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Category: Politics & Elections

  • Voting centers opening for General Election

    Many Arapahoe County voter service and polling stations (VSPCs) opened on Monday, Oct. 24. 

    Deputy Director of Elections Peg Perl encouraged voters to return ballots or vote in person early to avoid potentially long waits as Election Day nears.

    “We expect the longest waits to be on final Election Day,” Perl said. “Voting early gives you the peace of mind that your ballot is in and you won’t miss your chance to be heard.”

    Voters can visit a VSPC to request a replacement mail ballot, vote in person, and register to vote or update their registration. Four centers also offer curbside ballot pickup for voters on the go who need a ballot.

    Voters can also use accessible voting equipment like audio ballots, tablets with large font ballots, and input jacks to connect to assistive equipment, such as sip and puff devices, paddles or a four-direction joystick. 

    Multilingual voters also have options to help them cast a ballot. Beginning this year, Spanish-speaking voters will be able to use live ballots in Spanish. There’s also a new, statewide translation hotline to translate ballot content, in addition to the interpretation service the County maintains to assist citizens with questions about voter registration.

    All voters casting a ballot in person must provide an acceptable form of ID.

    The Elections Division will manage a total of 32 VSPCs, all across the County, this election cycle, opening in three phases:

    • Phase 1: Oct. 24—Nov. 8. 
    • Phase 2: Nov. 4—Nov. 8. 
    • Phase 3: Nov. 7—Nov. 8.
    • All VSPCs are open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., M—F to November 7, and from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Election Day, November 8.
    • Phase 1 and Phase 2 VSPCs will also be open, Saturday, Nov. 5, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
  • County Clerks Begin Mailing Ballots for the November 8th General Election

    Denver, Colo. – This week, Colorado County Clerks will begin mailing ballots to active eligible voters for the November 8 General Election.

    “Colorado voters should start checking their mailboxes for their 2022 General Election Ballot,” said Secretary Griswold. “I encourage every eligible Coloradan who has not yet registered to vote do so, there is still time!”

    County Clerks must mail ballots to voters by October 21st for the General Election. Registered voters who do not receive a ballot should contact their County Clerk.

    Eligible Coloradans can still register to vote and update their voter registration at GoVoteColorado.gov through October 31st in order to receive a ballot in the mail. After October 31st, Coloradans can still register to vote, receive a ballot, and vote in person at a voting center until 7 p.m. on Election Day.

    Important information for Colorado voters:

    • All Colorado voters can sign up to track their ballot from sent to counted using BallotTrax.
    • Eligible voters who wish to mail back their voted ballot should do so by October 31st to ensure it is received by their county election official by November 8th. After October 31st voters should return their ballot to a drop box or voting center.
    • Early voting begins on October 24th. Some locations will open earlier, with 411 drop boxes and over 350 voting centers available this year, voters can look up the closest locations, opening date, and hours at GoVoteColorado.gov.
    • In person voting on Election Day, Tuesday November 8th, will be available from 7 a.m.-7 p.m.
    • Eligible voters must have returned their ballot to a drop box or voting center by 7 p.m. on Election Day, or be in line to vote by 7 p.m. on Election Day for their ballot to be counted. Ballots cast by military and overseas voters must be sent no later than 7 p.m. on Election Day and received by close of business on the 8th day after the election (November 16).

    Colorado voters can visit GoVoteColorado.gov to:

    • Register to vote or update their voter registration
    • Find their local County Clerk
    • Find their closest drop box or voting center
    • Sign up to track their ballot using BallotTrax
    • Find accurate election information
  • CDPHE, federal food program partners delivered nearly 1 million meals to seniors during the pandemic

    Denver, (October 10, 2022): The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment and adult day care facilities across the state partnered to deliver nearly 1 million meals to seniors during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic from April 2020 to December 2021, according to new data released by the department today. 


    “Seniors often face physical or health-related issues that affect their nutritional needs,” said Naomi Steenson, CDPHE Child and Adult Care Food Program director. “We are extremely proud to have been a part of this community effort to support the state’s seniors during this unprecedented time.” 


