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![]() tim chandler wrote: I used to live in Monument, CO, less than 100 yards from Monument Creek, one of the areas in which this mouse lives. Development is a fact of life along the Front Range - but waterways are protected from development and monitored for quality at least as much as anywhere else, given the scarcity of water and the popularity everywhere in Colorado of "greenways" and parks. Not at all, I grew up in Jefferson County in the 50's and 60's! All the streams and wetlands near where I grew up are gone or destoryed! The place that use to have ground nesting birds and great fields full of wildlife plus a good stream are all gone! They even built a concrete ditch for the stream and built right over it! You go to Jefferson County and El Paso County you will see streams that have rip rock along the sides! The stream bed is just a concrete brainage dith = no more craw Daddin; there! It keeps the water moving fast and ensures that downstream communities get a lot of water real fast! You go to Douglas County and they have built massively near streams! Douglas county has restored some areas and they look grat; but with the mouse not a mouse of concern anymore, all that will go away! And the riparian water ways are a major source of critical habitat and migration route for wildlife! I think they will soon like like the drainage ditches Denver calls Cherry Creek and the South Platte when they flow through Denver! IMO there is no danger of eliminating this mouse, certainly not in the Monument area - they'd have to pave over the whole place to do that, seen it done and the rip rock method will eliminate wildlife near any drainage ditch bank! and although there's too much development there now for my taste, there are still many, many homes on one acre or more that are not going to disappear. And regulations and community standards and desires still operate democratically at least in most places, so that truly outrageous development programs tend to get nipped, if not always in the bud. Compared to places back East, it's still wide open out there with usually too much and too dense vegetation that presents a fire hazard every year. Ohh sound like you are trying to draw in the property rights fanatics - I imagine Douglas Bruce will be on that issues some day! There has to be a balance. But for too many years the enviro "Chicken Littles" have been getting away with murder in stopping development because it doesn't fit their "I've got mine, close the gates NOW" I live in Denver Central = as such I don't have mine! You look at someone building out in the boonies and they are most liekly to be to the right and just want theirs! attitude and in using court decrees to thwart laws and stop things they don't like, If you read the link I provided, the Preble's meadown jumping mouse has not stopped on development! circumventing the will of the people. The mice are important but development can and should be sanely balanced - not insanely in favor of the enviros as previously. Like the ever-popular bumper sticker says, "Don't Californicate Colorado!" Tim C. Been to you area BUB - see development directly only to development - and not the flood gates will open! Wow = Don't Californicate Colorado!" = uyou think there is some reason the people from Calif are moving out!! Yep development! You take such as the Mall in Englewood - Cindereally city was it not! They developed it to the point that traffic and congestion devalued the area and people moved out! You cant stop Californicate Colorado!" wrote in message ups.com... Derek Broughton wrote: Benign Vanilla wrote: Some of you may remember my wife's attempt at convincing me I was losing my mind, when I found a jumping kangaroo like mouse in the house a few months back. I may be insane, but Yahoo! is apparently in on it... Jumping Mouse Loses Federal Protection WASHINGTON - The Preble's meadow jumping mouse, once seen as a costly impediment to development, is now viewed by the government as a critter that never really existed - and is no longer in need of federal protection under the Endangered Species Act. Sorry, but the point of that whole piece is that it never _did_ exist (though, to be fair, the Preble's jumping mouse doesn't exist only because it's actually just a different kind of jumping mouse :-) ) -- derek You want a good article on the mouse situation: http://www.csindy.com/csindy/2004-04-08/cover.html |
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