Vote YES to protect the floodplain and repeal the annexation of CU South. Repeal the bad deal!
Together we can change the history of CU South.
Deepe and Van Vleet family farms operate on the land. Most of it is used for cattle grazing. Lynn Van Vleet is shown here is an achival photo from the Carnegie Library for Local History.
Gravel mining by Flatiron Company begins in 1952 on Deepe farm, initially under a lease. Despite numerous objections, mining on the property continues until 1995.
Boulder has long understood the importance of the CU South property and sought to buy and protect it.
In 2001 an Independent Review Panel of international flood experts organized by Prof. Gilbert White recommended against development in the floodplain. The report was adopted by City Council but its recommendations were never acted upon.
The 2001 Independent Review Panel report (which the City and CU ignored) recommended:
In May 2006 CU conferred Gilbert White with an honorary degree at their commencement exercises. The Regents acknowledged Prof. White's contributions on many fronts including his persistence on behalf of all Boulder residents at risk from severe flooding.
Starting on September 11, 2013, a slow-moving cold front stalled over Colorado. In Boulder, 9.08 inches was recorded September 12 and up to 17 inches of rain recorded by September 15. This amount of rainfall is comparable to Boulder County's average annual precipitation.
Every major drainage in Boulder experienced some level of flooding.
According to the City's analysis of flood damage, the South Boulder Creek drainage was responsible for 15.8% of the total damage in the City in 2013. Most of the damage in the South Boulder Creek drainage was caused by sewer and flood drain backups (46%) not the main drainageway (3.6%).
The proposed flood mitigation project at CU South only addresses a tiny faction of the total flood damage in the City of Boulder from the 2013 flood.
Save South Boulder formed in late 2015 when South Boulder residents Helen Burnside, Amy Siemel, and Jenny Natapow first saw CU’s flyers posted at CU-South, announcing its proposed campus development plans. Knowing that the area was directly in the middle of the South Boulder Creek Floodplain, and also being daily users of the space for hiking, walking and recreating with their children, they were appalled that the property would turn into yet another development, with attendant loss of wild space, habitat and native species.
Since its founding, Save South Boulder has worked for seven years to convince the City to follow the principles proposed by Prof. Gilbert White and the experts on the 2001 Indpendent Review Panel. Save South Boulder has consistently advocated for consideration of higher levels of flood protection, best practices and natural forms of flood mitigation, and a less costly and less one-sided annexation agreement with CU.
The City's flood mitigation plans require CU's cooperation and some of its land. CU needs water and sewer service to develop at CU South and only agreed to cooperate with flood mitigation in exchange for annexation and provision of these services.
A good neighbor would readily cooperate with flood mitigation in the interest of public safety. CU has done the opposite and forced annexation as a pre-condition for cooperating on flood mitigation.
Not only did CU demand annexation, they also imposed limitations on the size of the flood mitigation project that could be built. Boulder could have a 500-year flood mitigation project but for CU's demands.
Boulder citizens and City Council hoped to get 500-year flood mitigation on South Boulder Creek. On May 20, 2019, in spite of the urgent need for flood control, CU sent a letter to the city stating:
“We are writing to you today to provide notice that the university, as the landowner, does not agree to Variant I 500. We are informing the city that any further expenditure for the development of preliminary designs for Variant I 500 should cease.”
The City eventually caved in to CU's demands and current plans call for 100-year flood mitigation, far less than what experts have recommended for years.
To satisfy CU's demands, on June 16, 2020, the Boulder City Council voted to reject the previously approved $35 million Variant 1 500-year flood protection plan and move forward with a $66 million 100-year flood protection plan (referenced below), which includes a mile-long floodwall and dam with a cut-off wall to bedrock that will impede groundwater flows, extensive earthfill to refill a portion of the gravel pit to elevate it above the level of a 500-year flood, and other specifics.
In 2019 Save South Boulder joined with PLAN-Boulder County to seek a vote of the people regarding the CU South annexation. Citizens asked that City Council require CU follow the same steps for annexation proposals which the City has always required of landowners. Instead, CU’s annexation proposal demanded exemption from these requirements, including that a site plan for development be provided, along with attendant costs for the site development, assessment of impacts on adjacent neighborhoods, an environmental impact study, and a requirement that residents nearby the proposed annexation be consulted.
