Now the Denver Police Department can throw the book at scofflaws. The good book.
The Gideon Bible Association is in town to distribute Bibles — not just to hotels and motels, but to schools and law enforcement agencies, including the DPD. On Friday, Mary Beth Klee, deputy chief of administration for the DPD, sent a note to the six police districts, noting that "Chief Quinones has ok'd the association to deliver a box of Bibles to each of the six district stations and the HQ Information Desk. Please advise your clerks this will be happening over the next several days and make the Bibles available to the officers. Do not hand them out but let them know they are available and free for them to take if they choose to. Thank you."
The e-mail included an earlier note from Captain Sylvia Sich of the DPD's Planning, Research & Support Division saying that the Gideon group had "obtained a letter of permission from the Denver city attorney's office to make the distribution, and have already worked with the DSD chaplain for distribution to the Sheriffs. The PD chaplains do not want to be involved (unknown reason)."
Hmm. Maybe the chaplains did a little soul-searching and came up with a concept called the separation of church and state.
When this edition was going to press on Monday night, Off Limits was still praying that the DPD would return our calls to comment on this new chapter in law enforcement.
********Natural wonder: Boulder County has a reputation for leading the state in matters of open space, animal rights, environmental protections and all-around tree-hugging. But next week may present the acid test for local officials' greeniness. On Wednesday, September 18, the county planning commission will listen to a presentation from staff and ponder whether to include a statement in the comprehensive plan declaring that "Boulder County acknowledges the rights of all naturally occurring ecosystems and their native species populations to exist and flourish."
Whether or not it's approved, the proposed language signals that the Rights of Nature movement has landed in Colorado, complete with website and Facebook page. It's essentially a push by a wide array of environmental activists and thinkers to grant a kind of legal standing to native species; if corporations that promote fracking and other forms of environmental degradation can be granted personhood in the political arena, why can't entire ecosystems have rights, too?
Since 2008, laws that specifically acknowledge such rights have been passed in countries such as Bolivia and Ecuador and more than three dozen U.S. towns and cities. The locals pushing for a similar measure in Boulder include the president of the county's Audubon Society; an attorney whose bio lists "life-long experience in the study of consciousness, nature and the law"; an "ecopsychologist and poet"; and Priscilla Stuckey, author of Kissed by a Fox: And Other Studies of Friendship in Nature.
Slipping a line about how "trees are people, too" into the county planning documents isn't exactly awarding a constitutional right. Advocates of the Rights of Nature say it's a significant step, though, toward acknowledging that current protections for native species haven't saved a number of struggling populations in Boulder County — from the lark bunting to the burrowing owl to the bristlecone pine forest — from being imperiled. But critics fear that embracing the concept of legal rights for flora and fauna sets a dangerous precedent that can lead to further restrictions on property and energy development, as well as genetically modified crops.
A recent communique from the Rights of Nature supporters suggests that the county planning commission legal staff is prepared to recommend against incorporating the language in the comprehensive plan. That has the advocates rallying the troops to submit comments to the commission urging deeper consideration of the issue.
Will Boulder eventually join places like Santa Monica, California, in declaring that citizens have a right to "a sustainable climate that supports thriving human life and a flourishing bio-diverse environment"? Will it follow the lead of Tamaqua, Pennsylvania, in viewing ecosystems as "persons" for purposes of environmental enforcement? Or will it treat Boulder's abundant natives as second-class citizens?
Either way, you can be sure of one thing. It's business, not personal.