Briefs from the San Luis Valley

Brief by Marcia Darnell

San Luis Valley - May 2004 - Colorado Central Magazine - No. 123 - Page 5
Copyright © 2004 by Marcia Darnell and Central Colorado Publishing Co. All rights reserved.
Return to May 2004 table of contents.

Runoff

The Rio Grande basin will owe New Mexico 15% of its river flow this year, says Steve Vandiver. The division engineer for the Colorado Division of Water Resources says recent rains changed the forecast from 27% just a short time ago. The Rio Grande is expected to carry 550,000 acre feet this year. Diversions have already begun.

Meanwhile, Allen Davey, district engineer for the Rio Grande Water Conservation District, says it's not too late to save the Valley's unconfined aquifer. All it will take is irrigating 50,000 fewer acres for five years.

On another front, the state water engineer received notice that Gary Boyce, once a partner in Stockman's Water Company, intends to drill two monitoring wells on his property. By law, the wells can't produce, and can only be used for a year, but fears are that "Stockman's II" is in the works.

Antonito No-No

Two Antonito Town Board members face felony charges in the mishandling of town funds. Alice Gurule and Harold Abeyta, former mayor, are accused of taking illegal paychecks from the town between March 2002 and February 2003.

Election News

Town elections produced some surprises in the Valley. Creede and Del Norte elected new mayors, Eldon Seime and Glen Graham, respectively. Re-elected were mayors Myrrl Smith of Blanca, Rafael Gallegos of Antonito, Adeline Sanchez of Center, Kizzen Laki of Crestone and Alva Jack Smith of Hooper.

Village Voices

Wolf Creek Ski Area is holding public meetings on its proposed new village development. The idea of a 2,172-unit development made people question the economic, environmental, and social impact of a new development. Water concerns run high, as do worries about the impact on wildlife habitat. The U.S. Forest Service is involved as part of the development's environmental impact study.

La Sierra Continuum

Issues surrounding historic access to La Sierra, aka the Taylor Ranch, continue. Owner Lou Pai is seeking to restrict access to the 77,500-acre parcel. Seemingly endless lawsuits have resulted in access to local residents for grazing, timber and firewood. Pai's attorneys say they want to protect the resources of the land. Protesters staged a march and rally in response.

Brief Briefs


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