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1 <br />2 <br />3 <br />4 <br />5 <br />6 <br />7 <br />8 <br />9 <br />10 <br />11 <br />12 <br />13 <br />14 <br />15 <br />16 <br />17 <br />18 <br />19 <br />20 <br />21 <br />22 <br />23 <br />24 <br />25 <br />16 <br />particularly like a remark having to do with the construction of <br />the weirs on Muddy Creek that we visited here a year and a half <br />I ago. <br />-MR. TODD: They are virtually complete.. Bob can <br />probably address this. I think he's been down here since I have <br />and Jack Viner. They are virtually complete. The main thing <br />we're waiting on now is telephone lines to the recorders, but <br />most of them are in place and pretty well ready to go based on <br />the recording device, the telephone lines for the recording <br />device. Bob may have some additional comments on that. But <br />our Commission has passed, approved, the contract and, you know, <br />contingent now on what Fort Lyon decides at its meeting next <br />year. <br />MR. COOLEY: Anything you can do to assure <br />there's two or three feet of precipitation in Muddy Creek would <br />be appreciated as well. <br />MR. TODD: I'll go for that. <br />MR. COOLEY: Bob Jesse, your name has come up <br />in the discussion here, somehow it seems to. I'd like to hear <br />from you on that, on the weirs. <br />MR. JESSE: Well, I've been down to the stations <br />themselves. They do exist. One of my men went down and he had <br />a recorder installed. I brought along the decree, thought <br />maybe you might want to discuss it. And I prepared some number <br />to go through about what would happen if we did get a flood, <br />