Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Board is composed of elected officials (county commissioners, mayors, city council, or town board members), as well as three nonvoting members designated by Colorado's governor. Board officers serve one-year terms starting each February. The Board meets monthly to discuss and act on regional issues.
Denver, Boulder and Western Railroad: Colorado and Northwestern Railway: 1897 1904 Colorado and Northwestern Railroad: Colorado and Pacific Wagon, Telegraph and Railroad Company: CB&Q: 1861 1871 Clear Creek and Guy Gulch Wagon Road Company: Colorado and Salt Lake Railroad: CB&Q: 1871 1872 Colorado Central Railroad: Colorado and Southeastern ...
This list of Colorado companies includes notable companies that were created or headquartered in Colorado ... Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad;
The Western Federation of Miners: The Course of Western Radical Unionism, 1903–1907. Masters' thesis. University of Virginia, 1968. Lens, Sidney. The Labor Wars, From the Molly Maguires to the Sitdowns. New York: Doubleday, 1974. ISBN 0-385-00500-8; Lukas, J. Anthony.
The Transportation Expansion (T-REX) Project [1] was a $1.67 billion project aimed at improving transportation options for commuters in the Denver metro area within the areas of Interstate 25 and 225, which was recognized as the 14th busiest intersection in the United States at the time.
The Alva B. Adams Tunnel is the principal component of the largest transmountain water project in Colorado, the Colorado-Big Thompson Project (C-BT). The tunnel transfers water from the western slope of the Colorado River drainage to the eastern Front Range of Colorado. It is 13.1 miles (21.1 km) long, with a concrete lined diameter of 9.75 ...
The Colorado legislature founded the Colorado Water Conservation Board (CWCB) through the passage of House Bill no. 6 [permanent dead link ] in 1937 for the "purpose of aiding in the protection and development of the waters of the state". The bill decreed that the agency would be run by twelve directors, who convened for the first time on ...
On 25 April 1992 an op-ed was published in The Denver Post by the President of the Denver Water Board, Hubert Farbes. The opening line was, "A NEW path for the Denver Water Board is emerging from the fog of confusion that cloaks metro water issues in the aftermath of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's veto of the Two Forks project."