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Category: Front Page

  • TODAY’S EVENTS – Thursday, Jan. 12

    TODAY’S EVENTS – Thursday, Jan. 12

    WHAT’S HAPPENING?

     

    • FREEBIE DAY at the DENVER ZOO!! 

      Visit the Denver Zoo for free today! Be sure to share some of the fun @I70Scout!

    • I-70 Regional Economic Advancement Partnership

      Front Range Airport @ 11:45 a.m. Lunch is available for $15.

    • Bennett Fire Protection District Board

      Station No. 3 @ 7 p.m.

    • Byers Park & Recreation District Board

      Quint Valley Fairgrounds @ 7 p.m.
       

      EVERY THURSDAY

        • Music & Movement

          Anythink Bennett Library: Ages 2-6 can sing, dance and learn to play basic instruments @ 10 a.m.

        • Family Story Time

          Davies Library: Ages 3-5 can hang out with their family and listen in on a wonderful story @ 11 a.m.

        • Bingo for Books

          Anythink Bennett Library @ 4:15 p.m.

        • AA Strasburg Sobriety. 

          Saron Lutheran Church, 1656 Main St., Lane Shade @ 7:30 p.m., For questions, call (303)717-2263

      SPORTS

        • Girl Basketball, Byers @ Hemp Hill Middle School, 4 p.m.
        • Wrestling Strasburg High School @ Lyons, 5:30 p.m.
        • Basketball, Middle Park @ Bennett High School:
           
          Girls:

          JV @ 4

          V @5:30 p.m.

          C @ 7 p.m.

          Boys:

          JV @ 4 p.m.

          C @ 5:30 p.m.

          V @ 7 p.m.

        • Boys & Girls Basketball (V), Shinning Mountain @ Deer Trail High School, 5 p.m.
        • Deer Trail Youth Wrestling @ 6:15 p.m.
        • Eastern Plains Honor Guard practice. Strasburg American Legion Hall @ 7 p.m. Call (303)719-8292.

       

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  • TODAY’S EVENTS – Wednesday, Jan. 11

    TODAY’S EVENTS – Wednesday, Jan. 11

    WHAT’S HAPPENING?

    • National Step In A Puddle & Splash Your Friends!

      Join in on the celebration that all kids will love and all the young-at-heart adults will love just the same, as we celebrate National Step in a Puddle and Splash Your Friends Day. Celebrated annually on January 11, this day can be a little bit tricky depending on where you live, as at this time of the year, many of the puddles could be frozen! Look out for some puddles so you can splash your friends and share your pictures @I70Scout!

    • Strasburg High School Board Meeting

      Strasburg High School Community Room @ 6:30 p.m.

    • Needlework and Crafts

      Bennett Community Center @ 1 p.m. Contact Mary White, (303)644-3202, or Peg Mancuso, (303)644-5191.

    • IOU with Love

      A Pay it forward Giving Circle. Maximize your giving potential with a group of like minded friends. Assist those who could be lifted up by a little extra TLC and compassion. Meet Monthly … Socialize … Listen to Guest Speakers. Give a little … Give alot … YOU determine the amount you can donate. Social Hour from 6 to 7 p.m., Meeting @ 7 p.m., location varies. For location and directions, call (303)913-7094 or (303)261-0680 or visit www.iougivingcircle.com.

    • National Sunflower Association’s Annual Research Forum

      Ramada Plaza Suites and Convention Center in Fargo, ND.

      EVERY WEDNESDAY

        • Baby Bounce

          Anythink Bennett Library: Songs, stories and rhyme times for babies up to age 2 and their caregivers @ 10 to 10:30 a.m.

        • Music & Movement

          Anythink Bennett Library: Ages 2-6 can sing, dance and learn to play basic instruments @ 10 a.m.

        • Bennett Young At Heart Seniors Potluck

          Bennett Community Center @ 12 p.m., Contact Shirley Kuzara, (303)644-4768

        • Byers Silver & Gold Senior Citizens Game Day

          Byers American Legion Hall @ 12:30 p.m.

