The Denver Post

Growing need

Aurora and Colorado Springs take the first steps to build $500 million dam, reservoir near Holy Cross Wilderness

- By Bruce Finley

HOMESTAKE CREEK» A hundred miles from Colorado’s Front Range house-building boom, f ield scientist Delia Malone dug her f ingers into spongy high-mountain wetlands at the edge of the Holy Cross Wilderness.

She found, about 15 inches undergroun­d, partially decayed roots, twigs and the cold moisture of a fen. These structures form over thousands of years and store water that seeps down from melting snow.

Malone has been digging about 20 holes a day, surveying fens for the U.S. Forest Service, to better understand nature’s water-storage systems — which sustain vegetation and streamflow­s that 40 million people across the Colorado River Basin rely on in the face of increasing aridity.

Aurora and Colorado Springs are planning to flood these wetland fens and replace natural storage with a man-made system: a $500 million dam and a reservoir that may require changing wilderness boundaries.

The cities each own rights to 10,000 acre-feet a year of the water that flows out of the wilderness and would pump what the reservoir traps, minus evaporatio­n, through tunnels under mountains to other reservoirs and, finally, to pipes that deliver steady flows from urban faucets, toilets, showers and sprinkler systems.

“The natural processes that enable water storage are more efficient in a changing climate,” Malone said. “Think of our mountains as big towers of water. Why

“The Front Range municipali­ties need to realize that there’s no more reliable water supply available from the West Slope and Colorado River Basin.”

would you want to destroy that natural storage system?”

Three decades after the federal government killed the proposed $1 billion Two Forks Dam project along the South Platte River southwest of Denver, Front Range cities again are taking first steps toward moving more water across mountains. Their reservoir partially inside the Holy Cross Wilderness, between Leadville and Minturn, would sacrifice natural processes for the purpose of sustaining population growth and a developmen­t boom — harnessing nature to slake human thirsts.

City officials say continued urban growth depends on moving more water. But their first steps, starting with seismic investigat­ions this fall, have hit turbulence.

Fens play a key role ensuring that streams and rivers still flow after winter snow melts. And as climate warming leads to earlier melting and depletes surface water in the Colorado River, natural wetlands increasing­ly are seen as essential to help life hang on. The benefits stood out this summer as the West endured record heat, wildfires and drought.

Environmen­tal groups led by Colorado Headwaters, the Sierra Club, Save the Colorado and WildEarth Guardians strongly oppose the dam and reservoir.

Yet Front Range developers’ desire for more water is intensifyi­ng. Across the mountains at constructi­on sites on high dusty plains, roads and power lines have been installed, heavy dirt-movers beep and carpenters thwack atop roofs.

Local government­s have approved permits allowing housebuild­ing at a pace that in some areas is projected to nearly double water consumptio­n.

Colorado Springs officials issued 3,982 permits for new singlefami­ly homes last year, 18% higher than the average over the previous five years, according to data provided to The Denver Post. They estimated the current population around 476,000 will reach 723,000 “at build-out” by around 2070. This requires 136,000 acrefeet of water a year, city projection­s show, up from 70,766 acrefeet in 2019.

Aurora officials estimated their population of 380,000 will reach 573,986 by 2050. They’ve approved entire new communitie­s, such as the 620-acre Painted Prairie, with more than 3,100 housing units in the “aerotropol­is” that Denver leaders have promoted near Denver Internatio­nal Airport, and projected current water consumptio­n of 49,811 acre-feet a year will increase to 85,000 acrefeet and even as much as 130,158 acre-feet in a high-growth, rapid-warming scenario.

Delivering Colorado Springs’ share from the Holy Cross Wilderness “is absolutely important. What we’re looking for is a balanced portfolio of water supply options,” said Pat Wells, water manager for Colorado Springs Utilities, which diverts water from as far as 150 miles and relies on Colorado River Basin sources for 70% of city supplies.

Whether elected leaders should approve new developmen­t given water challenges “is a good question, something that water supply managers are always considerin­g,” Wells said. “Should we be factoring in water supply considerat­ions in land-use approvals?”

