fbpx

Blog

  • TODAY’S EVENTS – TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3

    TODAY’S EVENTS – TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3

    EASTERN COLORADO

    — DAILY EVENTS —

    • Bennett VFW Post No. 8449

      Bennett VFW Hall @ 6:30 p.m.

    • Byers Community Cemetery Association semi-annual meeting

      May Farms, Byers. @ 7 p.m. For information, call (303)915-4900.

    • Byers American Legion Auxiliary

      Byers Legion Hall @ 7 p.m.

    • Deer Trail Town Board

      Town Hall, 255 Second Ave. @ 7 p.m.

    EVERY TUESDAY

    • Storytime

      Anythink Bennett library @ 10:30-11:30 a.m. Children can enjoy stories, puppets, songs and other fun activities to promote early literacy for preschoolers. Stories will focus on classic and newly published books. (No session Oct. 24).

    Schoolhouse News

    • Bennett School Forum for Board Candidates

      BENNETT — The Bennett School District 29J will host Meet the School Board Candidates Night from 6:30-7:30 p.m.,  Tuesday, Oct. 3, at the Bennett High School library. Candidates for the two seats up for election on Tuesday, Nov. 7, for the Bennett School Board are Zebulen A. Petre, James Dubois and Kyle Meyer. For further information, call Debra Matis, designated election official, at (303)644-3234, ext. 8202. The Bennett High School library is located at 610 Seventh St. 

    LIBRARY NEWS

    • Terrific Tuesdays

      Anythink Bennett library @  4:15-5 p.m. Patrons of all ages can paint rocks, give them away, and make someone’s day as part of a Kindness Rocks Project at Crafternoon.

    SPREAD THE NEWS

    COMMENT, Like, Follow & SHARE @I70Scout


     

    RELATED NEWS

    CURRENT EDITION

    WEATHER & TRAFFIC    PUZZLES    RECENT NEWS    ADVERTISE WITH US

     


  • DAM Announces New Exhibits OCT. 2017: HER PARIS AND GANESHA OPEN; LAST CALL FOR MI TIERRA AND LA MUSIDORA; AND OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

    DAM Announces New Exhibits OCT. 2017: HER PARIS AND GANESHA OPEN; LAST CALL FOR MI TIERRA AND LA MUSIDORA; AND OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

    The Denver Art Museum bids adiós to Mi Tierra

    and

    Welcomes Three New Exhibitions


    October 1: Ganesha

    The Playful Protector, which opens Oct. 1, will display statues and other depictions of the popular Hindu deity known for removing obstacles. This was developed in collaboration with the National Museum of Cambodia in Phnom Penh. Widely worshiped since the 400s, Ganesha originated in India as a Hindu god who removes obstacles and is known for granting wealth and success. Imagery of Ganesha has crossed both geographic and religious boundaries, inspiring numerous representations throughout the Asian subcontinent over time—all of which will be surveyed in the exhibition to showcase the iconographic changes of this popular Hindu deity. Sculptures, paintings and textiles will provide a spectrum of ancient to modern representations of Ganesha. Included with general admission, which is free for youth 18 and younger.

     

    Opening Oct. 15, Past the Tangled Present

    Denver artist Jaime Molina’s interactive and immersive installation, was inspired by imagination and the joy of discovery.A special Teen Day with Jaime Molina, Oct. 21 from 11 a.m.-3 p.m., will include a question-and-answer session and a hands-on workshop with the artist and an Insta/Snapmeet. Both the installation and Teen Day are included in general admission, which is free for youth 18 and younger.

     

    Oct. 22 Her Paris: Women Artists in the Age of Impressionism

    The DAM is proud to present this special ticketed exhibition will feature more than 80 paintings by 37 women artists from across Europe and America, who migrated to this epicenter of art to further their careers. They range from well-known artists such as Berthe Morisot, Mary Cassatt and Rosa Bonheur, to painters who are lesser-known in the United States, including Anna Ancher and Paula Modersohn-Becker. Advance ticket purchase recommended; tickets for youth 18 and younger only $5.

     

    CLOSING SOON

    Time is running out to see Mi Tierra: Contemporary Artists Explore PlaceThirteen Latinx artists created site-specific installations expressing experiences of contemporary life in the American West. These vibrant works, incorporating mixed-media, performance-based video art, digital animation, fiber constructions, painting, sculpture and ceramics, will be on view through Oct. 22. Guided tours of Mi Tierra are available Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 2 p.m. through October 21.

