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Showing posts from May, 2026

Opinion: The Boulder airport decision needs more complete analysis

I’ve been following the council’s process around the Boulder airport and have been frustrated by the lack of good background info regarding the options. So, I did a bit of research. Thanks to all who helped me, including a long-time climbing partner, who is a pilot and an attorney and was involved in the Aspen airport fight. Regarding the “straw poll” that the council took at a recent study session: Some attempted to treat this as a decision to accept a grant from the FAA, which, per the FAA’s terms, would require continuing the airport operations indefinitely, and under FAA jurisdiction. The council should read its own rules. Charter Section 16 states, “The council shall act only by ordinance, resolution, or motion.” The Boulder Revised Code Sec. 2-2-8 requires a council motion to approve the city manager’s signing of any lease of three years or longer. And the council is only empowered to make such motions at official meetings, not study sessions. The reason that FAA jurisdicti...

Opinion: The ‘housing crisis’ – what’s real and what’s not

Colorado’s “housing crisis” has been a rallying cry for more and more development over the last few years. But looking at the reality yields a much more nuanced picture. I finally found the underlying document produced by the state’s Department of Local Affairs (DOLA), where the “housing crisis” was discussed in detail. Published in September 2025, it’s called “Colorado’s Housing Shortfall: An Estimate and Review of Existing Studies.” There’s no direct link, but it can be found at “Colorado’s Housing Shortfall 9/2/25,” and then downloaded per the link at the bottom of this article. It’s worth the look, in my opinion. It points out that there has been a definite increase in the cost of housing, and argues that this is due to a “shortfall” in construction rates, elevated interest rates and rising construction costs. Interesting, what’s ignored is the almost total lack of regulatory efforts to control prices, as well as the obvious constraints on water, road capacity, open space, neighbor...