Money Doesn’t Grow on Trees For Customers at Dollar Tree

COLORADO SPRINGS — For the liberal elite, superfluous consumption isn’t fashionable anymore. If you have money, you aren’t supposed to buy more—you’re supposed to buy better. In an era when plastics threaten the environment, beverage drinkers are asked to find alternative straws. When the agricultural industry threatens global warming, wealthy millennials buy vegan products from…

The Dirty Secret of the Ski Industry

COLORADO SPRINGS–As the first snows of winter blanket Colorado and launch ski season, ski industry leaders are facing a difficult challenge: a finite number of years left for people to get out and ski powder. The industry draws 56.5 million people, who spend $8.4 billion a year, to ski resorts around the United States, according…

Can a Growing Recreation Industry Exist Alongside Conservation?

  CRESTONE– Colorado’s ceaseless efforts to get people outdoors and develop a recreation industry may be ruining ecosystems. In one high mountain valley, San Luis Valley Ecosystem Council (SLVEC) director, Christine Canaly, declares that enough is enough. If ecosystems collapse, Canaly argued in a recent interview, then both humans and other wildlife will be hurt.…

South Platte River from Natural to Cement

DENVER– The South Platte River is a critical resource in the Denver area over the past 50 years it has endured massive change development and abuse. But fishing groups, the Greenway Foundation and water users say they are committed to restoring natural processes. The Chatfield Reservoir built in response to a massive flood which deluged Denver in 1965, holds water that could be released to simulate fluctuating flows. What’s the incentive? Property values…

The Next Generation of Ranchers

SAN LOUIS VALLEY — Employees work from dawn to dusk at Medano Zapata Ranch. They’re clad in cowboy boots. Denim jeans. Patagonia jackets. They look like they should be at a bar in Denver. Instead, they’re young millennials going back to the land. “We’re training the next generation,” said Duke Phillips III, the ranch manager.…

Protecting America’s Jewels

GREAT SAND DUNES NATIONAL PARK – Sand rips over 300 feet tall dunes in the San Luis Valley. You look down and feel as if you’re in a desert on Mars. You look up and see jagged snowy peaks of the Sangre de Cristo Mountain Range. Protecting this unique ecosystem in a changing future is…

Will Tourists Know The Truth of Summitville?

SUMMITVILLE — On a cold, windy day in late October, snow blanketed the remains of an industrial gold mine above timberline in the Rocky Mountains. It fell on the jagged, step-like grooves of a reconstructed mountainside. It covered a small bump in the landscape—the only evidence of cyanide waste, now sheathed underground in plastic. It…

Superfund Sites See New Future

There are about 2,250 toxic mine sites in Colorado, according to Mark Rudolph, project manager at the Summitville Mine Superfund cleanup site. These toxic waste-emitting mines have degraded landscapes throughout the state, but the EPA’s Superfund program has proved effective in remediating these sites and giving them new futures. At Summitville, mine operators poured liquid…