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Tag: Colorado State University

  • Xcel to cut power to 9,000 customers in northern Colorado ahead of high winds

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    Xcel Energy will cut power to 9,000 customers in northern Colorado starting Friday morning ahead of strong winds and fire danger, utility officials announced Thursday.

    National Weather Service forecasters issued a red flag warning for critical fire weather in the northern Colorado foothills from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday, with low humidity and winds up to 75 mph creating conditions “favorable for rapid fire spread” and extreme fire behavior, the agency wrote in an alert.

    Xcel Energy customers in Larimer and Weld counties will see power cuts starting at 8 a.m., including in parts of Fort Collins, Loveland, Kerns and Bellevue, according to an online outage map.

    The outage area’s rough footprint is Wellington to the north, Windsor to the east, Horsetooth Reservoir to the south and Ted’s Place to the west.

    Central Fort Collins is not included in the planned outage, including Old Town and neighborhoods near Colorado State University, according to Xcel’s map.

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    Katie Langford

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  • At the National Western Stock Show, Colorado 4-H teens hope to make the sale

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    Ever since Grace Kennedy met Quinn in May, the teenager’s goal has been to fatten the Hereford calf up — but not too much, not if she wants to auction it off at this month’s National Western Stock Show in Denver.

    Quinn, who is about a year-and-a-half old, weighed 460 pounds when Grace won the animal from the Stock Show’s Catch-A-Calf program. The calf weighed about 1,250 pounds as of early December.

    “They just want a good-looking carcass,” Grace, who lives just outside of Morrison, said of the judges who will determine how well she did in raising Quinn for beef.

    The 17-year-old is just one of Colorado’s 4-H youth members who will attend the Stock Show in hopes of making a sale. Teenagers from across the state will come to Denver to auction off cattle, goats and other livestock, with the goal of earning money for college, first cars or to reinvest in their farming endeavors.

    4-H student Grace Kennedy, 17, tries to convince her one-year-old steer, Quinn, to continue his walk around the property on Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025, in Morrison, Colo. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

    The Stock Show began Saturday and will run through Jan. 25.

    “Being from Colorado, I feel like it would be really cool making a sale in a national show in your state,” 15-year-old Ty Weathers said.

    Ty, who lives on a cattle ranch outside of Yuma in northeastern Colorado, has been showing cows since he was about 7 years old. He will show a steer named Theodore at the Stock Show this year, and he hopes to sell the animal to earn money for a car.

    Unlike Grace, who received Quinn through the Catch-A-Calf program, which requires participants to sell their calves during the Stock Show, there’s no guarantee Ty will make a sale.

    “I like winning,” Ty said, referring to his hope he’ll be able to auction Theodore off for the highest price. “I’ve grown up in it, so it’s just a part of life.”

    Zemery Weber, who lives in Gill in Weld County, started showing goats when she was 8 years old to earn money, but this is her first time doing so at the Stock Show.

    “I got a goat this year that seems to be pretty good,” the 14-year-old said. “I’m excited, but I’m also nervous because it’s my first time.”

    Zemery will show a goat named Nemo. She plans to save part of the money she earns from selling the goat for meat for her first car and college.

    Zemery Weber, 14, leads her goat, Nemo, outside of the barn at her mother's home near Gill, Colo., on Dec. 15, 2025. Weber plans to show the goats at the National Western Stock Show. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
    Zemery Weber, 14, leads her goat, Nemo, outside of a barn at her mother’s home near Gill, Colo., on Dec. 15, 2025. Weber plans to show the goats at the National Western Stock Show. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

    “It has helped me become the person that I am,” Zemery said of showing goats. “It is a very good experience for students to have and kids to have to learn responsibility and reliability.”

    Showing animals is just one way students can participate in the Stock Show.

