Colorado Native Americans’ ancestors given public lands for reburials

After years in limbo, hundreds of Native Americans’ remains will be going home. On Friday, state and federal officials joined tribal representatives at the State Capitol to sign a “Memorandum of Understanding” allowing for human remains housed in various museums and universities to be reinterred on public lands in Colorado…

Army abandons Pinon Canyon expansion plans

A long-festering conflict between southeast Colorado ranchers and the Pentagon slipped into a wary truce Monday, when a senior Army official announced a strategic retreat from plans to expand the 367-square-mile Pinon Canyon Maneuver Site. The move, coming after months of unofficial hints and assurances, illustrates the shifting priorities of…

Colorado water history to get its closeup in The Great Divide

In the devastating aftermath of our recent floods, it’s easy to forget that water has typically been a scarce resource in Colorado, battled over by competing interests, even as its rivers feed into eighteen states, from the Pacific Ocean to the Mississippi. But The Great Divide, a recently announced documentary…

Will Boulder embrace legal rights for plants and animals?

Boulder County is known for leading the state in matters of open space, animal rights, environmental protections and all-around tree-hugging. But next week may present the acid test for local officials’ greeniness. On September 18 the county planning commission will listen to a presentation from staff and ponder whether to…

Christo’s “Over The River” legal wrangle far from over

Contrary to what you read in the papers, the legal battle over the artist Christo’s controversial “Over the River” project — which involves suspending translucent, silvery fabric panels at intervals along a 42-mile stretch of the Arkansas River — isn’t about to go away any time soon. In fact, the…

Infographic: Why wildfires are getting worse in Colorado and beyond

Since the terribly destructive Black Forest and Royal Gorge blazes, which were brought under control last month, wildfires haven’t made nearly as many headlines in Colorado. But with a couple of substantial fires ongoing in Western Colorado and the summer heat at its most intense, the danger isn’t over –…

Lamar coal plant shut down by lawsuit — maybe forever?

In a stunning defeat for the beleaguered coal industry, a southeast Colorado utility group has agreed to shut down a troubled coal-fired power plant, as well as to pay $325,000 in legal fees to environmental groups who challenged the plant in court over emission violations. The settlement also calls for…

Wild horses: The bad science behind BLM’s management plan

A long-awaited report by the National Academy of Sciences on the federal government’s efforts to manage herds of wild horses across the West is finally out, and it confirms what mustang advocates have been saying for years: The Bureau of Land Management program is poorly managed, relies on an unsustainable…

Hentzell Park: Did Denver officials ignore law in land swap?

A lawsuit filed by a citizens’ group, seeking to put the brakes on a plan by Denver city officials to swap an open space area in the Cherry Creek corridor for an office building, contends that Mayor Michael Hancock’s administration has violated a provision of the city charter that prohibits…

Photos: Colorado River battle against a serious enemy — invasive tamarisk

The Colorado River is under attack…from millions of invasive tamarisk bushes. Wildlife and native greens have been choked out and recreational activities have dwindled as the banks of the river are barraged by the black-trunked salt cedars. But people aren’t letting these obtrusive bushes take over the river without a…