Projects News

Fighting for the Green River

A speculative water project could take 81 billion gallons a year out of the Green River and Flaming Gorge Reservoir.

Problem

The Green River below Flaming Gorge Reservoir offers some of the best fishing in the West. But despite the importance of the Green River to anglers and the local economy, a speculative water project proposed by developer Aaron Million could take 81 billion gallons a year out of the Green River and Flaming Gorge, and pump it 560 miles to the Front Range of Colorado.

Initial construction costs for this project will exceed $7 billion, with annual operating costs totaling over $123 million. Yet that’s not the worst part. The Million Pipeline is a potential economic and environmental boondoggle that could unleash a host of destructive impacts on local communities, fish and game habitats, and taxpayers in three states.   A pipeline project of this magnitude has the potential to:

  • Ruin world class kokanee salmon and lake trout populations by increasing water temperatures and raising salinity levels.
  • Destroy the Blue-ribbon fishery for trophy rainbow and brown trout in the Green River.
  • Harm critical mule deer and pronghorn habitat and hunting opportunity.
  • De-water wetlands in the basin and impede waterfowl hunting.
  • Impact Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge, Browns Park
  • National Wildlife Refuge, Dinosaur National Monument, as well as Ouray National Wildlife Refuge.
  • Lower water levels significantly, making it virtually impossible to access the reservoir for recreation.
  • Further the spread of cheat grass, tamarisk and quagga mussels, which will harm hunting and fishing in the area.
  • Force the government to spend millions of dollars in taxpayer money to reconstruct boat launches, campgrounds, marinas, fishing piers and other access points.
  • Destroy a $118 million recreation-based economy the communities in the region depend on for their survival.
  • Slow the recovery of endangered native fish like the razorback sucker, Colorado pikeminnow, and bonytail chub. Until these fish are recovered and removed from listing under the Endangered Species Act, the area’s recreation-based economy will continue to operate with restrictions required under federal law.

Make Your Voice Heard

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) reviews federal permits for hydropower projects, and is taking comments on Million's application for a preliminary permit through December 16.  While this is only the first step of many that would be required for the proposed pipeline, it gives us the chance to stop Million's dangerous proposal now, before it can get started.  FERC needs to hear from you about the importance of the Green River and your concerns about the impacts of this project.

To submit your comments by the December 16th deadline, please follow these instructions:

1. Go to www.ferc.gov 2. Click on the 'Documents and Filings' menu tab on the homepage 3. Click on the eComments tab 4. Fill in the required information and you will receive an official form to file your comments 5. Include on the docket # P-14263 for the Flaming Gorge Pipeline project. 6. Submit your comment before the December 16th deadline

Note: If you have personal experiences on the Green, be sure to mention those in your comments.

Suggested Talking Points

In addition to the points listed above, it's important to stress the following in your comments:

  • The Million project will be bad for the Green River and its world-class trout fishery and the regional tourism economy that fishery supports, as well as harming critical native fish habitat downstream where the Green is a centerpiece of endangered fish recovery.
  • This project already failed to pass muster with another federal agency that reviewed it.  After scoping, the Army Corps of Engineers pulled the plug on the environmental analysis process that it had begun on this pipeline because Million didn't have the threshold information available to even allow them to analyze the project. Nothing has changed - and FERC shouldn't allow an applicant to "game" its system this way to create phony credibility with investors.
  • Having struck out with the Corps, Million is now trying to sell this as a hydropower project - but it can't be justified based on its claimed hydropower benefits.  It would actually interfere with hydropower generation at Flaming Gorge by reducing the water available to go through the existing hydroelectric facilities. The project isn't good for fish or for hydropower.

Continue the Fight

To stay up to date on this issue and learn about more opportunities to get involved, please sign up to on our campaign website 'Sportsmen for the Green' and 'like' us on Facebook.