    In the Front Range, county 4-H programs — which have youth participate in agricultural, STEM and other projects — also put on a field trip for elementary school students to visit the show so they can learn about animals and where their food comes from, said Josey Pukrop, a 4-H youth development specialist with the Colorado State University Extension in Jefferson County.

    Last year, about 12,000 children participated in the field trip, she said.

    4-H has been operating nationally for more than 120 years, through it, children participate in programs that include showing livestock, gardening and building robots. The youth program is largely funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture, according to the agency’s website.

    More than 100,000 Colorado students participate in 4-H via community clubs and other programming, said Michael Compton, the state 4-H program director at the CSU Extension.

    Like Ty, Grace’s family is in the cattle business, but it wasn’t until the pandemic that she began to take an interest and dream of owning her own ranch someday.

    Grace’s foray into cows began when the dance studio she attended closed because of COVID-19 in 2020. Grace, in search of a new hobby, got into horses and trail riding with her father.

    4-H student Grace Kennedy, 17, leads her one-year-old steer, Quinn, around the property as training for being shown at the National Western Stock Show next month, on Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025, in Morrison, Colo. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)
    4-H student Grace Kennedy, 17, leads her one-year-old steer, Quinn, around the property as training for being shown at the National Western Stock Show next month, on Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025, in Morrison, Colo. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

    Soon after, she took an interest in cows and worked on her grandfather’s cattle ranch in South Dakota during the summer. Grace’s parents have their own herd near Morrison, and the teenager has started breeding and raising her own cattle.

    “Animals are the coolest things,” Grace said. “They are here to teach us something, to teach us life qualities. They’re peaceful.”

    Grace has been a member of 4-H for six years, showing cattle for four.

    She is participating in the Stock Show’s Catch-A-Calf program, which loaned her a calf so she can learn cattle management.

    The Catch-A-Calf program started in 1935 and is open to teens ages 14 to 18 who live in Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska and Wyoming, according to the Stock Show’s website.  

    “Sometimes it’s kids that haven’t raised these animals before,” Pukrop said.

    Zemery Weber, 14, cleans the pens for her goats, Theo, left, and Nemo, in a barn at her mother's home near Gill, Colo., on Dec. 15, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
    Zemery Weber, 14, cleans the pens for her goats, Theo, left, and Nemo, in a barn at her mother’s home near Gill, Colo., on Dec. 15, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

    Teens participating in the program have to rope a calf, feed it and return the cow to the next Stock Show to be judged on showmanship and carcass quality. The program’s Grand and Reserve Grand Champions get to sell their steers at an auction held on the final Friday of the Stock Show, according to the website.

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    Jessica Seaman

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  • As nonalcoholic beverages take off, CSU’s fermentation and food science program bubbles up new ideas

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    FORT COLLINS, Colo. — Across the country, a trend is brewing as people are swapping beers and cocktails for nonalcoholic drinks. At Colorado State University (CSU), students and staff in the fermentation and food science program are aware of the rise and what the future of the industry can look like.

    Students in the fermentation and food science program gain hands-on experience with courses in the Ramskeller Brewery and Innovation Hub and Brew Kitchen. The program started in 2013, and Denver7 covered the program’s name change to include a stronger focus on food science.

    “I think there’s so many different things that we study in this program, like so many different forms of science, and it’s just kind of all encompassing,” Olivia Duque, senior in the program, said.

    Denver7 went 360 in-depth, taking a look at how Coloradans are embracing the rise of mocktails and how local businesses have embraced the shift. Last month, we listened to brewers at the Great American Beer Festival on changes they are seeing in the industry.

    Jeff Biegert, New Belgium Brewing sponsored CSU fermentation & food science professor and brewmaster, explained there is a key distinction between non-alcoholic beer and alcohol-free beer.

    Maggy Wolanske

    “There is nonalcoholic beer, which is defined as beer that is one-half of 1% alcohol or less,” said Biegert. “Then alcohol-free beer is absolutely 0% alcohol. These are identified differently by the Tax and Trade Bureau, which is the overreaching administration that looks at fermented beverages and alcohol in the marketplace. So an alcohol free beer, that administration, the TTB, will actually measure and qualify and make sure like there’s absolutely no alcohol in it.”