To make a new dam and reservoir more palatable, the cities are exploring unpreceden­ted “mitigation” of digging up and physically removing the undergroun­d fens, then hauling them and transplant­ing them elsewhere to restore damaged wetlands. An experiment on a ranch south of Leadville, officials said, is proving that this could help offset losses of Homestake Creek wetlands.

This would challenge a federal policy laid out in 1999 at Interior Department regional headquarte­rs in Denver that classifies fens as “irreplacea­ble.” The policy says “onsite or in-kind replacemen­t of peat wetlands is not thought possible” and that “concentrat­ed efforts will be made to encourage relocation of proposed reservoirs. … that might impact fens, when practicabl­e.”

Covered by grasses and shrubs, water-laden fens blanket the Homestake Valley — wetlands filled with porous peat soils that receive minerals and nutrients in groundwate­r. Moving such wetlands, if attempted, would require massive hauling of soil blocks combined with the delicate precision of an organ transplant to retain ecological functionin­g.

“We’re looking at what is possible,” said Aurora Water Manager Marshall Brown, who testified in Congress about the reservoir last year.

This push for more mountain water “is related to growth,” Brown said in an interview. “Colorado is dealing with a lot of people who want to move to Colorado. Most of the cities are growing, dealing with trends associated with growth. It’s a popular state, with popular cities. We’re all struggling with how we deal with the growth that is coming our way.

“Cities are going to have to look to develop additional water supplies. The water in Colorado is primarily on the Western Slope. … For eastern slope growth to be supported, some of the water has and will continue to need to come from where the water supplies originate on the Western Slope.”

Tapping wilderness water

When Congress in 1980 establishe­d the Holy Cross Wilderness, lawmakers included provisions allowing Colorado Springs, Aurora, the Climax Mine, Vail Resorts, Eagle Valley authoritie­s and others in western Colorado to tap a total of 30,000 acre-feet of water a year. A first dam on Homestake Creek, built in 1968, already had reduced flows and natural fluctuatio­ns.

Now U.S. Forest Service officials must decide whether to grant a special-use permit allowing Aurora and Colorado Springs to conduct geologic testing along Homestake Creek — a first step, without the participat­ion of Vail and Eagle Valley water suppliers. Forest managers decided against a full environmen­tal review for this proposed testing, saying bore holes drilled in forests qualify for a “categorica­l exemption” of the sort frequently granted for fossil fuel drilling and road work in forests.

American Rivers and Trout Unlimited raised concerns about the lack of scrutiny.

“The Front Range municipali­ties need to realize that there’s no more reliable water supply available from the West Slope and Colorado River Basin. And that was true before the impacts on water from climate change were really incorporat­ed in our thinking,” American Rivers’ Colorado projects director Ken Neubecker said. “A large new reservoir would be pretty devastatin­g.”

Colorado’s state-generated water plan lists dozens of potential new water supply projects, including this effort to tap Eagle River headwaters along Homestake Creek — for which collaborat­ive consultati­ons are encouraged.

Gov. Jared Polis recently said he opposes trans-basin diversions of water in general. But Polis has declined to take a position on this specific effort.

“Projects of this kind are complex, often take years to develop and require a thorough review and understand­ing of their impacts, so it is not something we can weigh in on at this juncture,” Polis press secretary Conor Cahill said.

But Sen. Kerry Donovan, D-Vail, who represents seven counties across western Colorado and leads the state lawmakers’ Agricultur­e and Natural Resources Committee, adamantly rejects the project, even feasibilit­y testing, she said in an interview at her cattle ranch. “I will fight this down to my last breath,” Donovan said.

Harnessing nature for growth

Colorado historical­ly has sacrificed nature to enable growth and developmen­t. The population has nearly doubled since 1980 to 5.8 million. Front Range cities and farmers annually siphon more than 500,000 acre-feet of water (1 acre-foot equals 325,851 gallons) from rivers in western Colorado, redirectin­g Pacific-bound flows eastward through tunnels under the Continenta­l Divide.

Over the past decade, the economy has shifted away from resources extraction toward hightech innovation and a booming recreation and tourism industry — built by touting pristine unaltered nature.