Questions? Contact Charlie Card, NE Utah Coordinator ccard@tu.org

Chapter Spotlight: Canyon Reach project on Mayhem Gulch

By Glen Edwards, West Denver TU Chapter On Friday, Oct. 28, 2011, the West Denver chapter held a brief dedication ceremony at Mayhem Gulch for the recently completed WDTU Canyon Reach project on Clear Creek. This project concentrated on safe access for young families and marginally mobile adults, both relative to the busy highway, and relative to the stream. Three separate stretches received major winter habitat and feeding lane structures, as well as boulder clusters for easy fishing access, constructed by the contractor, Frontier Environmental Services. The lowest stretch is at Mayhem Gulch, located 9.5 miles up Clear Creek Canyon from the intersection of Highways 6 and 93 just west of Golden, or just below Mile Marker 262. The middle stretch is upstream at a large unpaved parking area just below MM 261, and the upper stretch is further upstream near the Canyon Park Open Space sign just below MM 260.5.

Contributions to the project from CDPW's "Fishing is Fun" program, the Jefferson County's Conservation Trust Fund, the Colorado Water Conservation Board, Alfred Frei and Sons quarry, CTU's GoMo Grant, the Henderson Mine, the Trask Family Foundation, as well as several private donors and our own WDTU chapter, totaled approximately $300,000. Educational signage for the project is planned, but not yet installed.

Jefferson County Comission Chairperson Faye Griffin spoke briefly at the Oct. 28 Canyon Reach Project dedication ceremony, and the Director of the new Colorado Division of Parks and Wildlife, Rick Cables, was the keynote speaker. Cables impressed the audience with his down-to-earth enthusiasm for efforts like the Canyon Reach Project , and for his obvious support for conservation groups like Trout Unlimited.

Fraser River gets a boost

by Bob Berwyn Summit County Citizen's Voice

SUMMIT COUNTY — With its flows reduced by upstream tributary diversions, and its river-bottom cobbles choked by highway traction sand, the Fraser River has long been a symbol of the imbalance between resource protection and other uses of water in Colorado.

But the Grand County stream will soon get partial relief, as various agencies from both sides of the Continental Divide teamed up to construct a settling pond near the entrance to the Mary Jane ski area in a project tha symbolizes an emerging spirit of tran-smountain cooperation.

Better maintenance and capture of highway sand can help reduce impacts to tiny aquatic organisms that form the base of the food chain in the river, helping to sustain healthy fisheries. The larvae of the aquatic insects need a coarse bed of rocks at the bottom of the stream to thrive. When the sand fills in all the gaps between the rocks, the bugs have nowhere to go.

The settling pond will also protect municipal and resort water infrastructure and equipment.

Read more

U.S. Senate honors Fraser's Kirk Klancke

By Tonya BinaSky-Hi News

U.S. Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., recognized Fraser resident Kirk Klancke on the senate floor in Washington D.C. on Oct. 12 for Klancke's “commitment to preserving our environment and making Colorado a better place to live, work and play.” In his speech to members of the 112th Congress, Udall highlighted the fact that Klancke, president of Grand County's chapter of Trout Unlimited, was recently selected a finalist for Field and Stream's “Heroes of Conservation” Award. “Both Kirk and I have spent time enjoying the natural beauty of our state while appreciating the value of preserving it for future generations,” Udall stated. “His work embodies what I have long held to be true — we don't inherit the Earth from our parents; we borrow it from our children and the generations that will follow.”

Read the full article

Learn more about Colorado TU's efforts to Defend the Colorado River

Project Healing Waters

The Denver based chapter of Project Healing Waters has been doing some great things lately. From Larry Snyder, the Denver group of Project Healing Waters:

While fly tying and casting classes are still continuing at the Denver VA hospital and the Aurora VA clinic, the Denver group of Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing is finishing off our 2011 outings and trips this Saturday, the 15th of October, with an informal get together at Cherry Creek State Park. Vets, volunteers and their family members will be treated to a fall lunch prepared by one of our volunteers.  2011 was a break out year for Denver.  In 2010 we were only able to book 4 fishing trips for the vets. This year it was 19 trips, with some of the trips flat out ruining a few of the vets with many trout caught in the 5 to 12 pound range. These guys may not want to catch normal fish anymore. Some of the better trips included floating the Colorado River, Battle at Boxwood Gulch Tournament, the Blue River Ranch, the Rahwah Ranch, Homestead Ranch, St. Mary's float tubing, the Canejos River, Big Thompson, Arkansas, Lake Lehow and of coarse a couple of trips to Rainbow Falls Mountain Trout in Woodland Park. One of our vets was able to go to Canada fly fishing for Pike, Walleye and Small Mouth Bass. Next month, another vet will be shipped off to the Bahamas to do some saltwater fly fishing on the flats.

