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Tag: arvada

  • Missing Arvada girl may be on Colorado’s Western Slope

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    A 13-year-old Arvada girl missing since Sunday morning may be in the Gunnison area, according to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation.

    Marely Laureano Flores was last seen at 6:45 a.m. in the 6700 block of West 51st Avenue on Sunday, CBI officials said in a Missing Indigenous Person Alert.

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  • RTD plans to significantly increase frequency of G and B trains to Arvada and Westminster

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    RTD tests trains on the G Line in Arvada, Sept. 4, 2018.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Trains and buses could soon run more frequently on lines around Denver, reversing pandemic-era cuts to the Regional Transportation District.

    RTD staff presented plans for June 2026 adjustments this week. The proposal, which is still up for debate, would increase the frequency of several rail lines. 

    The G Line to Arvada would come every 15 minutes for most of the day, while the B Line to Westminster would start running every 30 minutes at peak times.

    Currently, the G arrives every 30 minutes and the B every hour.

    “When I found out about this the other day, if I could have done a back flip, I would’ve done a back flip,” said Ian Harwick, a member of the RTD Board of Directors, as he discussed the G Line changes at a recent meeting.

    Meanwhile, changes on the light rail lines will result in greater frequency along the “trunk” that runs from Lone Tree’s RidgeGate Parkway Station to downtown Denver, with trains coming as often as every 7.5 minutes.

    The proposal also includes more frequent shuttles on 16th Street downtown and extending the 15 bus route to serve an Amazon warehouse in Aurora.

    But, it also would scale back or even eliminate service on some bus lines, including the Platte Valley FlexRide.

    “These service changes represent a coordinated effort to strengthen reliability, restore key frequencies and better align service with customer demand,” said Patrick Preusser, RTD’s chief operations officer. 

    “Everyone I’ve spoken to so far about these service changes is over the moon. It’s a great example of what we can do with more funding,” said Chris Nicholson, a member of the RTD Board of Directors.

    The proposal comes as RTD faces continued political pressure. Its board chair, Patrick O’Keefe, recently said that the district can not afford to complete the FasTracks program that voters approved more than 20 years ago — meaning RTD might never finish planned extensions of the B Line to Longmont, the N Line to Thornton, the L Line to the A Line, and the D Line to Highlands Ranch.

    The planned train to Longmont could instead be replaced by service on the planned Front Range Passenger Rail project.

    Meanwhile, O’Keefe said the agency should instead focus on its next 25 years.

    The service proposal is expected to return to an RTD board committee on March 11 and then to the full board on March 24, taking effect in June.

    The proposed changes for rail lines include:

    • Increasing frequency on the G Line, running trains every 15 minutes from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. on weekdays and 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on weekends. Trains had been running every half hour for years. The change would restore pre-pandemic frequency.
    • Increasing frequency on the B Line, running trains every 30 minutes on weekdays from 6 to 9 a.m. and 3 to 6 p.m. The change would restore pre-pandemic frequency.
    • Increasing frequency on the R Line to every 15 minutes from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays and 9 a.m to 6 p.m. weekends. This is in response to suspension of H Line service.
    • The D Line will run to Union Station instead of 18th and California, “establishing a stable operating pattern that improves customer experience.”
    • Timing adjustments to the W Line.
    • Suspension of the H and L rail lines due to the downtown rail reconstruction project.

    Proposed changes for bus service include:

    • Increasing frequency of the 16th Street FreeRide, with buses arriving every 3 minutes instead of every 4.5 minutes.
    • Extension of Route 15 on Colfax to the Amazon warehouse at 21000 E. 13th Ave. in Aurora.
    • Increasing frequency of routes 0L 37, 43, LD3 and the ART line.
    • Reinstatement routes 53 and 80.
    • Elimination of the Platte Valley FlexRide due to low ridership
    • Reductions of evening and late-night trips on routes 7, 112, 120, 520, among other changes

    RTD staff said the changes are not expected to increase costs. Some of the changes would be supported by Clean Transit Enterprise grant funding from the state, which is paid for with fees on retail deliveries. 

