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Category: Colorado News

  • LONGMONT ACTIVISTS HOLD TOWN MEETING WITH (OR WITHOUT) REP. KEN BUCK 

    LONGMONT ACTIVISTS HOLD TOWN MEETING WITH (OR WITHOUT) REP. KEN BUCK 

    Longmont activists have planned a town hall meeting with Republican Congressman Ken Buck this Saturday, April 15, at 2:15 PM, at the Longmont Public Library.

    It’s likely that Buck won’t be there. His staff has told organizers of the event that he has other commitments. But they say the town hall will go on as scheduled, and they are holding a chair for Buck in case he changes his mind.

    Buck has already held one Town Hall in Longmont this year. But it did not satisfy Longmont resident Kendra Eastvedt, who found it“extremely authoritarian. I had to get pre-authorization to be admitted to the meeting. I was not allowed to carry a sign, speak out of order, or display emotion in terms of a raised voice.” Eastvedt added that the location of the meeting, at the Southwest Weld County Services Complex, while technically in Longmont, did not really feel like a Longmont meeting.

    “I’m glad I can help organize a real town hall that is really in Longmont,” she said.

    Planning for the town hall has been going on for some time. “When I spoke with Rep. Buck back in February he was reluctant to commit to a traditional town hall, open to all,” said Ira Chernus, another town hall organizer. “Then I consulted several prominent political figures in Longmont, and all agreed that our representatives should have open meetings, where all residents, including members of the press, are free to attend, ask questions, and speak their mind. We are disappointed that Mr. Buck is still avoiding genuinely public meeting. We hope he will change his mind.”  

    Hearing that Buck would probably not be at the town hall, Eastvedt commented, “If Rep. Buck is this afraid of his constituents, perhaps he should consider another line of work.”

    Bob Seay, who ran against Buck in 2016, will be at the town hall to offer the Democrats’ perspective on Buck’s performance in Congress.  

    The event will be held this Saturday, April 15, at 2:15 PM, at the Longmont Public Library, on Kimbark Street between 3rd and 4th Avenues. It will be preceded by the weekly “Longmont Leads With Love” vigil at 1:00 PM at 6th and Main Streets, and a march from the vigil site to the Library, led by bagpipes, starting at 1:45 PM.

     

  • State House Speaker to visit Hugo hospital

    On Wednesday, April 14 Colorado Speaker of the House Crisanta Duran will visit Lincoln Community Hospital in Hugo.

    Duran is scheduled to arrive at the hospital at 10 a.m., have a brief tour of the hospital and then meet with staff and community members at approximately 10:30 a.m.

    At 11 she hopes to visit with patients, then visit the Hugo and Limon communities.

  • Fire recovery workshop

    Fire recovery workshop

    CCTA is hosting a free fire recovery workshop at the Haxtun School on Thursday, April 13.

    A free meal will be served at 5:30 PM, followed by speakers at 6:00. Don Brown, CO commissioner of Ag will share his experience with fire recovery from a previous fire in Yuma. Green Cover Seeds will answer questions about spring seeding options and plant management, and Jake Miller will discuss strategies for grazing cropland and fenceless range.

    Please RSVP for supper at www.highplainsnotill.com

  • Teen sexting crime back before Colorado Legislature

    Teen sexting crime back before Colorado Legislature

    DENVER (AP) _ Frequent teen sexting has given Colorado a dilemma when it comes to criminal charges. When is a naughty photo between teens a modern form of flirting? And when is it child pornography?

    State lawmakers are going to debate the topic Tuesday when a House committee takes up two sexting measures.

    The first bill creates a new crime of posting private images by a juvenile. That’s when a youth shares nude photos without the depicted youth’s consent.

    The second bill makes it a crime for a youth to have a sexually explicit image of himself or herself or of another juvenile.

    The proposed new crimes would not be considered sexual exploitation of a child, the current charge. Lawmakers debated teen sexting last year but were unable to settle on a solution.

  • *** POLLFISH 2017 EASTER CONSUMER SURVEY ***

    *** POLLFISH 2017 EASTER CONSUMER SURVEY ***

    A. REESE’S PEANUT BUTTER EGGS ARE THE MOST DESIRED EASTER CANDY

    Q: Which Easter candy brands would you most like to buy?