        • Recovery in Christ

          Valley Bank, Strasburg @ 7 to 9 p.m.

       

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  • COLORADO FREEBIES: JANUARY 2017

    COLORADO FREEBIES: JANUARY 2017

    FREE EVENTS IN JANUARY!!

     

    DENVER ZOO:
    JANUARY 12TH, 20TH & 21ST

    DENVER MUSEUM OF NATURE & SCIENCE:
    JANUARY 22ND

    DENVER BOTANIC GARDENS:
    JANUARY 16TH

     

    Like & Follow THE I-70 SCOUT  for YOUR MONTHLY EVENTS! @I70Scout

     

     

  • Colorado’s Director of Marijuana Coordination Andrew Freedman: Official Announcement

    Colorado’s Director of Marijuana Coordination Andrew Freedman: Official Announcement

    Andrew Freedman to leave position as State Director of Marijuana Coordination

    Gov. John Hickenlooper announced that Andrew Freedman, Director of Marijuana Coordination, will be transitioning out of the administration. Freedman will be launching a consulting firm, Freedman & Koski, LLC which specializes in advising State and Local governments on how to best implement marijuana legalization.

    Andrew Freedman has done a remarkable job shepherding Colorado through one of the great social experiments of this decade. I think he has an invaluable expertise to support and assist other states as they work through issues of good government, public health, and public safety. I believe he can serve as a connection between these states so we can all share lessons learned and communicate effectively with the federal government. – Hickenlooper

    Freedman was first hired in January 2011 by Lieutenant Governor Joseph Garcia to be chief of staff. He left that position in July of 2013 to become the campaign director for Yes on 66: Colorado Commits to Kids. In January of 2014 he was hired by Hickenlooper to be the State’s Director of Marijuana Coordination. He was charged with coordinating the State’s efforts to implement the effective regulation of Colorado’s recreational and medical marijuana while promoting public health, maintaining public safety, and keeping marijuana out of the hands of children.

    During his time as Director, Freedman worked with various departments to tackle some of the state’s most complex issues regarding marijuana legalization. He coordinated with the Department of Revenue, Department of Public Health and Environment, Department of Agriculture and the Attorney General’s Office to create the world’s first regulatory structure for recreational marijuana, medical marijuana, and hemp. Freedman rallied state resources and the community to pursue sensible policy options for banking, edibles, taxation, advertising, pesticides, data collection, and the gray and black markets. Freedman also served as the governor’s point person on marijuana issues for the federal government, the media, and other states and countries.

    It has been an honor to work for the administration, the Lieutenant Governor, and the Governor these last six years. Though I have often worked on some of the more divisive policies in Colorado politics, I have been amazed by the ability of Coloradans and this administration to come together to make sure we implement these policies in a way that benefits all of us. The Governor and Colorado have taught me that good government matters, and I will forever be grateful for that lesson. – Freedman

    The Governor’s November 1st budget requested that the Office of Marijuana Coordination be sunset by the end of the fiscal year. The office was intended to aid in the roll-out of a legalized system, and thereafter to allow departments to handle the long-term work. Going forward, the responsibilities of the Director of Marijuana Coordination will be handled by the Governor’s Senior Deputy Legal Counsel, Mark Bolton. Bolton will be the point person for the Governor for ongoing issues concerning marijuana legalization, and will maintain his responsibilities in the Office of Legal Counsel. Freedman will remain on staff part time to aid in this transition.

  • New legislative session brings $500 million deficit, uncertainty

    New legislative session brings $500 million deficit, uncertainty

    by James Anderson

    Associated Press

    DENVER (AP) — With one eye on a $500 million state budget gap and the other on Washington, Gov. John Hickenlooper and a split Colorado Legislature enter the 2017 lawmaking session with little expectation of fiscal reform and plenty of uncertainty over transportation, the state’s Medicaid bills, affordable housing and illegal pot sales.