    More details of the proposed changes are available in this PDF.

    Public hearings to hear about the proposed changes are planned for the following dates via Zoom, with details to come:

    • Feb. 23, 2026, at noon and 5:30 p.m.
    • Feb. 24, 2026, at noon

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  • Plainview fire in Arvada burns 130 acres near Coal Creek Canyon

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    A grass fire at the entrance of Coal Creek Canyon in Arvada burned more than 100 acres, prompted pre-evacuation warnings and closed two state highways on Saturday.

    The Candelas neighborhood was under a pre-evacuation warning for several hours after the Plainview fire sparked near Colorado 93 and Colorado 72 at 8:35 am., Arvada Fire Rescue spokesperson Brady Johnson said.

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  • Former Jeffco school social worker pleads guilty to child sex assault

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    A former Jefferson County Public Schools social worker took a deal and pleaded guilty Monday to sexually assaulting a child, court records show.

    Chloe Rose Castro, 29, pleaded guilty to one count of sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust, a felony, according to Jefferson County court records. The plea deal dropped a second child sex assault charge and one count of internet luring of a child from her case, court records show.

    Castro faces an open-ended, or “indeterminate,” sentence that will last from a minimum of four years to a maximum of life in prison when she is sentenced on April 2, according to a news release from the First Judicial District Attorney’s Office.

    The woman was arrested in November 2024 after the victim’s parents found “evidence of a sexual relationship” and reported Castro to the Arvada Police Department, prosecutors said in the release.

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    Lauren Penington

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  • RTD ridership still falling as state pushes transit-oriented development: ‘We’re not moving the needle’

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    ENGLEWOOD — Metro Denver budtender Quentin Ferguson needs Regional Transportation District bus and trains to reach work at an Arvada dispensary from his house, a trip that takes 90 minutes each way “on a good day.”

    “It is pretty inconvenient,” Ferguson, 22, said on a recent rainy evening, waiting for a nearly empty train that was eight minutes late.

    He’s not complaining, however, because his relatively low income and Medicaid status qualify him for a discounted RTD monthly pass. That lets him save money for a car or an electric bicycle, he said, either of them offering a faster commute.

    Then he would no longer have to ride RTD.

    His plight reflects a core problem of lagging ridership that RTD directors increasingly run up against as they try to position the transit agency as the smartest way to navigate Denver. Most other U.S. public transit agencies, too, are grappling with a version of this problem.

    In Colorado, state-government-driven efforts to concentrate the growing population in high-density, transit-oriented development around bus and train stations — a priority for legislators and Gov. Jared Polis — hinge on having a swift public system that residents ride.

    But transit ridership has failed to rebound a year after RTD’s havoc in 2024, when operators disrupted service downtown for a $152 million rail reconstruction followed by a systemwide emergency maintenance blitz to smooth deteriorating tracks that led to trains crawling through 10-mph “slow zones.”

    The latest ridership numbers show an overall decline this year, by at least 3.9%, with 40 million fewer riders per year compared with six years ago. And RTD executives’ newly proposed, record $1.3 billion budget for 2026 doesn’t include funds for boosting bus and train frequency to win back riders.

    Frustrations intensified last week.

    “What is the point of transit-oriented development if it is just development?” said state Rep. Meg Froelich, a Democrat representing Englewood who chairs the House Transportation, Housing and Local Government Committee. “We need reliable transit to have transit-oriented development. We have cities that have invested significant resources into their transit-oriented communities. RTD is not holding up its end of the bargain.”

    At a retreat this past summer, a majority of the RTD’s 15 elected board members agreed that boosting ridership is their top priority. Some who reviewed the proposed budget last week questioned the lack of spending on service improvements for riders.