    1. Reese’s Peanut Butter Eggs: 14%

    2. Easter M&M’s: 11%

    3. Jelly Belly Jelly Beans: 10%

    4. Hershey’s Chocolate Bunny: 9%

    5. Cadbury Creme Eggs: 8%

    B. PEEPS IS THE LEAST PREFERRED EASTER CANDY BRAND OVERALL

    Q:  How likely are you to recommend this candy brand to a friend or colleague? Net promoter score, aka NPS, measures customer satisfaction and brand perception on a scale of -100 to +100. (A positive, high score means consumers actively recommend the brand; a negative score could mean consumers actively dissuade friends.)

     

    1. REESE’S: NPS of +32

    2. HERSHEY’S: NPS of +31

    3. CADBURY: NPS of +1 

    4. LINDT: NPS of -18

    5. BRACH’S: NPS of -27

    3. PEEPS: NPS of -36

    C. AMERICANS OVERWHELMINGLY PREFER TO BUY IN-STORE

    Q: What is your favorite way to shop for Easter?

    1. In-store: 90%

    2. Online: 10%

    D. THE MAJORITY OF AMERICANS PLAN TO SPEND LESS THAN $25 PER GIFT

    Q: How much are you likely to spend on an Easter gift?

    1. Between $10 and $25 (37%)

    2. Less than $10 (27%)

    3. Between $25 and $50 (21%)

    4. Between $50 and $100 (10%)

    E. CANDY IS THE MOST POPULAR EASTER PURCHASE

    Q: Which products do you plan to buy on/around Easter?

    1. Candy: 23%

    2. Plastic eggs or baskets: 15%

    3. Stuffed animals: 12%

    4. Toys: 12%

    5. Clothes: 9%

    F. WAL-MART IS THE MOST POPULAR BRICK & MORTAR RETAILER FOR EASTER GIFT SHOPPING

    Q: If shopping in-store, what are your favorite stores to shop for Easter gifts?

    1. Wal-Mart (38%)

    2. Walgreen’s or a similar drugstore chain (19%)

    3. Target (18%)

    4. TJ Maxx or a similar discount chain (7%)

    5. Safeway or a similar grocery chain (5%)

     

    (conducted via mobile phone on March 28, 2017 by Pollfish)

     

  • Tips for Final Week of Colorado Income Tax Filing Season

    Tips for Final Week of Colorado Income Tax Filing Season

     

    DENVER — With only one week left until the Tuesday, April 18 filing deadline, Colorado taxpayers should be aware of a few things if they have not yet filed their state income tax returns.

    Emancipation Day postpones Federal & State tax deadlines

    One thing taxpayers may notice is that this year’s filing deadline does not fall on April 15, which is on a Saturday this year. Typically, when a due date falls on the weekend, it is moved to the next Monday. However, the District of Columbia’s observance of Emancipation Day (April 16) will also affect the filing deadline. Because Emancipation Day falls on a Sunday, it will be observed on Monday, April 17. This will push the tax filing deadline for federal and Colorado income taxes to the next business day, making the due date Tuesday, April 18, 2017.

    Returns filed on Tuesday, April 18 will be considered as timely filed. Revenue Online will accept returns as timely filed until midnight. Returns that are mailed must be postmarked by April 18. An automatic extension to file is granted until October 16, but there is no extension to pay. See page 17 of the 104 Booklet for more information on extensions.

    Mailing address change: Zip+4

    Starting on January 1, 2017, the Zip+4 Code in the mailing addresses for income tax returns have changed based on whether or not the forms are mailed to the Department with a payment. The change in zip code is intended to ensure smoother processing of payments and returns. A complete list of mailing addresses by form number can be found on the Department’s Mail a Form webpage atColorado.gov/Tax/mail-form. These addresses and zip codes are exclusive to the Colorado Department of Revenue, so a street address is not required.

    Prevent delays

    Missing Social Security numbers (SSN) and Colorado Account numbers (CAN) on forms and/or payments made by check cause processing problems and could delay proper credit for a tax account. This also could result in billing notices sent to taxpayers because the accounting system doesn’t know to which tax account the tax payment applies.

    Make sure the SSN or CAN is listed on the memo line of the check and is on any documentation mailed to the Department. This is especially important when a check is sent without a form. The Department receives thousands of checks each month that do not have an SSN or CAN, resulting in research time to properly credit the taxpayer. This causes delays in return processing and any refund.

