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How To Be A Citizen: What It Takes To Run For Office With Joe Neguse
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How To Be A Citizen: What It Takes To Run For Office With Joe Neguse
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How To Be A Citizen: What It Takes To Run For Office With Joe Neguse
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Editorâs note:
This is the final installment of a three-part series on the Curecanti legislation in the Colorado Outdoor Recreation and Economy Act.
By BRUCE NOBLE
The agreement that launched Curecanti National Recreation Area in 1965 was signed by three interesting men. Foremost among them was the renowned conservationist and Secretary of the Interior, Stewart Udall. Among other things, Udall stood next to President Lyndon B. Johnson at the White House when the Wilderness Act was signed into law in 1964. Another signatory to the Curecanti agreement was George Hartzog, a man who loved the National Park Service, but ruled the organization with an iron-hand as its director. Finally, the agreement includes the signature of Bureau of Reclamation Director Floyd Dominy. Dominy was both a dedicated dam-builder and a notorious womanizer who would not have fared well in the era of the Me Too Movement. (Dominyâs antics, both noteworthy and nefarious, are well documented in John Mc
camera icon iStockPhoto/milehightraveler
Denver, CO – A former Japanese American incarceration camp in Colorado may be one of our next national park sites, following legislation introduced today by U.S. Representative Joe Neguse (D-CO) and Representative Ken Buck (R-CO). The National Parks Conservation Association commends this progress, which would designate Amache National Historic Site.
“As America’s storyteller, the National Park Service is entrusted with preserving and sharing the places like Amache, that reflect our past, present and ideally future values as a nation,” said
Tracy Coppola, Colorado program manager for the National Parks Conservation Association. “The story of what happened at Amache deserves to be told in its fullest form. The Amache National Historic Site Act will preserve and protect this story, while challenging us all to reflect, heal, and act toward a better future where justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion are our n