    Common Ground: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh, 1989-2013, featuring more than 170 portrait and landscape photographs by critically acclaimed photographer Fazal Sheikh, continues on view through Nov. 12. Guided tours of Common Ground are available Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays at 2 p.m.

    Other Highlights

    A variety of lectures and programs are offered in October, including screenings of a film on Windshield, a groundbreaking modernist summer home built in the 1930s (Oct. 3), and a documentary on artist Daniel Sprick’s career (Oct. 4). Artist Jordan Wolfson will discuss the context of contemporary art over the past decades (Oct. 10) and former DAM curator of Spanish Colonial art Dr. Donna Pierce will analyze the development and historical implications of casta paintings on Oct. 13.

    The Untitled Final-Friday 2017 series wraps up Oct. 27 with Untitled: Homewrecker, when we will question house rules and shake things up for the mother of all season finales!

    Stop by Tuesday mornings 10 a.m.-noon or Thursday afternoons 1-3 p.m. in October and November to visit with our new Creative-in-Residence. Thomas Evans, aka Detour, is a Denver-based creative whose projects have included murals, sensor-embedded painting and sculpture, DNA-based cultural mapping projects and even touch-activated musical fruit!

    There’s always plenty for families to do at the DAM, with Free First Saturday, Create Playdate  and Fall Break (Oct. 26-29)

      

    SPREAD THE NEWS

    COMMENT, Like, Follow & SHARE  @I70Scout


     

    CURRENT EDITION

    WEATHER & TRAFFIC    PUZZLES    RECENT NEWS    ADVERTISE WITH US

     


  • “Fight Flu Colorado” Campaign Kickoff Event

    “Fight Flu Colorado” Campaign Kickoff Event

    Colorado Leaders Promote “Fight Flu Colorado” Campaign  

    DENVER — Gov. John Hickenlooper, Lt. Gov. Donna Lynne, and Department of Public Health and Environment Exec. Dir. Larry Wolk will roll up their sleeves to receive their annual flu shots as part of the State’s “Fight Flu Colorado” campaign.

    Since August, 20 Coloradans have been hospitalized with the flu, roughly double the number of cases usually seen at this time of year. In 2016, more than 3,000 Coloradans were hospitalized from the illness. Flu vaccinations are your best protection against this common but dangerous virus.

    WHO:       Gov. John Hickenlooper, Lt. Gov. Donna Lynne, Larry Wolk, Executive Director, Department of Public Health and Environment

    WHERE:  Governor’s office, State Capitol, 200 E. Colfax Ave., Denver

    WHEN:     Friday, Sept. 29, 2017, 9:00 a.m.

    SPREAD THE NEWS

    COMMENT, Like, Follow & SHARE  @I70Scout


     

    CURRENT EDITION

    WEATHER & TRAFFIC    PUZZLES    RECENT NEWS    ADVERTISE WITH US

     


  • Senators Urge Energy Dept to Restore Puerto Rico — Post Hurricane

    Senators Urge Energy Dept to Restore Puerto Rico — Post Hurricane

    Energy Department Urged to Help Restore Puerto Rico Electric Service 

    Washington, D.C.– Senators Cory Gardner (R-CO) and Kamala Harris (D-CA) today sent a letter to Department of Energy Secretary Rick Perry urging his Department “to work expeditiously with electric utilities across the U.S. to assist the local electric and power utilities and authorities in Puerto Rico to help restore electric services as quickly as possible in the wake of Hurricane Maria.”

    The letter reads in full:

    Dear Secretary Perry:

    We write to urge the Department of Energy (DOE) to work expeditiously with electric utilities across the U.S. to assist the local electric and power utilities and authorities in Puerto Rico to help restore electric services as quickly as possible in the wake of Hurricane Maria. We also urge DOE to leverage all existing resources at our national laboratories, including the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), to aid in these restorative efforts.

    On September 20, 2017, Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and surrounding islands as a Category 4 storm. The electric grid in Puerto Rico sustained substantial damage and much of the island remains without power, endangering lives and delaying the recovery process.

