Fee May Be Required to Use Longmont’s EV Charging Stations The Colorado city is considering a $1 hourly fee for those who charge their electric vehicles at city-owned charging stations. The fee will help pay for the cost of owning and maintaining the stations. John Fryar, Daily Times-Call | April 19, 2021 | News
(TNS) Longmont, Colo., Power and Communications staff has suggested the city resume collecting a $1 hourly fee from people who charge their electric vehicles at publicly accessible city EV charging stations.
Longmont s City Council is to review that proposal during a Tuesday night study session.
Longmont owns and operates five such publicly available EV charging stations and has not imposed a fee to people using them since it changed the system connecting four of them in summer 2019.
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Aspen Journalism
Homestake Creek flows from Homestake Reservoir near Red Cliff. A pilot reservoir release to test how to get water to the state line in the event of a Colorado River Compact Call proved hard to track for state engineers.
Bethany Blitz/Aspen Journalism
In September, Front Range water providers released some water downstream which they were storing in Homestake Reservoir to test how they could get it to the state line in the event of a Colorado River Compact call.
But accurately tracking and measuring that water from the high mountain reservoir in the Eagle River watershed all the way through the Colorado River at the end of the Grand Valley turned out to be tricky, according to a recently released report from the Colorado Division of Water Resources.
Homestake Reservoir release proves tricky to track vaildaily.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vaildaily.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.