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Category: National News

  • Labor Day: Why do we celebrate it?

    Labor Day: Why do we celebrate it?

    DID YOU KNOW??

    WHAT

    Labor Day, a Federal holiday celebrated on the first Monday in September, is a creation of the labor movement dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers. It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our Country.  It is also unofficially considered the end of summer in the United States. Its back to school for most younsters and football season starts.

    WHEN

    The growing trade union and labor movements in beginning of late 19th century, trade unionists proposed that a day be set aside to celebrate labor. “Labor Day” was promoted by the Central Labor Union and the Knights of Labor, which organized the first parade in New York City. In 1887, Oregon was the first State to make it an official public holiday. By the time it became an official Federal holiday in 1894, thirty U.S. states already officially celebrated the holiday. 

    WHO

    More than 100 years after the first Labor Day observance, there is still some doubt as to who first proposed the holiday for workers.

    Some records show that Peter J. McGuire, general secretary of the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners and a cofounder of the American Federation of Labor, was first in suggesting a day to honor those “who from rude nature have delved and carved all the grandeur we behold.”

    But Peter McGuire’s place in Labor Day history has not gone unchallenged. Many believe that Matthew Maguire, a machinist, not Peter McGuire, founded the holiday. Recent research seems to support the contention that Matthew Maguire, later the secretary of Local 344 of the International Association of Machinists in Paterson, N.J., proposed the holiday in 1882 while serving as secretary of the Central Labor Union in New York. What is clear is that the Central Labor Union adopted a Labor Day proposal and appointed a committee to plan a demonstration and picnic.

    -Credit to USDOL

    THANK YOU TO ALL WORKING, CONTRIBUTING, CITIZENS OF AMERICA. ENJOY TODAY, IT’S FOR YOU.

     

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  • AAA – More than 600,000 Coloradans to hit the roads for Labor Day

    AAA – More than 600,000 Coloradans to hit the roads for Labor Day

    DENVER — AAA Colorado projects that more than 600,000 Coloradans will travel 50 or more miles away from home this Labor Day weekend as part of a record-breaking close to the summer driving season.

    “2017 has set the curve when it comes to travel statistics: Memorial Day weekend was the busiest since 2005, and Independence Day weekend was the busiest ever,” said AAA Colorado spokesman Skyler McKinley. “Those trends will continue into Labor Day, despite the start of the school year and modest gas price increases linked to Hurricane Harvey.”

    Gas Prices

    The end of summer, multi-city road trip remains an important Labor Day tradition, according to a survey of AAA Colorado travel experts. Coloradans planning to travel by car to their destination this year, be forewarned: At $2.45 for a gallon of unleaded, national gas prices are higher than they’ve been all year — and are, in fact, at their highest point since August 2015. A combination of increased demand tied to the Labor Day holiday and refinery and pipeline shutdowns caused by Hurricane Harvey have temporarily inflated gas prices, although AAA Colorado anticipates that these increases will be short-lived.

    In Colorado, drivers can expect to pay between $2.40 and $2.55 per gallon throughout the Labor Day holiday period. That’s a 20- to 25-cent increase over last year, but a far cry from Colorado’s all-time high: $4.093 a gallon in July 2008.

    Motorists hoping to find the cheapest gas along their route can use AAA’s TripTik Travel Planner at ttp.aaa.com.

    In-State Travel Advisories

    Motorists should avoid traveling through major cities during peak travel times. The best times to leave will be in the early mornings because the roads should be less crowded, and drivers will have more time to get to their destination safely. Traveling on the holiday itself often results in less congestion and fewer crowds.

    Road-trippers headed west up I-70 should anticipate some slight delays near Glenwood Springs due to the Grand Avenue bridge construction project. Make no mistake: I-70 is open for business. Exit 116 is closed, however, so travelers headed to the Roaring Fork Valley will need to detour — and other motorists should anticipate heavy traffic during peak driving hours.