I believe the latest number is somewhere around 20 new vets that finished the fly tying and casting classes this year with another 13 currently attending the fall classes. Both the hospital and the Aurora clinic have waiting lists of veterans who have heard about what we are doing and want to attend future classes. One of our volunteers has orchestrated monthly, more advanced, fly tying classes at Gander Mountain for those that we have graduated. He said we can't teach them and just drop them and we encourage them to continue and build on what they learned. 3 of our vets have joined us as volunteers, as well.

What's in our future? I can't tell you how exited I am about 2012. We will start off the year with a booth at the ISE show this year (we will raffle off a couple of rods, one being a 9' 6wt PHW all purpose rod with fighting butt) and we will co-host a booth with the Ft. Carson group at the Fly Fishing Show in January. Toward the end of January, we will be teaching rod building and on the 15th of March (mark this in you calendar) we will be hosting a Fly Fishing Film Festival fund raiser at Red & Jerry's in Littleton. Spring classes will start at the hospital and the clinic and we will kick off the fishing with a trip to Rainbow Falls Mountain Trout, probably in April. Many of the great fishing venues the vets enjoyed, this year, have asked us to come back. A goal of 30 fishing trips has been thrown out and we will work hard to achieve that.

Such a great program. Be sure to check out the Project Healing Waters Fly Rods that give 20% to Project Healing Waters and help support our veterans.

Denver Post: Colorado's South Platte River a viable fishery

Denver Post Will Rice

Tyler Kendrick stalked the water slowly in front of me, about 40 feet ahead in clear shallow water. His lime-colored fly line trailed behind like a tail.

I squinted against the hot sun and scanned the far bank looking for tails and fish. They were there; we just had to find them. Tyler suddenly stopped and stood dead still. His body language, like a cat stalking a mouse, indicated he spotted a fish. He stripped out a few more feet of line and took a half step forward.

It was going to be a longshot. Tyler made two powerful back casts and punched his cast to the right into the faster current moving downstream.

Kendrick and I had teamed up for Denver Trout Unlimited's fifth annual Carp Slam, a fishing tournament created to raise money for improvements on the battered and bruised metro section of the South Platte. Sixteen amateurs and 16 professionals competed last month and raised more than $30,000 for projects intended to improve the river as a fishery and a recreational waterway.

"We want to expose people to angling opportunities close to home and provide an opportunity for youth to take the first cast," said Todd Fehr, president of Denver Trout Unlimited. "First-time casters grow up to be future conservationists and stewards of our state's water resources."

Click here to read the full article.

Special Campaign Update: Protecting the Upper Colorado River

With the largest snowpack in recent memory and high flows sustained far into summer, 2011 has been a banner year for the Colorado River. In times like these, it’s difficult to think of the Colorado as a river on the brink, threatened by low flows and temperature problems – but that is exactly the situation facing our state’s namesake river and its tributaries, particularly the Fraser River. The headwaters of the Colorado River have been tapped heavily for generations. Front Range water providers permanently remove water from the Colorado River basin by pumping it across the Continental Divide through a series of tunnels, pipes, and diversion structures. The most notable of these ‘trans-basin’ diversion projects are the Colorado-Big Thompson Project, which transports water from Granby Reservoir below Rocky Mountain National Park to cities and farms in northern Colorado, and the Moffat Collection System, which draws water from 30 creeks and streams throughout the Fraser River watershed and delivers it to Denver via the Moffat Tunnel. The result? More than half of the rivers’ historic flows are permanently removed and rerouted to the Front Range rather than sustaining important trout and wildlife populations downstream. Indeed, even in this year of epic snowmelt, existing trans-basin diversions are causing low flows and high water temperatures on streams in the Upper Colorado watershed.