    Extension of time to file

    Colorado taxpayers who can’t make the April 18 filing deadline may take advantage of the state’s paperless, six-month extension of time to file. Although there is no form or notification necessary to file the information late, taxpayers must still submit 90% of the tax due by April 18 to avoid penalties. Any remaining balance due would be subject to interest only, as long as the return and balance owed are sent to CDOR by the October 16 extension deadline. Those who pay less than the required 90% of the amount due by the April deadline will be charged interest and penalty on the unpaid balance. Taxpayers can make a payment via Revenue Online or mail it with the form DR 0158-I: Extension Payment Voucher for Colorado Individual Income Tax included in the 2016 104 booklet to ensure their payments are credited to their accounts.

  • Buyer Beware: Watch Out for Free Tree and Landscaping Deals

    Buyer Beware: Watch Out for Free Tree and Landscaping Deals

     
    BROOMFIELD — The Colorado Department of Agriculture (CDA), Colorado Nursery and Greenhouse Association (CNGA) and the Associated Landscape Contractors of Colorado (ALCC) are warning consumers to be wary of trees, shrubs, perennial plants and turf grass sod that is included for “free” with the cost of exorbitant planting and landscaping costs.  CNGA, ALCC and CDA all work together to protect consumers. 
     
    “There is a consumer protection concern when plants are offered for ‘free’ with the purchase of the landscaping installation.  More often than not, the quality of the plants included with these too-good-to-be-true landscaping offers is very poor and does not meet minimum industry or mandated standards in the Colorado Nursery Act,” said CDA’s Program Manager for the Nursery, Phytosanitary, Plant-Pest Quarantine, and Seed programs, Laura Pottorff.  “Trees and other landscape plants are a significant investment made to add value to our property.  Be wise and informed.”
     
    While the Department of Agriculture cannot regulate how the plant is planted, it can regulate quality of woody plant material, turfgrass sod, and perennials at the time of sale.  CDA helps protect the consumer by ensuring that the product they see at the retail nursery or receive from the landscape contractor meetsminimum standard for plant health and quality. 
     
    The Colorado Nursery Act requires that all people who sell nursery stock (trees, shrubs, turfgrass sod and other perennial plants) be registered to do so.  If this plant material is offered for sale, it must meet strict standards for plant health and pest freedom that gives trees and other plants a “leg up” and increases likelihood of survival. 
     
    Consumers are encouraged to ask the nursery or landscape contractor if they are a member of their local industry association, such as CNGA or ALCC.  Member companies often go above and beyond to make sure they meet industry best practices.  Industry best practices make sure that trees have adequate root systems to survive and adjust to transplanting in Colorado’s challenging landscapes, adding long term value to a landscape.
     
    Member companies follow best management practices that include endorsement of certain tree trunk diameter to root diameter ratios.  For example, the best management practice for root balls is that for every caliper inch of trunk width measured at 6” above soil line for a deciduous tree (trees that loose leaves each autumn) there should be at least 10 inches of root ball to match. Similar standards exist for coniferous trees. CNGA and ALCC member companies will also strive to meet industry best planting standards as well.  Best planting standards are researched by universities and other scientists in Colorado to ensure best success of trees and shrubs planted in our area. 
     
    By law:
    • Woody plants and perennials cannot be sold with insect or disease infestations.
    • Woody plants and perennials cannot be sold with roots that are girdling, indicating that the tree or shrub has been in the container too long or in the balled and burlapped state too long.
    • Turfgrass sod cannot be sold if it contains more than 3 weeds in a 6 x 6 foot (or 36 square foot) area.
    • Check with the CDA to make sure that the company or person you are purchasing your woody plants, turfgrass sod and perennials from is registered to sell nursery stock.  By state law they have to be registered to sell nursery stock.  The Nursery Act is a consumer protection law and all woody plants, sodand perennials sold within the state of Colorado and the people who sell them fall under the jurisdiction of this law and the Colorado Department of Agriculture.
     
    “If nursery stock is offered for ‘free,’ it may not meet state or industry minimum standards; consumers run the risk of paying for installation services and winding up with poor quality or soon to be dead trees and shrubs,” continued Pottorff.  “If possible, go to the nursery and pick out the tree or plants you want.  When those plants are delivered to you and planted in your landscape watch them closely for the first few weeks and months to make sure they appear to be growing normally.” 
     
