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Category: Local News

  • Bill Passes Wages on CDOT Projects

    Bill Protects Workers’ Wages on CDOT Projects

    A bill expanding wage protections for workers on state highway projects passed the House Transportation & Energy Committee on February 1. HB17-1068, sponsored by Rep. Adrienne Benavidez, D-Adams County, specifies that the Colorado Department of Transportation may consider bids, including those for public-private partnerships like the recent US36 project, only if the bid calculates labor costs using locally prevailing wages and benefits. The idea is to prevent lowball bids from companies that don’t pay their employees fair wages.

    This bill is intended to protect workers in Colorado so they can earn a good wage and raise their families. It also clarifies the state’s requirement to pay prevailing wages on public projects when they partner with private business – Rep. Benavidez

    The committee voted 8-4 to send the bill to the House floor.

  • KILLED: Personal Property Tax Relief for Colorado Businesses

    KILLED: Personal Property Tax Relief for Colorado Businesses

    Personal Property Tax Relief for Colorado Businesses Out-Voted

    DENVER— Today, Democrats on the House State, Veterans, and Military Affairs Committee, killed, on a party-line vote, Rep. Tim Leonard’s (R-Evergreen) bill to provide tax relief to Colorado’s business owners. Under current law, there is a $7,300 threshold for business personal property taxes, whereby businesses with personal property totaling less than $7,300 in actual value do not report personal property value, but anything over that amount requires taxation on the total amount including the first $7,300.

    Leonard’s bill, House Bill 1063, would have created a $50,000 business personal property tax exemption and only subjected personal property in excess of that amount to taxation starting in 2017.

    Business personal property taxes are taxes on items inside a business, and as a business owner I know first-hand how high taxation impedes business growth. “This bill would have reduced taxes and relieved businesses from an onerous tax, giving owners more money to expand, increase wages and add jobs in Colorado. – Leonard, who owns a franchise coffee shop

    Republicans in both the House and Senate have made tax relief for Colorado businesses priority this legislative session. 

  • Gardner Addresses Delayed VA Medical Leases

    Gardner and Colleagues Introduce Bill to Authorize Delayed VA Medical Leases

    WASHINGTON—Senators Cory Gardner (R-CO), Mark R. Warner (D-VA), Susan Collins (R-ME), and a group of 14 other Senators, reintroduced the bipartisan Providing Veterans Overdue Care Act, legislation that would authorize pending leases for 24 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) medical facilities in 15 states. The bill seeks to ensure veteran access to healthcare by authorizing these medical leases, which would allow the VA to maintain needed healthcare facilities for which the VA has been seeking congressional approval for more than a year.

    Under law, the VA must receive specific legislative authorization to lease medical facilities with average annual rental payments in excess of $1 million. However, since 2012, Congress has not, through a regular process, authorized any major VA medical facility leases, hampering the ability of the department to provide much-needed health care and services to veterans around the country. The 24 leases pending before Congress are located in states with an estimated 11 million veterans.

    “Our veterans deserve the best possible care and I am committed to working to make that a reality,” said Gardner. “Under current law, a VA outpatient clinic in Northern Colorado and a VA administrative office in Denver’s lease will expire unless Congress acts. This bill provides a legislative fix and ensures our veterans’ care is not interrupted. I look forward to working with my colleagues on this issue until this bill becomes law.”

    “Despite progress the V-A has made in recent years to improve access, too many veterans in Virginia and across the country are still waiting too long to get medical care through the V-A. While we have been able to reduce waiting times in the Hampton Roads region, we have a larger challenge ahead as the veteran population in the area grows at roughly four times the national average,” said Warner. “Veterans deserve a new outpatient facility in South Hampton Roads to help ease some of the burden at Hampton VAMC, and Congress needs to make the approval of these two dozen pending leases a top priority. Our veterans expect better from us, and this bill is a good step in the effort to improve veteran’s access to the services they have earned through their service to this country.”

    “Veterans deserve convenient access to the high-quality health care they have earned through their service.  That is why I continue to urge my colleagues to support the authorization of these leases for vital medical facilities across the country, including in Portland, ME,” said Collins. “These facilities, such as the proposed CBOC in Portland, will allow veterans to receive outpatient care without the stress and difficulty of traveling to larger VA medical centers, which may be located far away from their homes.”

    One reason for the delay in congressional authorization has been a recent change in the way that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) scores these leases. Prior to 2012, the major medical facility leases were scored on an annual basis, but that year, CBO determined that budget authority for these leases, many of which cover a 20-year period, should be recorded up front when the leases are initiated and the acquisition occurs, not when the debt is repaid. As such, scoring for legislation that authorized these leases increased significantly, even though actual spending would not increase and the leases are ultimately subject to annual appropriations.

