brian: two people greet me at my limo. they will have umbrellas every day if they don t they will be fine you had. steve: exemplify what kind of a rainy day they are expecting here. outside the door here at studio f they have two dozen sand bags. they are waiting for a flood to come to the northeast. ainsley: a deluge. brian: actually survive the blistering weather. talk about what s going on, talking about blistering, that s exactly what s going on with this whole dossier controversy and seemingly some rivalry not only between republicans and democrats. senate and house as it relates to the intelligence committees and this investigation about what went on leading up to this election. steve: that s right. that man right there, he s what we are talking about right now. devin nunes, who is the chairman of the house intel committee, he has sent that blistering letter that brian was talking about to the attorney general. and essentially what he says is the fbi in using that dossi
The flow of the Colorado River past Xcel’s Shoshone power plant just east of Glenwood Springs is running at around 12,000 cubic feet per second this week. If that sounds
In an effort to elevate the needs of the environment in water management, the state of Colorado is convening a new committee that is scheduled to begin meeting this summer. The Colorado Water Conservation Board.
As Colorado s rivers shrink and its soils dry out, state lawmakers this year passed a slew of water bills that advocates say will help reduce water use and protect the critical natural resource.