    Students in the program have learned about the fermentation process in cheese, yogurt, and kombucha. Last year, Biegert said students worked on a nonalcoholic hop seltzer.

    Jeff with hop seltzer .jpg

    Maggy Wolanske

    “There is absolutely no alcohol in this. It is essentially carbonated water, some citric acid to lower the pH on it, and then some extract to bring in some wonderful hop aromas into it,” Biegert said.

    Biegert explained the different processes for making non-alcoholic beer, which include vacuum distillation, membrane filtration, and engineered yeast. He said the vacuum distillation technique can be used when heating the beer and removing the alcohol under a vacuum, whereas the membrane filtration puts the membrane under high pressure to separate alcohol and water.

    Innovation Hub & Brew Kitchen .jpg

    Maggy Wolanske

    “The third way, which we plan on doing here in the lab next semester, is play around with some engineered yeast. So there’s bioengineered brewer’s yeast out there that is engineered not to ferment the typical sugars that are in your standard beer. You make a very low-density beer to start out with, and you put this in, and it consumes the real simple sugars, which are not many in that substrate,” Biegert said.

    Even though trends are constantly evolving in the spirit world, students are grateful for the foundation of fermentation in Fort Collins.

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  • Keeler: CSU Rams never showed up for Border War, shamed 28-0 by Wyoming

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    LARAMIE, Wyo. — Reality check? CSU was already checked out.

    Wyoming came to play Saturday night. The Rams came to pout. Or maybe plan, to a man, for life after Fort Collins.

    If the 117th edition of the Border War was a boxing match, they’d have called it after three rounds. If it were a Broadway show, they’d have closed it at intermission.

    If it was a harbinger, it’s going to be an awfully long, awfully cold final four weeks in Fort Fun.

    Wyoming 28, CSU 0. And that scoreline probably flatters the Rams, who looked flat from the jump.

    It was the Cowboys’ largest margin of victory in a battle for the Bronze Boot since 2010 — a 44-0 Pokes victory. That was also the last time CSU got blanked in the series. It was three hours of negative superlatives, each stacking on top of the other like poisoned LEGO blocks.

    You can fake a lot of these things in this world. You can’t fake football when the administration fires the coach and sets fire to the rest of the season. You can’t fake giving a hoot in a rivalry game when you don’t.

    That’s not a knock. It’s just human nature. Jay Norvell was given his walking papers last Sunday. CSU’s franchise QB, Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi, walked out right after him.

    The pair dug a lot of the holes this program finds itself in right now, granted. But there isn’t enough talent — or brotherhood, or camaraderie or trust — left among the remaining pieces to climb out.

    The lines between the NFL and the upper levels of the college game are getting blurrier by the day. But when everybody’s a free agent, that whole “checking out” thing becomes endemic.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Department of Energy cancels millions in funds for clean energy projects in Colorado

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    DENVER — The U.S. Department of Energy is canceling more than $7.5 billion in funding for clean-energy projects across the country, including more than $500 million earmarked for Colorado projects.

    Russ Vought, director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, announced on Wednesday that funds would be canceled for 223 projects across 16 states, all of which voted for Democrat Kamala Harris in last year’s presidential election.

    According to a list by House Appropriations Committee Democrats, 34 projects in Colorado are on the chopping block.

    The cancellations affect places like Colorado State University, the Colorado School of Mines and the Colorado Energy Office, among others, whose grants have been marked for termination.

    “Following a thorough, individualized financial review, DOE determined that these projects did not adequately advance the nation’s energy needs, were not economically viable, and would not provide a positive return on investment of taxpayer dollars,” the Energy Department wrote.

    Denver7 political analyst Alton Dillard said the cuts send a clear political message.