    Roadside Assistance

    AAA Colorado anticipates it will rescue more than 6,600 motorists over the course of the Labor Day holiday, a 20% increase over 2016. Per forecast, 19% of those calls will be battery related, 14% will be for locksmith services, and 18% will be tire, fuel, or winch related. The remaining 49% will involve a tow. Many motorists can avoid an interruption to their travel plans by having their car inspected at a trusted mechanic before setting out for the weekend, planning gas stops out along the way, and checking their tires after every stop.

  • The Total Solar Eclipse – August 21, 2017 – WHAT TO EXPECT

    The Great American Total Solar Eclipse

    –Only in America–

    August 21, 2017

    Not only is a total solar eclipse rarer than a solar eclipse, but this one is even rarer. This total eclipse is only viewable from America, and will be the last total solar eclipse America will see in its totality until May 1, 2079.

    WHY? 

    The demise of Earth is predicted to happen around seven billion years from now, when the expanding sun engulfs and destroys our planet, and Earth’s life forms will witness the last total solar eclipse— around 600 million years from now. From now until then, solar eclipses will occur in annular, partial and total, from different vantage points on Earth. However, August 21, 2017 will be the last total solar eclipse America will see in its totality because the moon is slowly moving away from Earth, disrupting the intricate balance that causes the sun’s light to be blocked out. A total eclipse is a dance with three partners: the Moon, the Sun and the Earth. This can only happen when there is an exquisite alignment of these three partners in our sky. The moon’s slow progress away from Earth means these celestial events won’t keep happening, and only visible from certain points on Earth. On Aug. 21, 2017, people across the United States will see the sun disappear behind the moon, turning daylight into twilight, causing the temperature to drop rapidly, and revealing massive streamers of light streaking through the sky around the silhouette of the moon. On this day, America will fall under the total path of a total solar eclipse, for the last time in a half a century.

    The so-called Great American Total Solar Eclipse will darken skies all the way from Oregon to South Carolina, along a stretch of land about 70 miles (113 kilometers) wide. People who descend upon this “path of totality” for the big event are in for an unforgettable experience. The duration of totality, as experienced by observers on the ground, tops out at a few precious minutes for all total solar eclipses. For most viewers, the Aug. 21, 2017 total solar eclipse will last less than two and half minutes.

    When, Where & How:

     The Total Solar Eclipse in Denver, Colorado

    Monday, August 21, 2017

    The Path

    The solar eclipse will be visible from all across America, however, viewers directly under the path will only see the spectacular TOTAL eclipse. Others, such as in Denver, Colorado, will see a partial eclipse. Depending on location, the angle of your view will vary. Depicted below is a time lapse of what can be expected to be seen from Denver, Colorado.

    The Time

    * Times are local for Denver (MDT – Mountain Daylight Time)

    • The Moon touches the Sun’s edge: This Partial Eclipse begins at 10:23 am, in a 117°East-southeast direction, at a 45.2° altitude.

    • Moon is closest to the center of the Sun. This Maximum Eclipse begins at 11:47 am, in a 144°Southeast direction, at a 57.5° altitude.

    • The Moon leaves the Sun’s edge. This Partial Eclipse ends at 1:14 pm, in a 186°South direction, at a 62.0° altitude.

    The View

     

    For NASA-funded scientists, the eclipse will last over seven minutes, however. Their secret? Following the shadow of the Moon in two retrofitted WB-57F jet planes. 

    Amir Caspi of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, and his team will use two of NASA’s WB-57F research jets to chase the darkness across America on Aug. 21. Taking observations from twin telescopes mounted on the noses of the planes, Caspi will ­­­­­capture the clearest images of the Sun’s outer atmosphere — the corona — to date and the first-ever thermal images of Mercury, revealing how temperature varies across the planet’s surface.

    These could well turn out to be the best ever observations of high frequency phenomena in the corona. Extending the observing time and going to very high altitude might allow us to see a few events or track waves that would be essentially invisible in just two minutes of observations from the ground. – Dan Seaton, co-investigator of the project and researcher at the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colorado.