    The Child and Adult Care Food Program reimburses participating child care centers, homes, and adult day care centers for nutritious meals and snacks served to children and adults. One of the program’s goals is to make it more likely that seniorsespecially those with limited incomeswill have access to healthy meals to help maintain their health and prevent or delay assisted living and nursing home placements. Because many of those adult day care centers closed their doors for fear of spreading the virus following the pandemic’s start, many adults who would normally be served by those centers could not access those meals.


    To avoid cutting people’s access to healthy meals, CDPHE and participating Child and Adult Care Food Program adult day care centers moved quickly to take advantage of federal waivers allowing for the delivery of meals outside of the centers. Temporarily switching to a delivery model allowed participating Child and Adult Care Food Program centers to increase the number of people they served, with an average of 47,574 meals served every month between April 2020-December 2021, an increase of 15% over the pre-pandemic average.

     

    The United States Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Services funds the Child and Adult Care Food Program and the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Nutrition Services Branch administers the program. Child and Adult Care Food Program adult day care centers follow USDA-FNS meal standards, which include milk, fruits, vegetables, grains and meat/meat alternatives. The meal standards allow for a wide variety of culturally sensitive foods, and participants have the opportunity to choose from a selection of foods at each meal. 


    While federal waivers allowing for food delivery during the pandemic expired at the end of June 2022, participating adult day care centers report sustained increases in the number of meals served every month. Adult day care centers in Colorado can learn more about the program and opt-in by calling 303-692-2330 or visiting cdphe.colorado.gov/CACFP.


    Nondiscrimination Statement Revised May 2022
    In accordance with federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
    civil rights regulations and policies, this institution is prohibited from discriminating
    on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex (including gender identity and sexual
    orientation), disability, age, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity.
    Program information may be made available in languages other than English. Persons
    with disabilities who require alternative means of communication to obtain program
    information (Braille, large print, audiotape, American Sign Language), should contact
    the responsible state or local agency that administers the program or USDA’s TARGET
    Center at 202-720-2600 (voice and TTY) or contact USDA through the Federal Relay
    Service at 800-877-8339. To file a program discrimination complaint, a Complainant
    should complete a Form AD-3027, USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form which
    can be obtained online, from any USDA office, by calling 866-632-9992, or by writing a
    letter addressed to USDA. The letter must contain the complainant’s name, address,
    telephone number, and a written description of the alleged discriminatory action in
    sufficient detail to inform the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights (ASCR) about the
    nature and date of an alleged civil rights violation. The completed AD-3027 form or
    letter must be submitted to USDA by: Mail: US Department of Agriculture
    Office of the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW,
    Washington, D.C. 20250-9410; or fax: (833) 256-1665 or (202) 690-7442; or email:



    El Departamento de Salud y Medioambiente de Colorado y un programa federal entregaron casi un millón de comidas a adultos mayores durante la pandemia 


    Denver, (Octubre 10, 2022): El Departamento de Salud y Medio Ambiente de Colorado junto con centros destinados al cuidado de adultos mayores en el estado, entregaron casi 1 millón de comidas a personas de la tercera edad. Esto ocurrió durante el pico alto de la pandemia de abril 2020 a diciembre 2021, de acuerdo a nuevos datos publicados por el Departamento el día de hoy.


    “Los adultos mayores enfrentan problemas físicos o de salud que afectan sus necesidades nutricionales,” así dijo Naomi Steenson, directora del Programa de Cuidado Infantil y de Adultos del Departamento de Salud y Medio Ambiente de Colorado. “Estamos muy orgullosos de ser parte de este esfuerzo comunitario para apoyar a los adultos mayores del estado en estos tiempos sin precedentes”.


    El Programa de Cuidado Infantil y de Adultos reembolsa a los centros de cuidado infantil, casas y centros de cuidado para adultos participantes, las comidas nutritivas y refrigerios que se brinda a los niños y adultos. Una de las metas del programa es hacer que los adultos mayores, especialmente los de escasos recursos, tengan acceso a comidas saludables para ayudar a mantener su salud y prevenir o retrasar su ingreso a lugares de cuidado de adultos mayores. Debido a que muchos de estos centros de asistencia cerraron sus puertas por el miedo a la propagación del virus, muchos adultos que normalmente recibían comidas en esos centros, no tenían acceso a los alimentos.