    Last year, Hickenlooper and fellow Democrats tried and failed to loosen Colorado’s strict spending rules by declaring a $750 million hospital fund off-limits to tax rebates. They wanted the money for aging roads and underfunded schools. 

    The governor dropped that idea from his proposed $28.5 billion budget this year, as lawmakers prepare to face more tough spending choices during their four-month session starting Wednesday. 

    As it stands, Hickenlooper’s budget requires $500 million in transfers, cuts or delayed spending on transit, health care and other programs. All of it must comply with the state’s Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, which limits the revenues the state can take without voter approval.

    The governor and new leaders in the Republican-controlled Senate and Democrat-led House are floating the idea of asking voters to approve a tax to update Colorado’s highways. The state’s to-do list for roads has an $8 billion and growing price tag to fund delayed road and bridge repairs and pay for envisioned new road projects. Legislators from both parties say they’re keenly aware that traffic gridlock is a top priority to voters.

    “Obviously the need is something both sides are aware of — painfully aware of,” incoming Senate President Kevin Grantham, R-Canon City, told a group of business owners Thursday.

    There are signs the parties could finally agree on a way to promote affordable condo and other housing construction— a pressing issue for the fast-growing state with rapidly rising housing costs. Colorado home values have gone up 10 percent over the past year, according to real estate data firm Zillow, which predicts they’ll rise another 4 percent over the next year.

    In recent years, lawmakers have tried unsuccessfully to reform state laws that allow developers to be sued for construction defects. Both sides agree it’s too easy under state law for renters and homeowners to sue — and that has contributed to skyrocketing housing costs.

    Leaders of the House and Senate say they are optimistic they can change those laws this session to promote housing construction.

    Incoming House Speaker Crisanta Duran, a Denver Democrat, told the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce that she’s optimistic lawmakers can hammer out a compromise on the long-debated developer-liability question.

    But she added that developers shouldn’t expect a friendlier Democratic House under her leadership.

    “I stand strong against taking away consumer rights,” Duran told the business leaders.

    Plenty of attention will be paid to health care, and both Democrats and Republicans say they need to study how they can prepare for a possible repeal or other changes to the Affordable Care Act this session. 

    Colorado’s Medicaid insurance for the needy costs the state $6.4 billion annually. One in five residents is already on Medicaid, and nearly 1.5 million residents will depend on it this year. 

    Western Slope residents pay some of the highest premiums in the country under the health law — and they have only one provider. Lawmakers will be under pressure to help without clear guidance from Washington.

    Hickenlooper also is asking legislators to crack down on the so-called “gray” — if not outright illegal — pot market. He cites liberal rules on the number of marijuana plants recreational users and caregiver can grow, and he contends drug cartels are taking advantage of those rules to export Colorado pot harvests to other states.

    The governor wants more information from people who grow pot on behalf of sick people and a ban on recreational pot users putting together large communal grows.

    Eyes also will be on both Congress and local environmental rules regarding enduring topics central to Coloradans: energy, protecting jobs for those who develop it, and the uncertain future of state and federal plans to keep it clean.

    “We don’t know what dictates, or removal of dictates, from Washington, D.C., may do to us,” Grantham said.

  • Deer Trail School hosting high school football meeting Jan. 10

    Deer Trail School hosting high school football meeting Jan. 10

    DEER TRAIL — Deer Trail High School will host a commitment meeting for students interested in playing football for the Eagles next year and their parents beginning at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow, Jan. 10, in the cafeteria.

    Deer Trail student-athletes have played football at Byers the past couple of years and tomorrow’s commitment meeting will help determine whether Deer Trail will reinstate its own program.

  • TODAY’S EVENTS – Sunday, Jan. 8

    TODAY’S EVENTS – Sunday, Jan. 8

    WHAT’S HAPPENING?