Dams and reservoirs, once routinely pursued to enable growth in the arid West (there are an estimated 37,000 dams west of the Mississipp­i River), increasing­ly aren’t built because of the destructio­n dams cause in wetlands and wildlife habitat.

Colorado’s last major water projects were done in the southweste­rn corner of the state. The McPhee dam and reservoir on the Dolores River was completed in 1985. The Animas-La Plata dam and reservoir, authorized by Congress in 1968, was completed in 2011.

Denver Water devoted 17 years to seeking permits before receiving final federal approval in July to enlarge the existing Gross Reservoir west of Boulder, by raising the dam 131 feet — a project that when completed would enable storage of more water diverted out of the Colorado River Basin.

When the Environmen­tal Protection Agency in 1990 killed Front Range cities’ proposed Two Forks Dam, officials cited “unacceptab­le environmen­tal damage.” That reservoir would have met urban water demands for decades, and city officials warned they’d be hard-pressed to sustain more people.

But Aurora adapted by building a $653 million water treatment plant that uses filters, chemicals and more than 9,000 ultraviole­t light bulbs to purify and recycle up to 50 million gallons a day. Local government­s between Denver and Castle Rock turned to the pumping of undergroun­d water from aquifers to sustain growth. Those aquifers no longer produce water as easily.

And conservati­on made huge gains, with urban water use decreasing from an average around 120 gallons per person a day to as low as 76 gallons in Colorado Springs, according to utility data. (Agricultur­e requires 85% of water supplies in Colorado and cities are looking at farms, too, as a source to enable more growth and developmen­t.)

Wildlife and wilderness

The Holy Cross Wilderness covers 122,797 acres around the 14,006-foot Mount of the Holy Cross, where snow in crevices forms a crucifix. Bears, deer, elk, lynx, beaver, ducks, fish and myriad other species — some rare and endangered — inhabit the area.

Although wetlands cover about 2% of the West, ecologists have determined that 80% of species require wetlands habitat. And these include species such as deer and elk that in parts of Colorado are declining.

Colorado Headwaters president Jerry Mallett, joining Malone along Homestake Creek recently, said building a dam and reservoir would be ruinous for fish and wildlife and would violate wilderness protection­s that many Americans hold sacred.

“This is a train wreck. Much of our country is shifting toward recycling and reusing water, because that’s cheaper, and we increasing­ly have water treatment facilities in place. And will Colorado Springs and Aurora outgrow this water in 25 or 30 years?

“They’re probably going to want to continue to grow. This project is not going to solve their problem,” Mallett said. “And now we’ve got the recreation industry. If the cities want to continue to build, great. But find another way to do it. They have to look at that. If you grow, you’ll get more concentrat­ions of traffic, poor air quality, crime. It’s up to them. But

they cannot take our resources, which we depend on. Look at our $60 billion recreation industry.”

A fundamenta­l battle over how tightly to harness nature has begun. Water providers argue that, with climate warming, increased “variabilit­y” and uncertaint­y requires constructi­on of more reservoirs to capture mountain snow runoff during wet years. It’s unclear how much more water urban residents will conserve in maintainin­g habitable cities.

Opposing all new dams and reservoirs, Save the Colorado director Gary Wockner counters that an ideology of “growth-ism” pervades government and is driving the destructio­n of nature.

Colorado Springs, Aurora and possible Western Slope partners pushing for a reservoir reflect the grip of growth-ism that is “eviscerati­ng the soul of the natural and cultural history of our state,” Wockner said.

Some environmen­tal groups are preparing for legal combat should the cities seek required state, county and federal permits. Others haven’t weighed in. Conservati­on Colorado leaders declined to comment on this water push.

Public concerns about wetlands

Transplant­ing fens as mitigation to try to restore wetlands elsewhere “for our convenienc­e” is impossible, WildEarth Guardians attorney Jen Pelz said. “Fens and other sensitive high-elevation wetlands are quite beautiful and mysterious, more art than science, not something we can re-engineer.”

Dams and diversions proposed in recent years around the West “are just as destructiv­e as those built a century ago, and building dams today is actually more irresponsi­ble because we know that dams disconnect aquatic and riparian habitat, cause species extinction, disrupt ecosystem function, dry rivers and harm native cultures and communitie­s,” she said. “We need to start removing dams, not building more.”

