New Innovation and Sustainability Initiative to Explore Five Wicked Problems
We are excited to announce COLab will be partnering with Colorado Press Association and Colorado Media Project on a series of media-industry-led working groups that
▪︎ FOUR SESSIONS – JULY 29, AUGUST 12, AUGUST 26, SEPTEMBER 23 ▪︎
You know that Colorado’s growing population and warming climate have put the state’s water future at risk. You may also know that recently, Lake Mead’s water level fell so low that it is likely to trigger the first-ever shortage declaration on the Colorado River.
But you may not know what this all means to your community and its water supplies, how you and your newsroom can get up to speed on water issues, and how you can inform your audience about these unprecedented developments most effectively. These are complex issues that take extra time to learn and report.
Over the next several months, Colorado journalists are invited participate in four “Water Fluency for Journalists” workshops presented by Jerd Smith of Fresh Water News and COLab’s Susan Greene.
Please register separately for each session. Space is limited.
All sessions will be held via Zoom, and recordings will be available here.
Session 1 – Hydrographs, history, and whose water is it anyway?
Thursday, July 29, 2021
2:00 to 3:30 p.m.
This session will set the context for Colorado water law, management and protection by covering basic Colorado hydrology, the history of settlement and water development in Colorado, and the foundations of Colorado water law and water rights administration that govern water use. Plus, we’ll look at protections for streams and water quality.
Session 2 – Drought, aridification, and sharing shortage in the Colorado River Basin
Thursday, August 12, 2021
2:00 to 3:30 p.m.
This session will be a deep dive into the Colorado River Compact and layered agreements that make up the “Law of the River,” the flawed hydrology that served as the basis for the original compact, the 20-year drought plaguing the basin, and drought contingency planning among the seven U.S. states that share the river, in cooperation with the nation of Mexico and Native American Tribes.
Session 3 – Nature vs. Nurture: Policy and planning to stretch a scarce supply
CORRECTED DATE: Thursday, August 26, 2021
2:00 to 3:30 p.m.
This session will dig into Colorado’s source water supply, major users and how they access water, community- and regional-level water planning, as well as major policy drivers and influencers, including the Colorado Water Conservation Board, Colorado Water Plan and other key water players working toward a sustainable water future in the face of drought and climate change.
Session 4 – The what, where, why of Colorado’s most pressing water issues
Thursday, September 23, 2021
2:00 to 3:30 p.m.
This session will cover the top water issues facing the state of Colorado and its communities, many of which look similar across the West, and will highlight creative solutions being pursued, from technological innovations to policy change to creative financing, to address these challenges. Plus, where can reporters begin as they dig into their local issues?
“Water Fluency for Journalists” trainings are offered by Water Education Colorado and Fresh Water News.
We are excited to announce COLab will be partnering with Colorado Press Association and Colorado Media Project on a series of media-industry-led working groups that
On behalf of the Paris-based freedom of press watchdog Reporters Without Borders, you’re invited to celebrate the Journalism Trust Initiative‘s one-year anniversary in the United States.
The Pulitzer Center is offering 10-month Al Accountability Fellowships to support journalists working on in-depth AI accountability stories that examine governments’ and corporations’ uses of
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