Today, the Colorado headwaters face an uncertain future in the face of two proposed expansions: the Windy Gap Firming Project (WGFP) and Moffat Firming Project (Moffat Project).  If completed, these projects would leave the Upper Colorado with only 25% of its native flows and the Fraser with only 20%.

These fragile river ecosystems that once teemed with native cutthroat trout may be approaching a tipping point, where further losses could destroy one of Colorado’s most valued gold medal fisheries and decimate the local communities and economies that depend on them. Warning signs are widespread. While the Colorado has raged for much of this summer, only a few years ago it was nearly bone-dry in September. The Colorado, Fraser, and Ranch Creek have seen excessively high water temperatures – putting trout populations at risk and violating state water quality standards designed to protect fish and wildlife. In the Colorado below Windy Gap Reservoir, we have seen the near-total loss of sculpin and stoneflies – the bedrock layer of the food chain. We cannot continue the status quo – much less tap the Colorado more heavily – unless we take real, concrete actions to restore the river.

TU has identified four key actions to secure the future health of the Colorado and Fraser Rivers in the face of future water diversion proposals:

  • Keep water temperatures within a range that support fish. When additional diversions remove more water from streams, it can raise water temperatures above levels where trout can survive. When stream temperatures become dangerous, diverters need to cut back in order to protect fish.
  • Provide flushing flows.  Heavy flows during snowmelt and spring runoff are needed to flush sediment from streambeds and keep fish habitat healthy year in and year out, but we can’t count on 2011-magnitude snowpack every year.  The project proponents must commit to providing adequate spring flushing flows every year.
  • Take Windy Gap off-channel.  Windy Gap Reservoir blocks fish, disrupts sediment and gravel movement, and harms water quality in the Colorado River. A “bypass” to direct the Colorado River around Windy Gap, reconnecting the river, would help to solve these problems.
  • Restore river habitat. Instream projects can help restore habitat for fish in stream reaches currently too wide and shallow. Independent estimates put costs for restoration at $7.1 million for the Fraser and $10 million for the Colorado. While large, these numbers are achievable.  For example, if such project costs were distributed among ratepayers, Denver Water could contribute its “share” at a cost of only about $1 per household per year.

 

While these strategies will help rivers, it is also important that monitoring and adaptive management are also in place, to respond to changing conditions or unexpected challenges.  Simply put, if the measures being used to protect the river aren’t working, we need to have the means to change direction.

A Not-Quite-Global Agreement

A highly-publicized agreement between Denver Water and West Slope governments earlier this year made some meaningful progress in addressing existing issues for the Colorado River. The agreement offers promise for the future of Front Range and West Slope cooperation on water issues. However, despite the shorthand name that some gave it – the “global solution” – it is neither global nor a complete solution.

The agreement includes provisions that are worth celebrating:

  • Future water projects using Denver's facilities (notably the Moffat and Roberts tunnels) will require approval from the West Slope and will need to address concerns on both sides of the Continental Divide.
  • Safeguards are included for the Shoshone water rights in Glenwood Canyon, which will help maintain year-round flows in the Upper Colorado.
  • Denver agrees to provide 1,000 acre-feet per year of water to help address low flow concerns in both the Fraser and Williams Fork systems.
  • Denver will provide $2 million to assist with river habitat restoration in the Upper Colorado basin.
  • Water and funds (including an additional $2 million) will be managed through a partnership effort, called "Learning by Doing," designed to adapt to changing conditions  Notably, TU is the sole conservation organization that has been included in the management committee for Learning by Doing.

These tools are valuable in helping address past impacts that have put the Colorado River at risk, and TU looks forward to participating in the “Learning by Doing” process and helping make it as successful as possible.

But the agreement is not global – notably, it does not include the largest user of Upper Colorado River water, the Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District (which is the recipient of the Windy Gap project water).  Additionally, by its own terms, the agreement does not address new impacts from the proposed expansion of the Moffat and Windy Gap projects at all.

