History
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1884
August 1884
State engineer E.S. Nettleton conducts the first preliminary survey of a possible diversion project to import West Slope water to the Front Range. -
1889
1889
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1890
1890
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1902
June 17, 1902
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July 1902
Secretary of the Interior Ethan Allen Hitchcock establishes the U.S. Reclamation Service within the U.S. Geological Survey to study potential water development projects in 17 western states. -
1905
1905
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1907
1907
The Reclamation Service becomes a separate organization within the Interior Department and is renamed the Bureau of Reclamation.
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1915
Jan. 26, 1915
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1921
1921
The U.S. Congress officially changes the name of the Grand River to the Colorado River. Proponents request the change to officially identify the headwaters of the Colorado River and differentiate it from the Green River in Wyoming. -
1922
Nov. 24, 1922
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1930
1930
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1933
Aug. 17, 1933
Northern Colorado leaders organize the Grand Lake Committee – predecessor to the Northern Colorado Water Users Association and the Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District (NCWCD/Northern Water) – to pursue a Grand Lake water diversion project. -
December 1933
Engineers report that a Grand Lake water diversion project is feasible. -
1935
January 1935
The Reclamation Service allots $150,000 to survey and estimate costs for the Grand Lake Project. -
Jan. 25, 1935
Grand Lake Project proponents establish the Northern Colorado Water Users Association. -
1936
July 1, 1936
Congress officially renames the Grand Lake Project the Colorado-Big Thompson Project. -
1937
May 13, 1937
Colorado Governor Teller Ammons signs the Conservancy District Act into law. -
June 1937
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June 11, 1937
The Northern Colorado Water Users Association and the Western Slope Protective Association reach an agreement to endorse the C-BT Project, including construction of Green Mountain Reservoir. -
June 15, 1937
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June 24, 1937
Congress approves Senate Document 80, authorizing construction of the C-BT Project. -
Aug. 9, 1937
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Sept. 20, 1937
The District Court of Weld County orders the creation of Northern Water. -
Sept. 28, 1937
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Nov. 12, 1937
Interior Secretary Harold Ickes considers protests against C-BT Project funding, but he determines the project is feasible and forwards his findings to President Roosevelt. -
Dec. 27, 1937
President Roosevelt concurs with Harold Ickes and grants the C-BT Project final approval. -
1938
June 28, 1938
Northeastern Colorado voters authorize Northern Water to sign a contract with the United States and to assess a 1 mill ad valorem tax on all properties within Northern Water boundaries to build and operate the C-BT Project. The measure is approved by a 17:1 margin. -
July 5, 1938
Northern Water signs a contract with the United States to repay a portion of C-BT Project construction costs. -
Dec. 1, 1938
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1940
June 23, 1940
Construction begins on the Continental Divide Tunnel. One crew begins from Grand Lake on the West Slope while a second team tunnels from a location near Estes Park on the East Slope. When complete the tunnel is the longest ever built from two separate headings. -
1941
Dec. 5, 1941
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1942
Dec. 31, 1942
The War Production Board halts all construction work on C-BT Project features except the power plant at Green Mountain Reservoir. -
1943
May 1943
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July 1943
The War Production Board allows C-BT Project construction to resume on a limited basis. -
1944
April 24, 1944
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June 10, 1944
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Dec. 21, 1944
President Roosevelt signs legislation to rename the tunnel after the late Senator Alva B. Adams. -
1945
November 1945
Construction workers complete Shadow Mountain Dam and spillway. -
1947
1947
The C-BT Project diverts 6,014 acre feet of water to the East Slope for irrigation. -
June 23, 1947
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1948
Nov. 1, 1948
Crews close the gates at Olympus Dam, enabling water to be stored in Lake Estes. -
1949
Sept. 14, 1949
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1950
July 19, 1950
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1951
Jan. 10, 1951
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Jan. 25, 1951
Water is pumped from Lake Granby into Shadow Mountain Reservoir for the first time. -
July 20, 1951
Colorado Gov. Lee Knous and others dedicate the Granby Pump Plant and sponsor a fishing contest in conjunction with the ceremony. -
July 21, 1951
The first C-BT Project water is released from Horsetooth Reservoir into the Poudre River. -
1952
Sept. 19, 1952
Crews finish building the dams at Carter Lake. -
1953
Jan. 1, 1953
Severe drought grips eastern Colorado through 1956. -
April 2, 1953
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June 1, 1953
Following the death of Charles Hansen, Greeley Tribune editor and first Northern Water Board president, the District looks for a new headquarters location close to C-BT Project features and Reclamation’s new office southwest of Loveland. -
Sept. 8, 1953
The Northern Water Board votes to include the City of Boulder in District boundaries. The Board also agrees to purchase 2.6 acres west of Loveland for a new headquarters. The site is a cherry orchard. -
1954
Feb. 26, 1954
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May 27, 1954
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1955
Oct. 12, 1955
U.S. District Court issues a final decree stipulating the quantities of water the C-BT Project may divert, store and deliver. -
1956
Jan. 1, 1956
Construction crews finish the South Platte Supply Canal, the final C-BT Project feature Congress authorized in 1937. -
Aug. 11, 1956
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Sept. 10, 1956
Northern Water and Reclamation officials sign C-BT Project Supplemental Contract No. 2, authorizing a five-year interim period for Northern Water to accumulate reserve funds for possible emergencies. -
1957
1957
The C-BT Project is declared complete and fully operational.
