Wyoming
Cowboy State Daily Video News: Tuesday, August 13, 2024
It’s time to take a look at what’s happening around Wyoming, for Tuesday, August 13th. I’m Wendy Corr, bringing you headlines from the Cowboy State Daily newsroom – brought to you by Outrider PAC. Did you know that according to a new survey, 79% of Wyoming Voters support Freedom in Education? Learn more about Educational Savings Accounts in Wyoming at OutriderPAC.com
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An avalanche of political mailers have been flooding mailboxes around the state.
While there’s not one side that has done everything perfectly or another that has done everything wrong, Cowboy State Daily’s Leo Wolfson says some politicians are more concerned about the trend than others.
“Former House Speaker Tom Lubnau… believes that it’s very concerning trend, that a lot of misinformation is being spread and in our current, modern day news ecosystem where people can kind of just going to do echo chambers and listen to whatever news agrees with their preconceived conceptions, that they end up missing out on the real facts of the matter and just kind of go into a skewed type of world.”
However, Wolfson says that everyone he spoke to about the matter agrees that this is the highest volume of political mailers they can remember.
Read the full story HERE.
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Colorado authorities have issued a Senior Alert for a 76-year-old missing Wyoming woman with dementia who was last seen early Monday morning in Colorado Springs.
Martha James, of Rock Springs, has been missing since Saturday late afternoon when she left home in her vehicle. James has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and dementia, and Cowboy State Daily’s Jen Kocher reports that her family is worried she may be lost and not able to find her way home.
“Her dementia has been progressively getting worse over the past several months, so her family, her sister in law and brother, are quite concerned about her, because … she’s been getting lost a bit around town… her credit card was used in Rock Springs on Saturday about 530 so then the next time it was used was in Cheyenne, later that evening, and then again on Saturday in Boulder, Colorado.”
James is traveling in a 2022 Silver Nissan Rogue and thought to be with her two dogs, a tan Chihuahua and a white miniature poodle.
Read the full story HERE.
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Australian-based American Rare Earths Ltd. has restructured its rare earths project in Wyoming as part of a new strategic direction to attract Wall Street investment and accelerate development of its critical ores needed for national security purposes.
With Wyoming becoming ground zero for new development of rare earths deposits, energy reporter Pat Maio says companies are in a race to be the first to start producing. And the new entity, called Wyoming Rare (USA) Inc., is considering moving its headquarters to either Laramie or Cheyenne.
“They’ve restructured the business here in Wyoming, and they’re … formally going to make it like a 100% owned, independent company here in Wyoming, which is going to streamline things for them to essentially raise money, lots of money, like half a billion dollars, at least, money, so they can start accelerating into mining for rare earths.”
The decision to move the headquarters will be made before the end of the year, as well as rounding out the composition of its board of directors.
Read the full story HERE.
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Secretary of State Chuck Gray wanted to make it clear at Monday evening’s State Building Commission meeting that he hasn’t forgotten about Gov. Mark Gordon’s veto of House Bill 125 during the 2024 legislation session, a bill that would have banned gun-free zones in Wyoming.
The Building Commision met to discuss proposed draft rules that would allow for concealed carry of firearms in the Wyoming Capitol building, something that is currently not allowed, according to politics reporter Leo Wolfson.
“Secretary of State Chuck Gray certainly didn’t miss an opportunity to criticize Governor Mark Gordon for the veto that he made of the bill that would have … prohibited all gun free zones in Wyoming. Gray said that these new rules would never have been necessary if the governor hadn’t vetoed that bill.”
The draft rules would only allow people with a concealed firearms permit to carry a weapon in the extension hallway area of the Capitol. This would exclude the main Capitol Rotunda and legislative chambers.
Read the full story HERE.
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An 85-year-old homeowner says he shot a home invader Friday night in Riverton after first fighting the intruder back onto his front porch.
Cowboy State Daily’s Clair McFarland went to the home of Wayne Williams, who says in hindsight, he should not have opened the door to the man who was banging on his door at 11 p.m.
