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Recreational Use Becomes Water Fight of New West
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Recreational Use Becomes Water Fight of New West
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6/25/2010 11:50:15 AM
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6/17/2010 1:50:20 PM
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State
CO
Basin
Gunnison
Water Division
4
Date
1/1/3000
Author
Jason Blevins, Denver Post
Title
Recreational Use Becomes Water Fight of New West
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
News Article/Press Release
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Recreational becomes <br />water of <br />By Jason Blevins <br />Denver Post Staff Writer <br />Glenwood Springs — Gary <br />Lacy, Colorado's pre- eminent <br />whitewater play -park designer, <br />remembers standing in front of <br />the Golden City Council in 1996, <br />trying to persuade the reluctant <br />officials to pony up $170,000 for <br />a kayak park on Clear Creek <br />"I told them I thought it would <br />be a nice little amenity for a little <br />community," he said. <br />Lacy, whose Boulder -based <br />Recreation Engineering and <br />Planning firm has designed <br />more parks in the U.S. than any <br />other firm, was wrong about the <br />"little" role he envisioned. <br />Kayak play -parks — stretches <br />of foaming whitewater that en- <br />thrall both boaters and specta- <br />tors — have become the cher- <br />ished attractions in more than a <br />dozen Colorado towns. Two pro- <br />fessional paddlers in Buena Vis- <br />to are building an entire commu- <br />nity around a planned play -park <br />But the jumbles of boulders in <br />rural waterways are now more <br />than the proverbial golden -egg <br />for communities fighting for a <br />sliver of Colorado's $8.5 billion <br />tourism economy. They embody <br />a New West vs. Old West fight <br />over water and how evolving <br />economies and communities <br />grow. <br />Buoyed by studies showing an- <br />nual economic impacts of at <br />least $1 million from parks in <br />Golden, Vail, Salida and Steam- <br />boat Springs, more and more ru- <br />ral municipalities are getting in <br />line for recreational water <br />rights. <br />The water - for -fun push pits <br />places such as Gunnison, Chaf- <br />fee County, Silverthorne and <br />Steamboat against traditional <br />water users such as ranchers, <br />farmers and thirsty, growing ur- <br />ban communities. <br />And the winners in the increas- <br />ingly volatile fight are lawyers. <br />Gunnison, for example, has <br />spent $5oo,000 in its legal fight <br />against the Colorado Water Con- <br />servation Board over how much, <br />or little, water it's entitled to use <br />for its $300,000 park, which this <br />summer drew 2,000 visitors for <br />a one - weekend festival. Nearly <br />$1 million into the play -park are_ <br />Paddle battle <br />Since the first modern whitewater course was installed in Boulder Creek <br />in the early 1990s, kayak parks have'provided an important boost to mountain <br />economies. An increasing number of towns are looking to obtain water <br />rights to keep water flowing. <br />A Existing A Whitewater parks proposed <br />whitewater parks or under construction <br />na, Gunnison. remains in the <br />same place it was when it began <br />the legal skirmish several years <br />ago. <br />"When a small community <br />like Salida or Buena Vista or <br />Gunnison spends $5oo,000 to <br />fight the state and gets nothing <br />out of it, something is broken," <br />said state Rep. Kathleen Curry, a <br />Democrat from Gunnison who <br />once headed the Upper Gunni- <br />son River Water Conservancy <br />District. "I need you to think <br />about how you can start work- <br />ing with traditional water watch- <br />ers who say water should go to <br />the Front Range to feed growth <br />and go to farms," she said. <br />Curry was a guest speaker last <br />week at a first -ever whitewater- <br />park symposium in Glenwood <br />Springs. The Whitewater Cours- <br />es and Parks conference drew <br />more than loo play -park plan- <br />ners, designers and community <br />leaders from across the country. <br />A' mid the massive plans like <br />that of a $25 million hydraulic - <br />pumped "superpark" in Char- <br />lotte, N.C., and modest retrofits. <br />of existing parks, one message <br />rang clear. <br />"These are not just for kayak - <br />ers anymore. Kayakers get' you <br />to build them, but 99 percent of <br />the people who benefit from <br />them never get wet," said Scott <br />Shipley, a 'park engineer with <br />Lacy's firm and a three -time <br />Olympic paddler. <br />In much the same way, White- <br />water parks have become the <br />hope of the paddling industry. <br />"These are the future of White- <br />water," said Rick McLaughlin, <br />whose Denver -based whitewa- <br />ter design group built Conflu- <br />ence Park on the South Platte <br />River. "We can accomplish <br />many objectives with these <br />parks." <br />Staff writer Jason Blevins can be <br />reached gtt,303 -820 -1374 or <br />jblevins@denverpost.com. <br />denverpost.com. <br />Thomas McKay I The Denver Post <br />
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