    Reports indicate that the hurricane destroyed the vast majority of transmission lines, power lines, and other critical aspects of Puerto Rico’s electric grid. The executive director of the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (PREPA) has estimated restoration of power could take at least three or four months, leaving more than 3 million Americans without power on the island for that time.

    A natural disaster in Puerto Rico should be treated no differently than a natural disaster anywhere else in the United States. We must mobilize all available federal resources to aid in recovery efforts and your Department will play a critical role as we work to bring stability to the island and relief for our fellow Americans.

    SPREAD THE NEWS

    COMMENT, Like, Follow & SHARE  @I70Scout


     

    CURRENT EDITION

    WEATHER & TRAFFIC    PUZZLES    RECENT NEWS    ADVERTISE WITH US

     


  • Cannabis Industry Experts —Attend Public Discussion @ Anythink— Sept 27

    Cannabis Industry Experts —Attend Public Discussion @ Anythink— Sept 27

    Anythink Libraries Hosts

    Careers in Cannabis Event

    for Anythink Startup Month

    WHAT:      A panel of experts and leaders in the cannabis field will discuss entrepreneurial opportunities created by the industry during the Careers in Cannabis panel, part of Anythink Startup Month. The speakers will discuss trends and ways that the cannabis industry intersects with everything from agriculture and chemistry to marketing and entrepreneurship.

                 The event is appropriate for adults ages 21 and up. It is free and open to the public. 

    WHO:        This panel includes Jesse Burns of Sweet Grass Kitchen, Alex Levine of Green Dragon and Ricardo Baca, the country’s first marijuana editor for a major newspaper and current founder of Grassands, a cannabis content agency. Baca was listed by Fortune Magazine as one of the most powerful people in the marijuana industry. 

          To arrange interviews with the panelists, please contact Stacie Ledden at 303-405-3286

    WHEN:     Wednesday, Sept. 27, 6:30-8 pm

    WHERE:  Anythink Wright Farms, 5877 E. 120th Ave., Thornton, CO 80602, 303-405-3200

    About Anythink

    Anythink is a new style of library – a place of unlimited imagination, where play inspires creativity and lifelong learning. Rangeview Library District serves the residents of Adams County with seven Anythink libraries and Anythink in Motion – the district’s mobile library – and is one of the recipients of the 2010 National Medal of Museum and Library Service from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. For more information, go to anythinklibraries.org.
     

    SPREAD THE NEWS

    COMMENT, Like, Follow & SHARE @I70Scout


     

    RELATED NEWS              CURRENT EDITION

    WEATHER & TRAFFIC    PUZZLES    RECENT NEWS    ADVERTISE WITH US

     


  • Congress Mike Coffman to Co-Sponsor extension of The Community Health Center Fund

    Congress Mike Coffman to Co-Sponsor extension of The Community Health Center Fund

    The Community Health Investment, Modernization and Excellence Act of 2017

    Congress Mike Coffman (R-CO 6th District) Announces Co-Sponsorship

    Community Health Centers are the primary care medical home for more than 25 million Americans throughout the United States.  With bipartisan support from Congress, the more than 1,400 Community Health Centers (CHCs) nationwide provide access to high-quality integrated primary care, oral health, behavioral health, and wraparound services and supports for patients who need to access services the most.  CHCs save $24 billion annually, through reduction in ER utilization, and are proven to save 24% in total Medicaid spending, when compared to other providers. 

    What is CHCF?

    The Health Center Program, which is administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration within the Department of Health and Human Services, awards grants to outpatient health care facilities that provide care to medically underserved populations. CHCF funds have been used for a range of health center activities including funding new health centers, increasing services provided at existing health centers, and implementing care coordination initiatives. CHCF funds have also been used to fund health centers in need of immediate funding such as those in Flint, MI, which had immediate health service needs due to the discovery of lead in its water supply, and those in Puerto Rico and other territories, which had additional health service needs related to the Zika virus. The CHCF represents more than 70% of the Health Center Program’s Fiscal Year 2016 funding. Funding for the CHCF was extended in the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015.

    Total funding for the Health Centers program is $5.1 billion annually.  Of this total, $3.6 billion comes from the Community Health Centers Fund (CHCF), a dedicated source of funding that was extended for two years in 2015.  Without action by Congress by September 30th, this funding will expire.  The CHIME Act would extend the funding for an additional five years.  Modest amounts of it would be available in future years to address national priorities, to include access to mental health, substance abuse, and oral health services.

