DISAPPEARING COLORADO

How Population Growth, Sprawl, and Density Are Devouring Open Space and Colorado’s Quality of Life

SPRAWL’S TOLL ON COLORADO

Rejecting Olympic Gold to Save Open Space

In 1970, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) awarded the 1976 Olympic Games to the largest city in Colorado – Denver.  As a 2015 article in The Guardian acknowledged:

“The Games were positioned as the perfect celebration of both the United States’ bicentennial and Colorado’s centennial anniversaries. And where better to host a Winter Games than in the majestic Rocky Mountains?”

But those 1976 Winter Games were eventually held in Innsbruck, Austria, not Denver, Colorado. Why?  Because a coterie of Colorado environmentalists, led by a spirited young state lawmaker named Richard D. Lamm, convinced a majority of Denver residents and Coloradans to do something that had never happened before in modern Olympic history:  to say, in effect, “Thanks, but No Thanks,” or more precisely, to reject spending public funds to host an Olympic Games after having already been awarded the Games.  This rejection, “was a major victory for ecologists who feared vast areas of mountain landscape would be ruined for generations by the Olympics,” according to United Press International.

Half a century ago, the values and priorities represented in this explicit rejection of “progress” in favor of protecting a beloved and besieged landscape by a critical mass of Coloradans made environmental history. Its reverberations were felt throughout the country.  The senior author of this report heard about it as a schoolboy in suburban Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  For the first time, on environmental grounds, a majority of skeptical, engaged citizens had successfully rebelled against the schemes of their “betters” and powerful business interests and turned down a prestigious event and related development that would have earned them worldwide envy and acclaim.  Coloradans had taken to heart the lyrics of Colorado transplant John Denver in his 1972 mega-hit song “Rocky Mountain High”:

"Now his life is full of wonder but his heart still knows some fear
Of a simple thing he cannot comprehend
While they try to tear the mountains down to bring in a couple more
More people, more scars upon the land"

"Now his life is full of wonder but his heart still knows some fear
Of a simple thing he cannot comprehend
While they try to tear the mountains down to bring in a couple more
More people, more scars upon the land"

-- John Denver