    *photos and information credit: NASA

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  • Trump: Fire & Fury On North Korea

    Trump: Fire & Fury On North Korea

    State of International Relation with Kim Jong-un

    SEOUL, South Korea (Associated Press) – Donald Trump’s threat to unleash “fire and fury” on North Korea might have been written by Pyongyang’s propaganda mavens, so perfectly does it fit the North’s cherished claim that it is a victim of American aggression.

    Not since George W. Bush labeled North Korea part of an “axis of evil” has the nation had such a strong piece of presidential evidence to back up its argument that only nuclear and missile development can counter “hostile” U.S. policies aimed at ending the rule of the latest member of the Kim family of dictators.

    Trump now runs several risks by matching his rhetoric to that of the North, which has regularly vowed to reduce archrival Seoul to a “sea of fire.”

    Word choice matters on the Korean Peninsula. A torrent of belligerent warnings by the North in 2013, for instance, including nuclear strike threats against specific U.S. targets, led to an anxious, weeks-long standoff that saw the United States fly its most powerful warplanes _ nuclear capable B-2 and B-52 bombers, and F-22 stealth fighters _ near the North Korean border.

    The risk, now as then, is that heated words could cause a miscalculation that might trigger real fighting across the most heavily armed border on earth, a border that’s only a short drive from greater Seoul’s 25 million people.

    Trump’s comments Tuesday were actually linked to Pyongyang’s never-ending stream of threats: “North Korea had best not make any more threats to the United States,” Trump said. “They will be met with fire and fury like the world has never seen.”

    Though it seems unlikely it was directly responding to those comments, the North on Wednesday repeated past warnings that it’s examining operational plans for attacking the U.S. territory of Guam.

    This is mostly a bluff: North Korea is extremely unlikely to follow through on a suicidal pre-emptive attack on the United States. But there is also almost zero chance that the North will miss the opportunity to put its propaganda specialists to work topping Trump’s threat of total war. Pyongyang, after all, may be the world’s leading producer of such threats _ against Seoul, against Tokyo, against Washington, against essentially anything or anyone seen as hostile.

    As John Delury, an Asia specialist at Seoul’s Yonsei University, tweeted following Trump’s comments, “Trying to out-threaten North Korea is like trying to out-pray the Pope.”

    The risk is that what works for a tiny, impoverished dictatorship that has long seen itself as sandwiched between geopolitical behemoths whose only aim is using the Korean Peninsula for their own interests might not work for the world’s most powerful economy and military.

    Trump now confronts a problem that North Korea has long faced: Over-the-top threats are one thing, but what do you do when you can’t back them up?

    So far, of course, North Korea has favored smaller scale sneak attacks over following through with its threats to launch missiles into Seoul, let alone a U.S. territory. North Korea will surely continue its nuclear bluster, but Trump cannot bring “fire and fury” without risking the destruction of Seoul, and the deaths of tens of thousands of U.S. troops and citizens in South Korea.

    Trump’s comments also feed North Korea’s craving for global attention.

    The country uses its scary rhetoric and nuclear boasts to force itself to the top of outside governments’ foreign policy lists. For the North, being ignored is a worse fate than being criticized.

    Trump’s “fire and fury” line might also hurt his efforts to get China, the North’s economic and diplomatic enabler, to do more to curb Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions.

    China, though it does not want a nuclear North Korea, sympathizes with Pyongyang’s claim that it is under real threat from Washington.

    “The U.S. is trying to tell China, `We’re not in this for regime change; we’re not trying to take down (leader) Kim Jong Un; we’re not trying to reunify the Korean Peninsula; what we want is to negotiate their nukes away,’ Delury said in an interview. “To use unprecedented, inflammatory language, to threaten war on North Korea because they make threats, undermines the work the U.S. is trying to do to keep the Chinese on board.”

    Before Trump’s threat, the North’s biggest recent example of so-called U.S. hostility was the joint military drills staged by allies Washington and Seoul. Those start up again in a few weeks. Expect to see “fire and fury” drive North Korean propaganda then, and for a long time to come.