It falls to the U.S. Forest Service to determine whether a dam and reservoir project will advance.

A decision is expected before fall on whether Colorado Springs and Aurora can begin testing potential dam sites along Homestake Creek.

If the testing shows that building a dam and reservoir would be feasible, the cities then would prepare a formal proposal.

The size of the reservoir hasn’t been set. City officials said storage between 6,000 and 20,000 acre-feet could suffice for catching surplus flows — their water rights priority date is 1952, relatively junior in Colorado’s allocation system — which could be pumped through existing tunnels to larger reservoirs near Leadville and in South Park. (Aurora plans to construct a new reservoir to store 96,000 acre-feet of water southeast of Fairplay.)

Forest managers said they have received more than 700 comments from Colorado residents, many opposed to building a dam and reservoir.

“There are public concerns about these fens and wetlands,” said Marcia Gillies, deputy district ranger in the White River National Forest’s Eagle-Holy Cross Ranger District.

“They are spongy, grassy, swampy peat bogs, and when you step on them it is almost like stepping on a waterbed. It moves under your feet. They’re definitely unique. No doubt about that. And once they are destroyed, they cannot easily be restored because they take thousands of years to develop,” Gillies said.

But the decision to be made won’t address the issue of whether to build a dam and reservoir. It will focus only on the cities’ request to conduct geo-technical testing, frequently allowed in forests.

The cities have proposed to drill 10 bore holes, 150 feet deep. Their contractor­s would minimize impact by using rubbertrac­ked vehicles, she said.

And they would drill the holes away from fens just for the purpose of assessing the bedrock below.

 ?? Photos by Daniel Brenner, Special to The Denver Post ?? Field scientist Delia Malone and Colorado Headwaters president Jerry Mallett walk through wetlands at the edge of the Holy Cross Wilderness on Aug. 21. Aurora and Colorado Springs are planning to construct a dam and reservoir that would inundate these wetlands. Below: Malone stands by a beaver pond. She has been surveying the wetlands to increase understand­ing of natural water-storage systems, including “irreplacea­ble” fens.
Photos by Daniel Brenner, Special to The Denver Post Field scientist Delia Malone and Colorado Headwaters president Jerry Mallett walk through wetlands at the edge of the Holy Cross Wilderness on Aug. 21. Aurora and Colorado Springs are planning to construct a dam and reservoir that would inundate these wetlands. Below: Malone stands by a beaver pond. She has been surveying the wetlands to increase understand­ing of natural water-storage systems, including “irreplacea­ble” fens.
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 ?? Daniel Brenner, Special to The Denver Post ?? Colorado Headwaters president Jerry Mallett visits a site proposed by Aurora and Colorado Springs for a new dam and reservoir on Aug. 21 in the Homestake Valley between Leadville and Minturn.
Daniel Brenner, Special to The Denver Post Colorado Headwaters president Jerry Mallett visits a site proposed by Aurora and Colorado Springs for a new dam and reservoir on Aug. 21 in the Homestake Valley between Leadville and Minturn.
 ?? Rachel Ellis, The Denver Post ?? Workers build homes at the Painted Prairie developmen­t in Aurora last month. Government­s along the Front Range have approved permits allowing constructi­on of thousands of homes, forcing new efforts to move water across the mountains to satisfy growing demand.
Rachel Ellis, The Denver Post Workers build homes at the Painted Prairie developmen­t in Aurora last month. Government­s along the Front Range have approved permits allowing constructi­on of thousands of homes, forcing new efforts to move water across the mountains to satisfy growing demand.
 ?? Daniel Brenner, Special to The Denver Post ?? A beaver pond sits on a site proposed by Aurora and Colorado Springs for a new dam and reservoir on Aug. 21 in the Homestake Valley between Leadville and Minturn.
Daniel Brenner, Special to The Denver Post A beaver pond sits on a site proposed by Aurora and Colorado Springs for a new dam and reservoir on Aug. 21 in the Homestake Valley between Leadville and Minturn.
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