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The Gunnison Country's Environmental Leader

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Our History

High Country Conservation Advocates was founded in 1977 to protect Gunnison County, Colorado from a proposed molybdenum mine on Mt. Emmons.  Known locally as “Red Lady,” Mt. Emmons rises directly above the Town of Crested Butte’s historic district, in the town’s watershed.  Over the decades, HCCA successfully led the community in keeping Mt. Emmons mine-free, working with local partners such as the Town of Crested Butte, Gunnison County, the current owner of the mine properties, and state and federal agencies to take advantage of an opportunity to secure permanent protection for Mt. Emmons. On August 29, 2024, complex agreements were finalized, and Red Lady was saved!

Realizing that environmental threats go well beyond mining, HCCA developed public lands and water programs to protect these precious resources, upon which our local economy depends. As an outgrowth of this work, we have become Gunnison County’s environmental leader, protecting public lands, water, and wildlife in an area that covers more than 3,500 square miles–Gunnison County alone is comprised of over 80% public land and the Gunnison River is the 5th largest tributary to the Colorado River.

 

We are an advocacy organization that collaborates with local stakeholders and policymakers, applies sound science, educates, and upholds the environmental integrity of our community.  We recognize that environmental sustainability is the key to a healthy economy. We advocate for protection along the high alpine tundra of the Raggeds Wilderness and Collegiates, past the steep cliffs of the Black Canyon, from the North Fork of the Gunnison River’s rolling scrub oak hills and aspen groves, to the rushing waters of the Lake Fork. Our work ensures these iconic public lands and waters will be healthy for generations to come.

Our Mission

High Country Conservation Advocates is a grassroots non-profit dedicated to protecting the health, integrity and beauty of the public lands, waters, and wildlife of Colorado’s Gunnison Country.

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Land Acknowledgement

High Country Conservation Advocates (HCCA) acknowledges that the lands we are devoted to protecting and improving are the ancestral and native homes to the Nùu-agha-tʉvʉ-pʉ̱ (Ute), Pueblos, and Dinè Bikèyah people.

 

HCCA is community driven, and wishes to recognize the communities of people that historically made these lands their hunting and gathering grounds, spiritual places of worship, homes to raise children, and all other uses significant to indigenous people.

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During Euro-American colonization, the treaties were broken, forcing the Nùu-agha-tʉvʉ-pʉ̱, Pueblos, and Dinè Bikèyah people out of their ancestral lands and into reservations a fraction of the size. With little to no support or resources, many lives and traditions were lost throughout this time. In modern day conservation we will collaborate with indigenous voices to right these past wrongdoings by recognizing their history.

 

HCCA advocates that their voices will not be lost, but rather listened to and acknowledged.

Take Action! 

Become a Voice for the Valley
Public lands need public advocates. When you join HCCA, you're adding your voice to a local movement rooted in care, science, and action.

  • Become a member

  • Attend a hike or restoration project

  • Share our work with your friends and family

High Country Conservation Advocates

Protecting the public lands, waters, and wildlife of the Gunnison Country since 1977

501(c)(3) nonprofit | EIN# 84-0772688

P.O. Box 1066
Crested Butte, CO 81224

office@hccacb.org

970.349.7104

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© 2025 High Country Conservation Advocates

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