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It’s do-or-die time for a water pipeline Thornton says it needs to keep home construction alive

Larimer County’s commissioners set to decide “critical vote” on permit for $500 million project

A pipe crew worker gets ready to join a 42-inch diameter section of pipe along Colorado Blvd and Cherry Blossom Drive in Windsor in late 2020. A years-long effort by Thornton to pipe its water from the Poudre River to the city is likely to face a crucial vote Monday from the Larimer County Board of Commissioners. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
A pipe crew worker gets ready to join a 42-inch diameter section of pipe along Colorado Blvd and Cherry Blossom Drive in Windsor in late 2020. A years-long effort by Thornton to pipe its water from the Poudre River to the city is likely to face a crucial vote Monday from the Larimer County Board of Commissioners. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
DENVER, CO - OCTOBER 2:  Staff portraits at the Denver Post studio.  (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
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The city of Thornton has returned to the same hearing room where, five years ago, the Larimer County commissioners said no to its request to bury miles of pipeline in the county.
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