Colorado Politics

EDITORIAL: Don’t drag feet on Pikes Peak environmental study

Work was supposed to begin this summer on a beautiful new structure to replace the Summit House atop Pikes Peak. It would have been a great complement to Friday’s ceremonial groundbreaking on the country’s Olympic Museum in downtown Colorado Springs.

Alas, Summit House advocates have resorted to hoping for a groundbreaking next summer.

If things don’t go well, next year could be an optimistic hope. The project needs more donations, but regulations present the bigger obstacle. Community leaders should urge regulators to rush.

Before work may commence, the plan must go through an extensive environmental assessment by the U.S. Forest Service. Under the best-case scenario, this fall the service will find the project poses “no significant impact” and enable groundbreaking next summer.

This need not become an ordeal.

Read more at The Colorado Springs Gazette.

Tags

PREV

PREVIOUS

Insights: Construction defects reforms cost lawyers, but they might not save much for home buyers

After years of Colorado legislative fights over how to save time and money on litigation, two significant but insufficient things happened over the last three weeks that help nail down the issue of construction defects. If changing the rules of the courts to address defendants’ liability sounds like the bygone battles of tort reform, then you’re onto something. Tort […]

NEXT

NEXT UP

EDITORIAL: The CIRCLE program

The state has a lot of explaining to do. This past week, The Chieftain reported that the Colorado Mental Health Institute at Pueblo was closing – at least temporarily – its high-powered CIRCLE program, which treats patients who are both mentally ill and have addiction problems. Two Pueblo Democratic state legislators – Rep. Daneya Esgar […]


Welcome Back.

Streak: 9 days i

Stories you've missed since your last login:

Stories you've saved for later:

Recommended stories based on your interests:

Edit my interests