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1960
Nov. 9, 1960
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1962
Jan. 1, 1962
A 40-year repayment period commences for Northern Water's portion of C-BT Project facilities and construction costs. -
1965
October 1965
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1968
1968
Northern Water purchases 11 acres adjoining the south and west sides of its current property to expand its headquarters.
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1970
July 6, 1970
Windy Gap Project participants formally establish Northern Water's Municipal Subdistrict, the first subdistrict ever created under the Water Conservancy Act. Construction begins on a new Northern Water headquarters. -
1971
April 27, 1971
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1973
Oct. 3, 1973
Northern Water, Subdistrict and Reclamation sign a carriage contract, allowing the Subdistrict to utilize C-BT Project facilities to transport and deliver the Subdistrict’s Windy Gap Project water. -
1976
July 31, 1976
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1977
1977
Drought hits northeastern Colorado from 1977 to 1978, and Horsetooth Reservoir reaches its lowest level since it was first filled in the 1950s.
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1980
April 30, 1980
The Subdistrict reaches an agreement with the Colorado River Water Conservation District and other West Slope interests. The West Slope agrees to no longer oppose the Windy Gap Project, and the Subdistrict commits to study and construct the Azure Project to benefit the West Slope. -
1981
1981
Northern Water establishes an Irrigation Management Service to promote wise agricultural water use. The IMS is part of Northern Water's commitment to water conservation. -
July 11, 1981
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1985
March 29, 1985
The Subdistrict agrees to pay $10.2 million to the West Slope when plans for the Azure Project are scrapped. This supplemental agreement removes the last hurdle to the Windy Gap Project. -
June 29, 1985
Subdistrict officials dedicate the Windy Gap Project. -
1986
1986
The City of Thornton pays $55 million for 21,000 acres of farmland in Weld and Larimer counties. The city intends to transfer the farms’ irrigation water to Thornton via a 56-mile pipeline. -
April 9, 1986
Thornton makes public its plan to divert water from Northern Colorado. -
June 1, 1986
Northern Water assumes operation and maintenance responsibilities for C-BT collection facilities on the West Slope. -
October 1986
President Reagan signs legislation designating a large segment of the Cache la Poudre as Colorado's first wild and scenic river. -
1987
Feb. 1, 1987
Northern Waterassumes operation and maintenance responsibilities for Horsetooth Reservoir and Carter Lake. By 1987 Northern Water has 56 full-time employees; approximately half are employed in the Operations and Maintenance Branch. -
Sept. 20, 1987
Northern Water marks its 50th anniversary with a celebration at its headquarters in Loveland. -
October 1987
The Bureau of Reclamation announces a reorganization plan, shifting the 85-year-old agency's focus from project construction to water resources management. -
1988
1988
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1989
Feb. 6, 1989
A Water Division No. 5 judge grants the Subdistrict absolute decrees to pump and store Windy Gap Project water.
