WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 21, 2023
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TRAPPERS DAY SPIRIT
Air quality group targets Colorado Fort Lupton marks heritage with annual Trappers Day and Tomato Festival P3 smokestacks •In-door dining and large gatherings prohibited by new restrictions •A fundraiser to combat domestic abuse • Page 3
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COVID-19
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LOCAL
BY MICHAEL BOOTH THE COLORADO SUN
loCal opInIon sports legal puzzle ClassIfIeds
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VOLUME 116 | ISSUE 38
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
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VOICES: PAGE 10 | OBITUARIES: PAGE 11 | LIFE: PAGE 12 | CLASSIFIEDS: PAGE 27
A series of Colorado’s largest greenhouse gas-emitting sectors have come under the regulatory knife for cuts in recent years: oil and gas producers, gasoline vehicles, large buildings, cement plants and coal-fired utilities. Now a secondary tier of big-name greenhouse gas polluters is facing new rules from an Air Quality Control Commission vote this month, with the goal of 20% emissions reductions from a 2015 benchmark at industrial companies like Suncor, Molson Coors, Cargill Meat Solutions and Leprino Foods. While the industries argue a 2030 timeline for those cuts is too quick and expensive, environmental and neighborhood groups say the state’s draft rules for the legislation-mandated cuts won’t actually reduce greenhouse gases for at least seven years. They also say a trading plan to allow the 18 sites on the list to buy carbon credits to meet the rules is a SEE AIR QUALITY, P9
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