    By FOSTER KLUG

    – Associated Press

     

    CNN Reports Today: Trump “Maybe Fire & Fury” Is Not Tough Enough

     


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  • BREAKING NEWS: ROBBERY– CAN YOU ID ME?

    BREAKING NEWS: ROBBERY– CAN YOU ID ME?

    Robbery at Citiwide Bank– Last Night

    The Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating a robbery that occurred at 5 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 9, at Citywide Banks, 13700 E. Arapahoe Rd.

    The suspect is described as a white male, wearing a white, long-sleeved shirt, black track pants, black latex gloves, sunglasses, and a dark hat. He left in an unknown direction.

    CAN YOU ID ME?

     

    Anyone with information about this crime is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 720-913-STOP (7867) or the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office tip line at 720-874-8477.


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  • ALERT: FOOD RECALL

    ALERT: FOOD RECALL

    Protein Bar Recall

    for possible

    Listeria Monocytogenes 

    from

    Amrita Health Foods 

    Company name:  Amrita Health Foods

    Product name:  Protein bars produced April 24 to May 31; best buy dates 04/24/2018 to 05/31/2018:

    ·         Amrita Chocolate Maca Bar, 60 gram, UPC 853009004056, Best Buy 04/24/2018 to 05/31/2018

    ·         Amrita Dark Chocolate Quinoa, 60 gram, UPC 853009004438, Best Buy 04/24/2018 to 05/31/2018

    ·         Amrita Sunflower Seed Butter, 60 gram, UPC 853009004414, Best Buy 04/24/2018 to 05/31/2018

    ·         Amrita Chocolate Chip Coconut, 50 gram, UPC 853009004391, Best Buy 04/24/2018 to 05/31/2018

    ·         Amrita Mango Coconut, 50 gram, UPC 853009004018, Best Buy 04/24/2018 to 05/31/2018

    ·         Amrita Apricot Strawberry, 50 gram, UPC 853009004056, Best Buy 04/24/2018 to 05/31/2018

    ·         Amrita Pineapple Chia, 50 gram, UPC 853009004025, Best Buy 04/24/2018 to 05/31/2018

    ·         Amrita Apple Cinnamon, 50 gram, UPC 853009004049, Best Buy 04/24/2018 to 05/31/2018

    ·         Amrita Cranberry Raisin, 50 gram, UPC 853009004032, Best Buy 04/24/2018 to 05/31/2018

     

    Reason for recall: Potential contamination with Listeria monocytogenes

    Distribution: Nationwide.

     

    [ngg_images source=”galleries” container_ids=”180″ display_type=”photocrati-nextgen_basic_thumbnails” override_thumbnail_settings=”0″ thumbnail_width=”240″ thumbnail_height=”160″ thumbnail_crop=”1″ images_per_page=”20″ number_of_columns=”0″ ajax_pagination=”0″ show_all_in_lightbox=”0″ use_imagebrowser_effect=”0″ show_slideshow_link=”1″ slideshow_link_text=”View Slideshow” order_by=”sortorder” order_direction=”ASC” returns=”included” maximum_entity_count=”500″]

    For more information, please visit the FDA here

     


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  • The Great American Total Solar Eclipse – August 21, 2017

    A Total Solar Eclipse –Only in America– August 21, 2017

    Not only is a total solar eclipse rarer than a solar eclipse, but this one is even rarer. Not only is this total eclipse only viewable from America, but this will be the last total solar eclipse America will see in its totality until May 1, 2079.

    WHY? 