“But he says, the guy shoved his way inside, and Wayne had his 380 and he tried to shoot, and it just went, click… he had forgotten to rack one into the chamber… So he pushed him out the door, and they’re tumbling down the front porch steps, 85 year old man with a 20 something man… Wayne ends up on top. He’s trying to get free of the guy’s grasp. And he shoots again. This time he thinks he hit him in the leg.”
Riverton Police Department representatives declined Monday to comment beyond a preliminary statement they issued Saturday – which says the incident appeared to be a shooting in response to an attempted burglary.
Read the full story HERE.
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The Perseids, one of the year’s best meteor showers, reaches its peak over Wyoming on Tuesday morning. And stargazers in the Cowboy State have a great spot to see it, according to Cowboy State Daily’s Andrew Rossi.
“Historically, the Perseid meteor shower peaks on the evening of August 12 and 13th, but the peak means that’s just when it’s max visibility for meteors. So that’s up to 50 to 100 an hour during the peak, but it’s visible from mid July through the beginning of September… if you want to see the Perseids, according to sources I talked to, you want to get to a high place, in a dark place, get comfortable with it as wide a range of view as possible, and just look upwards and see what you can see.”
While there’s a month-and-a-half window to see the Perseids, they historically peak Aug. 12 and 13, according to NASA. The peak can be between 50 and 100 meteors every hour.
Read the full story HERE.
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Laramie County Clerk Debra Lee said she believes the Wyoming Republican Party is attempting to “disrupt” the upcoming primary election ahead of Election Day.
Last week, the Wyoming Republican Party filed a lawsuit against Lee for what they claim was an illegitimate test of election tabulators. Politics reporter Leo Wolfson says Lee is calling the complaint an effort to disrupt the current primary election.
“The lawsuit is frustrated that a equipment test that was performed last week on the voting equipment was not done with the exact procedures that it’s supposed to take place. So the Republican Party lawsuit kind of follows up on a complaint that was already filed by the Laramie County Republican Party. But Lee is standing by the test that she performed.”
On Monday, the Wyoming GOP put out an email claiming that five other counties had errors similar to Laramie’s in their tests. They also listed six county clerks who they claim are refusing to provide their test results.
Read the full story HERE.
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A Gillette, Wyoming, man accused of slitting his mother’s throat to defend himself from distant attic people has been found sane enough to stand trial.
32 year old Scott Patenaude is scheduled for a Thursday arraignment in Campbell County District Court, according to Cowboy State Daily’s Clair McFarland.
“the case paused so that the authorities could see if he was mentally fit to stand trial. You cannot give a plea in Wyoming unless the court recognizes that you are mentally fit, mentally competent to do so, and after the Wyoming State Hospitals assigned Doctor delivered that report, pad node and his counsel didn’t dispute the finding that he was mentally competent.”
During his police interview, Patenaude reportedly said he had an infected tooth that kept him from sleeping, loud trucks roared along the road and woke him, as did an “intelligent tapping” in the attic.
Read the full story HERE.
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The state of Wyoming and 16 other coal-producing states are suing to challenge a rule crafted by the Environmental Production Agency that targets “inactive coal ash impoundments.”
The rules were designed by the EPA nearly a decade ago to hold power plants accountable for controlling and cleaning up contamination created by the disposal of coal ash. But Cowboy State Daily’s Pat Maio reports that they could go into effect in November unless they are overturned by a federal appeals court.
“Governor Gordon believes, with his litigation, though, that this is kind of another cost factor, a burden, a regulatory burden, that’s being placed on the coal industry that could limit its production in future years. So that’s why he’s filing this litigation.”
Coal ash, or coal combustion residuals, is produced whenever coal is burned at coal-fired power plants. These residuals are considered one of the largest types of industrial waste.
Read the full story HERE.
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Wyoming seems to have become aurora central with another spectacular show of celestial lights early Monday morning, which more expected this week.
The geomagnetic storm that manifested as an aurora Monday was the latest generated during the Sun’s 11-year solar maximum, and there’s a good chance of even better displays to come before the end of the year, reports Cowboy State Daily’s Andrew Rossi.
