it was human rights advocates from the Catholic Diocese who first reported the forced abortions.
I'm beginning to doubt whether Schaffer even met with the Catholic Church and that he blatantly lied about human rights violations even though he knew they were occuring. Just so he could go parasailing.
A for-profit corporation is proposing to build a new private prison in Aurora. Across the country, the trend toward building private prisons has been problematic. From high costs and poor performance to depreciated home values, private prisons often spell trouble for communities.
Our partner organizations are working hard to defeat the proposed construction of this private prison in your community and they need your help.
Please take a few minutes to click on the link below and tell them why you think this private prison should not be built.
http://www.progressnowaction.org/stopprivateprison
Boulder will soon become the nation's first smart grid city and Xcel Energy will lead the charge.
The advanced, smart grid system -- when fully implemented over the next few years -- will provide customers with many technologies designed to provide environmental, financial and operational benefits.
Tim Masters is free. Finally. After 10 years serving for a crime he didn't commit. Gail Schoettler's commentary today sums it up quite nicely.
Without due process, and with behind the scenes withholdings and back room deals, how can justice really be served? And how, given the number of people who have been put to death for crimes they didn't commit, can we continue to use the death penalty as a means of justice.
It's deplorable and wrong.
Tim Master's will never regain the 10 years of his life he missed during the years he served, but hopefully something good will come out of this fiasco. Like an overhaul of our justice system. A rethinking of how we determine one's guilt. A more thorough use of DNA evidence.
Did he really say "bitch slapped"? I know he's a talk show host. I know he pushes the envelope. But bitch slapped? He went too far. This comment rivals Imus' "nappy headed hoes" comment.
We, as Coloradans should be outraged. And we should not stand for this hateful commentary.
Not only was this comment demeaning to women, it minimizes the severity of domestic violence women across Colorado experience.
Click on the link to sign the petition urging advertisers on his show to pull their adds and calling on Caldara to apologize.
http://dontpayforhate.com
Next Tuesday marks the 35th anniversary of Roe, the landmark decision that gave women access to safe legal abortion services.
35 years later, it's still one of the most contentious issues in our country.
And a recent study, published by the Guttmacher Institute cited that abortion rates are at their lowest in 34 years, with 19% of pregnancies ending in abortion.
The study didn't cite why this percentage of women terminating their pregnancies has fallen so dramatically. Increased access to the morning after pill. More contraceptive options. More women continuing instead of terminating their pregnancies.
In any case, there are a couple of events worth mentioning so stop by to celebrate. There is a Roe Happy Hour in Denver, a Rally on the steps of the Capitol and forum at Naropa.
My name is Monica Griego and I am the legislative director for the Colorado Consumer Health Initiative.
Today at the State Board of Health, members of that Board voted to increase fees for copies of medical records. As if there weren't nearly 20% of Colorado's population uninsured... As if there weren't enough barriers to affordable and accessible healthcare... the Board now has handed consumers another barrier to access one's own medical record.
The proposal to increase fees for medical record copies was not COST based, and many legal opinions expressed that this proposal could be in violation of Federal Law (HIPAA).
While CCHI will oppose the decision and appeal the hearing, it is important for people to know that those with AIDS, Developmental Disabilities, or physical disabilities will now have to pay more for copies of their medical records if they wish to file for social security or disability benefits.
These populations, their personal representatives, and the advocacy organizations that work on theirr behalf deserve better. Please stay tuned to take action and let the Board of Health know that you are disappointed in the decision they took today.
This decision simply means that Colorado’s elected officials recognize the importance of comprehensive sex ed programs, including, but not limited to abstinence.
This decision makes Colorado the 14th state to pass up money for abstinence-only education funds.
The Fort Collins City Council voted 6-1 to dismiss task force recommendations and allow colored lights, wreathes and all the yule tide Christmas cheer outside city buildings.
To celebrate other denominations, a multicultural display will be added in front of the museum.
My favorite testimony from the public hearing...
"Basically, the city subtly . . . removed Christmas and replaced it with a pagan holiday called the winter holiday. "I don't celebrate winter."
I bet he's celebrating winter today!
Let the holiday cheer return to Fort Collins!
The recent outrage about holiday displays continues in Fort Collins.
First, a task force made recommendations to ban colored lights and wreaths from the exterior of city buildings but allowed whatever religious adornments on the inside of city and county buildings.
Then Fort Collins residents got angry. They came together with city council members and made different recommendations—keep the trees and lights, but don't allow any religious displays on the inside of city buildings.
The city council will decide the final fate of the Holiday display tonight. I'll blog the outcome tomorrow.
But I have to ask you all, is this really what the holidays are about?
Really, this shouldn’t be hard to write about, but it is because it is so totally absurd. Fertilized eggs? Rights?