        • Strasburg High School Commences SES ELL ACCESS Testing

          Federal and state laws require that English Language Learning (ELL) Students be assessed annually to measure their proficiency in reading, writing, listening, and speaking English, as well as the progress they are making in learning English.  Strasburg High School commences is testing period today, through Jan. 27.

        • National Sunday Supper Day

          These days, families are busy with after school activities, jobs and homework.  Sunday Supper has been a disappearing tradition around the country. The Sunday Supper Movement aims to bring families back together in the kitchen and around the supper table one Sunday at time.   National Sunday Supper Day is a step toward this goal. Spend the evening at the table cozying up with your family and share your moments with us! @I70Scout #NationalSundaySupperDay

        • Denver Museum of Nature & Science – Cosmic Journey: A Solar System Adventure

          In Cosmic Journey: A Solar System Adventure, you’ll travel through our solar system faster than the speed of light, taking in the wonders of the planets and their moons. Denver Museum of Nature & Science, 2001 COLORADO BLVD, DENVER, CO, @ 11:15 a.m., 11:45 a.m., 1 p.m., 3:30 p.m., 4:30 p.m.; $4 – $5.

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  • TODAY’S EVENTS – Saturday, Jan. 7

    TODAY’S EVENTS – Saturday, Jan. 7

    WHAT’S HAPPENING?

      • Denver Art Museum – Free Day

        General admission is free on the first Saturday of the month thanks our local Toyota Stores and members of the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District (SCFD). Note: This does not include admission to special ticketed exhibitions. Denver Art Museum, 100 W. 14th Ave. Pkwy., Denver, CO 80204 @ 10 AM; Free

      • Disney’s Beauty and the Beast- Musical 

        “Once upon a time” there lived a selfish young Prince, who had everything his heart desired. Vintage Theatre presents “Disney’s Beauty and the Beast: A Musical” – The classic story of young Belle and the Beast that only she can change. Vintage Theatre, 1468 Dayton St, Aurora, CO 80010 @ 7:30 p.m.; $28 – $31 – 303-856-7830 or online

      • PACE & Denver Zoo – Family Discovery Series: Animal Expeditions

        The Denver Zoo explores the Animal Kingdom and takes guests on an educational safari around the world! Come face-to-face with live animals and discover their wild nature. Parker Arts Culture & Events (PACE) Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker, CO 80138, @ 10 a.m.; $5

    Sports:

        • Wrestling.

          Strasburg High School @ Bennett. 8 a.m.

        • Boys and Girls Basketball.

          Wiggins @ Strasburg High School.  4 p.m.

        • Boys Basketball.

          ECA @ Byers. 2 p.m.

        • Lacrosse

          Colorado Mammoth v. Vancouver Stealth, @ Pepsi Center, 1000 Chopper Circle, Denver, CO. 7 p.m.; $varies

        • Hockey

          University of Denver v. Arizona State, @ Ritchie Center, 2201 E. Asbury Ave., Denver, CO. 7 p.m.; $15 – $37

     

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  • Denver Metro Action Day for Visibility 

    Denver Metro Action Day for Visibility 

    Indoor Burning Restrictions in Effect 

    This is the Denver Metro Air Pollution Forecast effective 4PM on Friday, January 6, 2017: 

    An Action Day for Visibility is now in effect for the seven-county Denver-Boulder metropolitan area. Indoor Burning Restrictions and requests to limit driving are now in effect until at least 4 PM Saturday, January 7, 2017. Poor visibility and an exceedance of the state visibility standard are expected on Saturday. Otherwise, good or moderate air quality conditions are expected. No other air quality advisories are in effect. 

    Cold temperatures and snow cover will limit atmospheric mixing and cause Poor visibility on Saturday. 

    For statewide conditions, forecasts and advisories, visit: 
    http://www.colorado.gov/airquality/colorado_summary.aspx  

    A poorly maintained vehicle pollutes more than a well maintained one. If you must drive, properly maintain your vehicle. We’ll all breathe easier! 