    The CDA routinely inspects plants at most of the nurseries in our state.  The results of these inspections and any conditions under advisory or Stop Sale that were found during an inspection are available to the public.  Contact us at 303-869-9070 or visit www.colorado.gov/nursery.
  • Five-Week Heat Is On DUI Enforcement Begins Today

    Five-Week Heat Is On DUI Enforcement Begins Today

    1,555 Arrested During 2016 Spring Events Enforcement

     STATEWIDE As warm weather beckons Coloradans outdoors, the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT), Colorado State Patrol (CSP) and local law enforcement agencies are set to collaborate for the latest The Heat Is On DUI enforcement in an effort to curb impaired driving. The Spring Events enforcement begins today, April 7, and continues through May 15, coinciding with annual spring celebrations and festivities — graduations, spring breaks, outdoor festivals, the start of baseball season and numerous 4/20 events — where alcohol and cannabis may be consumed.

     Last year, 1,555 impaired drivers were arrested during the five-week enforcement. This year’s crackdown involves 108 law enforcement agencies statewide.

     “With warmer weather, we know more Coloradans will hit the roads to enjoy the outdoors,” said Darrell Lingk, Director of CDOT’s Office of Transportation Safety. “We ask those who drink alcohol or consume cannabis do so only if they plan a sober ride. Impaired driving is not a risk worth taking.”

    In April and May 2016, there were 94 traffic fatalities on Colorado roads. Of these, 38 (40 percent) involved impaired drivers.

    “Law enforcement is determined to keep Colorado’s roads safe and prevent impaired driving crashes from occurring year-round,” said Col. Scott Hernandez, Chief of the Colorado State Patrol. “The Spring Events enforcement reinforces this mission and reminds motorists to plan a sober ride to and from their destinations.”

     The start of spring also marks the return of Colorado Rockies baseball, and CDOT is bringing impaired driving awareness to Coors Field this season. Posters will be placed throughout the stadium and a public service announcement (PSA) video featuring Rockies players will be played on the Jumbotron each game, both reminding fans to enjoy the game responsibly. CDOT will also host a “stadium take-over” during games with every digital screen displaying the message: “Choosing to Drink? Don’t Risk a DUI.”

     The CDOT Highway Safety Office provides funding to Colorado law enforcement for impaired driving enforcement, education and awareness campaigns. The Heat Is On campaign runs throughout the year with 12 specific high-visibility impaired driving enforcement periods centered on national holidays and large public events. Enforcement periods can include sobriety checkpoints, saturation patrols and additional law enforcement on duty dedicated to impaired driving enforcement. More details about the campaign, including impaired driving enforcement plans, arrest totals and safety tips can be found at HeatIsOnColorado.com.

  • Soldiers and Vehicles will travel from a southern Colorado Army post to a remote training site

    Soldiers and Vehicles will travel from a southern Colorado Army post to a remote training site

    FORT CARSON (AP) — Nearly 6,000 soldiers, hundreds of vehicles and 30 helicopters will travel from a southern Colorado Army post to a remote training site for a two-week training exercise.

    The Army said Wednesday the exercise will take place in late April at the Pinon (PIN’-yun) Canyon Maneuver Site.

    Ground convoys will make the 140-mile (225-kilometer) trip from Fort Carson in Colorado Springs to the maneuver site between April 11 and April 22. They will return in early May.

    The Army says each convoy will have up to 30 vehicles and travel 40 mph (64 kph) on two routes. Convoys will be 30 minutes apart and won’t travel in urban areas during peak rush hours.

    The Army says the exercise will involve night and day maneuvers and will increase dust and noise levels.

  • State-private partnerships pave way for progress on plague vaccine campaigns

    State-private partnerships pave way for progress on plague vaccine campaigns

     

    DENVER – While a drone dropping peanut butter-flavored baits makes national headlines there’s an untold, Colorado-centric backstory on how those little blue baits came to be. It’s a story of creativity, trial-and-error experimentation, and a machine originally designed to make carp bait.

    This time last year federal and state wildlife managers, hoping to deploy an anti-plague vaccine that may aid in efforts to recover the endangered black-footed ferret, had a problem: No one knew how to mass-produce the baits that carry the vaccine quickly and affordably enough to supply the demands for their expanding field vaccination campaigns.

    Enter scientists from Colorado Parks and Wildlife, who already had been working behind the scenes on several fronts for years to advance the science on controlling plague on a limited geographic scale for conservation purposes.