    Para evitar cortar el acceso a comidas saludables, el Departamento de Salud y Medio Ambiente de Colorado y los centros de cuidado participantes del Programa de Alimentos de Adultos y Niños se movieron rápidamente para tomar ventaja de las exenciones federales permitiendo la entrega de alimentos fuera de los centros. Así, temporalmente se cambió a un modelo de entrega permitiendo a los participantes de los centros del Programa de Alimentos de Niños y Adultos a incrementar el número de comidas, con un promedio de 47,574 comidas servidas cada mes entre abril 2020-diciembre 2021, un incremento de 15% comparado con el promedio antes de la pandemia


    El Departamento de Agricultura de Estados Unidos y Servicios de Alimentos y Nutrición financian el Programa de Alimentos de Niños y Adultos y el Departamento de Salud y Medio Ambiente de Colorado con la División de Servicios de Nutrición administran el programa. Los centros de cuidado del Programa Alimentos de Niños y Adultos cumplen con los estándares de USDA-FSN, que incluyen leche, frutas, vegetales, granos y alternativas de carnes. Los estándares de los alimentos permiten una variedad cultural y los participantes tienen la oportunidad de escoger opciones en cada comida.


    A pesar de que las exenciones federales que permiten la distribución de la comida durante la pandemia expiró a finales de junio de 2022, los centros de cuidado de adultos reportan incrementos continuos en el número de comidas cada mes. Los centros de cuidado de adultos en Colorado pueden informarse más sobre el programa y participar llamando al 303-692-2330 o visitando cdphe.colorado.gov/CACFP.


    Declaración de no discriminación revisada en mayo de 2022. 
    De acuerdo con la ley federal de derechos civiles y el Departamento de Agricultura de EE. UU. (USDA) regulaciones y políticas de derechos civiles, esta institución tiene prohibido discriminar sobre la base de raza, color, origen, sexo (incluida la identidad de género y orientación), discapacidad, edad o represalia por actividad previa de derechos civiles. La información del programa puede estar disponible en otros idiomas además del inglés. Personas con discapacidades que requieren medios alternativos de comunicación para obtener el programa con información (Braille, letra grande, cinta de audio, lenguaje de señas americano), debe comunicarse a la agencia estatal o local responsable que administra el programa TARGET del USDA al 202-720-2600 (voz y TTY) o comuníquese con el USDA a través del Federal Relay Service al 800-877-8339 o escribiendo una carta al USDA. La carta debe contener el nombre del denunciante, dirección, número de teléfono y una descripción escrita de la supuesta acción discriminatoria en detalle suficiente para informar a la Subsecretaría de Derechos Civiles (ASCR) sobre la naturaleza y fecha de una supuesta violación de derechos civiles. El formulario AD-3027 completado o la carta debe enviarse al USDA por correo al Departamento de Agricultura de EE. UU. Oficina del Subsecretario de Derechos Civiles, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410 o fax (833) 256-1665 o (202) 690-7442, o correo electrónico: . Esta institución es un proveedor de igualdad de oportunidades.
  • Gov. Polis Orders Flags Lowered to Honor National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Service

    DENVER — Today, Governor Jared Polis ordered flags to be lowered to half-staff on Sunday, October 9, 2022 in honor of the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Service as proclaimed by President Biden. The flag will be at half-staff for the entire day on Sunday.

     

    The text of the proclamation reads:

     

    NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim October 9 through October 15, 2022, as Fire Prevention Week.  On Sunday, October 9, 2022, in accordance with Public Law 107–51, the flag of the United States will be flown at half-staff at all Federal office buildings in honor of the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Service.  I call on all Americans to participate in this observance with appropriate programs and activities and by renewing their efforts to prevent fires and their tragic consequences.


    IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this seventh day of October, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-two, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-seventh.


    JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.
  • State of Colorado Informational Career Open House Highlights Openings at Nearly 20 State Agencies

    DENVER – The Colorado Department of Personnel & Administration (DPA), in partnership with the Department of Labor & Employment (CDLE), is hosting a second statewide informational career open house virtually on Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022 to help fill open positions in 19 State agencies.