    Metro Community Provider Network (MCPN) and Salud Family Health Centers are two of 20 CHCs across Colorado and provide healthcare services to patients living in Colorado’s 6th Congressional District.  In 2016, Colorado CHCs provided services to 740,000 Coloradans, 93% of whom were below 200% Federal Poverty Level ($49,200 for a family of 4) and more than 90% were uninsured or enrolled in public insurance programs- Medicaid, Medicare, and CHP+.  MCPN and Salud served more than 126,000 patients (17% of all CHC patients served) across their respective service areas, including Adams, Arapahoe, and Jefferson Counties in the 6th Congressional District.  

    On Monday, September 25th, Congressman Coffman, a champion of the Community Health Center Movement, co-sponsored the CHIME Act, joining 64 members of the House, including Representative Diana DeGette (D-CO 1st District). 

    Community Health Centers have done an extraordinary job in providing care to the uninsured and the underinsured in this country and should be recognized as the foundation that we build upon whenever we talk about health care reform. — Coffman.

    “MCPN applauds Representative Coffman for his unwavering support of Community Health Centers and his acknowledgement of the impact we have on our community through high quality, low cost, person-centered care,” stated Ben Wiederholt, President and CEO at MCPN.   

    John Santistevan, President and CEO of Salud Family Health Centers shared in Mr. Wiederholt’s sentiments.  “I’d like to thank Representative Coffman for his efforts to assure his constituents have access to quality health care by strongly supporting Community Health Centers.  We look forward to continued work with Representative Coffman to improve and expand health care services throughout Colorado. 

     

     — credit of Public Health Post Org
    

     

    SPREAD THE NEWS

    COMMENT, Like, Follow & SHARE @I70Scout


     

    RELATED NEWS              CURRENT EDITION

    WEATHER & TRAFFIC    PUZZLES    RECENT NEWS    ADVERTISE WITH US

     


  • It’s National Voter Registration Day

    REGISTER NOW

    —Make a Difference Today—

    DENVER, Sept. 26, 2017 — Today is National Voter Registration Day, and Colorado is proud to have the highest percentage of registered voters in America among its eligible population.

    In addition, the turnout among registered voters in Colorado in the 2016 presidential election was 74.5 percent, the fourth highest in the nation, with 2.9 million voters casting ballots.

    Although national elections garner plenty of attention, Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams said the Nov. 7 ballot should catch voters’ attention because it involves school board races, tax measures and other local issues.

    These can directly affect your property values. Whether you think your neighborhood has too many potholes or the schools need more funding — or you’re happy with the way your local government is being run and want to see your leaders reelected — you only get a say if you register and cast a ballot. — Williams

    Easy Ways to Register

    • TEXT TO VOTE: Eligible Coloradans can simply text the word “Colorado” or “CO” to “2Vote” (28683) on their smartphones, and then open the link to the SOS online voter registration and election information site.

    • ONLINE REGISTRATION: Colorado in 2010 became the fourth state to allow online voter registration and www.govotecolorado.com has processed more than 1.9 million transactions.

    • SENIOR CLASS REGISTRATION: The office hands out the Eliza Pickrell Routt award to high schools where at least 85 percent of eligible seniors have registered or preregistered to vote.

    • Colorado also allows for same-day voter registration.

    Although some Coloradans canceled their voter registration over the summer, the number of registered voters in Colorado actually increased and is at an all-time high, with 3,756,923 million voters.

    Military and overseas ballots for the Nov. 7 coordinated election have already been sent, and beginning Oct. 16 the remaining ballots will be mailed. Coloradans also can vote in person at polling centers in their counties. Six county clerks don’t need to send any ballots at all, because every community in their jurisdiction canceled their elections.

    More information on the conduct of elections in Colorado is outlined in a letter from Secretary Williams.

    The National Association of Secretaries of State in 2012 designated September as National Voter Registration Month with the fourth Tuesday in September set as National Voter Registration Day to encourage voter participation and increase awareness about state requirements and deadlines for voting.