    At 2PM (MST), Friday, 1/6/2017 the highest AQI value was 59 for Particulate less than 2.5 micrometers which indicates Moderate air quality. Respiratory symptoms possible in unusually sensitive individuals, possible aggravation of heart or lung disease in people with cardiopulmonary disease and older adults. Unusually sensitive people should consider reducing prolonged or heavy exertion. 
    Front Range Air Quality Forecast & Colorado Smoke Outlook 

    FRONT RANGE AIR QUALITY FORECAST: 
    Friday, January 6, 2017, 2:30 PM MST 

    Ozone concentrations are expected to be in the Good category on Friday and Saturday. 

    Fine Particulate Matter concentrations are expected to be in the Good to Moderate range on Friday and Saturday. Moderate concentrations are most likely within the Denver Metro Area and northward along the Front Range urban corridor into southern Weld County, including Greeley. Unusually sensitive people should consider reducing prolonged or heavy exertion in these areas on Friday and Saturday. 

    Carbon Monoxide concentrations are expected to be in the Good category on Friday and Saturday. 

    Nitrogen Dioxide concentrations are expected to be in the Good to Moderate range on Friday and Saturday. Moderate concentrations are most likely within the Denver Metro area near busy roadways, particularly between the hours of 7-10 AM, and between 5-9 PM. For health recommendations, please see Fine Particulate Matter above. 

    Visibility is expected to be Moderate to Poor on Saturday. 

    COLORADO SMOKE OUTLOOK: 
    Friday, January 6, 2017, 2:25 PM MST 

    Light to moderate smoke is possible near prescribed fires and small wildfires around the state.

  • Fishful Thinker TV filmed upcoming season at Colorado state parks

    Fishful Thinker TV filmed upcoming season at Colorado state parks

    DENVER – Fishful Thinker TV, a documentary-style show for western anglers, is showcasing Colorado state parks and wildlife areas this season. The show will feature a realistic cross-section of the fishing opportunities available in the state. This season premieres Jan. 7 at 9:30 a.m. MST on the Altitude Sports and Entertainment network.

    “Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s mission aligns with our goal at Fishful Thinker TV to educate people about the breadth of public resources and how best to enjoy them,” said Chad LaChance, host of Fishful Thinker TV. “I’m excited about this opportunity to further spread the word about Colorado outdoor activities to anglers in Colorado and surrounding states.”

    Colorado has 42 state parks, 37 of which offer angling opportunities. The upcoming season of Fishful Thinker will feature locations in multiple state wildlife areas and state parks, including South Delaney Buttes State WIldlife Area, Cherry Creek State Park, Lake Pueblo State Park, Navajo State Park, Coller State Wildlife Area, John Martin State Park, Echo Canyon State Wildlife Area, State Forest State Park, Jackson Lake State Park, Stagecoach State Park, Steamboat Lake State Park, Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area, North Delaney State Wildlife Area, Two Buttes State Wildlife Area, Lathrop State Park, and Yampa River State Park as well as other Colorado waters.

    “We love showing off our state park and look forward to seeing Fishful Thinker TV showcase the angling options we offer,” said Jason Trujillo, park manager at Cherry Creek State Park.

    In the episode filmed at Cherry Creek State Park, LaChance catches walleye and fillets and cooks it on the spot.

    Episodes of Fishful Thinker TV air on the Altitude Sports and Entertainment network every Saturday at 9:30 a.m. MST and will repeat regularly throughout the week. Fishful Thinker TV will also air nationally on the World Fishing Network later in 2017 and it is available to stream through the MyOutdoorTV app.

    Entering its sixteenth season, Fishful Thinker TV is for anglers who want to experience what it’s like to fish in a variety of public water locations. The show focuses on angler education first and foremost, choosing locations by the best and most diverse fishing opportunities. For more information, visit fishfulthinker.com.