    “In partnership with other State agencies, we held a successful open house event this past June,” said Statewide Chief Human Resources Officer Lynne Steketee. “We will continue to provide opportunities like this for job seekers across our wonderful state who are interested in public service. Along with our partners at CDLE, we are passionate about bringing more great talent to State government. We believe equity, diversity, and inclusion drive our success, and encourage candidates from all identities, backgrounds, and abilities to attend.”

    Governor Jared Polis encourages job seekers to join Team Colorado!

    WHAT: Attendees will meet virtually with representatives from the participating agencies in one online space. State of Colorado recruiters will be on hand to explain the various roles in their agency, explain minimum qualifications, provide valuable tips on how to apply, and more.

    PARTICIPATING AGENCIES: 

    • Colorado Community College System
    • Colorado Energy Office
    • Colorado Judicial Branch
    • Colorado School for the Deaf & Blind
    • CSU Global
    • Department of Agriculture
    • Department of Corrections
    • Department of Early Childhood
    • Department of Health Care Policy & Financing
    • Department of Human Services
    • Department of Labor & Employment
    • Department of Law
    • Department of Personnel & Administration
    • Department of Public Health & Environment
    • Department of Transportation
    • Office of Economic Development & International Trade
    • Governor’s Office of Information Technology
    • Office of the Governor, Lt. Governor
    • Office of State Planning & Budgeting

    WHEN: Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

    WHERE
    : Register as “An Attendee” on Premier Virtual

  • Governor Polis Announces CPW’s Discovery of Greenback Cutthroat Naturally Reproducing in Ancestral Waters of their Native South Platte Drainage

    Governor Polis Announces CPW’s Discovery of Greenback Cutthroat Naturally Reproducing in Ancestral Waters of their Native South Platte Drainage

    Greenback Trout was Once Considered Extinct

    DENVER – After more than a decade of intensive efforts to rescue the greenback cutthroat trout from the brink of extinction, Colorado Parks and Wildlife announced Friday it has discovered that the state fish is naturally reproducing in Herman Gulch, one of the first places the agency stocked it in its native South Platte River drainage.

    This is a huge breakthrough by CPW’s aquatics team considering that in 1937 the greenback cutthroat trout was considered extinct. For decades, it was believed only two native cutthroat – the Colorado River and Rio Grande – had survived while the greenback and yellowfin had succumbed to pollution from mining, pressure from fishing and competition from other trout species.

    In 2012, CPW confirmed that tiny Bear Creek, on the southwest edge of Colorado Springs and in the Arkansas River drainage, was home to an unlikely population of wild greenback cutthroat trout. Outside their native range, the fish are believed to have been brought to Bear Creek from the South Platte Basin in the late 1800s for a tourist fishing enterprise.

    The discovery triggered a massive effort by CPW and the Greenback Recovery Team – a multi-agency group of state and federal aquatic researchers and biologists – to protect the 3½-mile stretch of water holding the only known population of naturally reproducing greenbacks.

    After a decade of work to protect and reproduce greenbacks, the Herman Gulch discovery marks a major milestone.

    “While we will continue to stock greenback trout from our hatcheries, the fact that they are now successfully reproducing in the wild is exciting for the future of this species. This is a huge wildlife conservation success story and a testament to the world-class wildlife agency Coloradans have in Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Colorado’s ecological diversity strengthens our community, supports our anglers, and our thriving outdoor recreation economy,” said Gov. Jared Polis. “CPW’s staff and our partner agencies have worked for more than a decade to restore this beloved state fish, and today’s news truly highlights the success of the work.

    The governor’s thoughts were echoed by officials throughout CPW.

    “The bedrock mission of Colorado Parks and Wildlife is to perpetuate the wildlife resources of the state,” said CPW Acting Director Heather Dugan. “This is a tremendous example of CPW fulfilling its mission. I am so proud of all the aquatic researchers, biologists, hatchery staff, volunteers and partner agencies who helped achieve this milestone of naturally reproducing greenback cutthroat trout.