    “We’re not moving the needle. Ridership is not going up. It should be going up,” director Karen Benker said in an interview.

    “Over the past few years, there’s been a tremendous amount of population growth. There are so many apartment complexes, so much new housing put up all over,” Benker said. “Transit has to be relied on. You just cannot keep building more roads. We’re going to have to find ways to get people to ride public transit.”

    Commuting trends blamed

    RTD Chief Executive and General Manager Debra Johnson, in emailed responses to questions from The Denver Post, emphasized that “RTD is not unique” among U.S. transit agencies struggling to regain ridership lost during the COVID-19 pandemic. Johnson blamed societal shifts.

    “Commuting trends have significantly changed over the last five years,” she said. “Return-to-work numbers in the Denver metro area, which accounted for a significant percentage of RTD’s ridership prior to March 2020, remain low as companies and businesses continue to provide flexible in-office schedules for their employees.”

    In the future, RTD will be “changing its focus from primarily providing commuter services,” she said, toward “enhancing its bus and services and connections to high-volume events, activity centers, concerts and festivals.”

    A recent survey commissioned by the agency found exceptional customer satisfaction.

    But agency directors are looking for a more aggressive approach to reversing the decline in ridership. And some are mulling a radical restructuring of routes.

    Funded mostly by taxpayers across a 2,345 square-mile area spanning eight counties and 40 municipalities — one of the biggest in the nation — RTD operates 10 rail lines covering 114 miles with 84 stations and 102 bus routes with 9,720 stops.

    “We should start from scratch,” said RTD director Chris Nicholson, advocating an overhaul of the “geometry” of all bus routes to align transit better with metro Denver residents’ current mobility patterns.

    The key will be increasing frequency.

    “We should design the routes how we think would best serve people today, and then we could take that and modify it where absolutely necessary to avoid disruptive differences with our current route map,” he said.

    Then, in 2030, directors should appeal to voters for increased funding to improve service — funds that would be substantially controlled by municipalties “to pick where they want the service to go,” he said.

    Reversing the RTD ridership decline may take a couple of years, Nicholson said, comparing the decreases this year to customers shunning a restaurant. “If you’re a restaurant and you poison some guests accidentally, you’re gonna lose customers even after you fix the problem.”

    The RTD ridership numbers show an overall public transit ridership decrease by 5% when measured over the 12-month period from August 2024 through July 2025, the last month for which staffers have made numbers available, compared with the same period a year ago.

    Bus ridership decreased by 2% and light rail by 18% over that period. In a typical month, RTD officials record around 5 million boardings — around 247,000 on weekdays.

    The emergency maintenance blitz began in June 2024 when RTD officials revealed that inspectors had found widespread “rail burn” deterioration of tracks, compelling thousands of riders to seek other transportation.

    The precautionary rail “slow zones” persisted for months as contractors worked on tracks, delaying and diverting trains, leaving transit-dependent workers in a lurch. RTD driver workforce shortages limited deployment of emergency bus shuttles.

    This year, RTD ridership systemwide decreased by 3.9% when measured from January through July, compared with that period in 2024. The bus ridership this year has decreased by 2.4%.

    On rail lines, the ridership on the relatively popular A Line that runs from Union Station downtown to Denver International Airport was down by 9.7%. The E Line light rail that runs from downtown to the southeastern edge of metro Denver was down by 24%. Rail ridership on the W Line decreased by 18% and on R Line by 15%, agency records show.

    The annual RTD ridership has decreased by 38% since 2019, from 105.8 million to 65.2 million in 2024.

    A Regional Transportation District light rail train moves through downtown Denver on Friday, June 27, 2025. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

    Light rail ‘sickness’ spreading

    “The sickness on RTD light rail is spreading to other parts of the RTD system,” said James Flattum, a co-founder of the Greater Denver Transit grassroots rider advocacy group, who also serves on the state’s RTD Accountability Committee. “We’re seeing permanent demand destruction as a consequence of having an unreliable system. This comes from a loss of trust in RTD to get you where you need to go.”