Unfortunately, the media attention around the agreement gave many people the false impression that the Colorado River’s problems - past and future - had been solved.  As Drew Peternell, Director of TU’s Colorado Water Project said, “Denver deserves credit for taking a step in the right direction with the global agreement, but there is a large hole that needs to be filled.  We urge Denver and Northern to finish the job of protecting the Colorado River from the impacts of current and future trans-basin diversions.”

Mitigation efforts to help protect rivers

The next step in working to defend the Colorado River headwaters – and to actually address impacts of the new projects – came this past spring as the Colorado Wildlife Commission (Commission) and Colorado Water Conservation Board (CWCB) considered “mitigation and enhancement plans” for the WGFP and Moffat Project. TU staff, including the Colorado Water Project’s Mely Whiting and Rob Firth, and local volunteer leaders like Kirk Klancke brought information and recommendations forward to the Commission.  We offered not only our perspectives, but also a strong scientific assessment of in-stream habitat needs for the Colorado and Fraser Rivers which was made possible through generous support from Bob Fanch and Devil’s Thumb Ranch.  From the original draft plans, Division of Wildlife staff negotiated changes that would improve the plans and better address the needs of the Colorado headwaters. Ultimately, these efforts resulted in progress – particularly at Windy Gap – but fell short of adequately addressing the rivers’ needs.

First the good news: the Windy Gap Firming Project mitigation plan includes a requirement for the project to stop diversions when stream temperatures exceed acute temperature standards (where trout begin to immediately die); and it increased the existing Windy Gap flushing flow requirement from 450 cfs to 600 cfs (a step in the right direction, though true channel flushing requires much more water).  Proponents of both projects also made offers of “enhancement” plans to help conduct habitat restoration on the Colorado River.

Yet notable gaps remain.  The Colorado River plan provides $4 million less than recommended for restoration.  While there was an offer to study the Windy Gap bypass, there is no commitment to fund its construction even if the study documents its value.

The shortcomings on the Fraser were even greater – of the $7.1 million identified need for Fraser basin habitat restoration, only $750,000 was pledged. Denver pledged water to help address temperature issues associated with its expanded diversions in August – but offered no similar measures for the month of July.

Despite these gaps, the Commission and CWCB approved the mitigation plans (and the associated “enhancement” plans). Colorado TU appreciates the efforts made by the Wildlife Commission and Department of Natural Resources to move the ball forward, but these plans fall short of what is needed to keep the rivers from further decline.

The fight continues

The state mitigation process is only “advisory” – ultimately, federal agencies including the US Army Corps of Engineers and Environmental Protection Agency, as well as the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (for Moffat) and Bureau of Reclamation (for Windy Gap), will decide whether to approve permits for the projects.  If approved, these agencies also will define what requirements are included with those permits. As federal agencies evaluate these projects, Colorado TU will continue to communicate our concerns and provide recommendations backed by science, urging them to ensure that any permits that are issued include adequate protections for the rivers.

Ultimately, the future of the Colorado headwaters – and all of our western rivers – depends upon a strengthened commitment to managing our water resources wisely – addressing the need for a reliable water supply on the Front Range without sacrificing the needs of fish, wildlife and West Slope communities that depend on healthy rivers.  Colorado TU believes that all Coloradoans, both on the Front Range and the West Slope, value healthy rivers and want to see an intact Colorado River preserved for their children and grandchildren. In the coming months, we will work to build more visibility and awareness of issues facing the Colorado, encouraging citizens to engage as stewards of these places.  From understanding the reasons to reduce personal water use, to lending a voice in calling on Denver Water and Northern to take responsibility for the impacts they are causing, to sharing the story of our rivers with friends and neighbors – Coloradoans can make a difference.

Colorado TU will not give up our fight for the Colorado headwaters until we can truly say that we have successfully protected the river for future generations to experience and enjoy.