    “Despite more than a decade of setbacks and frustrations, CPW staff worked as a team across departments and across regions, stayed focused on the goal and now we gave this great news. It’s a great day.”

    Front-line aquatic researchers and biologists celebrated the news.

    “It’s just great to see all the hard work everyone has put in to save these fish is starting to pay dividends,” said Kevin Rogers, CPW aquatics researcher who has devoted much of his career to rescuing the greenbacks. “This is just another affirmation that our conservation practices work and that we can save species on the brink.”

    In the years since the 2012 confirmation of greenbacks in Bear Creek, CPW has worked with its partners including U.S. Forest Service to protect and improve the creek habitat and the surrounding watershed and to develop a brood stock –  a small population of fish kept in optimal conditions in a hatchery to maximize breeding and provide a source of fish for the establishment of new populations in suitable habitats.

    Each spring, CPW aquatic biologists have strapped on heavy electro-fishing backpacks to painstakingly hike up Bear Creek to catch greenbacks and collect milt and roe – sperm and eggs.

    Then, they use the milt to fertilize all the roe in a makeshift lab on the banks of the creek. All the spare greenback milt collected is then raced to the Leadville National Fish Hatchery to fertilize eggs from the greenbacks in its brood stock. In 2014, an additional broodstock was started in Zimmerman Lake, near the headwaters of the Cache la Poudre River and thus within the greenback’s native South Platte basin.

    All fertilized eggs are then sent to the CPW Mount Shavano Hatchery in Salida where they are kept in a greenback isolation unit where conditions are carefully controlled to allow the maximum number of eggs possible to hatch.

    In 2016, CPW began stocking the greenback fry that hatch from those eggs into Herman Gulch west of Denver. Stocking into other streams in the South Platte drainage soon followed. Today, fledgling greenback populations exist in four South Platte basin streams. But only the fish in Herman Gulch have existed long enough to reach adulthood and begin reproducing.

    CPW and its partner agencies in the Greenback Recovery Team and others including Trout Unlimited have carried bags of greenback fry miles up steep mountain trails every summer since trying to get them into water where they might reproduce. The agency tried different age classes and sizes each year over a three-year period.

    “The news of the natural reproduction of greenback cutthroat trout in Herman Gulch is truly monumental,” said Josh Nehring, CPW’s assistant aquatic section manager who previously was senior aquatic biologist in the Southeast Region and oversaw efforts to protect the lone greenback population in Bear Creek.

    “CPW aquatic biologists in the Southeast Region have worked incredibly hard to protect and preserve the only known population of greenbacks in Bear Creek,” Nehring said. “Our hatchery staff along with our federal hatchery partners overcame immense obstacles to be able to replicate the species in captivity. Now to see them on the landscape in their native habitat replicating on their own is a huge sense of accomplishment for everyone involved.”

    The news of reproducing greenbacks in Herman Gulch was never a sure bet. And over the years CPW aquatic biologists even feared they could lose the population in Bear Creek. There was intense pressure from increased recreation on adjacent trails and traffic on a road that parallels the creek, delivering sediment into Bear Creek.

    There were flash floods that could have wiped out the rare trout. Invasive and aggressive brook trout remain a constant threat to move upstream and outcompete the greenbacks. And there have even been wildfires that have erupted in the forests that surround the creek.

    Worst was a survey conducted by CPW aquatic biologist Cory Noble in the fall of 2020 that showed a troubling decline in the greenback population in Bear Creek with no reproduction that year. Noble launched even greater efforts to modify the habitat to reduce the influx of sediment, to patrol for invasive brook trout and to monitor the population by less stressful techniques using underwater cameras.

    While Noble worked on Bear Creek, a long list of his CPW aquatic colleagues were spending countless hours and piling up miles hiking high-country streams in the gritty work of identifying host creeks, preparing them for greenbacks and then hauling them miles in heavy backpacks to be stocked.

    “As our colleagues worked to protect the Bear Creek population and successfully raise them in our hatchery, our Northeast Region biologists were on the ground building a wild brood source at Zimmerman Lake and searching for just the right habitats where we could remove non-natives, safely stock the greenback and protect them from other threats and give them the best chance to survive and reproduce,” said Jeff Spohn, senior aquatic biologist in the Northeast Region.