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1991
March 1991
The Central Colorado Water Conservancy District imports the concept of children's water festivals to Colorado from Nebraska and hosts Colorado's first children's water festival. -
June 3, 1991
Northern Water begins offering C-BT Project water for seasonal rental. People line up as early as 2 a.m. to rent water. -
June 14, 1991
Northern Water and Subdistrict boards vote to include the City and County of Broomfield within Northern Water and Subdistrict boundaries. -
July 1991
Northern Water staff release the Northern Colorado Regional Water Supply Study, including information about projected future water demands. -
1991
Northern Water begins preliminary design work on the Southern Water Supply Project pipeline to deliver C-BT and Windy Gap water from Carter Lake to cities and towns year-round. -
1992
May 19, 1992
Children's water festivals spread across Northern Colorado. Northern Water sponsors its first festival in Fort Collins. -
October 1992
The University Press of Colorado publishes "The Last Water Hole in the West," a history of Northern Water and C-BT Project. The book's author is Colorado State University historian Daniel Tyler. -
1993
1993
Northern Water expands its Irrigation Management Service to include a Turf and Urban Landscape Water Management and Conservation Program component. By 1993 municipalities own more than half of C-BT Project units. -
November 1993
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1994
1994
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June 18, 1994
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1995
Dec. 13, 1995
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1996
May 1, 1996
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July 16, 1996
Crews install the last segment of the Fort Lupton-Hudson pipeline, completing the second phase of the Southern Water Supply Project. -
1996
Following repairs, Reclamation personnel test and ready the Flatiron Pump Plant Unit No.3. -
1997
Feb. 7, 1997
Northern Water and Municipal Subdistrict boards vote to include the City of Louisville within Northern Water and Municipal Subdistrict boundaries. -
Sept. 1, 1997
Engineers begin designing a third phase of the Southern Water Supply Project pipeline, a 42-mile segment from Platteville to Fort Morgan. -
November 1997
Northern Water purchases 35 acres on the north side of Berthoud to consolidate all East Slope employees, facilities and activities at a new headquarters site. -
1998
April 1, 1998
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August 1998
Pleasant Valley Pipeline participants settle on a project design. The reversible pipeline will benefit Larimer and Weld county residents. -
October 1998
Crews begin constructing a bypass flow structure at the Flatiron Power Plant. The bypass will enable water to bypass Flatiron in the event of a plant failure. The plant produces hydropower and also pumps water 300 vertical feet to Carter Lake. -
December 1998
Construction of the Flatiron bypass structure is complete. -
1999
1999
Windy Gap Project participants and the Subdistrict consider several potential reservoir sites on both the East and West slopes to store Windy Gap Project water from 1999 to 2000. This effort becomes known as the Windy Gap Firming Project, an effort to firm the relatively junior Windy Gap Project water rights and provide storage independent of the C-BT Project. -
September 1999
Crews finish work on the Southern Water Supply Project pipeline’s final 42 miles from Platteville to Fort Morgan.
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2000
2000
Sustained drought hits northeastern Colorado until 2006, resulting in agricultural water shortages and municipal water use restrictions. -
January 2000
Northern War and Reclamation unveil plans to modernize Horsetooth Reservoir’s four 50-year-old dams to make the structures more earthquake resistant and reduce seepage. -
April 2000
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April 2000
Northern Water and Colorado Division of Wildlife officials agree to construct additional game ramps in several C-BT Project canals. The ramps enable stranded wildlife to exit the canals safely. -
June 13, 2000
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July 14, 2000
The Northern Water Board approves a contract with RB+B Architects, Inc. to design new headquarters facilities in Berthoud. -
Oct. 27, 2000
President Clinton signs legislation authorizing title transfer of four C-BT Project facilities from the U.S. government to Northern Water. All are located downstream of Horsetooth Reservoir and include the North Poudre (Munroe Gravity) and Charles Hansen supply canals, the Windsor Extension and the Dixon Feeder Canal. -
December 2000
Northern Water and Reclamation sign C-BT Project Supplemental Contract No. 7 to modernize Horsetooth Reservoir’s four 50-year-old dams. -
2001
February 2001
The Bureau of Reclamation contracts with Delhur Industries to modernize Horsetooth Reservoir’s four dams. -
2002
April 2002
The Northern Water Board approves a contract with FCI Constructors, Inc. for the new Berthoud headquarters facilities. -
June 17, 2002
The Bureau of Reclamation marks its 100th anniversary with a celebration at Hoover Dam on the Colorado River near Las Vegas, Nevada. -
August 2002
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October 2002
