Rocky Mountain Voice

Tag: Bureaucratic Overreach

Colorado Agriculture Under Siege from Regulation and Rewilding
State, Approved, denvergazette.com

Colorado Agriculture Under Siege from Regulation and Rewilding

By Rachael Wright | The Denver Gazette Janie VanWinkle is contemplating something she never thought she’d ever consider — selling the family ranch after four generations of living and working in Colorado. “The political environment is so toxic that if we do speak up at all, it falls on deaf ears,” said VanWinkle, a Western Slope rancher. “This is no longer an agriculture-friendly environment or atmosphere. Five years ago, I could never imagine having this conversation with my family.” Colorado's agricultural industry is the state's second-largest economic driver, accounting for more than $47 billion in activity and employing more than 195,000 people. The export of Colorado cattle as of 2024 generated nearly $4.5 billion, making Colorado one of the 10 producers in the nation. Th...
Young Rancher’s Win Restores Power to Farmers and Families
National, Approved, Beef News, Food Freedom

Young Rancher’s Win Restores Power to Farmers and Families

By Beef News Staff | Beef News At 21, Dawson Holle didn’t just change a law—he rewrote the future of food freedom in North Dakota. Backed by cows, commonsense, and coalition-building, he legalized raw milk and cream without corporate lobbying or culture war noise. This is how a farm kid outmaneuvered the bureaucracy—and lit a path every state can follow. It starts with a rotary parlor and a thousand cows. Before the sun comes up in Mandan, North Dakota, Dawson Holle is managing crews, driving the semi to pick up corn or straw, and fielding legislative calls from the Capitol. He’s 21. He’s the youngest elected lawmaker in state history. And this year, he overturned decades of dairy regulation to legalize on-farm raw milk across North Dakota. “I mean, I could go buy sushi. I coul...
Bureaucratic Green Energy Mandates to Cost Colorado Ratepayers $45 Billion
State, Approved, denvergazette.com

Bureaucratic Green Energy Mandates to Cost Colorado Ratepayers $45 Billion

By Scott Weiser | The Denver Gazette An energy office report shows six less-costly options, including nuclear power. Colorado Energy Office Executive Director Will Toor joined a group of "renewable" energy advocates on a press call recently, arguing that Congress should retain Inflation Reduction Act tax credits for wind, solar, and grid-scale batteries, rather than reallocating the funds to other technologies, including nuclear power, which President Trump has set as a priority. Underpinning that argument is that wind, solar and batteries are the "fastest and most affordable way for utilities to meet this demand.” That's not what a April 2025 report, commissioned by the energy office itself, has found. On the contrary, the report from Ascend Analytics, “Pathways to Deep Dec...

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