skip to main content
skip to newscasts

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Public News Service Logo
facebook instagram linkedin reddit youtube twitter
view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Liberal candidate wins Wisconsin Supreme Court race in blow to Trump, Musk; Montana scores 'C-minus' on infrastructure report card; Colorado's Boebert targets renewed effort to remove federal wolf protections; Indiana draws the line on marijuana promotions.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Speaker Johnson cites constitutional limits to a third presidential term. Groups plan nationwide protests against executive overreach. Students raise concerns over academic freedom following a visa-related arrest in Boston. And U.S. Senate resolution aims to block new tariffs on Canada.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Air and water pollution is a greater risk for rural folks due to EPA cutbacks, Montana's media landscape gets a deep dive, and policymakers are putting wheels on the road to expand rural health.

New Roadmap Aims to Double Acreage of Conserved Colorado Lands

play audio
Play

Thursday, April 6, 2023   

As Colorado faces mounting challenges associated with a changing climate - record-breaking wildfires, extreme drought and dwindling water supplies, the loss of habitat for native plants and animals - a new roadmap aims to help secure the state's most critical natural resources by doubling the footprint of conserved lands over the next ten years.

Linda Lidov - interim executive director of the group Keep It Colorado - said people who have lived in the area for centuries, along with recent transplants, share a lot of the same values about the place they call home.

"The wide open scenic vistas, the strong agricultural heritage and way of life, the outdoor recreation economy, the wildlife here," said Lidov. "This plan is really about finding ways to protect those things."

About 60% of lands in Colorado are privately owned, and the roadmap aims to help landowners ensure that their life's work - producing food, protecting waterways, wildlife habitat and plant biodiversity - can continue long after they retire.

Conserving key parcels now is important - Lidov said - because while there will always be opportunities to build more, we can never get back natural spaces once they're partitioned and sold off for development.

The roadmap offers guidance to engage all of the state's communities in conservation, and emphasizes the need to protect lands that carry Colorado's most valuable natural asset.

Lidov said the work will require creating partnerships with a host of stakeholders, including the Colorado Water Conservation Board, basin roundtables, watershed councils and other groups focused on water.

"Working with water conservation partners on different solutions and opportunities that protect water for nature and people," said Lidov. "Because land is connected to water, and water is connected to land, and we really need both."

Water is one of five strategic focus areas in the plan. Lidov said all Coloradans stand to benefit if the effort to boost the number of conserved privately-owned lands from 3.3 million acres to 6.6 million acres is successful.

She added that there are many ways people can help conserve lands that puts food on our tables, protects wildlife and protects a way of life.

"We encourage people to vote with their values," said Lidov, "advocating for good policy, writing to their legislators, volunteering with their local land trusts."



Disclosure: Keep It Colorado contributes to our fund for reporting on changing climate and the environment. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


get more stories like this via email
more stories
The Little Village Environmental Justice Organization has become as much as a landmark to the community as the Little Village Arch and was awarded the national Food Sovereignty Prize in 2024. (City of Chicago 2021)

Environment

play sound

By Angela Burke for Civil Eats.Broadcast version by Judith Ruiz-Branch for Illinois News Connection reporting for the Solutions Journalism Network-Pub…


Social Issues

play sound

More than 1,000 protests against the policies of President Donald Trump are set for Saturday across the country, with 117 planned in California alone…

Social Issues

play sound

A bill known as the Act for Civic Engagement did not make it out of committee in Olympia before the deadline but advocates for people who are incarcer…


Legislation regulating cryptocurrency kiosks is being considered in the Maryland House of Delegates. (Adobe Stock)

Social Issues

play sound

A bill in the Maryland General Assembly would regulate cryptocurrency kiosks, the more than 700 ATM-like machines for virtual currencies around the …

Social Issues

play sound

Registration is open for the next information session for the Doswell School of Aeronautical Sciences at Texas Woman's University in Denton, where …

Some two million gray wolves roamed North America in the early 1800s but today, fewer than 7,000 remain on just 10% of their historic range in the Lower 48 States. (Adobe Stock)

Environment

play sound

Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., has introduced a bill to remove gray wolves from the list of endangered and threatened species under the Endangered …

Social Issues

play sound

The Trump administration announces its new wave of tariffs Wednesday, and with U.S. Department of Agriculture funding still a question mark, …

play sound

Educators at Iowa State University are creating a new major to meet what they see as a new and growing demand in the health care field: pairing medica…

 

Phone: 303.448.9105 Toll Free: 888.891.9416 Fax: 208.247.1830 Your trusted member- and audience-supported news source since 1996 Copyright © 2021