Basically, any woman who has unprotected sex could have a fertilized egg inside of her. Not a viable pregnancy because at that point, no implantation has occurred.
And there is no way to track a fertilized egg like there is a viable pregnancy. Which leaves the door open for a severe attack on women’s rights. I’m not talking abortion rights, I’m talking basic access to contraceptives, stem cell research, in-vitro fertilization.
Do we really want to impose one person’s definition of when life begins on every woman in Colorado?
Abstinence, or rather the lack there of, has been in the news lately. Portland Maine's King Middle School will soon be offering contraceptives to students with parental consent. And Denver Public Schools is looking to a similar program to address its high teen pregnancy rate.
It seems the right is losing its grip on its ability to control public debate on such a contentious issue. And it's about time.
USA Today reported a poll showing 46% of Americans would support using military force against Iran.
Are you crazy? We aren't even out of Iraq yet and we are talking about military action against Iran?
What about Pakistan? With incredible instability, a US puppet regime and tested nuclear weapons, shouldn't the US be focusing more on some type of non-military action in that region?
Maybe the Bush regime sees Iran as an exit strategy. They've royally messed up Iraq and have no idea how to leave. Iran. Yes...Iran.
It makes sense. Increased fear within the US will shift the focus away from Iraq and onto Iran. And it will push conservative turn-out because Americans respond well to fear tactics.
The teen birthrate in Denver is double that of the state average. Yes double.
Something needs to be done to reverse this trend and the Denver School Board is looking into options. One of which happens to be providing contraceptives to students.
Providing birth control at school health centers is a logical solution and it makes it easy for students to to access.
In other states that have faced similar situations, allowing student health centers to offer contraceptives has substantially decreased teen birthrates.
Abstinence works until it fails and then teens end up pregnant. Why not give teens the opportunity and the access to make responsible decisions about sex?
This is a common sense solution to an issue that has long term effects on the lives of women and their families.
Yup, kids are voting in Mesa. Well kinda.
An organization called Kids Voting Mesa County gets kids engaged in the civic process. They get to participate in forums, write letters to the editor, interview candidates and write articles for their school papers. At the end they get to cast their ballots—online to simulate the mail only ballot in Mesa this cycle.
This program provides a missing and much needed link between youth, civic engagement, and voting. Making civic participation second nature to young people will hopefully translate into a more engaged citizenry. The results aren't in yet, but let’s hope so.
FEMA holds a press conference to address the California wildfires and its employees act as press people. You've got to be joking.
The press received only 15 minutes notice and a listening only 800 call in number. Of course, few press people made it. But FEMA had to give the appearance of a real live press conference so the public affairs director and the deputy public affairs director asked questions, appearing to be members of the press. Instead of asking questions of any real importance, they used the time to glorify FEMA.
How can we hold our government officials accountable if we can't ask them hard hitting questions? How can the President claim to "Help" when, instead of of visiting the wreckage and walking and talking to the devastated folks on the ground he surveys the area from a helicopter.
Could our government be any more disconnected from reality?
The Amendment 41 Debate has been raging for over a year now and today marked hopefully a near end to this lobbyist driven hysteria.
There are three points which seemed to have been lost in the hysteria if you read the Amicus Brief:
Amendment 41 won by a landslide with over 62% of voters supporting the measure. That’s a mandate.
Lawmakers can be bought by “a cup of coffee”. Okay maybe not a cup but multiple cups of coffee, lunches, Rockies tickets—you get the point. Certainly lobbyists wouldn’t continue to waste client’s money if they weren’t getting results.
And Colorado lobbyists spent more than $1.5 million to influence public policy in 2005. Who says votes can’t be bought?
No one really knows how Amendment 41 will shake out. The Court will most likely make a decision by the end of the year. If the court decides to overturn 41 I hope that Common Cause will continue the fight to ban gifts to state and elected officials. It if upholds Amendment 41, lobbyists will have to learn a new form of communication—with words instead of deeds.
Posted Jul 05, 2008 10:34pm
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Sincerest success
Posted Jul 05, 2008 2:54pm
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Schaffer wasn't the only one profiteering in Kurdistan
Posted Jul 03, 2008 6:31pm
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Fighting on two fronts- with the vote coming up July 8th
Posted Jul 03, 2008 1:53am
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Why not concealed hand guns at the airport?
Posted Jul 02, 2008 8:17am
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The reason we need new rules
Posted Jul 01, 2008 9:34am
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The Gundamentalists THINK They Won, but…
Posted Jun 30, 2008 12:56pm
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Stop sitting on your keyboard- Act NOW- to remind Obama
Posted Jun 30, 2008 9:49am
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Lovely little war
Posted Jun 30, 2008 9:47am
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Martin Luther King Jr
Posted Jun 29, 2008 5:31pm
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