    “One, it is always going to be concerning that having a clean climate is somehow become politicized,” said Dillard. “But it also is sending the message that if you are in a state that supported Harris, that you’re going to pay.”

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    Alton Dillard, Denver7 Political Analyst

    Dillard warned of significant consequences for Colorado’s energy sector.

    “In a state like Colorado that’s known for innovation and entrepreneurship, the downstream effects, I think, are going to be dire,” he explained. “So you add this back in again to the fact that we’re also in the middle of a government shutdown, and I know it’s an overused term, but we are at a major inflection point in not only clean energy, but just government in general.”

    Dillard added that no one should be surprised by this move, as it delivers on exactly what the Trump administration said it was going to do.

    The cancellations are likely to face legal challenges. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, recipients of those awards will have 30 days to appeal the department’s decision.

    Reaction from Colorado’s lawmakers

    In the wake of the cuts, Denver7 is hearing from Colorado lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.

    Republican Congresswoman Lauren Boebert, who represents Colorado’s 4th Congressional District, said the move was connected to the government shutdown and blamed Senate Democrats.

    “This wouldn’t be an issue if Senate Democrats would stop their temper tantrum and vote to open our government. Their failure to act is hurting Colorado, from federal employees working here to ranchers and farmers depending on stability whose future is now uncertain. If anyone needs to answer questions about this, it’s Senate Democrats who are voting to shut our government down.”

    Rep. Lauren Boebert / (R) Colorado

    Democratic Senator John Hickenlooper, meanwhile, said the cuts “punish Americans who dared to vote against” the Trump administration.

    “The cancellation of this funding for political vengeance is blatantly illegal. Congress approved this funding to create jobs and to generate cleaner, cheaper power. Even if for some dark reason you are against cleaner energy, these projects are well underway. To abandon them now wastes the funds already invested, and needlessly cripples dozens of honest, hard-working small businesses that believed having a legal contract with our country meant something. The White House strategy during their shutdown is to punish Americans who dared to vote against them.”

    Scripps News Group and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Claire Lavezzorio

    Denver7’s Claire Lavezzorio covers topics that have an impact across Colorado, but specializes in reporting on stories in the military and veteran communities. If you’d like to get in touch with Claire, fill out the form below to send her an email.

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  • Colorado flags at half-staff through Sunday to honor 9/11 anniversary and death of Charlie Kirk

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    DENVER — Colorado Gov. Jared Polis has ordered flags to half-staff on Thursday in honor of the 9/11 anniversary and the death of political activist Charlie Kirk on Wednesday.

    “On 9/11, we remember the 2,976 souls lost that tragic day, honor the first responders who ran toward the danger to help others, and mourn with the families who still have an empty seat at the dinner table,” Gov. Polis said.

    Flags will fly at half-staff from sunrise to sunset on Thursday to pay respects to all those who lost their lives on Sept. 11, 2001, their loved ones, and how the terrorist attack changed the fabric of the United States.

    National News

    Trump attends Pentagon ceremony as US marks 24 years since Sept. 11 attacks

    President Donald Trump then ordered the flags to stay at half-staff through sunset on Sunday in honor of Kirk who was shot and killed while speaking at an event on the Utah Valley University campus in Orem, Utah.

    “Political violence is never acceptable and I condemn the brutal and inexcusable attack on Charlie Kirk in Utah. This is a challenging time for so many in our country, but any divisions we face will never be solved by trying to hurt each other. I am sending hope and love to his friends and his family in this dark hour. I encourage everyone to be stronger and disagree better and peacefully,” Gov. Polis said

    31-year-old Kirk was the co-founder of Turning Point USA, a right-wing political nonprofit organization that advocates for conservative politics on high school and college campuses across the U.S. — making him a major figure and voice within the young conservative movement, with millions of followers across his various social media platforms.

