Fracking: Congress needs to drill into the issue, says Diana DeGette

As reported in this space on Friday, a new study from Common Cause tracks how oil and gas interests spent $747 million on lobbying and campaign donations since 2001 to win congressional support for “fracking,” hydraulic fracturing drilling methods that involve using toxic chemicals. Which may be why the House…

Fracking: Gas industry pours $747 million into lobbying and Congress

As the oil and gas industry has turned increasingly to hydraulic fracturing to extract reserves, fears about groundwater contamination from the toxic chemicals used in “fracking” have intensified. And that’s prompted a $747 million spending spree by major industry players in an effort to allay those fears and influence key…

Ken Salazar hawking solar “sweet spots” for an energy boost

Yesterday, after three years, more than 80,000 public comments, and countless hours reviewing ponderous economic and environmental issues — in other words, pretty speedy for government work — Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar unveiled the Obama administration’s slimmed-down plan touting “solar energy zones” spanning seventeen sites in six western…

Colorado’s cold case backlog: 1,518 murders still unsolved

This week’s cover story, “The Victim Lobby,” delves into the growing power of the victim rights movement and the sometimes clashing agendas of groups within that movement. But there’s one issue crime victim advocates strongly agree about: The pile-up of unsolved homicides over the past few decades is alarming –…

Ken Salazar: BLM decision on Vermillion Basin a classic bit of Kenmanship

The long-awaited, much-debated Bureau of Land Management plan for oil-and-gas drilling on public lands in northwest Colorado has something in it to annoy everybody. In other words, it’s the kind of classic, middle-of-the-road, concessions-to-all-sides-and-favoritism-toward-none compromise we’ve come to expect from the Department of the Interior under Secretary Ken Salazar –…

Limon prison memos: A new form of cruel and unusual punishment?

One of the guilty pleasures here at the Crime & Punishment Desk is occasionally visiting the madness on display at The Real Colorado Department of Corrections, an anonymous blog by someone calling himself Thomas Paine. Mr. Paine apparently worked for DOC long enough to acquire a vast trove of unintentionally…

John Williams: Denver novelist is dead and living in France

John Williams would have relished the irony. The University of Denver professor’s astonishing novel Stoner landed with a thud when it was first published in 1965. Forty-six years later, and seventeen years after Williams himself died at the age of 71, the book is being hailed as a masterpiece –…