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<br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />i. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br /> <br />STUDY AREA DESCRIPTION <br /> <br />Community Description <br />The Town of Hot Sulphur Springs. Grand County, is located in west central Colorado and the <br />corporate limits have an area of 430 acres. Grand County is bordered by Jackson County on the <br />north, Routt County on the west, Eagle and Summit Counties on the south, Clear Creek County <br />on the southeast, Gilpin and Boulder Counties on the East, and Larimer County on the northeast. <br />The elevation of the town is approximately 7,700 feet. The Colorado Division of Local <br />Government Demography Section estimated the population of the Town of Hot Sulphur Springs <br />as 600 while the population of Grand County is approximately 12,442. The Town is situated 10 <br />miles west of the Town of Granby and 12 miles southeast of the Lake Granby. <br /> <br />Watershed Description <br />The Colorado River flows through the town from the northeast to southwest. At this point, the <br />Colorado River channel is relatively wide and flat, with a channel width of approximately 100 <br />feet and a slope of approximately 15 feet per mile. The floodplain width as shown on the FHBM <br />ranges from 500 to 700 feet. It is covered with thick brush and cottonwood trees for most of the <br />study area, with scattered brush and grass in the upper reaches. The floodplain is bounded on the <br />northwest by the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad. There are relatively few structures <br />located within the floodplain with much of the floodplain located within Pioneer Park. The <br />Colorado River drainage begins on the Continental Divide at elevations approaching 14,000 feet. <br /> <br />Since the FHBM was developed in the mid-1970's. the Town has expanded its limits to the <br />southwest. Heimbaugh Creek flows from south to north through this area and is tributary to the <br />Colorado River just upstream of the Town Limits. The drainage area for Heimbaugh Creek is <br />relatively small and consists of the grass covered ridges south of Town, <br /> <br />Floodine: Problems and Floodine: History <br />Flooding along the Colorado River and Heimbaugh Creek in Hot Sulphur Springs usually occurs <br />from May through September. Floodwaters can occur from snowmelt, intense rainstorms and <br />cloudbursts, or rainstorms augmented by snowmelt. Typically, flood flows in the Colorado occur <br />due to snowmelt while flood flows on Heimbaugh Creek are due to intense rainstorms. which can <br />be augmented by snowmelt. <br /> <br />Previous Studies <br />No previous studies other than the FHBM have been conducted for the Town of Hot Sulphur <br />Springs. <br /> <br />Community Response to the CWCB Desie:nation and Approval Process <br />A letter from the CWCB was transmitted to the Town of Hot Sulphur Springs regarding the <br />Board's proposed action for designation and approval of the Grand County FHBMs. CWCB has <br />not received a letter back from the Town requesting designation, <br /> <br />5 <br />