Boulder Weekly 10.19.2023

Page 6

NEWS

USE IT OR LOSE IT

DEAL ON NEW ACUTE CARE FACILITY NEARLY DONE

COMING UP

Residents can weigh in on the County’s new integrated weed management plan BY WILL MATUSKA

W

hether you consider weed management titillating or not, the control of noxious weeds has been a point of tension in Boulder County for decades, particularly the use of herbicides and, more recently, helicopters to perform aerial sprays. Earlier this month, the County released the first draft of a new integrated weed management plan to guide its policies for more than 50,000 acres of the nearly 115,000 Boulder County Parks and Open Space is tasked with overseeing. Following the new plan is a public engagement period featuring surveys, tours and Parks and Open Space Advisory Committee (POSAC) meetings until the Boulder County Commissioner’s final vote on Feb. 15. The last time the County’s weed management plan went through a similar public process was in 2004. “Our goal with the integrated weed management plan is to have a healthy ecosystem, and protect the health and safety of the people who live, work and recreate in Boulder County,” says Therese Glowacki, director of Boulder County Parks and Open Space. But Mark Guttridge, founder of Ollin Farms, was “pretty disturbed” to see the plan include aerial spray options via drone and helicopter, and continued herbicide use. “I’d like to see really no herbicide use at all,” he says, “but I know that we have to find a middle ground and I’m trying to do everything we can to provide alternatives for Open Space to really meet us halfway.” Ollin Farms uses regenerative agriculture principles to “produce top-quality farm products while continuing to increase the diversity and health of ecosystems around us,” and doesn’t use pesticides or herbicides. Guttenridge is concerned that spraying herbicides, especially aerially, 6

OCTOBER 19, 2023

Courtesy Boulder County

could have unintended consequences. “None of [the County’s herbicides] pass the test of, ‘We should be spraying this from the fricken air,’” he says. “The herbicides should only be hitting the exact plant you need to hit at that time.” The County has used Milestone, Hardball, Telar, Quinstar and Method herbicides in the last month, according to the county’s website, but it paused aerial herbicide applications earlier this year until the integrated weed management plan is updated and a decision on

BY THE NUMBERS:

The County treats nearly 50,000 acres for noxious weed. Below is a breakdown of management acres by treatment method so far in 2023. • Mowing: 1,215 ACRES • Manual (hand-pulling): 4,447 ACRES • Total herbicide spot application:

1,980 ACRES *

• Total herbicide broadcast application:

300 ACRES *

• The County hasn’t completed any aerial applications this year.

* Noxious weeds often do not make up the

entirety of a treatment area, meaning the actual number of acres treated is lower than the total application acres (spot application: 123; broadcast application: 73.5).

whether to resume aerial applications is made. The last time aerial spray was used by Boulder County was on Nov. 1, 2022 via helicopter at Hall Ranch, which faced scrutiny from some community members. Glowacki says the County “rarely” uses broadcast spray methods, which include backpack sprayers and truck, tractor, helicopter and drone applications. The new plan says “broadcast spraying is often the most effective and costeffective method to control large noxious weed infestations because of size, type of infestation and nature of topography.”

Earlier this year, the County used 2,4-D to treat curly dock at Heil Valley Ranch. The Natural Resources Defense Council says a growing body of research indicates 2,4-D “poses a danger to both human health and the environment.” The method of application on the County’s website isn’t clear. The drafted weed management plan combines the previous two plans — one for Parks and Open Space and the other for the overall county — and includes decision processes and strategies to minimize noxious weed problems. The document outlines the use of a variety of tools, including cultural, mechanical and biological control. When it comes to chemicals, Glowacki says the County uses “the lowest toxicity herbicides in the smallest amounts to be effective at controlling weeds” and wants to “keep all of those tools in the toolbox.” The budget for herbicide use, including aerial spraying, will be presented at the Dec. 5 POSAC meeting. While Glowacki says the County takes careful considerations when applying herbicides by following product labels to not impact water or air quality, Guttenridge isn’t sure that matters. “They’ll give directions on labels like how to do it and recommended setbacks [from waterways], but on the very same level that’s telling you this stuff is toxic,” he says. A survey asking the public for feedback on the plan closed on Oct. 18, but there are multiple opportunities for residents to attend POSAC or other public meetings to provide comments on the drafted plan before the commissioners’ final vote.

POSAC REGULAR MEETING

6:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 26, Boulder County Courthouse, 1325 Pearl St. Registration is required for those who want to comment: bit.ly/_POSAC_ registration

Mental Health Partners (MHP) is expecting to close on a 45,000-square-foot facility in Louisville at the end of November to serve as its new acute care facility. Details are still being hashed out, but here’s what we know: • The purchase was made possible by American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds awarded to MHP by the Colorado Behavioral Health Administration, specifically designated for acquiring a facility to increase access to recovery and health resources. Very little needs to be done to accommodate the building to MHP’s needs, according to Kristina Hernández Schostak, the nonprofit’s director of business development. • Schostak expects the shift of services to happen in the first half of 2024, which will host MHP’s acute care teams including crisis, withdrawal management, medicationassisted treatment, substance use disorder intensive outpatient program, transitional residential treatment, and a new psychiatric urgent care team. • The Ryan Wellness Center at 1000 Alpine Ave., Boulder will continue operations. If the building purchase goes through in November, MHP would transition its acute care services from its location at 3180 Airport Road, Boulder, to the new facility, located at 1107 West Century Drive, Louisville.

BOULDER WEEKLY


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