    The bill would authorize the following leases:

    ·       Ann Arbor, MI – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Birmingham, AL – Outpatient Mental Health Clinic
    ·       Birmingham, AL – Outpatient Specialty Clinic
    ·       Boston, MA – Research Space
    ·       Charleston, SC – Research Space
    ·       Corpus Christi, TX – Replacement Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Daytona Beach, FL – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Denver, CO – Chief Business Office Purchased Care
    ·       Gainesville, FL – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Hampton Roads, VA – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Jacksonville, FL – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Mission Bay, CA – Research Space
    ·       Missoula, MT – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Northern Colorado, CO – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Ocala, FL – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Oxnard, CA – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Pike County, GA – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Pontiac, MI – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Portland, ME – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Raleigh, NC – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Rochester, NY – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Santa Rosa, CA – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Tampa, FL – Outpatient Clinic
    ·       Terre Haute, IN – Outpatient Clinic
  • Annual Conference: Food Safety

    Annual Conference: Food Safety

    Produce Group’s Annual Conference: Food Safety

    WHEN: Feb. 21, 2017, Renaissance Denver Stapleton Hotel

    Registration Rates Increase Feb. 8

    Assisting growers in their safety practice and helping them comply with the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) implemented last year is a focus of the 2017 Colorado Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association (CFVGA) Third Annual Conference, Feb. 21 at the Renaissance Denver Stapleton Hotel. Addressing conference goers from 10 to 11am, will be Bonnie Fernandez-Fenaroli, executive director of the Center for Produce Safety (CPS).

    The food safety landscape is constantly changing as new technology allows for the quick identification of pathogens in the food chain. Extensive collaboration with members of the produce industry, regulatory agencies and academia, allows CPS to prioritize research and make results available to support growers in their continuous improvement of food safety programs. – Fernandez-Fenaroli

    CPS is a public /private partnership that funds food safety research on behalf of the fresh produce industry. Its unique approach to filling food safety knowledge gaps has become an industry resource throughout the United States and abroad.

    CPS research results are posted on its website. The newest information is presented at its annual research symposium, which this year will be June 20-21, in Denver. CFVGA will be offering a limited number of scholarships for growers to attend the symposium.

    In addition to the plenary session with Fernandez-Fenaroli, a conference break-out session will feature Dr. Ines Hanrahan, who will present a case study of the outbreak on caramel apples in late 2014. She will focus on action taken immediately following the outbreak to identify priorities for training and research and describe the improvements that the Northwest apple industry has taken to reduce the risk of reoccurrence.

    Growers interested in taking FSMA food safety training are invited to register for the full day certification training, the day before the conference, Feb. 20, also at the Renaissance Denver Stapleton Hotel.

    CFVGA’s full-day conference is designed to inspire growers and others in the produce industry as well as to provide networking and education. More than 300 people, including produce buyers and exhibitors are expected to attend. For more information and to register for both the conference and the training, log on tohttp://cfvga.org . For more on CFVGA: http://coloradoproduce.org

    The CFVGA is comprised of more than 200 members, including growers of all sizes and types of production throughout the state, as well as representatives of allied industries. The Colorado fruit and vegetable growing sector contributes nearly $300 million to Colorado at the farm gate and is multiplied as it goes through the distribution chain. Over 60,000 Colorado acres are in fruit and vegetable production.

  • Missed our Telephone Town Hall Meeting? Arapahoe County still wants to hear from you

    Missed our Telephone Town Hall Meeting? Arapahoe County still wants to hear from you

    Thank you for participating in our Feb. 2 Telephone Town Hall Meeting. If you were not able to join us, we still want to hear from you. Please share your ideas about your priorities for Arapahoe County as we develop our Strategic Plan for 2017-2018 later this month.
    Email and we will share your suggestions with Arapahoe County Commissioners and Elected Officials. 

    Thank you for participating in our Telephone Town Hall

     
  • TODAY’S EVENTS – Friday, Feb. 3

    TODAY’S EVENTS – Friday, Feb. 3

    WHAT’S HAPPENING? 

    IT’S THE WEEKEND!!! HAVE FUN AND BE SAFE!

     

    EVERY FRIDAY

    • Al-Anon Family Group

      For more information call (303)888-4525.

    • Story Time

      Kelver Library, Byers @ 10 a.m.

    SCHOOL NEWS

    • Deer Trail

      Basketball (V) vs Flagler, 5:30 p.m.