Colorado TU welcomes new staff: David Thompson and Jake Lemon

Colorado Trout Unlimited would like to welcome the two newest members of the Trout Unlimited Family. Jacob Lemon and David Thompson have joined the staff as AmeriCorps Vista Volunteers focused working with local chapters and communities across Colorado to strengthen our youth conservation education and RiverWatch water quality monitoring programs. David Thompson joins the TU team as the River Watch Field Coordinator. “I’m so excited to have this opportunity. Not only do I get to work in the water quality field but I get to do it while working for Trout Unlimited,” says David.

David comes to TU from Thurmond, West Virginia where he served as a Vista Volunteer for the New River Gorge National River as a water quality specialist. He worked on many projects in the area including the State of the New River Report and participated in the Park’s Long Term Monitoring Program for the New River and its’ tributaries. Before starting his service in West Virginia, David earned his Bachelor’s of Science degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Portland in Portland, Oregon. He is a native of Billings, Montana.

As Youth Conservation Education Coordinator Jake will be working to develop and strengthen the Youth Conservation Education Program. Hailing from Indiana, he recently graduated from Indiana University at Indianapolis with a degree in Environmental Science. During his undergraduate years, he was involved in water quality research and outreach through his internship with a non-profit research center.  Jake has been fishing with a spinning rod all his life and is very excited to get a fly rod in his hands.  In his free time he enjoys hiking, kayaking, and traveling. He is a foodie of sorts and loves trying new restaurants and dishes. As a newcomer to Colorado he is excited to explore and take advantage of the outdoor recreation activities it provides!

AmeriCorps VISTA is a national program coordinated in Colorado by the Western Hardrock Watershed Team that matches highly enthusiastic and skilled volunteers with local and national non-profits in hopes of creating long term impacts on the communities they serve.

Based out of our Denver office, both David and Jake will be reaching out to Colorado TU chapter leaders in the coming months. They can be reached by emailing david.thompson@coloradotu.org and jake.lemon@coloradotu.org, respectively.

Clear Creek restoration project underway: Trout Unlimited West Denver hopes to improve fish habitat, sense of stewardship

Building on past success, the Trout Unlimited West Denver chapter is about to begin restoration on about three-quarters of a mile of Clear Creek, northwest of Golden.

The Canyon Reach project, with multiple funding sources, will begin near Jefferson County Open Space Park’s Mayhem Gulch development then continue upstream to the vicinity of the park’s paved turnout just below the Colorado 119 and U.S. 6 junction.

Glen Edwards, Trout Unlimited West Denver’s local project director, said the restoration of Clear Creek habitat as a fishery resource is one goal, along with building a sense of stewardship in the community for the entire Clear Creek watershed.

“(We’ll) go down in the stream, move some of the natural rocks to make for better winter habitat — deeper holes and feeding lanes and just places for fish to survive the winter,” he said.

The major portion of the nearly $264,000 in funding came from the Colorado Division of Wildlife’s Fishing is Fun program, to the tune of $168,700. Some $60,000 will come from Jefferson County Conservation Trust Fund allocation, and the Water Conservation Board added more than $20,000. Trout Unlimited West Denver is contributing funds and volunteer work.

Read more:

Clear Creek restoration project underway: http://yourhub.denverpost.com/golden/clear-creek-restoration-project-underway/flTVkh3U7FBtcYiSnEb2VK-story

TU Says the Colorado River is “Dying”

Erica Stock Angling Trade Magazine The Colorado River is Dying … and the fly fishing community must help save it. If this doesn’t upset you, I don’t know what would. As you may or may not be aware – at its headwaters in Grand County, over 50 percent of the Colorado River’s historic annual flows are removed and diverted across the Continental Divide to Front Range cities like Denver, Broomfield, Arvada, and Longmont through the Moffat Tunnel and Colorado Big Thompson Project (aka, the “CBT”). Once it reemerges through spigots and spouts, OVER HALF of that water is used outdoors to sustain lawns and thirsty landscaping.

Read the full article here: http://www.anglingtrade.com/2011/05/25/tu-says-the-colorado-river-is-%E2%80%9Cdying%E2%80%9D/