10th Anniversary Edition Home Page
News highlights: 2002
By JoAn Bjarko
North Forty News
Wellington started the new year with a $4.8 million town budget. Among
the new expenses for the growing community was a third deputy sheriff.
The town contracts with the county sheriff's department for its law enforcement.
A proliferation of radio towers and cell towers filling the skies of northern
Larimer County turned into a contentious issue as the county approved requests
for new locations, including a 500-foot radio tower near Livermore.
North Poudre Irrigation Co. marked 100 years of operation in February.
Construction started in February on a new county office building in downtown
Fort Collins - right next to the old courthouse, which will be torn down.
Prior to construction, county commissioners opted for a bigger, five-story
building with a $27 million price tag. Two years earlier, the cost estimate
was $17.2 million.
LaPorte residents, with the guidance of the county planning department,
began work to update the area's land use plan. LaPorte is the only unincorporated
community in the county to have its own plan, which was last revised 10
years ago.
Wellington voters elected former town trustee Larry Noel as their new mayor.
Numerous federal agencies and local governments imposed fire bans by late
April because of extremely dry conditions.
Larimer County broke ground for its new fairgrounds complex in April. The
$65 million complex will open by October 2003, with the first game for
the Colorado Eagles hockey team scheduled for Oct. 17.
Larimer County CattleWomen celebrated 50 years of service to the cattle
industry.
A nonpartisan group circulated petitions for a ballot measure that would
increase the number of county commissioners from three to five. Petitions
were not turned in, however, when the three commissioners indicated they
would put the issue on the ballot anyway.
Colorado Gov. Bill Owens vetoed parts of the state budget bill, cutting
$5 million in per capita state funding for public health. Those cuts then
resulted in shortfalls for the Larimer County Department of Health and
Environment. The health board had to dip into emergency reserves to keep
some programs running.
Gateway Mountain Park in the lower Poudre Canyon finally opened to the
public in June. The area, once the site of Fort Collins' water filtration
plant, had been closed to the general public since 1979.
In July, Wellington started construction of a new wastewater treatment
plant that will be large enough to serve 6,000 people - twice the town's
current population. Cost of the new facility is $6.5 million.
Holcim (US) Inc., formerly Holnam Inc., shut down its cement manufacturing
plant in LaPorte on Aug. 31. The last day of work for dozens of employees
came nearly a year after the plant's closure was first announced.
Area water districts started looking into old ideas for more water storage,
including Glade Reservoir that would cover the current U.S. Highway 287
north of Ted's Place. A one-year study is under way.
The North Forty News added Timnath to its circulation area with its October
edition. A few months earlier, Timnath hired its first paid town administrator,
Joe Racine, to help guide the town through explosive growth. Racine has
30 years of experience in community planning.
Public meetings about LaPorte area gravel pits drew large crowds as local
residents aired concerns about traffic, dust and noise.
Election results: Almost 56 percent of county voters rejected a 0.3-mill
levy to fund public health services. Voters elected Republican Kathay Rennels
to a second four-year term as county commissioner. She defeated Green Party
candidate Nancy York. Other Republican candidates for county office were
elected without opposition: Scott Doyle, clerk and recorder; Larry Johnson,
assessor; Myrna Rodenberger, treasurer; Jim Alderden, sheriff; Ron Perkins,
county surveyor; and Pat Allen, coroner.
A three-state banking group announced plans to open a new bank in Wellington.
Called First National Bank, Wellington, it has no connection with the First
National Bank in Fort Collins.
The eyebrows of county residents who live east of I-25 went up a few notches
when they saw moose roaming their range. Moose were reintroduced to the
state in 1978 with transplants made in the North Park area near Walden.
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