    Leading that effort was Boyd Wright, aquatic biologist in Fort Collins, who has dedicated the past decade to returning wild populations of greenbacks to their native range in the South Platte Basin.

    Like Noble on Bear Creek, Wright and his team hauled heavy electro-fishing backpacks up Herman Gulch and the other stocking sites to study the fish they had stocked. After some disappointments, just a few days ago they made a stunning discovery: they documented greenbacks up to 12 inches long and found fry.

    “Our team of field technicians literally high-fived right there in the stream when we captured that first fry that was spawned this year,” Wright said. “When moments later we captured a one year old fish produced in 2021, we were truly beside ourselves.”

    “After many years of hard work and dedication, it is extremely satisfying to see our efforts paying off.”

    It’s news the entire agency had waited to hear for a long time: greenback cutthroat trout that were naturally reproducing in Herman Gulch.

    “This is a great achievement for the recovery of greenback cutthroat trout,” said Noble, the Colorado Springs-based aquatic biologist who has shouldered daily responsibility for the greenbacks in Bear Creek. “It is really rewarding to see that all of CPW’s hard work is paying off.”

    Similar relief was voiced by Bryan Johnson, hatchery manager at Mount Shavano Fish Hatchery in Salida. Johnson, a 20-year CPW hatchery veteran, has endured 10 years of frustration trying to find the right combination of water temperatures and genetic combinations just to get greenbacks to survive in the hatchery, much less in the wild.

    “This represents a lot of years and a lot of hard work and a lot of disappointment along the way,” Johnson said. “Frankly, we have low survival rates in the hatchery compared with other strains of cutthroat. We started the broodstock in 2008 and here it is 2022 and we’re finally seeing the first natural reproduction. We’ve gone through a lot to get these fish back on the landscape.”

    Just this week, Johnson and staff were bagging greenback fry at 4:30 a.m. so he could drive them 11 hours up gravel roads to a new reintroduction site. There, he handed off the fish to the Northeast Region team led by Kyle Battige, aquatic biologist from Fort Collins.

    “This is just the start,” Johnson cautioned. “We need more. We’ve only got a few places where we have greenbacks  on the landscape. But it’s awesome to see natural reproduction in Herman Gulch.”

    Harry Crockett, CPW’s native aquatic species coordinator and chair of the Greenback Recovery Team, said he’s confident the news of natural reproduction in Herman Gulch will be followed by even better headlines.

    “We found a greenback that was born in Herman Gulch that was already a year old,” Crockett said. “This indicates successful reproduction both this year and last, plus overwinter survival. This is important because trout that survive to one year are likely to live even longer.

    “And with more of these reintroductions going, we expect to find more reproduction in more places in the coming years.”

  • ArapCo seeks applicants for Citizen Redistricting Advisory Committee

    LITTLETON — Arapahoe County will redraw boundaries for county commissioner districts in 2023.

    To assist with the process, the county is seeking residents to serve on a Citizen Redistricting Advisory Committee that will help solicit public input and feedback and help draw proposed at least three draft district maps for consideration by the Board of County Commissioners. The process will last 10 months, from December 2022 to September 2023.

    Serving on a county committee can be a rewarding process. Applicants should be aware that committee members are expected to hold themselves to a high standard of privacy.

    Time commitments and a complete list of requirements are below. To apply, visit arapahoegov.com.

    Background

    Under state law, boundaries for county commissioner districts must be redrawn every 10 years based on the most recent U.S. Census. Because of a nationwide delay in states receiving the 2020 data, the Colorado State Legislature delayed the process for counties until 2023 to allow time to analyze it and prepare to redistrict. The new districts will be in effect for the 2024 election.

    Nine members are required for the committee: Three Democrats, three Republicans and three unaffiliated voters. Their voter registration must not have changed since the 2020 General Election, and all committee members must be Arapahoe County residents.

