The Lost Creek Guide February 16, 2022

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Volume 15 • Edition 4

February 16, 2022

Delivering to over 17,000 homes & businesses in rural Adams, Morgan, and Weld Counties

“Truth will ultimately prevail where there is pains taken to bring it to light” George Washington “If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of every American to be informed” Thomas Jefferson

Benchmarks of COVID Steadily Improving in Colorado, Though Still High By John Daley, Colorado Public Radio

Hart Van Denburg/CPR News Brynn McFerrin, 5, gets her first COVID-19 vaccination Tuesday, November 9, 2021, at National Jewish Hospital in Denver.

With hospitalizations and test positivity rates on a steady decline, pandemic numbers are looking better every day in Colorado. Confirmed COVID-19 hospitalizations fell to 979 on Monday. It’s the first time the number has been below a thousand since late last year and is back to about where it was in mid-October. The majority, 64 percent, of hospitalized COVID-19 patients are unvaccinated. The positivity rate, the rate of positive tests, a key gauge of transmission, dropped to 12.22 percent. That’s still more than double the level public health experts such as University of Colorado epidemiologist May Chu says signals concern. Omicron COVID cases are falling in Colorado. What that means for hospitals, masking and life “I would say between 3 and 5 percent. I usually say 3 percent, I think it’s better. Five percent or lower is manageable for hospitals,” said Chu, a clinical professor at Colorado School of Public Health. She said Coloradans can drive the number down by getting vaccinated and continuing to adhere to measures like masking, distancing and avoiding crowded indoor spaces. “We’re not done yet,” Chu said. Benchmarks of COVID Steadily Improving in Colorado, Though Still High Continued on page 14...

Invitation to Work Session on Town of Keenesburg 2022 Budget “The Mayor & the Trustees have scheduled an informal public meeting to review the 2022 Town of Keenesburg budget and the associated funds, the purpose of those funds; planned improvements, the funding source for those improvements; to answer questions related to the budget; staff compensation; water & sewer rate increases; as well as any other questions. This meeting is scheduled for Monday, February 28th, 2022, at 6:00pm. There has been great public participation at the board meetings and this participation is very welcomed and appreciated. The board felt that an informal public meeting would offer the best opportunity for residents to have a conversation with the Mayor and the Board members. If you have specific questions, we ask that you submit those questions in advance to the Town Clerk, Christina Fernandez at tokclerk@rtebb.net . This will help the board be prepared and have the information at hand. Thank you in advance for this consideration.” Quoted from Keenesburg February Newsletter. The meeting, we believe, will be held at the old town hall located at 140 S. Main Street. This informational sharing is provided as a community service by the Lost Creek Guide. There have been some fundamental questions raised about the budgeting decision process. The Mayor and the Trustees did not have to hold another public work session on the budget as all the appropriate budget review meeting were posted with appropriate notice with little public attendance. So, we must thank the Mayor and The Trustees for providing this opportunity. If you are interested in how your tax dollars are collected and how they were allocated in the Town of Keenesburg we strongly suggest that you attend this meeting. It is your money. If you show no interest what message does that send?

As Colorado Warms, Dry Soil Sucks Up More Water. That’s Bad News for Rivers and Farmers.

Increasingly dry soils could spell big trouble for reservoirs, agriculture, forest health and pose greater risk of wildfire. by David Gilbert, The Colorado Sun The soil is changing. Increasingly dry soils could spell big trouble for reservoirs, agriculture, forest health and pose greater risk of wildfire. John Stulp was born on the Eastern Plains. Fifty years ago he began farming with his father-in-law near Lamar. Together he and his wife, Jane, brought up five children in southeastern Colorado, raising cattle and dryland wheat. Along the way Stulp was elected as a Prowers County commissioner, and later served as Gov. Bill Ritter’s commissioner of agriculture and Gov. John Hickenlooper’s water policy adviser. When his service to the state was done in 2019, he headed back home to the prairie. But the prairie is changing. Winter wheat crops are becoming more unpredictable as hot, dry weather lasts longer. Where it once took 30 acres of pasture to support a cow and calf, it now takes 40 or more. As farming the prairie becomes a more marginal enterprise, ranchers are selling off cattle, farms are consolidating and families are leaving. Year after year, the area sets records: Driest summers. Driest winters. The last six months of 2021 were the hottest in Colorado’s recorded history, beating records set nearly a century ago in the Dust Bowl. “We’re in trouble,” said Stulp, 73. Wheat planted in the fall in anticipation of being watered by winter snow is performing poorly, he said. “The topsoil is so dried out, when we do get moisture, it doesn’t go very far. The wind sucks up the rest. It’s climate change, no question about it. If we get 3-4 degrees warmer like they say we might, it’ll look more like Albuquerque around here, and they don’t do a lot of farming around Albuquerque.” Meanwhile, in Colorado’s high country, scientists monitoring snowpack in the mountains are noticing a strange phenomenon: even in strong snowpack years, it’s translating into less spring runoff into rivers and streams, as soils left parched by long stretches of hot weather drink first before any water runs on. With Colorado facing a warmer future, scientists are looking at how increasingly dry soils could spell big trouble for reservoirs, agriculture, forest health and pose greater risk of wildfire. Underperforming snowpack “Even if precipitation doesn’t decline, a warmer future is a drier future,” said Peter Goble, a climatologist at Colorado State University’s Climate Center who studies soil moisture. “In a warmer world, the water we have gets used more quickly.” The idea that dry soils soak up more snowpack isn’t new, Goble said, but the data is still emerging, and long-term trends are tough to suss out. Some soil moisture modeling data goes back to the 1970s in Colorado, but most consistent observations go back only to the 1990s. Scientists are still in the process of distributing networks of soil moisture monitors statewide. As Colorado Warms, Dry Soil Sucks Up More Water. That’s Bad News for Rivers and Farmers. Continued on page 7...

WHAT’S IN THIS ISSUE

Page 2: Way of the World

Page 3: Cindy Baumgartner Comments to Keenesburg Trustees Page 6: Arizona Attorney General on Border Crisis Page 6: Colorado Livestock Association New CEO Page 9: Conservation Easement Update Page 12: Time to Balance the Federal Budget – Again by Newt Gingrich Page 16: Prairie Takes Pair from Weldon Valley Page 16: Colorado Gets Federal Money to Clean Up Abandoned Wells


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