So What’s This Really About?

August 26, 2016

I’m often amazed how we get wrapped up in the mind-numbing details of government processes, while completely missing the “big picture.” We can’t see the forest for the trees, as they say, because we’re so caught up in arguing the nuances of legal language that we forget to ask, “Why are we doing this?” What […]

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A Handshake Beats Legislation

August 7, 2016

Arizona Senator Jeff Flake recently embroiled water officials throughout the West in another controversy over the Colorado River. He tried to add language to a drought relief bill, which would have upset a delicate agreement affecting management of the river, substituting Congressional mischief for long-standing agreements among all seven States dependent upon Colorado River water. […]

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Water is the New Gold

July 29, 2016

A Denver newspaper this summer highlighted the apparently-shocking new discovery by some investors that in Colorado, “water is the new gold.” As the article explained, water rights may be as valuable to modern developers and town builders as the mother lode was during the gold rush that settled Colorado. This particular story involved the pending […]

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Too Complicated for the EPA?

July 22, 2016

Congress is famous for passing laws so large and cumbersome that they are hard to interpret. Remember Nancy Pelosi’s infamous line, “We have to pass the bill so you can find out what’s in it.” That was said of a 2,000-page bill. The Declaration of Independence was one page and the Constitution only six. The […]

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A Role Model for Generations

July 14, 2016

A few days ago in Denver, I attended a remarkable event — a simple reunion of people who once worked for U.S. Sen. William L. Armstrong. There were dozens of people there, sharing fond memories and funny stories of what most still consider the best years of their lives. I spent 10 unforgettable years on […]

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Like Sands Through the Hourglass – So Are the Days of Our Discontent

July 8, 2016

A respected freelance writer named Vince Beiser penned a column last summer offering a preview of his coming book on one of the world’s most important but overlooked natural resources, sand. He points out that we use more sand than any other natural resource except water, and perhaps air (though I’m not sure how one […]

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This Delay Smells Fishy

July 7, 2016

Here is a quandary for you: should seafood be regulated as agriculture or as food? For Members of Congress, that hasn’t always been as obvious as it might seem to ordinary people. You see, the Department of Agriculture has jurisdiction over meat, poultry, and eggs, but all other food is regulated by the Food and […]

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Get Off My Lawn

July 7, 2016

There was a time when the rules of congressional courtesy forbid congressmen from introducing bills affecting another congressman’s district without a very specific agreement between the two. The standard was simple: “you take care of your district and I’ll take care of mine.” There was a strong sense of “turf” that all Members respected, almost […]

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A Serious Setback for Colordao

July 7, 2016

“My, what big teeth you have,” said Little Red Riding Hood, only then realizing she was speaking to the big bad wolf, disguised in grandmother’s clothes and hungry. I don’t know if parents still read the tale to their children, with its lesson about the hazards of strangers. But it should be read again and […]

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A Whale of an Unintended Consequence

July 7, 2016

Wind energy continues to be controversial, which seems surprising. Most people rightly think of the wind as not only renewable, but free. However, the technology needed to turn that free and renewable resource into usable electricity is not free, and we continually learn more about its unintended impacts. For 30 years energy companies, utilities, government […]

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