     

    SPREAD THE NEWS

    COMMENT, Like, Follow & SHARE @I70Scout


     

    RELATED NEWS              CURRENT EDITION

    WEATHER & TRAFFIC    PUZZLES    RECENT NEWS    ADVERTISE WITH US

     


  • Military Veterans Slated for Graduation from Intensive Court Program

    Military Veterans Slated for Graduation from Intensive Court Program

    Adams County Court for Veterans Slates Graduation

    for

    Military Veterans from Treatment Program

    BRIGHTON – Marine veterans who have completed all phases of an intensive court program providing treatment and other services to veterans involved with the criminal justice system will celebrate their accomplishment this week with a graduation ceremony from the Adams County Court for Veterans.

    The ceremony is set for 2 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2017, in Courtroom 202 of the Adams County Justice Center (1100 Judicial Center Drive in Brighton). The public is welcome to attend, however participants’ full names will not be used and members of the public will not be permitted to photograph participants’ faces.

    The court program is one of several in Colorado designed to serve as an alternative to incarceration for eligible military veterans confronting the criminal justice system and who have needs for treatment for substance abuse or disorders such as traumatic brain injury or posttraumatic stress disorder that complicate their compliance with general probation or incarceration.

    There are 27 participants in the Adams County Court for Veterans, whose 12- to 24-month program emphasizes community reintegration and offender accountability through supervision and community-based resources.

    Our program provides a resource-rich and court-supervised intensive probation alternative with prompt sanctions and incentives for the participants. We are structured around strategies that are both evidence-based and data-driven to maximize positive outcomes. —  Adams County Judge Brian N. Bowen, who presides over the Adams County Court for Veterans

    Eligible military veterans with trauma spectrum disorders and/or substance abuse issues may be diverted to the Adams County Court for Veterans based upon the recommendation of a team that includes personnel from the 17th Judicial District courts and Probation Department, prosecutors, public defenders, local law enforcement and treatment professionals.

    Participants, who enter the program voluntarily, also may receive no-charge brain screening for traumatic brain injury through collaboration with the University of Denver School of Professional Psychology.

    The Adams County Court for Veterans is one of about 80 problem-solving courts in Colorado, including adult and juvenile drug courts, family/dependency-and-neglect drug courts, DUI courts, adult and juvenile mental-health courts and truancy courts.

    SPREAD THE NEWS

    COMMENT, Like, Follow & SHARE @I70Scout


     

    CURRENT EDITION

    WEATHER & TRAFFIC    PUZZLES    RECENT NEWS    ADVERTISE WITH US

     


  • Gardner’s North Korea Playbook carried out by Trump Administration

    Gardner’s North Korea Playbook carried out by Trump Administration

    Trump Imposes Sanctions on North Korea;

    Kim will ‘tame Trump’

    Washington, D.C. – China accounts for 90 percent of North Korea’s trade and there are over 5,000 Chinese companies doing business with North Korea. Earlier this summer, Senator Gardner introduced bipartisan legislation that would ban any entity that does business with North Korea or its enablers from using the United States financial system. The Executive Order reflects Gardner’s legislation and targets entities that Gardner has long called to sanction.

    Senator Cory Gardner (R-CO), Chairman of the Foreign Relations Subcommittee on East Asia, the Pacific, and International Cybersecurity, released the following statement regarding the Trump Administration’s announcement that they will expand authority to go after individuals, businesses, and banks involved with trade with North Korea.

    The actions announced by the Administration today are what I have been calling for, and are a huge step forward in the United States’ efforts to stop a nuclear war from breaking out on the Korean Peninsula. We need to make the choice clear to North Korea’s enablers, wherever they are based: they can do business with the United States, the most powerful economy in the world, or they can do business with an outlaw regime in North Korea. —  Gardner

    Gardner’s proposed legislation> read more


     

    “I will make the man holding the prerogative of the supreme command in the U.S. pay dearly for his speech,” Kim said in a statement released by the official Korean Central News Agency, which also published a photo of the North Korean leader sitting at his desk holding a piece of paper.

    “I am now thinking hard about what response he could have expected when he allowed such eccentric words to trip off his tongue. Whatever Trump might have expected, he will face results beyond his expectation,” Kim said, saying that he would “tame” Trump “with fire.”

    — credit of Sentinel Source


    HELP US SPREAD THE NEWS

    COMMENT, Like, Follow & SHARE to get your daily dose of Tips, Tricks, News and Events! @I70Scout


     

    RELATED NEWS              CURRENT EDITION

    WEATHER & TRAFFIC    PUZZLES    RECENT NEWS    ADVERTISE WITH US