The Northern Water Board moves its initial quota declaration to October, establishing winter-time water delivery accounts and allowing water users to transfer water before the traditional quota declaration each April. -
December 2002
Northern Water makes its final payment to the federal government, fulfilling its financial obligations under the original C-BT Project Repayment Contract and the C-BT Project Supplemental Contract No. 2. Northern Water continues to repay its portion of Horsetooth Modernization Project costs under C-BT Project Supplemental Contract No. 7. -
2003
January 2003
Northern Water begins investigating water project alternatives within the South Platte, St. Vrain, Big Thompson and Cache la Poudre watersheds for a potential Northern Integrated Supply Project. -
April 2003
The Subdistrict pumps a record-setting 64,200 acre-feet of Windy Gap Project water to Lake Granby. -
Sept. 2, 2003
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October 2003
After more than two-and-a-half years of work the Horsetooth Modernization project is complete. The same month work begins on the 8.5-mile Pleasant Valley Pipeline. -
2004
Feb. 13, 2004
Northern Water and Subdistrict boards vote to include the City of Lafayette within Northern Water and Subdistrict boundaries. -
March 2004
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April 2004
Northern Water expands its water quality monitoring program, a multi-agency effort to monitor and maintain the C-BT Project’s supply of high-quality water. -
August 2004
The Northern Water Board adopts new Carryover Program rules and a Carryover Capacity Transferability Program to more flexibly manage C-BT Project water supplies. -
September 2004
Northern Water implements online accounting, providing secure online access to C-BT Project allottees’ water accounts via the Northern Water website. -
2005
March 2005
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May 2005
Northern Water begins preliminary design work on a second Southern Water Supply Project pipeline from Carter Lake to cities within Northern Water and Subdistrict boundaries. -
October 2005
The Northern Water Board adopts a Regional Pool Program to increase water management flexibility and help preserve a portion of C-BT Project water supplies for irrigated agriculture. -
November 2005
The Northern Water Board signs agreements with the Bureau of Reclamation and URS Corporation to design a second outlet structure at Carter Lake. -
2006
March 2006
Northern Water relocates a section of the St. Vrain Supply Canal upstream of the Little Thompson Siphon due to unstable geology. The canal is back in operation and carrying water by early April. -
July 31, 2006
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Oct. 15, 2006
Northern Water staff begin lowering the water level in Shadow Mountain Reservoir 12 vertical feet to kill aquatic weeds by exposing them to freezing temperatures for approximately five weeks. The reservoir’s location and lack of depth make it fertile ground for aquatic weed growth. -
2007
April 2007
The Northern Water Board endorses staff’s recommendation to use “Northern Water” as an abbreviated reference for “Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District” to facilitate name recognition. Previously the organization was known by multiple references, including The District, Northern, The Northern District, The Water District, NCWCD and others. -
October 2007
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2008
January 2008
The Northern Water Board adopts a new logo to replace the organization’s existing 20-year-old logo. -
July 2008
Reclamation confirms the presence of quagga mussels in Lake Granby. Quagga mussels are an invasive species similar to zebra mussels. Both types of mussels drive out native species, block industrial pipes and can clog boat motors. -
2009
April 2009
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2010
March 2010
The Northern Water Board allocates 10,000 acre-feet of C-BT Project water from the Regional Pool; water users bid on and lease the entire amount. Adopted by the Board in 2005, the Regional Pool Program provides greater flexibility and to preserve some C-BT water supplies for irrigated agriculture. -
July 2010
The Northern Water Board allocates an additional 15,000 acre-feet of C-BT Project water from the Regional Pool; water users bid on and lease only 1,030 acre-feet due to plentiful supplies. -
October 2010
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2011
February 2011
The Northern Water Board approves construction of a hydroelectric power plant at Carter Lake. When complete the project will generate enough electricity to power a town of approximately 5,000 people. -
2012
May 31, 2012
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June 9, 2012
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Sept. 20, 2012
Northern Water marks its 75th anniversary with a celebration at its headquarters in Berthoud. -
2013
July 2013
Northern Water signs a water lease agreement with the city of Grand Junction to provide more than 5,400 acre-feet of water for municipal and recreational use in Grand Junction through releases out of Lake Granby down the Colorado River. This agreement helps fulfill a commitment under the Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program for additional water in a 15 Mile Reach of the Colorado River above Grand Junction. -
September 2013
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November 2013
