Hit-and-run kills Littleton pedestrian, police search for SUV driver
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:52:44 GMT
Officers are searching for a white Jeep Grand Cherokee that allegedly hit and killed a Littleton pedestrian Sunday, and the Colorado Bureau of Investigation is asking for the public’s help in finding it.Littleton officers responded to the pedestrian-motorist crash just after 3:20 a.m. Sunday on Bowles Avenue, near the intersection of Santa Fe Drive.The driver of a white SUV was traveling eastbound on Bowles Avenue when they hit a Hispanic man in his 40s or 50s, according to a Sunday news release from the Littleton Police Department. The unidentified man died from his injuries.The Jeep left the scene westbound, the news release stated.Littleton police and the Colorado Bureau of Investigation believe the white SUV is a Jeep Grand Cherokee model from between 2016 and 2021, according to a CBI medina alert.There is damage to the front of the vehicle on the driver’s side, the alert stated.UPDATED MEDINA ALERT: On 9/24/23 at about 3:38 AM, a 2016 to white 2021 Jeep Grand Cherok...Aurora’s Mango House is a food hall delight | Opinion
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:52:44 GMT
Editor’s note: This is part of The Know’s series, Staff Favorites. Each week, we offer our opinions on the best that Colorado has to offer for dining, shopping, entertainment, outdoor activities and more. (We’ll also let you in on some hidden gems).Denver’s food scene has endured extreme highs and lows in recent weeks, from bittersweet closures to the state’s first Michelin-starred eateries.But in Aurora, eating out is often more about the affordable, modest comforts of home than impressing out-of-state judges or holding down high-profile real estate in hip neighborhoods.A sterling example — and one that blows away most food halls for diversity and authenticity (yes, I know the latter can be a problematic term) — is the nonprofit Mango House. Founded 12 years ago by Dr. P.J. Parmar, the hulking pair of buildings at 10180 E. Colfax Ave. hold refugee-focused healthcare, shops, religious and social services, and events.Related ArticlesRestaurants, Food and...Small talk gives way to horror in “The Minutes” at Curious Theatre
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:52:44 GMT
On the civic-minded set of “The Minutes,” things get very strange, even funny, before going downright dark. Tracy Letts’s Pulitzer Prize-nominated drama about a city council meeting gone awry launches the new season at the Curious Theatre Company with artistic aplomb and to roiling effect.Letts, the author of the family meltdown drama “August: Osage County,” brings his knack for the implosive to what should be a routine Big Cherry city council meeting — if only Mr. Peel (played with hapless decency by Josh Robinson) would stop asking about the absence of Mr. Carp (Erik Sandvold).New to the council, Peel has just returned from burying his mother. It’s only natural for him to wonder, what did I miss? When he last saw Carp, the latter was talking about a cache of stolen bicycles that the brother of another council member had come into lucrative possession of.Carp’s chair and nameplate sit at the end of a long table, but he’s nowhere in sight. Why? Might a reading of the min...Losing eyesight sharpens vision for artist Chloé Duplessis
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:52:44 GMT
Editor’s note: An untold number of unheralded artists live in Colorado, those creators who can’t (or don’t want to) get into galleries and rely on word of mouth, luck or social media to make a living. You’ve likely seen them on Instagram, at festivals or at small-town art fairs. This monthly series, Through the Lens, will introduce you to some of these artists.In 2018, a Stargardt disease diagnosis for the Louisiana-born, Denver-based artist Chloé Duplessis was a wake-up call. At 39 the digital artist, muralist, photographer and oral historian was faced with losing her sight.“As an artist, I thought, how can I go on when the very thing I do is visual?”Stargardt Disease is a rare form of inherited macular degeneration that causes retinal degeneration, central vision loss and most often ends with almost complete blindness.Now 44, she has lost 40% of her vision and is legally blind. “I am actively losing my vision in real time,” she explains. Duplessis doesn’t know when she is going to...DPS board president calls out members’ “exorbitant” travel expenses amid uncertainty about spending limits
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:52:44 GMT
Members of Denver’s school board spent more than $40,000 traveling to conferences this past year, more than double the amount spent in other metro districts — and a figure that has spurred directors to call for changes in how the board handles expenses as the district faces financial constraints brought on by declining enrollment.Denver Public Schools board members, including President Xóchitl “Sochi” Gaytán, said the elected body needs to create a new policy governing directors’ expenses, including potentially setting a per-person cap to curb overspending.“I’m absolutely concerned about this level of spending,” Gaytán said of how much some board members have spent on travel. “I believe it’s an exorbitant amount.”Previous DPS boards operated with a $5,000 limit on expenses per person, but that cap wasn’t in writing. In interviews with The Denver Post, directors said the district lacks a clear policy on personal spending by its elected leaders — and they even disagreed on...10,000 Coloradans mistakenly lost their Medicaid health coverage in 2023
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:52:44 GMT
More than 10,000 Colorado residents were mistakenly cut off from Medicaid after the state marked them as ineligible.This spring, states started going through their Medicaid rolls to determine who was no longer eligible for the first time in about three years. During the emergency phase of the pandemic, states that kept everyone covered received additional federal money. There was an exception for people who left the state or died.Colorado, like most states, has a program to automatically reenroll households if other data sources, such as applications for food assistance, show their incomes are low enough to qualify for Medicaid. In August, however, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services asked states to determine if eligible people were falling through the cracks.Children and pregnant women can qualify at a higher income than non-pregnant adults. What that means is that even if a household as a whole made too much to qualify for Medicaid, certain members could still b...What’s the purpose? Slow art can be taxing in a fast-paced world.
