Current:Home > MarketsEthermac Exchange-A Town Board in Colorado Considers a Rights of Nature Repeal -CapitalCourse
Ethermac Exchange-A Town Board in Colorado Considers a Rights of Nature Repeal
Indexbit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-08 03:38:53
The Ethermac Exchangeink is barely dry on a Colorado town’s first rights of nature resolutions, yet a motion to repeal them is scheduled for a vote Tuesday night.
The resolutions, adopted in Nederland to protect a section of Boulder Creek that runs through the town, were inspired by the global “rights of nature movement,” which aims to secure recognition that ecosystems and individual species have the legal right to exist and regenerate.
The Nederland town board approved one of the rights of nature resolutions earlier this year, appointing two legal guardians to act on behalf of Boulder Creek. The other, a 2021 “Rights of Nature for Boulder Creek” declaration, recognized that, within town limits, the creek and its watershed are “living” entities possessing “fundamental and inalienable rights,” such as to exist, to be restored and to provide an adequate habitat to native wildlife.
We’re hiring!
Please take a look at the new openings in our newsroom.
See jobsNeither resolution is legally binding, and the guardians’ appointed for Boulder Creek are limited to preparing annual reports about the ecosystems’ health and making recommendations on improving water quality, wildlife habitats and wetlands protection.
While roughly 30 other countries have rights of nature laws or court rulings on the books, no court in the United States has ever recognized the legal doctrine, despite numerous efforts by towns, cities and counties to adopt rights of nature measures.
Still, the symbolic power of those local rights of nature ordinances and resolutions can be significant—as in Nederland.
The move to repeal Nederland’s dual resolutions by Nederland’s mayor, Billy Giblin, comes as the town advances an application with the state to construct a dam and reservoir on Middle Boulder Creek. The reservoir would provide Nederland with an upstream water supply. Currently, the town relies on water from the City of Boulder’s Barker Meadow Reservoir downstream.
The current controversy of Nederland’s rights of nature resolution erupted last month, when Save the World’s Rivers, a Colorado-based nonprofit, filed opposition to Nederland’s application, claiming that it was deficient and asking that the town be required to carry out an engineering plan and provide a cost estimate for the dam, among other things.
“Dams kill rivers, they drain rivers and this dam would do that to Boulder Creek,” said Gary Wockner, executive director and founder of Save the World’s Rivers.
Wockner said he believes that the move to repeal Nederland’s rights of nature resolutions stems from his involvement in advocating for those resolutions’ passage—he was one of the lead advocates behind the resolutions.
He said that his role at Save the World’s Rivers is distinct from his rights of nature advocacy and that he has fought dozens of dam projects in the southwest United States for over 20 years.
“To respond to our opposition to the Nederland dam in this case by targeting the rights of nature is just punitive,” Wockner said.
Giblin, the Nederland mayor, did not respond to an interview request. But in an explanatory document filed ahead of Tuesday’s board meeting, Giblin alleges that the rights of nature resolutions “may be being used in ways that the Town did not understand or anticipate at the time of adoption, and in ways that could jeopardize the Town’s water security.” The document also states that “proponents of Rights of Nature” have filed opposition in at least three Colorado court cases involving water issues.
“This unexpected shift—from Rights of Nature as a tool to provide the Town with information about the health of the Creek, to others using Rights of Nature as a point of leverage against the Town and its neighbors in the community…should be considered in deciding whether Rights of Nature remains a good fit for the Town of Nederland,” Giblin says in the document.
Nederland’s six-member town board will vote on his repeal measure. Five of the board’s members were newly elected in April, taking office after the resolution was approved in January appointing the Boulder Creek guardians.
Wockner alleged that the dam project at issue is connected to a push to create new residential housing in the region.
“You might say nature is out and dams are in, in Nederland,” Wockner said.
The town’s application filed in connection with the proposed dam stems from a conditional water right Nederland has held since 1980. To maintain the right, the town must every six years file a “diligence” application showing that it is taking steps to put the right to a “beneficial use.” The law is based on the public policy that water in the state should be used for human benefit, and if a right holder isn’t taking steps to do so, the right should go to someone else.
Share this article
veryGood! (5481)
Related
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Taylor Swift reacts to Sabrina Carpenter's cover of 'I Knew You Were Trouble'
- High mortgage rates push home sales decline, tracking to hit Great Recession levels
- How a hidden past, a name change and GPS led to Katrina Smith's killer
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Georgia Medicaid program with work requirement has enrolled only 1,343 residents in 3 months
- Air France pilot falls off cliff to his death while hiking California’s towering Mount Whitney
- Why Joran van der Sloot Won't Be Charged for Murdering Natalee Holloway
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Police arrest 2 in connection with 2021 Lake Tahoe-area shooting that killed a man, wounded his wife
Ranking
- 'Most Whopper
- Paris Hilton’s New Photos of Baby Boy Phoenix Are Fire
- Doxxing campaign against pro-Palestinian college students ramps up
- Police on the hunt for man after Maryland judge killed in his driveway
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Bachelor Nation’s Becca Kufrin and Thomas Jacobs Get Married One Month After Welcoming Baby Boy
- Wi-Fi on the way to school: How FCC vote could impact your kid's ride on the school bus
- Rolling Stones and Lady Gaga give stunning performance at intimate album release show
Recommendation
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Russian-American journalist detained in Russia, the second such move there this year
'The Golden Bachelor' recap: A faked injury, a steamy hot tub affair and a feud squashed
Oklahoma attorney general sues to stop US’s first public religious school
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
UN nuclear agency team watches Japanese lab workers prepare fish samples from damaged nuclear plant
Major water main break that affected thousands in northern New York repaired
Reward offered after body of man missing for 9 years found in freezer of wine bar