    RTD officials have countered critics by pointing out that the light rail’s on-time performance recovered this year to 91% or better. Bus on-time performance still lagged at 83% in July, agency records show.

    The officials also pointed to decreased security reports made using an RTD smartphone app after deploying more police officers on buses and trains. The number of reported assaults has decreased — to four in September, compared with 16 in September 2024, records show.

    Greater Denver Transit members acknowledged that safety has improved, but question the agency’s assertions based on app usage. “It may be true that the number of security calls went down,” Flattum said, “but maybe the people who otherwise would have made more safety calls are no longer riding RTD.”

    RTD staffers developing the 2026 budget have focused on managing debt and maintaining operations spending at current levels. They’ve received forecasts that revenues from taxpayers will increase slightly. It’s unclear whether state and federal funds will be available.

    Looking ahead, they’re also planning to take on $539 million of debt over the next five years to buy new diesel buses, instead of shifting to electric hybrid buses as planned for the future.

    RTD directors and leaders of the Southwest Energy Efficiency Project, an environmental group, are opposing the rollback of RTD’s planned shift to the cleaner, quieter electric hybrid buses and taking on new debt for that purpose.

    Colorado lawmakers will “push on a bunch of different fronts” to prioritize better service to boost ridership, Froelich said.

    The legislature in recent years directed funds to help RTD provide free transit for riders under age 20. Buses and trains running at least every 15 minutes would improve both ridership and safety, she said, because more riders would discourage bad behavior and riders wouldn’t have to wait alone at night on often-empty platforms for up to an hour.

    “We’re trying to do what we can to get people back onto the transit system,” Froelich said. “They do it in other places, and people here do ride the Bustang (intercity bus system). RTD just seems to lack the nimbleness required to meet the moment.”

    Denver Center for the Performing Arts stage hand Chris Grossman walks home after work in downtown Denver on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
    Denver Center for the Performing Arts stage hand Chris Grossman walks home after work in downtown Denver on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

    Riders switch modes

    Meanwhile, riders continue to abandon public transit when it doesn’t meet their needs.

    For Denver Center for the Performing Arts theater technician Chris Grossman, 35, ditching RTD led to a better quality of life. He had to move from the Virginia Village neighborhood he loved.

    Back in 2016, Grossman sold his ailing blue 2003 VW Golf when he moved there in the belief that “RTD light rail was more or less reliable.” He rode nearly every day between the Colorado Station and downtown.

    But trains became erratic as maintenance of walls along tracks caused delays. “It just got so bad. I was burning so much money on rideshares that I probably could have bought a car.” Shortly before RTD announced the “slow zones” last summer, he moved to an apartment closer to downtown on Capitol Hill.

    He walks or rides scooters to work, faster than taking the bus, he said.

    Similarly, Honor Morgan, 25, who came to Denver from the rural Midwest, “grateful for any public transit,” said she had to move from her place east of downtown to be closer to her workplace due to RTD transit trouble.

    Buses were late, and one blew by her as she waited. She had to adjust her attire when riding her Colfax Avenue route to Union Station to manage harassment. She faced regular dramas of riders with substance-use problems erupting.

    Morgan moved to an apartment near Union Station in March, allowing her to walk to work.

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    Bruce Finley

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  • Ralston Valley student arrested in Snapchat threat reported hours after Evergreen shooting

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    A Ralston Valley High School student was arrested in connection with a threatening Snapchat photo reported to police the same day a gunman shot and seriously wounded two Evergreen High School students.

    Hours after the Sept. 10 shooting, Arvada police officers started investigating hundreds of Safe2Tell reports about a photo of a rifle and ammunition with the words “Be ready rv” that was sent to multiple students on Snapchat.