“The auroras that manifested over Wyoming Sunday night into Monday morning were part of a severe g4 geomagnetic storm that were the result of coronal mass ejections, or CMEs, generated by sun spots on the surface of the sun. That puts it on par with the solar storm that generated the mid May auroras, which were the best that have been seen in two decades… this was the latest event in a series of what could be several events in August, going into September and October, when we could see spectacular auroras across the skies of Wyoming.”
The Perseids meteor shower is reaching its annual peak this week — with its best show expected early Tuesday morning — which means meteor fireballs could be seen streaking across the rainbow ribbons of an aurora.
Read the full story HERE.
Wyoming
Politicians mull action as details of alleged abuse, falsified records at Wyoming Boys’ School become public
by Maya Shimizu Harris, WyoFile
The photo of an Iraqi inmate strapped by U.S. military police to a restraint chair in the Abu Ghraib prison sparked “a collective cry of ‘torture,’” Sue Burrell, an attorney and author of a 2009 paper on restraints used at U.S. youth detention centers, recalled of a 2005 Newsweek magazine cover.
For Burrell, however, it stirred a more personal response. “All I could think of was that the restraint chair in the photo was almost exactly like the one we had recently seen in a juvenile detention facility in the United States,” she stated in the paper’s preface, which showed the Newsweek photo next to another of a restraint chair at a U.S. youth detention center.
A June court filing in an ongoing lawsuit alleging abuse at the Wyoming Boys’ School, a state facility for delinquent juveniles, almost mirrors the 2009 paper’s preface, showing two side-by-side images, one of a boy in a restraint chair with a white bag over his head and another of him huddled alone in the corner of a cinderblock room. Above the images is a quote attributed to one of the defendants: “[The] best part of the chair is watching the kids cry and scream like a fucking child . . . that’s what makes it worth it.”
“I had never thought I would see a photo of a child with a bag over their head, like they’re being water boarded,” said Rep. Karlee Provenza, a Laramie Democrat who has advocated for juvenile justice reform in Wyoming.
It’s unlikely the images — which sparked outrage on social media — would have come to light if it weren’t for the lawsuit. For years, lawmakers and advocates have grappled with the lack of transparency around the Wyoming Boys’ School specifically and the state’s juvenile justice system more broadly.
Citing confidentiality laws, the Wyoming Department of Family Services, which oversees the boys’ school, has declined to release information about abuse allegations at the facility. DFS treats allegations of abuse or mistreatment at the detention center as Child Protective Service cases. Child Protective Services and the boys’ school are both under the auspices of DFS, meaning the agency investigates itself without oversight or transparency.
“We can’t trust the government to investigate itself,” Provenza said. “We’ve seen how that falls short, so it might be that it needs to be a broader conversation and not just targeted at DFS.”
A legislative catch-22
Lawmakers — those responsible for crafting laws that regulate the state’s juvenile justice system — also struggle to access data that could help them see more broadly how Wyoming’s juvenile justice system works. That’s because Wyoming doesn’t have a statewide system. Instead, each county takes a different approach, making it difficult to collect uniform data showing how kids move through the system and what outcomes they experience.
For years, legislators have sought new laws to standardize data collection on Wyoming’s juvenile justice system and allow DFS to share it. They hoped the data would show how children move through the system and what their outcomes are, which could help lawmakers pinpoint what’s working and what needs to improve.
But fears of government overreach have stymied efforts to pass legislation that would increase transparency. Some lawmakers who opposed these measures have suggested studying the juvenile justice system more before passing any laws.
“My recommendation would be that the Legislature take some time to really put together a good dive into the juvenile justice system and all of its programs together to be able to make one clear, concise bill that fixes a plethora of problems,” Casper Republican Rep. Jayme Lien told her colleagues before voting against a measure to change Wyoming’s confidentiality statutes.
That idea puts the Legislature in a catch-22: to study the state’s juvenile justice system, lawmakers need data. But when the Joint Judiciary Committee tried to do a deep dive into juvenile justice in 2021, it quickly realized that access to that data would require a statute change.
Lien didn’t respond to a message from WyoFile sent Monday inquiring about whether she had looked into the topic and had interest in supporting any related legislation this upcoming session if reelected.
Political will?