    National News

    Who was Charlie Kirk? What we know about the conservative political influencer

    Kirk’s stop Wednesday at Utah Valley University was part of his “The American Comeback Tour,” where he engaged students through political debates under tents branded with phrases like “Prove Me Wrong.”

    The tour was set to stop at Colorado State University (CSU) next Thursday, September 18, according to The American Comeback Tour website. CSU has a local chapter of Turning Point USA on its campus.

    The American Comeback Tour

    Kirk is among numerous political figures who have been the targets of violent attacks in recent years. President Trump himself survived a gunshot wound to the ear at a rally in Pennsylvania last year.

    National News

    Gun used to kill Charlie Kirk found in wooded area; Trump blames ‘radical left’

    There have also been politically motivated attacks on Democrats, including in June, when Minnesota House Democratic Leader Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, were fatally shot, while State Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, were wounded. In 2022, Paul Pelosi, the husband of then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi, was attacked inside the couple’s San Francisco home.

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  • Why vets recommend CBD to treat dogs with chronic pain and anxiety – The Cannabist

    Why vets recommend CBD to treat dogs with chronic pain and anxiety – The Cannabist

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    Kristy Rosenberger swears by cannabidiol – more commonly known as CBD – not for herself, but for her dogs.

    Rosenberger was first introduced to CBD more than a decade ago when searching for something to help her dog, Punkie, who was anxious and epileptic. When thunderstorms rolled through, the Yorkie would whimper and shake. Rosenberger was afraid her behavior might trigger a seizure.

    Punkie’s neurologist recommended giving her CBD in combination with the dog’s seizure medication to sooth her symptoms. Rosenberger thought it couldn’t hurt to try, but was genuinely surprised when she noticed behavioral changes.

    Read the rest of this story on DenverPost.com.

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    The Cannabist Network

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  • Emerald ash borer — invasive insect that’s killed millions of trees — confirmed in Lakewood

    Emerald ash borer — invasive insect that’s killed millions of trees — confirmed in Lakewood

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    Lakewood has confirmed its first case of emerald ash borer, an invasive insect that’s killed millions of North American ash trees, city officials said in a news release Thursday.

    The insect was found “in a small area in central Lakewood” and confirmed by the Colorado State University extension office in Jefferson County, Lakewood officials said.

    Emerald ash borer beetles infest and kill green and white varieties of ash trees, including the popular autumn purple ash. Approximately 15% of urban trees are ash trees, according to the city.

    City officials did not say when or where the beetles were found or how many trees were impacted and could not immediately be reached for comment.

    Ash trees infested by the beetles can be identified through “D-shaped” exit holes, splitting bark and “S-shaped” tunnels under the bark, city Forestry Supervisor Luke Killoran said in a statement.

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    Katie Langford

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  • CSU Rams handle Northern Colorado, but star wideout Tory Horton leaves game with injury – The Cannabist

    CSU Rams handle Northern Colorado, but star wideout Tory Horton leaves game with injury – The Cannabist

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    FORT COLLINS — Colorado State collected its first win in a Rocky Mountain Showdown tuneup, but the cost might have lasting effects on the Rams’ season.

    CSU defeated Northern Colorado, 38-17, in a Saturday performance at Canvas Stadium that will draw mixed reviews in its own right. But the biggest story moving forward could be the availability of star wide receiver Tory Horton for the showdown next weekend with rival Colorado in FoCo.

    The all-conference pass catcher left Saturday night’s game in the third quarter and did not return. Horton hauled in his second catch of the game, made a nifty move to shake off a defender along the sideline, but almost immediately pulled up because of an injury. He took a couple of steps with a limp before going down in pain on the CSU sideline.