    “Until last spring, the production model for plague vaccine baits was akin to boutique fudge-making,” said Dan Tripp, a researcher with CPW. “Vaccination is only going to be practical on tracts of a few thousand acres or less where protecting prairie dogs from plague is the desired goal. But before we could even begin thinking about treating 1,000-acre blocks of habitat we needed a way to make more than a few hundred baits at a time. Cheap!”

    Tripp, along with assistant Lucy Corro and Scott Stelting, a former USDA scientist now with CORE Formulations LLC, began experimenting with the vaccine bait formula and a relatively inexpensive piece of machinery called a “boilie roller” that is popular in Europe for making custom-made carp fishing baits.


    “Our federal collaborators wanted bait balls that could be fed through a hopper carried by a drone,” said Tripp. “The original baits were like hand-crafted gummy cubes. We tried to make dried bait balls from the original recipe, but they were too brittle. So we had to experiment with ingredient proportions and timing to get everything working. Then it was time to fish or roll bait.”

    By May 2016, the new techniques for mass-producing bait balls were in use at CPW and USDA facilities in Fort Collins. As a result, federal and state agencies’ vaccine bait needs for the ramped-up 2016 field season were met in a five-week production run. The resulting baits were small, light, and – most importantly – by autumn already successfully field tested in two different mechanical delivery devices. CPW also contributed directly to the ongoing design and development of mechanical delivery devices to streamline vaccine bait distribution.

    And what about the blue color? A small field study that Tripp conducted in 2015 built upon work from the 1960s showing that prairie dogs seem to discern blue from other colors. Combining blue coloration with the scent of peanut butter seemed a good strategy for ensuring prairie dogs could locate smaller baits on the ground. Switching to the blue food-grade coloring also shaved costs and greatly simplified the bait production process.

    Another unheralded player in the scaled-up anti-plague campaign is Colorado Serum Company, a federally-licensed vaccine company that has provided nearly a century of animal health care service. In 2015, Colorado Serum secured federal authorizations and agreements allowing the company to mass-manufacture the anti-plague vaccine.

    “We had to find ways of coaxing the vaccine virus to multiply faster and in much larger quantities,” said Randy Berrier, vice president of technical services and business development with Colorado Serum Company. “We spent several months developing techniques to improve the vaccine yields, and succeeded just in time to meet all of the agencies’ needs for the 2016 field season. And we’re even more ready to be of service again in 2017.”

    CPW and Colorado Serum also partnered last spring to make sure the new mass-manufactured vaccine baits still performed as well as the hand-made variety used in years past. A CPW study in captive prairie dogs that began last June showed the commercial-source vaccine was still safe in prairie dogs and stimulated antibody responses as expected.

    And as a final testament to Colorado’s commitment to combating plague for wildlife conservation purposes, the efforts undertaken to scale-up vaccine bait manufacturing for the benefit of wildlife in Colorado and elsewhere were largely paid for through the state’s Species Conservation Trust Fund thanks to annual severance tax funding authorized by the Colorado General Assembly.

    Colorado’s wildlife managers have been especially motivated to make plague control tools more widely available because three of the nation’s four prairie dog species call Colorado home. All three species have at some point in the recent past been considered for federal listing as threatened or endangered.
    Plague, a disease once exotic to Colorado, is currently the single greatest threat to the few remaining strongholds for prairie dogs. Plague outbreaks also have caused repeated failures in federal attempts to restore the black-footed ferret, a species that depends on prairie dogs for survival.

    “We are very optimistic that this new tool to combat sylvatic plague in prairie dog colonies will work not only for the benefit of black-footed ferret recovery, but also for the private landowners who are voluntarily working to recover the species. Additionally, these efforts will be potentially beneficial in ensuring that prairie dog species are not federally listed,” said Ken Morgan, private lands program manager with CPW. “We are especially indebted to the local governments and willing landowners who have been cooperating in implementing these conservation measures for the benefit of the entire state.”

    “I hope Coloradans will take pride that our CPW and private sector partners stepped up in such a pivotal way to advance this conservation tool,” said Bob Broscheid, director of CPW. “This embodies Gov. Hickenlooper’s commitment to effective, efficient and elegant work in state service.”

    Read more about the story of vaccine bait mass-manufacturing in a new research letter just published in the Journal of Wildlife Diseases.