Juvenile justice reform isn’t an interim priority for the Joint Judiciary Committee this year. “It doesn’t need any study,” Rep. Art Washut, the Casper Republican who chairs the House Judiciary Committee, said. “We know what it is, we know what the needs are. It’s just a political will to pass legislation.”
“It’s always been very frustrating, sort of circular arguments that we haven’t done this, so we can’t do that,” Donna Sheen, the former executive director of the Wyoming Children’s Law Center, said. “But the bottom line is that we continue to leave children in really harmful places.”
When it comes to how children are treated at juvenile facilities, Wyoming’s current regulations are “pretty minimal,” Sheen said, and don’t differentiate between facility types. “So in that respect, there are very minimal expectations or rules around how children can be treated.”
Through materials provided in discovery, including depositions — testimony given under oath — images and records, the lawsuit against the boys’ school provides a window into what a child might experience at the facility. Besides providing images, the latest response in the case also includes new allegations that boys’ school employees were encouraged to downplay the use of force against residents in incident reports.
“In light of what’s coming out from this lawsuit, it is clear that we need to make changes,” Provenza, the Laramie Democrat, said in a phone call.
What those changes might look like is unclear right now. “I think everyone is digesting what’s coming out from the lawsuit, and then trying to figure out: What are the policies that need to change within the agency? What are the guardrails that the state needs to put in place to protect kids?”
Provenza said over text that she’s “hopeful” other lawmakers “will see the need for statute changes” and will also be willing to work on juvenile justice reforms come the next legislative session.
More broadly, Provenza said she would also prioritize putting a version of past confidentiality amendment bills into statute. “Without that change in statute, we are going to have a difficult time evaluating any program effectiveness,” she said in a follow-up text message.
Governor, candidates react
Gov. Mark Gordon, who appointed DFS director Korin Schmidt, declined to comment on the specifics of the case when asked by WyoFile if he thinks Wyoming should have stronger guardrails on the use of solitary confinement and force against children in state custody and if the lawsuit’s allegations call for an independent review of the boys’ school and DFS’ oversight of the facility.
“Building upon the commitment I witnessed firsthand during my mental health town hall and visit to the Wyoming Boys School in 2023, the safety and security of the students and staff at the facility are paramount to me,” he said.
The governor said that he had been “in direct contact” with Schmidt, who “verified and assured” him that “the youth currently residing at the school are safe and receiving proper care.” He also mentioned that most of these allegations “were made roughly four years ago.” In 2022, WyoFile and the Casper Star-Tribune reported that the use of force, restraints and confined isolation had increased at the boys’ school.

Gordon will finish his final term as governor in November. There are four Republicans and a Democrat vying to replace him. WyoFile posed the same questions to these candidates.
“Wyoming needs a juvenile justice system that protects communities, holds offenders accountable, and ensures children in state custody are treated humanely, safely, and with appropriate guardrails that focus on rehabilitation,” State Superintendent of Public Instruction Megan Degenfelder, a Republican running for governor, said in a statement to WyoFile.
“I take these allegations seriously, children in state custody are the responsibility of the State of Wyoming.”
If elected, Degenfelder said she would “support an independent review” of the boys’ school, including its use-of-force policies, isolation practices, staff training, reporting and transparency for lawmakers and the public.
Republican gubernatorial candidate Brent Bien also said in a statement to WyoFile that he would support an independent review of the allegations. “These are minor children in state custody. As such, the state does have a duty to not only maintain order, but to also ensure accountability while still protecting that child.”
“Though I can not prejudge a lawsuit, as Governor, I would not ignore any allegations that involve excessive force, isolation, ‘restraint chairs,’ or any other actions that may harm children in state custody.”
Wyoming, he said, should have “clear guardrails” for juveniles in state custody. If elected, he would support legislation requiring reporting, “body/video records,” limits on isolation and restraints, trauma-informed training and regular oversight of “all juvenile facilities.” Bien said those measures should include “strong consequences” for violations.
“The recent allegations about the Wyoming Boys’ School are deeply concerning,” Sen. Eric Barlow, a Gillette Republican who served as Speaker of the House, said in a statement to WyoFile. “Every young person in the state’s care deserves to be safe and treated with dignity. Wyoming families want their kids close to home, getting help and support.”
