Decibel meters measure sound pressure levels. A decibel meter doesn’t care of the sound pressure is coming from a lawnmower, or an electric guitar, or a coffee grinder, or a crying baby…
EDITORIAL: Government v. Noise, Part Two
Pagosa rock bands have entertained people in Town Park, at the Pagosa Springs Center for the Arts, on Lewis Street under a tent, at the County Fair, on the putting green at the Pagosa Golf Club, and on the football field at Pagosa Springs High School…
EDITORIAL: Government v. Noise, Part One
We can certainly understand the good intentions behind the Noise Control Act of 1972. Recent advancements in transportation technology had come with a high price, when measured in ‘decibels…’
EDITORIAL: Pagosa Springs, the Blighted Community, Part Six
The fact that other cities and towns may have abused the Urban Renewal Law doesn’t mean that the Town of Pagosa Springs ought to do the same thing…
EDITORIAL: Pagosa Springs, the Blighted Community, Part Five
“With all this going on, I haven’t heard anything about the commitment that the Town would make, or the County, to improve the downtown. I look up and down the [main commercial block] and what do I see?…”
EDITORIAL: Pagosa Springs, the Blighted Community, Part Four
The Town entered into an ‘economic incentive’ package with Colorado-based Hometown Markets, with a promise of tax subsidies and fee waivers valued at about $500,000…
EDITORIAL: Pagosa Springs, the Blighted Community, Part Three
Based on what I remember seeing that evening, I walked out onto the vacant 27-acre parcel that attorney Benedetti was promoting as the site for a possible ‘Urban Renewal Authority’ treatment, and snapped a photo…
EDITORIAL: Pagosa Springs, the Blighted Community, Part Two
“I’m actually representing a private client here. David Dronet is interested in using ‘Urban Renewal’ as a device for financing infrastructure for his proposed expansion…”
EDITORIAL: Pagosa Springs, the Blighted Community, Part One
“The general assembly finds and declares that there exist in municipalities of this state slum and blighted areas which constitute a serious and growing menace, injurious to the public health, safety, morals, and welfare…”
OPINION: How About a Peace Race Instead of an Arms Race?
During the late 1950s, the spiraling nuclear arms race, poverty in economically underdeveloped nations, and underfunded public services in the United States inspired considerable thought among socially-conscious Americans…
EDITORIAL: Declining Ovulation Rates in Certain Populations, Part Four
Over the short haul, however, it suggests a ‘graying’ of the planet, where a larger and larger proportion of the planet’s population is past childbearing age…
EDITORIAL: Town Council Votes to Eliminate ‘Impact Fees’
Will the Town really miss impact fees of $50,000 per year, considering its overall budget has increased by $5.7 million since 2005?
EDITORIAL: Declining Ovulation Rates in Certain Populations, Part Three
The birthrate for women in their 20s has tended to drop year after year… According to the report, the birthrate among women in their early 20s has dropped an average of 4 percent each year since 2007…
EDITORIAL: Declining Ovulation Rates in Certain Populations, Part Two
The way I understood home ownership, the way I was taught — by my parents’ actions and conversations — was that a house was meant to be a home, and you maintained it and cared for it…
EDITORIAL: Declining Ovulation Rates in Certain Populations, Part One
“Successful breeding depends largely upon the doe’s health during the rut. The ovulation rate is strongly affected by the doe’s level of nutrition…”
EDITORIAL: A Rough Ride to a Rafting Take-out, Part Three
Stella Liebeck ordered coffee at a McDonald’s drive-through and promptly spilled it on her lap. Because of the absorbent sweat pants she wore, she suffered severe burns…
EDITORIAL: A Rough Ride to a Rafting Take-out, Part Two
“If we want to own [the one-acre parcel] we could license. With the boating companies, and with the private boat owners. Make them sign a license. That way they would have to indemnify the County…”
EDITORIAL: A Rough Ride to a Rafting Take-out, Part One
“Right now, you have a County road there, and it’s private property on both sides of the road. What’s your concern about taking ownership? I guess that’s my question. I mean, what is your concern?”