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Colorado Springs City crews have cleared an 18-acre property near Pikes Peak Avenue and south Academy Boulevard of invasive trees so they can put in new wetlands to help slow down stormwater and improve its quality. The area was densely overgrown with invasive tree species before the work and collected large amounts of trash, as depicted in this photo taken before the work was done. Photo Courtesy of City of Colorado Springs Photo Courtesy of City of Colorado Springs ....
Crews working to clean and restore section of Spring Creek on southeast side of Colorado Springs Colorado Springs city crews are working to clean up the section of Spring Creek between Pikes Peak Ave and Airport Rd on the southeast side of the city. and last updated 2021-02-23 18:58:15-05 COLORADO SPRINGS â Colorado Springs city crews are working to clean up the section of Spring Creek between Pikes Peak Ave and Airport Rd on the southeast side of the city. The 19-acres of open space is over-run with invasive plant species that dominate native flora along the creek bed. The goal is to return this section of the creek to a more native, natural area. ....
Today Snow this evening will give way to lingering snow showers late. Low 28F. Winds N at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of snow 90%. About one inch of snow expected.. Tonight Snow this evening will give way to lingering snow showers late. Low 28F. Winds N at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of snow 90%. About one inch of snow expected. Updated: April 15, 2021 @ 6:03 pm ....
Colorado Springs officials want to continue their aggressive campaign to overhaul the city’s drainage system, and that will take more money. A lot more. ....
A drainage channel next to Doherty High School before the city improved it in 2019. Pam Zubeck Colorado Springs officials want to continue their aggressive campaign to overhaul the cityâs drainage system, and that will take more money. A lot more. On Feb. 8, two options were outlined for raising existing stormwater fees to fund millions of dollars in projects, largely due to the cityâs settlement of an Environmental Protection Agency lawsuit. That consent decree calls for the city to spend $45 million in the next 15 years to stem flows and reduce pollution of waterways from runoff. While the city looks to raise stormwater rates by up to 70 percent in the next three years to generate that cash, though, itâs also recrafting development and zoning rules to increase âlot coverageâ in new subdivisions. That means bigger homes with greater impervious surfaces that yield more runoff. ....