      Boys Basketball vs. Platte Valley, 4:00 p.m.

      Girls Basketball @ Platte Valley, 4:00 p.m.

    •  Strasburg

      Strasburg High School Cheer Youth Clinic, HS Classrooms, 3:30 – 5:30 p.m. 

      Cannon Youth Baseball Practice, Hemp Hill Middle School Gym, 6 – 7:30 p.m.

      Strasburg Boys Basketball vs. Platte Valley, 4:00 p.m.

      Strasburg Girls @ Platte Valley, 4:00 p.m.

      Strasburg High School Cheer Youth Clinic, HS Classrooms, 3:30 – 5:30 p.m.

      Strasburg Wrestling Practice, SES cafeteria, 3:45 – 6:00 p.m.

      Cannon Youth Baseball Practice, Hemp Hill Middle School Gym, 6 – 7:30 p.m.

    Send Us Your News & Announcements for February!

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  • TODAY’S EVENTS – Thursday, Feb. 2

    TODAY’S EVENTS – Thursday, Feb. 2

    WHAT’S HAPPENING? 

    • DID YOU KNOW?? IT’S GROUNDHOG DAY!!

      Will he see his shadow or will he not?  That is the question!

      Groundhog Day is observed on February 2nd, each year in the United States and Canada for a welcomed break during the winter. On this day the groundhog awakens from his nap and goes outside to see if he can see his shadow.  It is believed by many that if the groundhog sees his shadow there will then be six more weeks of winter. If this is so,  he then retrieves back into his den and goes back to sleep.  If he is not able to see his shadow, the groundhog remains outside to play and people celebrate believing that spring is just around the corner. 

      Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania has been chosen as the site for the annual Groundhog day event.  Thousands of people come to the town of Punxsutawney on Groundhog Day for this day of celebration.

    • YOUTH WRESTLING SIGN-UPS!

      The Bennett Wrestling Club, BENNETT MIDDLE SCHOOL @ 6:30-7:30 p.m. on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays from Jan. 31 to Feb. 9.   Spring registration in the Bennett Middle School multipurpose room. Parents must provide a copy of the wrestler’s birth certificate at registration. The cost is $20 for the season. Practice runs from 6:30-8 p.m. starting Tuesday, Jan. 31, also in the multipurpose room. For more information, call James DuBois at (720)290-8716 or Seana DuBois at (720)290-8718.

    • LOCAL CONSERVATIONISTS TREE SEMINAR

      BYERS — Local conservation organizations will host a tree workshop from 6-8 p.m., Friday, Feb. 10, at the Valley Bank & Trust Community Room in Strasburg. The workshop will cover species selection, site preparation, windbreaks, weed barriers and drip irrigation.

      RSVPs are required before Monday, Feb. 6. The cost is $6 per person, which includes pizza. If less than 10 people confirm, the seminar will be canceled. The workshop is sponsored by the Colorado State University Extension in Adams County; the Deer Trail, East Adams and West Arapahoe conservation districts; and the Colorado State Forest Service.

      Registration can be sent to Deer Trail/East Adams conservation districts, 133 W. Bijou Ave., Byers, Colo. 80103. For more information, call (303)822-5257, ext. 101.

    • FREEBIE DAY AT DENVER ZOO!

    EVERY THURSDAY

    • AA Strasburg Sobriety

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

    • Music & Movement

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

    • Color Me Happy

      Bennett Anythink library @ 5:30 p.m. Adults color together for relaxation and conversation. Coloring sheets, colored pencils, instrumental music, and refreshments provided. 

    • Family Story Time

      Davies Library, Deer Trail @ 11 a.m. for ages 3-5. 

    SCHOOL NEWS

    • BYERS

    Byers Wrestling @ Peyton, 6:00 PM 

    • DEER TRAIL

    Deer Trail Youth Wrestling, 6:15 PM 

    • STRASBURG

    Hemp Hill Middle School Girls vs. Elizabeth, 4 p.m.

    Wrestling @ Patriot League Crossover Dual @ University, 6:30 p.m.

    Art Club, HS Art Room, 3:30pm – 4:30pm

    Strasburg High School Cheer Youth Clinic, HS Classrooms, 3:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.

    Wrestling Practice, Hemp Hill Middle School Cafeteria, 6:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.

    • BENNETT

    Bennett High School Basketball vs. Pinnacle, 5:30 p.m.

    Send Us Your News & Announcements for February!

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  • TODAY’S EVENTS – Wednesday, Feb. 1

    TODAY’S EVENTS – Wednesday, Feb. 1

    WHAT’S HAPPENING? 