In 2025, Barlow voted in favor of Senate File 157, “Department of family services-confidentiality amendments-2,” one of many attempts over the last couple of years to improve juvenile justice data sharing, before it died in the House Judiciary Committee.
Republican candidate Curt Blake did not respond to WyoFile by publishing time.
The state defendants in the boys’ school lawsuit have until Friday to file their reply supporting their request for summary judgement — when a court decides a matter before a case goes to trial.
This article was originally published by WyoFile and is republished here with permission. WyoFile is an independent nonprofit news organization focused on Wyoming people, places and policy.
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Wyoming
Dan Speas Fish Hatchery temporarily closed to visitors as construction begins on new cool-/warm-water expansion
CASPER, Wyo. — On Thursday, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department announced that the Dan Speas Fish Hatchery will be temporarily closed, beginning June 25, due to the construction of a brand-new, state-of-the-art cool-/warm-water fish production facility.
A release from Game and Fish says that the brief pause in public access is a necessary step to ensure the safety of visitors and staff during the heavy-lifting phases of the project.
“We had hoped to keep access open to the hatchery, but we have discovered there will be too many safety hazards during the demolition phase of construction,” said Lars Alsager, Game and Fish superintendent of Dan Speas. “The Department will reassess the closure in the fall of 2026, once initial demolition and foundational work are safely wrapped up.”
As Wyoming’s largest producer of fish for stocking, the Dan Speas Fish Hatchery — along with the state’s nine other fish hatcheries — will continue its normal cold-water fish production uninterrupted throughout the entire construction process.
Once the expansion is complete, the new facility will dramatically boost Game and Fish’s ability to manage diverse recreational fishing opportunities across Wyoming by raising sport fish locally, rather than importing them from other states.
Anglers can look forward to high-quality, in-state production of walleye, sauger, crappie, bluegill, largemouth bass and channel catfish.
“This project marks a thrilling milestone for Wyoming’s outdoor community, ensuring a robust, self-sustaining future for cold, cool and warm-water sport fishing right here at home,” adds Alan Osterland, chief of fisheries.
The release notes that the Wyoming Game and Fish Department is committed to keeping the community in the loop every step of the way. They included a brief snapshot of what to expect throughout the project:
- Fall 2026: Demolition and foundation work conclude, and the department reassesses public access to the facility.
- Fall 2027: Construction of the new cool-/warm-water fish production facility officially ends.
- Spring 2028: The first batch of cool- and warm-water fish will be produced and prepared to stock Wyoming waters.
“The Wyoming Game and Fish Department extends its sincere thanks to the public for their understanding and cooperation as we build a premier fishery asset for generations of anglers to come,” the release states.
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Wyoming
Colorado And Oregon Lift Fishing Restrictions, Drought Will Kill Fish Anyway
Facing extreme drought in the wake of an exceptionally mild winter, officials in Colorado and Oregon have thrown up their hands and told anglers at some reservoirs: Catch all the fish you want, because they’re going to die anyway.
Conditions aren’t nearly so dire at two of Wyoming’s premier fishing reservoirs, Flaming Gorge in Sweetwater County and Boysen in Fremont County, where limits remain in place and the angling should remain good this summer, a state park manager and marina owner told Cowboy State Daily.
In northeastern Oregon, fishing limits were lifted on three reservoirs on the Powder River, a tributary of the Snake River, which originates in Wyoming.
Colorado is allowing unlimited angling on Antero Reservoir on the South Platte River in the central part of the state, and the Nee Noshe Reservoir to the southeast.
Utah has loosened catch limits on Crouse Reservoir, east of Salt Lake City, and Nine Mile Reservoir, south of the city.
In each instance, state agencies surmised reservoirs are getting so low and stagnant the fish are doomed regardless, according to numerous media reports.
No Emergency, Yet
Despite drought conditions across the state, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department doesn’t have “immediate plans to enact emergency regulations to liberalize creel limits,” according to fisheries management coordinator Mark Smith.
“However, conditions could change rapidly. If an emergency change to creel limits were to occur that information would be disseminated widely to the public and posted at the water for anglers to find,” Smith said in an email to Cowboy State Daily.
