Push for younger voting age starts in Missouri
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:30:06 GMT
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Missourians could have two more elections to vote in before 2023 is over but one national group, Vote16USA, is trying to decrease the voting age to 16 for local and school board elections. The Missouri arm of that effort, Vote16MO, is starting its campaign, led by 16-year-old DJ Yearwood."Youth are tax-paying citizens, contributing society members, but we draw the line when it comes to voting, where it matters the most," Yearwood said. What Missouri lawmakers didn’t pass this legislative session He says if elected leaders are held accountable through elections, 16 and 17-year-olds are missing out on the ability to exercise that accountability over their local leaders."For me, I'm not going to be able to vote until we're out of high school," said 17-year-old Nathan Smith.Smith is starting to get involved with Vote16MO after believing in the organization's point that getting younger people actively involved in the electoral process earlier makes them more consist...18-wheeler truck crashes on I-70, blocking two eastbound lanes near 32nd Avenue
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:30:06 GMT
An 18-wheeler truck crashed Tuesday morning, and two eastbound lanes of Interstate 70 near 32nd Avenue are blocked.State transportation authorities said the lanes likely will be closed for several hours and advised drivers to expect delays.The lanes were closed between Colorado Mills Parkway (Exit 263) and 32nd Avenue (Exit 264).#I70 eastbound: Two right lanes closed due to a crash between Exit 263 – Colorado Mills Parkway and Exit 264 – 32nd Avenue. Expect delays. Use caution. https://t.co/F0RAoFeUQG— Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) (@ColoradoDOT) May 16, 2023Sign up to get crime news sent straight to your inbox each day.Colorado nature photographer John Fielder, facing cancer, basks in beauty he helped preserve
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:30:06 GMT
Colorado nature photographer and environmentalist John Fielder sat on a couch inside his Summit County home recently gazing at jagged Gore Range mountains, not through the frame of a camera but a window — a spectacular scene among thousands that he has immortalized.A herd of elk had passed outside. A mountain grouse had been singing sonorously at the door.“Here I am at 72,” Fielder said, “and cancer is trying to take my life.”He’s been enduring this pancreatic cancer by relying on the same rational approach he honed in handling countless “curveballs” nature hurled while he covered all of Colorado’s 104,094 square miles photographing landscapes. Vehicle breakdowns above timberline, rafts flipping in whitewater rapids dumping him and all his gear, bears bulling into his camp, sudden storms plunging temperatures below freezing — all became challenges for the father of three to overcome by using brainpower, avoiding panic, and summoning st...Why Colorado microbreweries are launching macro-style lagers to compete with big guys like Coors
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:30:06 GMT
For decades, craft brewers carved out their niche by separating themselves from the likes of Coors and Anheuser-Busch with bigger, bolder and more experimental recipes that pushed the boundaries of beer. But over the years, competition has continually increased while sales have largely flattened, leading several Colorado beverage makers to embrace the motto, “If you can’t beat ’em, join ‘em.”In the last year and a half, Knotted Root Brewing Co., Tivoli Brewing Co. and Stem Ciders launched macro-style lagers to both compete for market share with the big brewers and offer drinkers something craft-made at a lower price point than $16 four-packs. Not only that, but they’ve also set up separate brands around their products in hopes of making them more approachable to beer drinkers who don’t currently shop in the craft aisle.This strategy, beverage makers say, aims to grow their customer bases and boost their bottom lines during a time when some breweries in Colorado are foldi...“Holly,” the conversational AI platform, may take your next burger order
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:30:06 GMT
Fast-food restaurants wrestling with finding workers are turning to a helper named Holly, who is being deployed by a Denver technology company. Her specialty is taking drive-thru orders and she sounds just human enough to do it smoothly while signaling that customers are talking to a robot.Valyant AI’s conversational artificial intelligence platform, “Holly,” is taking orders at some Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr. restaurants in Colorado and four other states. Four of the fast-food restaurants in Colorado are using the technology and 19 more are under contract to add Holly, Valyant AI CEO Rob Carpenter said.The company struck a deal to provide CKE Restaurant Holdings, the parent company of Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr., with its AI platform. CKE is working with two other companies to automate its drive-thru orders.The agreement reached last week allows Valyant AI to start selling to CKE’s franchisees, Carpenter said. “So it’s 3,000 potential locations ac...Do you have the right lawn for where you live in Colorado?
