Wednesday, April 28, 2010

From 'The Westerner'

Friday, April 23, 2010

Expansion foes question Coffman offer on Pinon Canyon

Opponents of an Army proposal to expand its Southeastern Colorado training base Wednesday rejected a congressman’s attempt to ban the Army’s use of eminent domain to secure additional land. "Mr. Coffman has been attempting to open a door for expansion all along. It looks to us that this bill is not something we need. We've already got eminent domain off the table," said Lon Robertson, a Kim rancher and president of the Pinon Canyon Expansion Opposition Coalition. Robertson said Coffman's bill asks that funding be allowed and if that happens it opens the door to expansion. "The best way to keep eminent domain away is to keep the funding away from the expansion. The funding ban that is in place already takes any threat of condemnation off the table, so this is a redundant bill that Mr. Coffman is offering," Robertson said. The rancher said Coffman’s motives were puzzling. "I guess we are scratching our heads more than anything right now. We are wondering why he is offering something that is already there and why is he trying to open the door to something that is not necessary." more

Monday, April 19, 2010

Land and Water-The Foundation

The economy of Southeastern Colorado has always been land and water based.  While peaks in the energy cycle have driven times of great prosperity in Walsenburg and Trinidad with coal at the turn of the century and gas more recently, agriculture has always provided the sustainable economic baseline. Both economic drivers require land.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Headlines confusion..... different Walker - nothing to do with Pinon Canyon Maneuver Site expansion

While there is a 'Walker' that owns a large part of the PCMS desired expansion area the 'Walker' in the news yesterday is a totally unrelated 'Walker' and has NOTHING TO DO WITH THE EXPANSION OF PCMS.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Leave the Black Cloud around long enough....

The following quote was taken from the article linked/described below:
"Today, Prospect Heights finally shows what the state and city governments want everyone to see: decay. The decay, though, isn’t the work of callous markets that left the neighborhood to perish. It’s the work of a developer wielding state power to press property owners to sell their land “voluntarily.” It’s also the result of a half-decade’s worth of government-created uncertainty, which stopped genuine private investment in its tracks.”
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