The County Seat ~ The lowdown on what’s up in county government

Archive for the 'El Paso County Commissioners' Tag

County, city leaders to get a present on Tuesday

November 21st, 2011, 3:00 pm by

El Paso County commissioners and Colorado Springs City Council members will get a present Tuesday from local oil and gas industry opponent, Mary Talbott.

She plans to hand them a copy of “Split Estate,” a 75-minute DVD about drilling issues in Rifle, Colo. The documentary looks at problems that emerge when surface owners don’t own the mineral rights beneath their properties, as is the law in Colorado.

Talbott says she’ll also give a copy to county public health department officials to watch.

Her goal? That the video might influence how local officials handle local regulations for the industry.

The county’s draft land use regulations for oil and gas activity are published on the county’s web site, www.elpasoco.com. Public comments are being accepted through next Monday, Nov. 28. Commissioners plan to adopt regulations by the end of January.

The city of Colorado Springs has a group looking into what to do about regulating the industry on the local level.

As interest in energy development along the Front Range intensifies, so does the concern of citizens. Last week, commissioners in Huerfano County unanimously adopted new oil and gas regulations, after what was described as a “boisterous” public hearing in which dozens of residents said the regulations don’t go far enough to protect them from the harmful effects of drilling.

 

 

 

Douglas Bruce to commissioners: ‘I want my money back’

November 21st, 2011, 11:55 am by

  Douglas Bruce wants his ten bucks back. But it doesn’t look like he’s going to get it any time soon.

  Bruce, author of the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, was fined $10 for not showing up to a board of El PasoCountycommissioners meeting in January 2008, the day he was sworn into Colorado’s House District 15 seat.

  In levying the fine, the former board of commissioners said Bruce’s absence as a county commissioner was unexcused. Bruce contends it was excused – that his fellow commissioners knew about his new legislative job and that he would be gone.

 Bruce had taken the oath for the State Representative office, unconventionally, though, postponing the action as long as possible to extend the potential length of the appointed term. And he did not step down as an El Paso Countycommissioner until after the swearing in for the state position.

Bruce told the current board of commissioners last week – at a time during regular meetings when anyone from the public can raise any issue with commissioners — he’s noticed that commissioners who have not attended recent meetings have not been fined for their absences.

The money, Bruce said, is a matter of principle, and he was disturbed over the pettiness and unfairness of the issue.

County Attorney Bill Louis volunteered to take Bruce into his office and give him $10 from his petty cash drawer.

Commission Chairwoman Amy Lathen said she wasn’t on the board when the matter came up and wasn’t willing to do that.

So that’s where the issue stands now, nearly four years later.

County extends public comment on drilling regulations

November 10th, 2011, 3:52 pm by

El Paso County commissioners agreed Thursday to extend the public comment period on its draft oil and gas regulations until Nov. 28. The deadline had been set for Monday.

The county is creating local land use regulations for the industry to cover numerous environmental and aesthetic issues and has sent out more than 100 copies of the draft rules. They can be viewed on the county website at www.elpasoco.com, under the development services department.

Commissioner Darryl Glenn to host town hall meeting Saturday

November 9th, 2011, 2:31 pm by

Darryl Glenn

District 1 El Paso County Commissioner Darryl Glenn will host a town hall meeting at Woodmoor Community Center, commonly referred to as “The Barn” at 1691 Woodmoor Drive, from 9:30-11:30 a.m. Saturday. 

The discussion will include an update on transportation projects scheduled for completion in 2011 as well as those projected for 2012, a review of the proposed 2012 county budget and other topics.

 Residents are invited to attend and learn about issues of particular interest to residents in District 1, which covers the north and northeast portions of the county.

Magistrelli will run for county commissioner

November 7th, 2011, 12:25 pm by

Karen Magistrelli of Crystola will vie for the District 3 El Paso County Commissioner’s seat next November. The district covers the county’s western section and includes Old Colorado City, Manitou Springs, Chipita Park and Green Mountain Falls. Commissioner Sallie Clark currently represents the district.

A 27-year county resident who runs a nonprofit organization that helps ex-prisoners rejoin society, Magistrelli said she’s concerned about “government shenanigans,” including the “confusing, deceptive language of the term limit ballot issue” and “unreasonable, excessive government regulations.”

“I’m ready to fight back to reduce waste, restore trust and integrity, and return to the principles of freedom,” she said, in announcing her candidacy.

Magistrelli became familiar with county government during a three-year struggle to win approval to build residences on land her family owns in the western-most part of the county.

Magistrelli said she’s “not a career politician,” and her qualifications come from life in the private sector.

Two other candidates have announced they will seek office in the November 2012 election. Commissioner Amy Lathen, current chairwoman of the board of county commissioners, has said she will run again for the eastern District 2, and Auddie Cox, a military veteran, will challenge the seat currently held by Commissioner Dennis Hisey, who represents the southern part of the county.