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:30:06 GMT
Trends in fashion, design and pop culture come and go. Some circle back after a few decades.One garden trend that is getting a lot of attention lately is replacing water-thirsty lawns with a more water-thrifty landscape. More people are paying attention to their outdoor water use and seeking ways to be better stewards of our natural resources.This trend is a keeper.Water-aware landscapes are becoming a preferred practice for homeowners, municipalities and homeowner associations as respect for conscientious water consumption continues to take root in the entire Rocky Mountain region.Popular replacement alternatives include installing native grass turf or other types that require less water. Another option is to reduce the lawn area for a different use like a patio or vegetable garden. A style that is also gaining popularity is to replace lawns and add plants with a focus on native, prairie or adapted plants that require less water along with the bonus of attracting plant pollinators ...Aurora sent police to Denver during 2020 protests. Which city should pay for officers’ alleged misconduct?
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:30:06 GMT
Aurora is asking a judge to force Denver to pay the full cost of lawsuits that include the city and the police officers it lent to its larger neighbor during the massive 2020 racial justice protests.Attorneys for Aurora filed a lawsuit against Denver on Friday, alleging that city’s officials have not said whether they’ll meet their obligation under Colorado law to pay for legal costs, settlements and jury awards against Aurora officers who worked in Denver during the 2020 protests.“Aurora has repeatedly asked Denver to confirm that it will indemnify Aurora or otherwise assume responsibility for these claims as required by state law and the parties’ longstanding practice and agreement,” the lawsuit states. “Denver has refused, and so Aurora now seeks a declaration establishing that Denver does, in fact, have that obligation.”The legal fight between two of Colorado’s largest cities comes three years after thousands of people marched in downtow...Colorado’s last horse track says tax policy could close it
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:30:06 GMT
The only horse racing track in Colorado said it could close in the near future if a Centennial judge does not stop a state agency from reinterpreting its tax policy.“It will be the death knell for horse racing in Colorado,” Arapahoe Park in Aurora said.The track and the Department of Revenue have been at loggerheads since August 2021 over how much money the track is supposed to pay in taxes for wagers that are placed on Arapahoe Park races from out-of-state betting locations. The track said it receives only 3 percent of revenue from those bets, yet the state is trying to tax the track as if it received 100 percent of the revenue.In May 2022, a temporary agreement was reached between DOR, Arapahoe Park and the Colorado Horse Racing Association, a trade group. That agreement allowed Arapahoe Park to pay taxes on only a small percentage of out-of-state bets, as it has for decades. With a signed agreement in place, the 2022 horse racing season went on as planned in Aurora.The question n...Jupiter will vanish Wednesday — but then reappear within minutes
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:30:06 GMT
If you want to see the largest planet in the solar system disappear and then reappear less than an hour later, grab your binoculars, set them next to your alarm clock and wake up early on Wednesday morning.Between 5 a.m. and 6:30 a.m., an “occultation” of the planet Jupiter by the moon will take place, meaning the path of the moon will cross in front of Jupiter. At first, Jupiter will appear to the left of the moon. After the occultation, Jupiter will appear to the right.It could be difficult to see, because it will happen low in the eastern sky near sunrise, and also because the moon will be just a thin crescent. That’s why you may need the binoculars to find the moon and to locate Jupiter, because the planet will appear as a bright object near it. Related ArticlesOutdoors | First solar eclipse in six years tops list of the best celestial events you can see in Colorado in 2023 Jupiter is usually the second-brightest planet in the sky. Only Venus is...Mom, 2 young daughters killed in Mother's Day crash on 10 Freeway in Riverside County
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:30:06 GMT
A 31-year-old mother and two of her daughters were killed in a tragic crash on Interstate 10 in Riverside County Sunday. Six other members of the family were injured in the wreck. The crash happened around 7:30 a.m. in Whitewater, a town located about 15 minutes northwest of Palm Springs. Officers with the California Highway Patrol responded to the scene on the eastbound 10 Freeway just west Haugen-Lehmann Way, but not before other motorists and Good Samaritans attempted to help the victims. “When I got into that one lane, I looked ahead of me there was this kid in the fourth lane flailing around on the ground, and people were just driving around him,” Dr. Timothy Jochen told KTLA. The dermatologist pulled up to the aftermath of the deadly crash and says it’s a scene he will never forget. “So, I stopped, parked in the median, got out of my car and ran up to the kid,” Jochen said. “I may not be the best person there. I’m not an ER physician, but I’m going to be a hec...Latest news
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