Some of Wyoming’s larger reservoirs have conservation pools, or “dead pools,” to act as buffers for fisheries when water is running low, Smith said.
Even so, “all stored water has limitations,” he added. The water at Flaming Gorge and Boysen is expected to drop enough to render some boat ramps useless.
So, Game and Fish is watching closely for a “tipping point” that might warrant a change in fishing regulations, Smith said.
Bad New For Small Waters
For smaller fisheries, the news isn’t quite so good.
“Ultimately, our goal is to protect all of our fisheries, but we recognize that some of our small waters have already been lost, or will be lost, to drying,” Smith said.
Sometimes that happens so fast there isn’t time to react, he said.
“For example, when we were finally able to access roads and assess small ponds in the 33 Mile country north of Casper this May, most of those fisheries had already succumbed to low water elevations and poor water-quality conditions,” Smith said.
“Other sagebrush stock-water reservoirs could face a similar fate,” he added.
Emergency regulations require the governor’s signature.
“Emergency regulations take effect immediately upon the Governor’s approval and would be lifted if conditions improved and fish were likely to survive,” Smith said.
Boysen Could Lose Boat Ramps
Boysen Reservoir has been roughly 70% full during June, Boysen State Park superintendent John Bass said.
Boysen is one of Wyoming’s top destinations for walleye, and also boasts good trout fishing.
Bass said he doesn’t anticipate the reservoir dropping to the point of mass fish die-offs or calls to lift all fishing limits.
According to Bureau of Reclamation estimates, Boysen will slowly fall, but remain above 50% capacity.
All four Boysen boat ramps are usable, he said. They are Bannon, Tough Creek, Fremont Bay and Cottonwood Bay.
“Although, as the lake starts falling, the Fremont and Cottonwood Ramps will be too shallow to use. But that’s a fairly common occurrence in my 10 years here,” Bass said. “The Brannon and Tough Creek boat ramps will be usable for the remainder of the year, until ice-up.”
‘The Marina Could Be Gone’
Likewise, there’s no reason to think officials will call for a free-for-all at Flaming Gorge, which straddles the Wyoming-Utah state line, Buckboard Marina owner Tony Valdez said.
“I don’t think we’ll be at the stagnant water level, where we could lose all of the fish,” he said.
Flaming Gorge draws anglers from all over the region for its prized kokanee salmon. It’s also known for lake trout and other species.
The Bureau of Reclamation this spring announced that Flaming Gorge is set for a million-acre-foot drawdown to make up for severe shortages downstream at Lake Powell, on the Utah-Arizona state line.
An acre foot is the amount of water that would flood an acre of land to the depth of one foot.
Valdez has previously expressed concerns the drawdown could ruin kokanee spawning areas. Kokanee are already under pressure because of competition with lake trout and burbot.
Wyoming Game and Fish and the Utah Division of Wildlife already lifted catch limits on smaller lake trout (under 28 inches) and burbot, in hopes of helping the kokanee.
Valdez said he doesn’t expect fishing limits to be suspended on any other species.
However, boat ramps could be rendered useless as the reservoir drops for the drawdown, he added.
Valdez said his marina could also tank this summer.
“This year, the marina could be gone. In fact, I’ve got to go deal with that right now, and move some stuff around (because of dropping water levels),” he said during a telephone interview with Cowboy State Daily.
Catfish Getting Scarce
Valdez said if there’s any danger of water dropping to fish-killing levels it would hit first upstream, at Fontenelle Reservoir.
“If it did get that low, the first one to go would be Fontenelle, then the Green (River) and then Flaming Gorge. But I don’t see it dropping that low,” he said.
Drought has ruined some of the fishing on the Blacks River, which feeds Flaming Gorge on the west side, Valdez said.
That river once was a hot spot for catfish, he noted.
“People still catch catfish near the confluence, more so in the lake than on the river. The river gets stagnant,” he said.
While Flaming Gorge is holding its own for now, the long-term picture could be stark.
During a Tuesday meeting in Denver, members of the Upper Colorado River Commission said conditions along the river system – which includes the Green River – are dire.
Wyoming state engineer Brandon Gebhart said it could be the worst year on record for the Colorado River basin.
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.
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