Announcements Late February

Colorado WaterWise welcomes you to submit a session abstract for the 2024 Annual Water Conservation Symposium. Submissions are due by March 1, 2024. The committee will review submissions and notify individuals in April. If you have questions, please email admin@coloradowaterwise.org.

The WEco Water Fluency Program is a professional development course designed for anyone interested in gaining an in-depth understanding of Colorado water management and protection. This includes non-water professionals in leadership roles intersecting with water, as well as water professionals who are newer to the field or the state of Colorado or who want to gain a broader view of the issues beyond their unique niche. Past participants have included elected officials, city/county staff, community and business leaders, special districts staff, board members for water organizations, educators, and more. Registration for the 2024 program is now open! Click here to view the 2024 Program Page and register/apply for a scholarship! 

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS: RIVER RESTORATION: The Rio Grande Headwaters Restoration Project is requesting proposals from qualified engineering firms with expertise and experience in the design of river restoration and agricultural diversion infrastructure, to complete 60% project designs and permitting documents for the Teacup River Restoration and Ag Improvement Project- River Restoration; DOWN DITCH INFRASTRUCTURE: RGHRP is requesting proposals from qualified engineering firms with expertise and experience in the design of agricultural ditch and water conveyance infrastructure upgrades in wetland and riparian systems, to complete 60% project designs and permitting documents for the Teacup River Restoration and Ag Improvement Project- Down Ditch Infrastructure. Full RFPs for both projects can be found on the RGHRP homepage.

Colorado Sierra Club has endorsed the CATs (Cats aren’t Trophies ) ballot initiative to ban the trophy hunting and trapping of wild cats. But we must secure 124,238 in-person, verified signatures and to do this, we rely on volunteers who are willing to help collect signatures. The CATs initiative is founded in ethics and science  which unequivocally documents that there is no proven need to trophy hunt or trap wild cats, and zero science to support it. Coloradans have tried many times over to reason with policymakers but to no avail. A ballot measure that honors science and respects the opinion of the vast majority of Coloradans who oppose trophy hunting and fur trapping is our only option to conserving these vital native carnivores. Learn more here.