Senators Were Joined by Water, Agriculture, Business, Local Government, and Environmental Leaders from Colorado and Utah to Offer Perspective
Download Photos and Video from the Trip HERE
Denver –– Today, U.S. Senators Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) and Mitt Romney (R-Utah) led a Colorado River trip focused on solutions to building climate resilience in the West. From Hittle Bottom to the Rocky Rapid campground outside of Moab, Utah, the senators floated the river with Colorado and Utah leaders from water, agriculture, business, and environmental communities and local government and discussed a bipartisan approach to address drought, wildfire, mudslides in the West.
“I’m grateful to Senator Romney for welcoming me to his beautiful state. Days like today are why I feel optimistic that we will find a way forward on our climate challenges, and why I feel strongly that the West has to lead in this endeavor,” said Bennet. “In the West, we come together to take on shared challenges, and we need that same spirit in Washington to create meaningful and durable solutions to climate change.”
“I appreciate Senator Bennet for the kind invitation to join him for today’s float trip down the Colorado River. It was an honor to have Utah’s Lieutenant Governor, local officials, and community leaders from our state join us, as well. What we are witnessing in Utah and throughout the West is an historic drought. The changing climate means that we are going to have to rethink how we solve the West’s water challenges, and today’s trip was an opportunity to begin to build consensus toward addressing them,” said Romney. “I look forward to our continued work in the Senate to find solutions to climate-related challenges so that we can do our part to leave the world in a better place for our children and grandchildren.”
Bennet and Romney have worked together for years to find meaningful solutions to issues affecting the West. In 2019, the senators asked the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to review the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Emergency Watershed Protection Program (EWP), specifically asking GAO to recommend improvements and consider the challenges the senators have heard about in using the program for wildfire recovery. In December 2019, the GAO accepted their request and is currently reviewing the program.
Bennet and Romney later introduced the MATCH Act in January 2020 and again in 2021 to improve the EWP program, which will expedite wildfire recovery, save taxpayers money, and prevent further disasters.