    Investigators contacted the student suspected of the post, who is a juvenile, that night but did not have evidence to pursue criminal charges, police said Wednesday. 

    Police linked the photo to a French social media post from 2024 and determined the threat was not credible, although 1,100 students did not attend school the next day.

    Officers continued investigating the student suspected of making the post and found digital links to the incident, including internet searches for “snap with gun be ready,” “survivors of columbine,” “worst school shooting in america” and the names of the Columbine High School shooters.

    Here are 5 things parents can do to protect their children online

    The student’s search history also contained questions about what would happen if a minor made a school shooting threat, if it was a federal offense and if there was a way a police officer could come to their house and talk to them.

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  • 3 injured in overnight Arvada shootings, police say

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    Three people were injured Saturday night in two separate Arvada shootings, including one on the edge of Olde Town, according to the police department.

    Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office deputies and Arvada police responded to a shooting near West 54th Avenue and Harlan Street, outside the Colorado Bureau of Investigation office, at 8:41 p.m. Saturday, according to a news release from the police department.

    The unidentified victim was shot multiple times during what police believe was an armed robbery and carjacking, investigators said in the news release. In a sheriff’s office news release Monday, the stolen vehicle was identified as a green Chevrolet Silverado.

    Paramedics took the victim to the hospital, police said. The sheriff’s office said the victim was in stable condition Monday.

    Officers were able to locate the stolen vehicle using Flock-brand cameras across Arvada and chased it onto westbound Interstate 70.

    The suspects fled from the car on foot when officers forced it to a stop, but they were quickly arrested, Arvada police said.

    On Monday, the sheriff’s office said the men are each being charged with second-degree attempted murder and aggravated robbery. One of the suspects, a 26-year-old man, is also being charged with second-degree motor vehicle theft and vehicular eluding. The other suspect, a 39-year-old, is also being charged with possession of a controlled substance.

    Earlier that evening, at about 6:15 p.m., two men were shot near The Russell, an apartment building on the south edge of Olde Town Arvada, police said.

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  • Arvada shooting and carjacking leads to pursuit, arrests; victim shot multiple times

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    ARVADA, Colo. — Suspects involved in a police pursuit were arrested Saturday night following a string of alleged crimes, including an Arvada shooting that left one person hospitalized.

    The shooting occurred around 8:40 p.m. in the area of W. 54th Avenue and Harlan Street in Arvada, according to the Arvada Police Department.

    Police said the victim was shot multiple times and transported to the hospital, where their condition is currently not known.

    Investigators later determined that the shooting was connected to a carjacking and armed robbery.

    A multi-agency effort, including Arvada police, used FLOCK camera technology to locate the stolen vehicle, and officers pursued the suspects.

    Police said the pursuit was brought to a safe conclusion near Interstate 70 and Wadsworth Boulevard using a tactical pursuit intervention technique.

    Soon after, the suspects attempted to flee on foot but were quickly taken into custody, according to police.

    The department said the investigation remains active and that no further details will be released at this time.

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  • Mental health evaluation ordered in fatal Jeffco rock-throwing case after defense claims ADHD contributed to killing – The Cannabist

    Mental health evaluation ordered in fatal Jeffco rock-throwing case after defense claims ADHD contributed to killing – The Cannabist

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    A mental health evaluation has been ordered for the third and final suspect in last year’s deadly spree of rock-throwing attacks in suburban Denver after the defense claimed his ADHD contributed to the killing and the injury of half a dozen drivers.

    Joseph Koenig, 19, was set to begin his jury trial for first-degree murder in Jefferson County district court later this month when his defense requested to introduce additional evidence and expert testimony into the case for an “impaired mental condition” defense, according to court documents.

    Koenig’s trial has been delayed until health officials can return a mental health evaluation to the judge determining the 19-year-old’s “mental condition.”

    Read the rest of this story on TheKnow.DenverPost.com.

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    The Cannabist Network

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