



Poet and performer Linda Shaw recites her original poem Rolling Out Royalty.
Produced in coordination with Eternal Body Productions.

Poet and performer Linda Shaw recites her original poem Dreams.
Produced in coordination with Eternal Body Productions.

Ken Ward talks with Dr Maxwell about Family life Center,Maxwell Theatrical Company and more.

High in the Colorado San Juan Mountains, the Summitville Mine was operated by Canadian mining company Galactic Resources as a cyanide heap leach mine from 1986 until abandoned in 1992. Acid mine drainage resulted in continuous contamination of water used by downstream neighbors, including farmers, ranchers, fishermen and wildlife. Named a Superfund site in 1994, the Summitville Mine killed off 17 miles of the Alamosa River, requiring permanent water treatment at the river's headwaters.

The Vasquez/I-70 Superfund Site, formerly home to at least 4 Metal Smelters, is four square miles, much of it unremediated - the soil not treated for high levels of Cadmium, Zinc, Lead, asbestos and other contaminants. Within this unremediated Superfund Site, the City of Denver and CDOT have promoted several projects, one to lower the I-70 viaduct 40 feet in a flood plain, some of it below the water table; another proposed project to protect the I-70 corridor by creating a drainage system of pipes, open canals and detention ponds through north Denver, Park Hill and City Park Golf Courses, the Cole neighborhood, and almost quadrupling the flow of 100-year flood waters through Globeville Landing Park.
In this January 3 City Council meeting, a number of north Denver friends and neighbors testified regarding the proposed projects and the bypass of environmental health and safety standards by the city of Denver, the EPA, CDOT and the Colorado Dept. of Public Health and Environment, placing at risk a number of communities and the environment, including the So. Platte River and neighbors downstream.
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