Billboard revisions headline Thursday’s commissioners’ meeting

October 25th, 2011, 4:36 pm by

El Paso County commissioners will consider proposed changes to billboard regulations at Thursday’s meeting, which starts at 9 a.m. at Pikes Peak Regional Development Center, 2880 International Circle.

The discussion will include expanding existing billboards, the process for proposed electronic or mechanical billboards, increased hold times for changing messages on electronic billboards and limitations on nighttime brightness standards.

The proposed revisions are on the development services page of the county website, www.elpasoco.com.

County sets timeline for local oil/gas regulations

October 18th, 2011, 4:28 pm by

El Paso Countystaff will begin reviewing draft regulations for local oil and gas regulations Thursday, planner Craig Dossey said this week during a joint meeting of county commissioners and Colorado Springs City Council members. 

Outside agencies related to the industry and stakeholders will receive copies for review and comment Oct. 31.

Comments will be accepted through mid to late November. The county’s planning commission then will issue a recommendation to the board of county commissioners, which will finalize and adopt land use regulations in late December or mid-January.

Commissioners enacted a four-month moratorium on new drilling permits on Sept. 29, to give staff time to develop local land use regulations after it appeared imminent that energy development companies were planning large-scale exploration.

While the state licenses and regulates many aspects of the industry, local jurisdictions can impose their own set of rules, and Dossey defended the decision to do so.

“The state regulates extensively in certain areas — the drilling process, construction, the exploration and production, design of onsite pits, the waste management — but is silent on issues regarding local roads,” he said.

And while the state regulates some of the activities related to environmental damage, Dossey said, “we think there’s still room in terms of air and water quality monitoring.”  

The draft regulations will address a host of issues surrounding exploratory drilling and production, including road impacts, setbacks, water supply, lighting, noise, drainage, erosion control, trash and debris, asthetics, site security, environmental impacts, air and water quality monitoring, floodplains, dust and odor control, emergency response and more.

Commission Chairwoman Amy Lathen will host a public town hall meeting, 10 a.m. to noon Nov. 5 at Peyton High School, 13885 Bradshaw Road, to discuss the county’s oil and gas regulation process.

County commissioners won’t meet next week

October 7th, 2011, 12:50 pm by

El Paso County commissioners won’t meet next week on Tuesday and Thursday because of an annual trip to Washington, D.C.

The five commissioners will be among 70 business, civic and government representatives from the Pikes Peak region who will make the trip and meet with the Colorado Congressional delegation.

They will discuss issues ranging from traffic jams at Peterson Air Force Base’s main gate to the ongoing need for a federal courthouse in the southern part of the state.

The group also is scheduled to meet with both Colorado U.S. Senators and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, and receive briefings from Congressional staff and federal lobbyists.

Click here to read a story on Mayor Bach heading up the local contingency.

Stephannie Finley, the Greater Colorado Springs Chamber of Commerce’s president of Governmental Affairs and Public Policy, said there’s “no doubt” that these annual trips to the nation’s capitol “have given our region a stronger voice in Washington.”

“But maybe just as important,” she said, ” we have so many local leaders on the trip working together on issues critical to our entire region.”

After returning, commissioners will meet jointly with Colorado Springs City Council for a third “shared services” discussion. The public meeting will begin at 11 a.m. on Oct. 17 at the county office building at 27 E. Vermijo Ave., third floor.

Last chance to comment on long-range transportation plan

August 30th, 2011, 2:03 pm by

El Paso County is taking final public comments on the 2040 Major Transportation Corridor Plan beginning Friday and through Oct. 2.

Public input began one and one-half years ago with open houses about future transportation needs.

The plan guides how taxes and fees are spent on local roadway projects.

The county’s planning commission will review the plan Sept. 6 and look at final public comments on Oct. 4.

The documents can be reviewed and commented on at this web site.

Building officially renamed for Chuck Brown

August 18th, 2011, 2:10 pm by

El Paso County Commissioner Amy Lathen talked with Chuck Brown at the building rededication.

Longtime local politician Chuck Brown was all smiles Thursday, at the official dedication of a county building now named after him.

The county’s transportation center and hazardous waste facility east of town on Akers Drive is known as the El Paso County Charles C “Chuck” Brown Transportation and Environmental Complex.

Brown said he appreciated the honor.

Brown twice served as a county commissioner, from 1981 to 1985 and 1993 to 2005, where he was known for wanting to spin off the eastern plains of the county amid controversy over new zoning rules.

In honor of its 150th anniversary, El Paso County built a float with historical photos.

 He also was a Colorado Springs City Councilman from 1975 to 1979 and served on the city’s park and recreation board, the city’s planning commission, the city’s urban renewal board, the Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments and the county’s highway advisory commission.

Brown is credited with the initial concept and development of the Pikes Peak Regional Transportation Authority, a sales tax mechanism to fund local road projects. He also envisioned the county’s transportation center and hazardous waste facility, which now bear his name.