Northern Water completes a multi-year effort to rehabilitate the original Carter Lake outlet structure. Constructed in the mid-1950s, the original outlet was intended for large-volume water deliveries only during the irrigation season. Year-round water deliveries to cities and towns severely limited Northern Water’s ability to repair the aging structure until a new outlet at Carter Lake was finished in March 2008. -
2014
March 11, 2014
Northern Water Directors initially approve the construction of a hydropower plant at the outlet of Granby Dam on Lake Granby in Grand County (Granby Hydropower Project). -
October 2014
Water storage levels in the C-BT Project reach an all-time high; more than 200,000 acre-feet above average and 20 percent greater than the previous record set in 1997. -
Dec. 19, 2014
Following years of effort, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Northern Water and its Municipal Subdistrict sign a new Windy Gap carriage contract. Simultaneously, Reclamation issues a Record of Decision enabling the Windy Gap Firming Project to proceed towards design and construction of Chimney Hollow Reservoir west of Carter Lake. At the same Board meeting, Northern Water Directors approve several financial agreements to proceed with the Granby Hydropower Project at Lake Granby. -
2015
March 13, 2015
The Northern Water Board approves a contract with Aslan Construction for the Granby Hydropower Project at Lake Granby. When operating at capacity the hydropower facility at Granby Dam will provide approximately 50 percent of the current capacity of the Trout Hydropower Plant at Carter Lake. -
May 2015
During late April and May, much of Northeastern Colorado receives approximately 200-300 percent of normal precipitation, leading to localized flooding. -
2016
June 3, 2016
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2017
May 16, 2017
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers issues a Record of Decision enabling the Subdistrict to proceed with construction of Chimney Hollow Reservoir, the key component of the Windy Gap Firming Project. -
2018
May 2018
Construction begins on a second Southern Water Supply Project pipeline (SWSP II) from Carter Lake. The $44 million pipeline parallels the first SWSP pipeline from Carter Lake to the west side of Longmont. From there the new pipeline will head southwest to serve both the Left Hand Water District and the City of Boulder’s water filtration plant at Boulder Reservoir.
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2020
January 2020
The Water Quality Control Division of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment issues the Northern Integrated Supply Project the Colorado 401 Water Quality Certification. -
July 15, 2020
The Larimer County Planning Commission recommends approval of a county 1041 permit for the Northern Integrated Supply Project to the Board of County Commissioners, which ultimately will decide whether to issue a permit. -
September 2020
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Sept. 2, 2020
The Northern Integrated Supply Project achieved an important milestone with the Larimer County Board of County Commissioners approving the 1041 Land Use Permit application. -
October 2020
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Dec. 10, 2020
Federal Court rules in favor of the Windy Gap Firming Project, clearing the way for construction of Chimney Hollow Reservoir near Berthoud. -
2021
Feb. 12, 2021
The Northern Water Board of Directors and Grand County Board of County Commissioners agree to be sponsors for the Emergency Watershed Protection Program for the East Troublesome Fire recovery effort and for the Grand County Watershed Recovery group. The EWP Program is managed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service. Its purpose is to implement watershed protection projects that mitigate risks to life and property caused by sudden watershed impairments such as post-fire flooding, sediment loading and debris flows. -
May 13, 2021
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June 17, 2021
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Aug. 6, 2021
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Aug. 16, 2021
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2022
April 2022
The Northern Water Board of Directors is expanded to 13 members. The additional member represents the City and County of Broomfield. -
June 1, 2022
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Aug. 23, 2022
Dignitaries from across the region gather to celebrate the start of construction at the Colorado River Connectivity Channel located in Grand County. Led by U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet, leaders of public agencies and private non-governmental organizations extol the value of the project that will reconnect two segments of the Colorado River above and below Windy Gap Reservoir. -
September 2022
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Dec. 9, 2022
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers issued a federal Clean Water Act Section 404 Record of Decision for the Northern Integrated Supply Project. This is a major milestone for NISP, as it reflects the lead federal regulatory agency’s review and approval of the project. The Corps’ approval was based on a lengthy and rigorous scientific analysis under the National Environmental Policy Act and a host of other environmental laws, including the federal Endangered Species Act, National Historic Preservation Act, State Water Quality compliance certification, and State Fish and Wildlife Mitigation Plan requirements.