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:52:44 GMT
It might be funny to call Trey Duvall’s new art installation at Rule Gallery “exciting.” After all, the piece is a bit tedious to watch.Here is the visual: a broom sweeps across a mound of sand.That’s it. The broom, ordinary and plastic, moves back and forth very slowly. It pushes the sand this way, just a little, and then that way, just the same.Trey Duvall’s pile of sand at the beginning of the show on Aug 18. (Provided by Rule Gallery)Perhaps this review should end right here because there is not much more to say about the visuality of this particular piece of visual art. I could go on, as I sometimes do, over-describing the scene, talking about how the sand is the color of brown sugar, or how the broom is a pure white with honey-shaded bristles.Or I could get into the mechanics, which, like most of Duvall’s pieces, are decidedly low-tech. The broom handle is attached to a string, which is connected to a pulley on the ceiling, which is operated by a motor, which drags the broom t...Bear spotted cruising along wall in Rancho Cucamonga neighborhood
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:52:44 GMT
RANCHO CUCAMONGA - A bear taking a morning stroll on a wall in an Inland Empire neighborhood was captured on video Sunday.The video, shared with KTLA by Esther Terrazas, shows the bear standing on an ivy-covered wall at the corner of Carnelian Street and Highland Avenue around 9:30 a.m. Terrazas says she was walking her dog in the Beryl Park area at the time. A bear was spotted taking a stroll in Rancho Cucamonga on Sept. 24, 2023. (Esther Terrazas)"Then all of a sudden I see a bear crossing the street. Me and a few other neighbors were in shock," she said.Terrazas and others, who were standing across a busy intersection from the bear, immediately left the area when it started climbing down the wall.Someone on the video could be heard saying they were thankful that Rancho Cucamonga sheriff's officers were patrolling the neighborhood. Animal control officials also arrived at the scene, Terrazas said.It was unclear if officials removed the bear or if it left on its own.Thousands of new trees coming to 10 Bay Area cities in bid to right old wrongs, address climate change
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:52:44 GMT
On the block where Consuelo Ramirez and her four children live in Oakland’s flatlands, only a single scruffy tree grows between the sidewalk and the street. A few others rise from backyards. Up in the Oakland hills to the east, spacious homes nestle beneath leafy, green canopies and trees line every road.“They have more money,” Ramirez, a single mother who retired at 53 after a workplace injury, said of her distant neighbors.And because those in the hills have more money and more trees, they have more shade, cooler summer days, more peace and quiet, more birds, squirrels and other animals — and, experts say, likely a better quality of life.Now, neighborhoods like Ramirez’s are set to turn greener through a grant program intended to put leaves over the heads of people hit harder by the climate crisis.Ten Bay Area cities have been awarded federal grants to plant, maintain and restore trees under a $1 billion program paid for by the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act ...Native Americans invited back to help protect and preserve their former lands
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:52:44 GMT
For decades, Theresa Harlan was warned that her family’s beloved cabin in Point Reyes National Seashore would be torn down, erased like all other traces of Coastal Miwok heritage in this fog-veiled, wind-sculpted landscape.But now she has the park’s promise that it will stay, a small but symbolic gesture in the growing movement to correct historic wrongs and give Native Americans a voice about the fate of lands and waters that were once theirs.“There is a shift,” said Harlan, 63. “We are treated as stakeholders.”Long after being removed, sometimes violently, tribes are negotiating collaborative or cooperative roles in 80 national parks, including Point Reyes. This month, federal officials will release details about Native partnership in the proposed Chumash Heritage National Marine Sanctuary off the Central California coast, the first tribal-nominated marine sanctuary designation in the nation.In another four national parks — Canyon de Chelly National Monument in Arizona, Glac...Latest news
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