
Transit advocates fail to learn from ‘spectacular’ FasTracks failure
The bottom line is that RTD’s rail lines failed to solve any of Denver’s transportation problems.
The bottom line is that RTD’s rail lines failed to solve any of Denver’s transportation problems.
The fruitless FasTracks sales tax is the biggest financial debacle Longmont has ever seen.
The impact of the three measures on a $565,000 home in Longmont added up about $300 extra a year, not including the .35 of one percent increase to sales taxes.
All three ballot measures will impact the tax base in Longmont for the next 20 years for property taxes and indefinitely for sales taxes.
“I live just inside the Longmont city limits. It discriminates against me relative to people who live a stone’s throw away. We’re creating different laws that contradict the Constitution. We need to keep that in check” — Longmont resident.
Longmont City Council has scheduled a “pre session” (the term used by Longmont for work session) for Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. on “Discussion Related to Gun Safety Laws.”
The far-left Colorado Working Families Party (CWP) has put its name on about two dozen city council and school board candidates in support of their election across the Denver-metro area, endorsing entire slates in some cases.
This whole plan is basically the same pipe dream as Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez and the Democrats’ proposed national Green New Deal.
To sum up, it would be smart for the city of Longmont to put a coronavirus task force in place right now and disband the needless Climate Action Task Force.
“I don’t get this push for a municipality to take on being an (Internet Service Provider). You’re telling me you have more knowledge in the marketplace than a company that’s been doing it for decades. And what business has government ever ran more efficiently than private enterprise?” — Kevin Ross, Eaton Mayor.
As technology and competition are turning once invincible natural monopolies into dinosaurs, we’re watching local governments create monopolies that almost certainly will be disrupted by technology.
Over the first four and a half years, NextLight has lost 20 percent of its residential customers (3,700) and 11 percent of its business customers (110).
By Jon Caldara
Colorado’s Secretary of State Jena Griswold is responsible for running the state’s TRACER system. This is the public database where campaigns must file their contribution and expenditure disclosures. If you wanna see who’s funding a candidate, that’s where you go.
But if you went there last week, you would have seen it was “down for maintenance.”
That was a lie. There was no “maintenance.”
Griswold took it down to have the home addresses of elected officials redacted from the site. In the wake of the shootings of state legislators in Minnesota, many of Colorado’s elected officials asked her to do it.
So why not just tell us that? We would have more than understood the truth.
This database is required by law. Scrubbing it might or might not be a good policy. She might or might not have the authority to do it. But to fib and say it was “down for maintenance” just adds to the reasons trust in government is at an all-time low. They can’t even tell us the truth on this reasonable feat.
In fact, we might not have known any of this falsehood had it not been for a scoop by Axios Denver’s John Frank. Only when confronted did the Jena’s office cop to shutting it down to redact information. Yes, a tiny lie. But that’s the gateway drug to big lies.
A couple of years back, the Colorado Department of Transportation didn’t want folks driving on a high mountain pass during a snowstorm, so they lied and said it was closed. A fabrication, it was open and fine.
There is a pretension and arrogance with those it’s-for-your-own-good lies. And it conditions citizens to let government play parent to them.
It takes a certain amount of arrogance to use the machinery of government to promote inaccuracies and lies (insert Trump joke here). Government should be the record holder and storehouse of truth.
The secretary of state, county clerks, law enforcement, auditors and researchers must be wholly committed to recording only the full truth, no matter what.
Where does my property line end and yours begin? Who owns that car? When was someone born? When did he die? We must trust government records or pretty much everything — everything — falls apart.
But now records can be redacted and altered.
Changing one’s gender on a Colorado birth certificate is as easy as changing your mailing address. Was a person born a boy on a certain date? Who knows? Those records can now be legally falsified.
If changing birth certificates is legal, I need to change the birth date on mine. I identify as 67 despite the government record saying I’m 60. I want my Social Security checks now.
We’re told redacting TRACER records was a matter of safety for those in politics. But lots of us are in politics. Why only protect the elected?
These records still show the home addresses of everyone of us who donated to a campaign. Aren’t we worth the same level of safety and protection?
If an elected official is targeted for an act of violence, wouldn’t those who paid for him to get into office also be possible targets? Why does Griswold protect the privacy of her elected colleagues but not their supporters?
There’s a reason why people want to give their money anonymously — to save their lives and livelihoods.
During the bloody civil rights battles, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, NAACP, had to go to court to protect their donor’s privacy. Why? If doxed, those who financed their mission would have been lynched.
A few years back, there was a mass shooting at a Planned Parenthood office in Colorado Springs. Fortunately, Planned Parenthood also keeps their donors private. If that shooter could look up their funders’ addresses, they might have been targeted, too.
Every year the legislature tries to pass bills to end donor privacy, labeling such donations as “soft money.” “Soft money” is the pejorative term for “political speech I want to support, but don’t want to be killed over.”
How fun it will be to watch those very legislators who pressured Jena Griswold to redact their home addresses to turn around and demand others involved in politics be treated differently and stay easy targets.
Privacy and security for me. Exposure for thee.
Are green energy sources as economically friendly as they are being portrayed? Or are there other factors that make them not quite as green-friendly as marketed? PowerGab Hosts Jake Fogleman and Amy Cooke discuss this with Sarah Montalbano from the Center of the American Experiment.
Show Notes:
Raised in a Colorado Jewish family, Dave Kopel made Boulder his home decades ago. He’s noticed the town and the state is growing more hostile to Jews.