    The demise of Earth is predicted to happen around seven billion years from now, when the expanding sun engulfs and destroys our planet, and Earth’s life forms will witness the last total solar eclipse— around 600 million years from now. From now until then, solar eclipses will occur in annular, partial and total, from different vantage points on Earth. However, August 21, 2017 will be the last total solar eclipse America will see in its totality because the moon is slowly moving away from Earth, disrupting the intricate balance that causes the sun’s light to be blocked out. A total eclipse is a dance with three partners: the Moon, the Sun and the Earth. This can only happen when there is an exquisite alignment of these three partners in our sky. The moon’s slow progress away from Earth means these celestial events won’t keep happening, and only visible from certain points on Earth. On Aug. 21, 2017, people across the United States will see the sun disappear behind the moon, turning daylight into twilight, causing the temperature to drop rapidly, and revealing massive streamers of light streaking through the sky around the silhouette of the moon. On this day, America will fall under the total path of a total solar eclipse, for the last time in a half a century.

    The so-called Great American Total Solar Eclipse will darken skies all the way from Oregon to South Carolina, along a stretch of land about 70 miles (113 kilometers) wide. People who descend upon this “path of totality” for the big event are in for an unforgettable experience. The duration of totality, as experienced by observers on the ground, tops out at a few precious minutes for all total solar eclipses. For most viewers, the Aug. 21, 2017 total solar eclipse will last less than two and half minutes.

    When, Where & How:

     The Total Solar Eclipse in Denver, Colorado

    Monday, August 21, 2017

    The Path

    The solar eclipse will be visible from all across America, however, viewers directly under the path will only see the spectacular TOTAL eclipse. Others, such as in Denver, Colorado, will see a partial eclipse. Depending on location, the angle of your view will vary. Depicted below is a time lapse of what can be expected to be seen from Denver, Colorado.

    The Time

    * Times are local for Denver (MDT – Mountain Daylight Time)

    • The Moon touches the Sun’s edge: This Partial Eclipse begins at 10:23 am, in a 117°East-southeast direction, at a 45.2° altitude.

    • Moon is closest to the center of the Sun. This Maximum Eclipse begins at 11:47 am, in a 144°Southeast direction, at a 57.5° altitude.

    • The Moon leaves the Sun’s edge. This Partial Eclipse ends at 1:14 pm, in a 186°South direction, at a 62.0° altitude.

    The View

     

    For NASA-funded scientists, the eclipse will last over seven minutes, however. Their secret? Following the shadow of the Moon in two retrofitted WB-57F jet planes. 

    Amir Caspi of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, and his team will use two of NASA’s WB-57F research jets to chase the darkness across America on Aug. 21. Taking observations from twin telescopes mounted on the noses of the planes, Caspi will ­­­­­capture the clearest images of the Sun’s outer atmosphere — the corona — to date and the first-ever thermal images of Mercury, revealing how temperature varies across the planet’s surface.

    These could well turn out to be the best ever observations of high frequency phenomena in the corona. Extending the observing time and going to very high altitude might allow us to see a few events or track waves that would be essentially invisible in just two minutes of observations from the ground. – Dan Seaton, co-investigator of the project and researcher at the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colorado.

    *photos and information credit: NASA

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  • Colorado State University Making Waves In Water

    Western Water Symposium Examines New Innovations

    The 2017 Western Water Symposium and Barbecue announces that Colorado State University Libraries will be hosting debates on new innovations surrounding water law, policy and technology, while benefiting its Water Resources Archive, an irreplaceable collection of historical documents pertaining to water in Colorado.

    Jennifer Gimbel, Gregory J. Hobbs Jr., John Stulp, Jennifer Pitt and Patrick O’Toole are scheduled to speak at this year’s Western Water Symposium and Barbecue on Monday, July 24, at CSU’s Morgan Library. These renowned experts will share their knowledge and lead important conversations on the theme of water optimism and innovation.

    The Speakers

    CSU Senior Water Policy Scholar Gimbel will emcee the program. Hobbs, author of The Public’s Water Resource, Articles on Water Law, History, and Culture, will share his 20 years of experiences as a Colorado Supreme Court Justice and discuss historical water developments in the Cache la Poudre River Basin. His talk is titled, “The Poudre River’s Heritage: Turn Back or Move Forward?” Stulp, special policy advisor to the governor for water and director of the Interbasin Compact Committee, will discuss “Water’s Innovative Future,” covering statewide innovations and the collaborative efforts required to achieve them. Following the barbecue lunch, the National Audubon Society’s Colorado River Program Director Pitt, who has worked to protect and restore Colorado rivers, will share her exceptional experiences surrounding management approaches for the Colorado River in “We’re All in It Together: Crafting Colorado River Management for the 21st Century.” O’Toole, president of the Family Farm Alliance, will tackle a broader perspective and outlook on water innovation and optimism in a national context. His talk is titled, “What’s Old is New, What’s New is Old.”