    Applicants will be interviewed by the Board of County Commissioners and selected based on:

    party affiliation;

    civic interest;

    willingness to listen to, respect and understand diverse viewpoints;

    experience working with others to reach outcomes or decisions;

    commitment to a fair and equitable process;

    geographic and demographic diversity; and

    commitment to attending all meetings as required by law.

    Time Commitment

    Limited, 10-month appointment  from December 2022 through September 2023;

    monthly meetings (60-90 minutes each), beginning in December;

    potential for bi-monthly meetings (60 minutes each), if necessary;

    a minimum of three public engagement events over 10 months (60-90 minutes each); and

    unless otherwise specified, applicants should expect to attend all meetings in person.

    Role and Responsibilities

    Consistent with state statute, commissioners create and present at least three proposed county commissioner district maps to the county commissioners for consideration. They must:

    understand requirements, data and context to make recommendations;

    provide input and direction to staff to draw initial maps for consideration in open meetings;

    provide input on the proposed public engagement plan in open meetings;

    participate in open advisory committee meetings;

    advocate for resident engagement in the process;

    review public feedback and provide direction to staff on incorporating the input into map revisions;

    present recommendations to the county commissioner in open meetings;

    recognize that members cannot engage in any discussion of this process with anyone outside of the established public process. Any discussions, “side conversations,” or requests for feedback cannot occur with any elected officials, political party officials, peers, staff or colleagues on this topic outside of scheduled public meetings;

    conduct oneself in accordance with group norms;

    recognize that all work is subject to Colorado Open Records Act requirements, including correspondence, work product and communications between and among colleagues and staff; and

    be willing to submit to a background check.

  • Colorado Celebrates National Voter Registration Day

    Denver, Colo. – In celebration of National Voter Registration Day, Secretary of State Jena Griswold is encouraging eligible Coloradans to register to vote or make sure their current voter registration is up to date.

    “National Voter Registration Day is the perfect day to register to vote!” said Secretary Griswold.  “Registering to vote is the first step in making sure your voice is heard in our elections. I encourage all eligible Coloradans to make sure their voter registration is up-to-date and, if they haven’t registered to vote, to do so today!”

    Coloradans can register to vote or update their registration online at GoVoteColorado.gov. They can also register to vote in person at their local county clerk’s office. For a complete list of county clerks, click here.

    Colorado is one of the country’s leaders in percentage of registered voters. As of September 1, 2022, over 3.7 million Coloradans were registered to vote. During last year’s National Voter Registration Day, which took place on September 28, 2021, a total of 10,252 Colorado voters either registered to vote or updated their voter registration.

    National Voter Registration Day is a nonpartisan day dedicated to encouraging voter participation and increasing public awareness about state requirements for voting.

    County election offices may begin mailing ballots for the 2022 General Election to registered voters on October 17.

  • VIDEO: Hickenlooper Urges Focus on Preventing Pandemics at Hearing with Fauci

    For video of the exchange, CLICK HERE

     

    Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator John Hickenlooper today called for more focused efforts to prevent future pandemics. In a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) hearing, Hickenlooper asked National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Director Dr. Anthony Fauci what more needs to be done to prevent future pandemics like COVID-19 and Monkeypox.

     

    Fauci called for more research into countermeasures before pandemics arise, an effort Hickenlooper has led in the Senate. Earlier this year, two Hickenlooper bills passed out of committee. The Early Countermeasure Discovery Act would improve the development of preventative treatment and research into pathogens before they cause the next pandemic. The Modernizing Biosurveillance Capabilities and Epidemic Forecasting Act would modernize and codify Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) programs that Hickenlooper, Cassidy Introduce Bill to Strengthen Surveillance and Forecasting of Pandemic-Causing Viruses focus on surveillance and forecasting of pandemic-causing viruses.’

     

    Hickenlooper: “In terms of the next public health emergency, how concerned are you that this next public health emergency will be one we don’t have vaccines or therapeutics for?”

     

    Fauci: “There are two approaches that we have described in detail in several publications and several of our white papers – what’s called the prototype pandemic and prototype pathogen response. In other words to look at multiple families [of viruses] and there are about 7-8 high priority families… and to do fundamental core research for example to get commonalities among the pathogens within a family and to start to develop vaccines, put them in phase one, and have them ready to go…”

     

    Hickenlooper: “I support that approach. I think that’s the right direction to go and make sure we are as prepared as one can be for what is unknowable.”