    • CSU Groundhog Expert Offers Fascinating Facts

    FORT COLLINS – In celebration of Groundhog Day, Feb. 2, Colorado State University Professor of Biology Greg Florant offers three fascinating facts about groundhogs – those hibernating, shadow-hating rodents.

    What’s in a name?: Groundhogs are the East Coast version of the marmot, which is found in the West (Rocky Mountains and Sierra Nevada). Both belong to the genus Marmota, but are distinct species. Groundhogs, also called woodchucks, are Marmota monax. Marmots are Marmota flaviventris.

    The long nap: Both groundhogs and marmots undergo hibernation from about October through March, during which they exhibit bouts of what biologists call torpor. During these periods, they reduce their body temperature from about 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit to near-ambient levels – as low as 35 degrees Fahrenheit, depending on where they are. They also reduce their respiration and heart rate one hundred-fold: from 300 beats per minute to as low as just three beats per minute. During hibernation, the animals do wake up periodically, and their body temperatures rise, but they usually enter back into torpor within a few hours. They can remain at their very low body temperatures for as long as three to four weeks.

    Hold the food: Marmots and groundhogs do not eat at all during their hibernation periods. Rather, they burn the fat stores they’ve accumulated during summer and early fall. They normally double their body weight from spring to fall.

    EVERY WEDNESDAY

    • Baby Bounce

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

    • Music & Movement

      Anythink Bennett library @ 10:30 a.m. Ages 2-6 can sing, dance and learn to play basic instruments.

    • Bennett Young At Heart Seniors Potluck

      Bennett Community Center @ 12 p.m. 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 – 9 p.m.

    SCHOOL NEWS

    • Byers
      Basketball JV & V @ Kiowa, 4 p.m.
    • Strasburg High School
      Eastern Colo Honor Band @ Bennett, 6:30pm
      Cheer Youth Clinic HS Classrooms, 3:30pm – 5:30pm
      Wrestling Practice SES Cafeteria, 3:45pm – 6:00pm
      Youth Wrestling Practice SES Cafeteria, 6:15pm – 8:15pm
      TC Lightning Club Softball Practice @ Hemp Hill Middle School Gym, 7:00pm – 8:30pm
      Bennett Middle School Girls Basketball @ KIPP, 4:30 PMEastern CO Honor Band Concert, 6:30 PM
    • Bennett Middle School
      PTO Meeting, 5:00 PM
      Acct. Meeting, 5:30 PM

    Send Us Your News & Announcements for February!

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  • COLORADO FREEBIES: FEBRUARY 2017

    COLORADO FREEBIES: FEBRUARY 2017

    FREE EVENTS IN FEBRUARY!!

    DENVER ZOO:
    FEBRUARY 2ND, 12TH & 13TH

    DENVER ART MUSEUM:
    FEBRUARY 4TH

    DENVER BOTANIC GARDENS @ CHATFIELD:
    FEBRUARY 7TH

    CHILDREN’S MUSEUM:
    FEBRUARY 7TH

    DENVER BOTANIC GARDENS:
    FEBRUARY 20TH

    DENVER MUSEUM OF NATURE & SCIENCE:
    FEBRUARY 27TH

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  • TODAY’S EVENTS – Tuesday, Jan. 31

    TODAY’S EVENTS – Tuesday, Jan. 31

    WHAT’S HAPPENING? 

    Pat yourself on the back…. you’ve officially made it through January

     

    EVERY TUESDAY

    • Story Time

      Anythink Bennett library: Ages 2-4 will enjoy puppets, songs, finger plays and stories that have stood the test of time @ 10 a.m.

    • Family Story Time

      Davies Library, Deer Trail: Ages 3-5 @ 11 a.m.

    • New year, new skill

      Kelver Library, 404 E. Front St., Byers: Participants of all ages will learn how to solder electronics by creating a light-up robot badge to take home and wear. Tweens under the age of 13 must be accompanied by an adult @ 4:30 – 5:30 p.m.

    SPORTS

    • Basketball
      Hemp Hill Middle School – Girls @ Kiowa, 4 p.m.
      Strasburg High School – Girls vs Brush, 4 p.m.
      Strasburg High School – Boys @ Brush, 4 p.m.
      Bennett High School vs Academy,  4 p.m.

      • Girls
        JV @ 4 p.m.
        C @ 7 p.m.
        V @ 5:30 p.m.
      • Boys
        JV @ 4 p.m.
        C @ 5:30 p.m.
        V @ 7 p.m.

    Send Us Your News & Announcements for February!

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