Recreation

March 14, 2010--Water, rafting measures get contentious (Durango Herald)

It seems to happen to every legislator at least once in his or her time at the Capitol. A bill you are certain is noncontroversial becomes far more complicated and contentious than you expected. That is the case with a bill I am sponsoring, House Bill 1051, which establishes an annual reporting requirement for water providers.

March 10, 2010--Major political players train sights on Curry rafting-rights bill (Colorado Independent)

Former Democratic state Sen. Michael Feeley, a lawyer-lobbyist who spent seven years as Minority Leader, is behind an advertising campaign aimed at torpedoing a rafting rights bill floated in the House by Rep. Kathleen Curry.

March 7, 2010--Bill pitting river enthusiasts, landowners runs into rough waters in Senate (Denver Post)

A bill that could buoy or sink Colorado's rafting industry and affect hundreds of thousands of river enthusiasts and landowners may have floated through the House, but it's on the rocks in the Senate. The Capitol battle pits two core Colorado values against each other: the love of the outdoors and the allegiance to personal property rights.

February 17, 2010--House passes rafters' legislation (Pueblo Chieftain)

A bill that allows rafters to go aground on private property passed the House on Tuesday and awaits the governor's signature to become law. Sponsored by state Rep. Kathleen Curry, unaffiliated-Gunnison, HB1188 sparked debate over commercial rafters' rights to travel public waterways and the rights of property owners. In the end, rafters won out, as the bill passed 40-25.

February 2, 2010--Climate report paints grim outlook for ski areas (Telluride Watch)

According to a recently published report by the National Wildlife Federation on the effects of global warming, Colorado’s ski industry has reason to worry. Published on Jan.

February 1, 2010--Water fights brew (Durango Herald)

Lawyers, rafts and money: Those are the debates in store for Colorado's water community this year at the Legislature. A Pueblo Democrat wants to make sure that water imports from wet basins to dry ones don't harm people in the original basin. And a Gunnison representative wants to make sure rafting guides can float the state's rivers, no matter who owns the riverbank.

January 14, 2010--Public meeting will look at river enhancements (Pagosa Daily Post)

There will be an opportunity for members of the public to view and comment on the proposed design for two whitewater features to be constructed in the Town Park stretch of the San Juan River later this month. Construction of at least one of the proposed features is tentatively slated for this spring, with the possibility of an additional feature being constructed in the fall.

January 12, 2010--Panel begins talks on Lake Nighthorse (Durango Herald)

A committee that took on the job of developing recreation at Lake Nighthorse is negotiating with a consultant to produce a skeletal plan that would lead to a fleshed-out version focusing on a timetable, cost and public benefit.

January 12, 2010--Funds add to McPhee marina (Cortez Journal)

Eight years after a fire tore through the McPhee Reservoir marina, the area will receive some much needed development due to the work of the McPhee Breakwater Project, Montezuma County and grants from the Colorado Division of Wildlife.

January 8, 2010--Curry to float bill aimed at ending rafter-landowner rights disputes (Colorado Independent)

The stories have reached almost rural-myth status in Colorado’s high country: rocks being thrown at paddlers, wires strung across rivers at head height, even occasional shots fired. The problem? Some private landowners really don’t like it when rafters or kayakers float through their property.
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