Multiple signature gathering campaigns from citizens resulted in the successful placement of Measure 302 on the 2021 ballot, as well as a second successful campaign to place a referendum to repeal the annexation agreement on the ballot for the upcoming November 2022 election.
Measure 302 would have required that a vote be held on annexation, that CU follow the normal information disclosure rules required by property owners wanting to be annexed, and that flood mitigation be implemented first, before any services be provided to the CU South property.
In September 2021, less than two months before the November election, the Boulder City Council passed CU’s annexation agreement, saying they had to act because flood mitigation constituted an “emergency”. Despite the pandemic, there was no flood-related emergency that justified Council's action. The flood that spurred this entire effort occurred 8 years prior. Further, Council failed to define what any other emergencies justified their action, despite that such a definition is required by the City Charter.
The City and CU then falsely argued that their vote rendered moot Ballot Measure 302 and its required vote on CU South. They also falsely suggested the vote would delay flood mitigation. Measure 302 received 43% support and failed to pass.
The annexation agreement itself was improperly negotiated on behalf of the City by former Mayor Sam Weaver and Council Member Rachel Friend through a series of more than 15 off-the-record meetings with CU. Typically such negotiations are carried out by city staff to provide more bargaining leverage. Weaver’s and Friend’s actions violated sunshine laws and norms of transparency, avoided public input and oversight, and with respect to protecting the City’s interests, did a terrible job.
The final agreement is a one-sided bad deal in which CU ends up with a billion-dollar property, and Boulder rate payers pay for almost everything associated with annexation. The costs that the City (e.g. Boulder citizens) are now obligated to absorb as part of this annexation include all costs associated with water treatment, moving the tennis courts, removing the berm, buying more land from CU, paying for earthfill, and impact fees that normally are paid by annexees but which have been waived for CU, including costs to the City for increased fire and police protection.
Did they at least negotiate a lot of affordable housing? No. The percentage of land allocated for affordable housing is far smaller than what would be required under a typical annexation in Boulder.
The agreement allows CU to construct 750,000 square feet of non-residential buildings - enough for 3,000 students and employees, but only 1,100 residential dwelling units. The agreement in fact allows for 2.5 million square feet of total development at CU South. This only makes the City’s jobs/population balance worse. It is not a housing solution.
Weak negotiations put Boulder citizens on the hook for most of the expenses of this annexation, which could result in CU selling the property for a tidy profit, should it decide not to build a third campus. It's a very bad deal for Boulder.
In October 2021, within 30 days of city council's September 21 action to approve the annexation, volunteers submitted more than 6,000 signatures requesting a referendum to repeal that annexation agreement. The clerk certified the signatures and the referendum was placed on the November 2022 ballot.
Under normal circumstances a successful referendum petition would result in a "halt" on all work on a project. However, because the CU South annexation was approved as an "emergency" ordinance, work was allowed to proceed even as the referendum vote approaches.
There were more than 33,000 students enrolled at CU in Spring 2022. CU refuses to cap enrollment at the Boulder campus, and the student population has grown beyond past forecasts.
CU plans another 2.5 million square feet of development at CU South with jobs and campus space for 3,000, but only 1,100 housing units - many of them to be designated as market rate single-family dwellings. CU offers only endless expansion without real housing solutions, but expects Boulder voters to pay most of the associated expenses.
Due to global supply chain issues, increased materials costs, and labor shortages, costs for infrastructure projects across the country have increased much faster than anticipated.
The price of a foot of water pipe in Tucson, Arizona: up 19%. The cost of a ton of asphalt in a small Massachusetts town: up 37%. The estimate to build a new airport terminal in Des Moines, Iowa: 69% higher, with a several year delay.
CU South is no exception. Latest estimates put the cost of the flood mitigation project at $63 million, but these estimates were developed years ago and the City does not intend to release a more current cost estimate before the election.
Help us get out the vote in November and get 500-Year Flood Protection. Repeal the CU South Annexation and Stop Ignoring Climate Change.
Paid for with major funding from PLAN-Boulder County, Save South Boulder & Alan Boles