    Panel of Innovators

    A special panel of innovators will follow the symposium with their unique perspectives, and a tour of the Water Resources Archive will conclude the day. A reception immediately follows.

    Event Details

    • The Event is on July 24, beginning at 9 a.m. and concluding at 6 p.m.
    • Regular admission is $100 and includes the symposium, reception, and lunch.
    • Student admission is $50.
    • All proceeds benefit the Water Resources Archive.

    Visit the Western Water Symposium & Barbecue website for more information and to register.

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  • Immigration Reform Announcement

    Immigration Reform Announcement

    FWD.US Statement

    for

    DREAM ACT

    WASHINGTON, DC – Today, FWD.us President Todd Schulte released the following statement on the introduction of a bipartisan DREAM Act by Senators Lindsey Graham and Dick Durbin, which would allow hardworking young immigrants who arrived in the U.S. as minors to apply for legal status and eventual citizenship if they meet certain educational or military requirements, successfully pass a background check, and remain in good legal standing:

    We applaud Senators Graham and Durbin for introducing vital legislation to protect Dreamers at this crucial time, when nearly 800,000 hardworking young immigrants are facing the imminent threat of deportation with the DACA program under attack. The DREAM Act would allow these impressive individuals – many of whom only know the United States as home – to live, work, study, and serve in our military free from the fear of deportation, continuing to contribute to our communities and our economy. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle consistently support protecting Dreamers, and the overwhelming majority of Americans agrees with them. Dreamers add billions in GDP growth to our economy, creating jobs and raising wages for U.S. citizens, and providing a pathway to legal status for them will make everyone safer by bringing people out of the shadows and allowing law enforcement to focus their limited time and enforcement resources on true public safety threats. We urge Senator Graham’s and Senator Durbin’s colleagues to join them to protect Dreamers and pass this critically important legislation immediately.

    POLLING DATA

    Polling Data for DACA and Dreamers support is at an all-time high, with more than 70% of registered voters supporting keeping DACA. Interestingly, that figure increases to 75% support when respondents are told that President Trump has continued this program, including 78% support among Republicans. Additionally, more than 81% of all voters believe that undocumented immigrants should be able to earn a pathway to citizenship if they can complete an application process and pass a background check. These findings reinforce polling from earlier this year, showing that 75% of Trump voters want legal status for Dreamers.

    About

    FWD.us is a bipartisan organization started by key leaders in the tech and business community to promote policies to keep the United States competitive in a global economy, starting with commonsense immigration reform and criminal justice reform.

     

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  • SCAM ALERT

    SCAM ALERT

    BREAKING NEWS:
    Scam Alert

    announcement from

    The Adams County Sheriff’s Office

    We have again received reports of a phone scam where the scammers are calling and claiming to be deputies from the Adams County Sheriff’s Office. They are using the names of actual employees of the sheriff’s office they get from our website and social media accounts. The callers say there is a warrant for your arrest, for something like missing Jury Duty, and you need to buy “Green Dot Cards” to pay a bond up to $5000.00 to remove the warrant and avoid arrest. The victim is asked to read the card numbers over the phone and the cards are drained.

    No one from the Adams County Sheriff’s Office will ever call and request money to avoid immediate arrest.

    If you are ever suspicious of a phone call where someone is asking for money, personal identifying information, or financial information, please call the Sheriff’s Office or your local law enforcement agency.

    The Adams County Sheriff’s Office also provides a warrant search on our website at http://adamssheriff.org/ and on our smart phone app available in the app store and on Google Play just search Adams County Sheriff CO.

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