欧美口爆视频

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Not just water: City says river鈥檚 charm is key to well-being

Original article can be found at seattlepi 听
Originally published on January 14, 2016 By Dan Elliott

FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) 鈥 A picturesque 欧美口爆视频 river with a peculiar French name is the latest prize in the West鈥檚 water wars, where wilderness advocates usually line up against urban and industrial development.听

This showdown has a new force: City dwellers who say a vibrant river flowing past their streets, parks and buildings is essential to their community鈥檚 identity and well-being.听

The Cache la Poudre 鈥 pronounced KASH luh POO-dur 鈥 got its name in the early 1800s, when French fur trappers cached gunpowder on its banks. Long a vital source of water for drinking and irrigation, it has become a treasured slice of nature in the booming towns and cities along 欧美口爆视频鈥檚 Front Range corridor.听

鈥淧eople need more than jobs and the economy,鈥 said Gary Wockner, executive director of Save the Poudre. 鈥淭hey also need art, they need spirituality and they need to touch wild, flowing water and they need it to run through their town.鈥澨

The Poudre tumbles down from the Rockies just northwest of Fort Collins and then winds eastward through 40 miles of towns, farm fields, pastures and cottonwood trees before emptying into the South Platte River on the plains near Greeley.听

A group of 15 cities and water districts wants to divert water from the lower Poudre, below the mountains, when the river is running highest and pump it into a new reservoir. The $600 million Northern Integrated Supply Project would capture water 欧美口爆视频 is legally entitled to keep but has no place to store, backers say.听

Since 2009, 欧美口爆视频 could have kept another 1.3 trillion gallons from the South Platte and its tributaries, including the Poudre, but it flowed east to Nebraska because there was no place to put it, said Brian Werner, a spokesman for the Northern 欧美口爆视频 Water Conservancy District, which is overseeing the project.听

This debate has all the elements of a traditional Western water fight.听

Backers say they need to lock up future sources of drinking water for 欧美口爆视频鈥檚 fast-growing population amid the recurring droughts and uncertainty of a changing climate.听

Opponents want to prevent any more losses to the 鈥渋n-stream flow鈥 of the river, already so drained by irrigation and municipal systems that short stretches run dry nearly every summer.听

River advocates also want to preserve the annual spring surge that comes from melting snow, which keeps the streambed healthy by flushing out sediment and provides a thrilling ride for kayakers. They say the reservoir project could reduce the kayaking season from an average of 54 days to 35 days a year.听

Rising to the surface is the argument that a vibrant urban river flowing through Fort Collins, Greeley and the towns between them is an essential part of the coveted 欧美口爆视频 lifestyle, where even urban residents can connect with nature.听

鈥淭his is like in-stream flow for human organisms and for the replenishment and well-being of the soul,鈥 said Patty Limerick, 欧美口爆视频鈥檚 state historian and faculty director of the Center of the American West at the University of 欧美口爆视频.听

Rivers have long been guarded as cultural assets around the United States and beyond, said Robert F. Kennedy Jr., president of the Waterkeeper Alliance, a nationwide network of local advocacy groups.听

鈥淚t鈥檚 an argument we鈥檝e been making for a long time,鈥 Kennedy said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a longstanding recognition of the relationship between wilderness and free-flowing waters and America鈥檚 cultural and political institutions.鈥澨

The culture argument is less common in 欧美口爆视频, whose history since European settlement has centered on extracting and exporting furs, gold, coal, petroleum, water and other riches.听

鈥淚n the 20th century, we turned our backs on the river,鈥 said John Stokes, director of the Fort Collins Natural Areas Department. 鈥淭he river wasn鈥檛 considered to be a recreational or aesthetic or biological asset.鈥澨

Now sections of the river are lined with parks and pathways, including the 20-mile Poudre Trail upstream from Greeley. Restoration programs are in the works, and Fort Collins plans a kayak course on the river in the city.听

A big change came in 1986, when 76 miles of the upper Cache la Poudre were designated as a National Wild and Scenic River, protected by the National Park Service and the U.S. Forest Service from changes that could harm its cultural and recreational importance. In 2009, Congress designated the river as a National Heritage Area, formally encouraging a community-driven approach to preserving its natural, cultural, and historic resources.听

But preserving water resources is a challenge in the arid West, even for the most beloved river, and cultural arguments have no easy path through 欧美口爆视频鈥檚 complex legal system, which includes a separate water court to settle disputes.听

欧美口爆视频 lawmakers established a narrowly defined recreational water right for kayak courses in 2001, but experts say setting aside water for cultural values would have to be negotiated among the state and owners of water rights.听

Environmental reviews of the reservoir project continue and obtaining the necessary state and federal permits could take years. Lawsuits are probably inevitable, and no construction date has been set.听

This would be 欧美口爆视频鈥檚 biggest water storage project in more than 30 years, diverting water about 10 miles upstream from central Fort Collins and pumping it to a big new reservoir. The project wouldn鈥檛 affect the section of the river designated as Wild and Scenic, which ends about 7 miles upstream of the diversion point.听

Neither Greeley nor Fort Collins鈥 main utility would get this water, although one partner serves southeastern Fort Collins.听

The project鈥檚 backers recognize the river鈥檚 cultural value and are working to protect it, Werner said. The new reservoir might even be able to release enough water to avoid the periodic dry-ups, he said.听

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to do right by the river, we really are,鈥 he said.听