Hello again from our newsroom on the banks of the upper Roaring Fork River. We hope these warm, late-summer days have been treating you well as you enjoy clean air and abundant moisture (if you need to see the receipts on that, check out our regular Data Dashboard updates). We are excited this week to […]
Post Type Archives: Newsletters
The Roundup | Grizzly Reservoir to be drained next summer, Basalt wave adjustments this fall
Grizzly Reservoir to be drained next summer for rehab work Repairs planned for dam, tunnel, outlet works By Heather Sackett | August 14, 2022 During next year’s rehabilitation work most of the creeks — Lost Man, New York, Brooklyn and Tabor — will be allowed to flow downstream instead of being collected by a canal […]
The Runoff | In dog days of summer, streamflows diminish but demands don’t
Welcome back to The Runoff, our monthly newsletter featuring insight and news from our Water Desk you won’t read anywhere else, plus additional context and updates on our most recent reporting. Once again we are taking the place of the normal edition of The Roundup, which will return next week. Thanks for going deeper with […]
The Roundup | Now is the time to understand more so we may fear less
A wrap-up of our conversation with New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, Aspen Journalism, and ACES in Aspen, CO.
The Roundup | Opinions differ on timeline as Crystal River Wild & Scenic efforts move ahead
Crystal River Wild & Scenic designation efforts, Aspen and Roaring Fork Valley COVID-19 data, and Aspen airport precipitation compared to average.
The Roundup | Data mining reveals a drop in the bucket
Data mining reveals a drop in the bucket: what caused Lake Powell to shrink overnight, plus an innovative water savings strategy
The Roundup | Environmental groups try to stop that train
Utah oil railway has ignited Colorado concerns, plus updates to the state water plan and COVID-19 data.
The Roundup | A moment of reckoning for water in the West
Record-low water storage levels at lakes Mead and Powell after more than two decades of drought conditions are among the chief indicators that the basin is “facing the growing reality that water supplies for agriculture, fisheries, ecosystems, industry and cities are no longer stable due to climate change.”
The Roundup | Add invasive fish to problems associated with Lake Powell
As Powell drops, invasive fish will enter lower Colorado River Basin, threatening progress.
The Runoff | River District in D.C., streamflows stressed and a possible double peak
Insight and news from our Water Desk you won’t read anywhere else, plus additional context and updates on our most recent reporting.