     

    For full video of the exchange, CLICK HERE.

  • USCIS to Welcome 19,000 New Citizens in Celebration of Constitution Day and Citizenship Day

    WASHINGTON— U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services will celebrate Constitution Day and Citizenship Day this year by welcoming more than 19,000 new citizens in more than 235 naturalization ceremonies across the nation between Sept. 17 and Sept. 23.

    “Since the beginning of the Biden-Harris administration, USCIS has been working tirelessly in communities to raise awareness about citizenship consistent with our mission to uphold America’s promise as a nation of welcome and possibility with fairness, integrity, and respect for all we serve,” said USCIS Director Ur M. Jaddou. “Constitution Day and Citizenship Day celebrations provide a wonderful opportunity to highlight our agency’s efforts, while welcoming more U.S. citizens to our American family.”

     

    On Sept. 17, the nation observes Constitution Day and Citizenship Day as part of Constitution Week (Sept. 17 to 23). The commemoration honors both the signing of the U.S. Constitution on Sept. 17, 1787, and an observance that began in 1940 as “I Am an American Day.” Citizenship Day began in 1952, signed into law by President Harry Truman and, in 1955, President Dwight Eisenhower proclaimed the first Constitution Week.

     

    Each year, USCIS celebrates Constitution Day and Citizenship Day – and Constitution Week – by celebrating the connection between the Constitution and citizenship, reflecting on what it means to be a citizen of the United States, holding special naturalization ceremonies across the country, encouraging new citizens to take action to fully exercise their new rights and responsibilities including registering to vote, and releasing new tools and resources that can help aspiring applicants pursue citizenship. Following each naturalization ceremony, USCIS encourages new U.S. citizens and their families and friends to share their naturalization photos on social media using the hashtags #NewUSCitizen, #ConstitutionWeek, and #CitizenshipDay.

     

     

     

    This year’s Constitution Day and Citizenship Day-themed naturalization ceremonies include a naturalization ceremony held at Tumacácori National Historical Park in Arizona on Sept. 16; the World Food & Music Festival in Des Moines, Iowa, on Sept. 16; Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas, on Sept. 19; U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 20; Homestead National Park in Beatrice, Nebraska, on Sept. 22; and George Washington’s Mount Vernon in Virginia on Sept. 23. On Sept. 17, Director Jaddou will participate in a special ceremony at Ellis Island in New York Harbor and Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas will participate in a ceremony in Los Angeles aboard the USS Iowa. For additional venues, please view a list of highlighted 2022 Constitution Day- and Citizenship Day-themed ceremonies.

    USCIS reaffirms its commitment to promoting citizenship and making the naturalization process accessible to all who are eligible. The agency has taken a number of steps to support implementation of President Biden’s Executive Order 14012: Restoring Faith in Our Legal Immigration System and Strengthening Integration and Inclusion Efforts for New Americans, as well as implementation of the Interagency Strategy for Promoting Naturalization, released on July 2, 2021. The Interagency Strategy for Promoting Naturalization calls for a multi-faceted approach operating on the national, state, and community-based levels to encourage the roughly 9 million lawful permanent residents eligible for naturalization today to become citizens.

    In addition to holding more than 235 ceremonies across the country as part of Constitution Day and Citizenship Day, USCIS will also host numerous activities throughout the month of September, all aimed at empowering immigrants to pursue citizenship along with the rights and opportunities that come with it. The agency will also publicly release an Eligible to Naturalize Dashboard to share statistical information about populations that may be eligible to seek naturalization in the United States and a “Two Generational Family Toolkit” to help families learn about citizenship and prepare for the naturalization test together. The dashboard provides statistics on those eligible to apply for naturalization by birth country and geographic location.

    For more information about USCIS’ Constitution Day and Citizenship Day activities, please see the USCIS Celebrates Citizenship Day 2022 Fact Sheet.

    For more information on USCIS and its programs, please visit uscis.gov or follow us on Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, and LinkedIn.