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

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  • Letters: Colorado veterinarians need help. Allowing vet “PAs” is the answer. – The Cannabist

    Letters: Colorado veterinarians need help. Allowing vet “PAs” is the answer. – The Cannabist

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    Creating veterinary “PAs” would provide more care for Colorado pets

    Re: “I’m a veterinarian and a lawmaker; don’t let big businesses undermine pet care,” June 13 commentary and “Protecting animals or protectionism? The rhetoric around online vet care,” June 23 commentary

    As three veterinarians who have started veterinary hospitals and practiced in Colorado for many years, we would like to express our support for Initiative 145. This November ballot measure would create a new Veterinary Professional Associate (VPA) position in Colorado. Like the Physician’s Assistant (PA) position we have all benefited from for 50 years in human medicine, these individuals would be able to do myriad important tasks for animals in hospitals, clinics and shelter settings, helping to relieve the veterinary shortages that exist now.

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

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  • Opinion: Opposition to online pet care is unrealistic and protectionist

    Opinion: Opposition to online pet care is unrealistic and protectionist

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    In Colorado, we love our pets, so it’s personal when the care they need is out of reach.  A recent Colorado State University study found that veterinary care is unattainable for a third of pet owners.

    This is why a group of animal welfare advocates have come together to lead ballot initiatives 144 and 145. These measures will safely increase access to veterinary care in Colorado by expanding the use of telehealth and by introducing a career pathway for a master’s-level veterinary professional associate (VPA) position, similar to a physician assistant in human medicine.

    In a recent op-ed, state politician Karen McCormick, raised concerns about these two ballot initiatives. We are a group of veterinarians with a lifelong commitment to the well-being of animals and the community. We are leading this measure and feel compelled to offer our perspective on why these measures are crucial for the health of our pets. Initiatives 144 and 145 are critical steps to safely increasing veterinary care for pets in Colorado and addressing the dire shortage of veterinary professionals.

    Animal Health Economics estimates a shortage of nearly 15,000 veterinarians will exist in the U.S. by 2030, leaving as many as 75 million pets without veterinary care. This is largely the result of a veterinary workforce crisis. There are simply too few veterinary professionals to meet the demand. A study from the American Association of Veterinary Medical Colleges (AAVMC) found that there were 2,000-3,000 more open jobs than veterinarians available to hire.

    Ballot Initiative 144 increases access to veterinary telemedicine, allowing pet owners to create a new relationship with a veterinarian and receive care virtually when appropriate. This same model has been successful in human healthcare, and was passed nearly unanimously in Florida, Arizona and California last year. Rep. McCormick claims to have passed a bill (HB 24-1048) on behalf of the veterinary trade association as an “expansion” of tele-technologies. What she fails to share is that her bill eliminated options for many pet owners to access veterinary care virtually.

    Even Gov. Jared Polis stated his disappointment in this new restriction when the bill passed, saying he was concerned that it “creates additional impediments to veterinary care, especially in rural areas.” Initiative 144 repairs this damage and truly expands telehealth.

    Ballot Initiative 145 creates a career pathway for a veterinary “PA”. These professionals will have a master’s degree in veterinary clinical care and must work under the supervision of a licensed Colorado veterinarian. Initiative 145 requires robust training from a leading veterinary school in the country. It also empowers the State Board of Veterinary Medicine to create licensing and other regulatory requirements. Initiative 145 leads to increased capacity in veterinary clinics, particularly in rural communities, while driving down costs for pet owners.

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    Apryl Steele, Missy Tasky, Jo Myers

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  • Former Broncos safety Justin Simmons might be in football limbo, but he was right at home Saturday and enjoying his offseason

    Former Broncos safety Justin Simmons might be in football limbo, but he was right at home Saturday and enjoying his offseason

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    Justin Simmons the football player remains in a state of limbo.

    Simmons the person looked right at home Saturday morning in Montbello.

    The 31-year-old, released by the Broncos after eight seasons back in March, has seen his free agency now inch toward the three-month mark.

    You wouldn’t have known it at the Denver Broncos Boys & Girls Club for the annual March for Peace on this sun-splashed morning.

    “God is so good. I’m so thankful for this time and for his faithfulness in terms of slowing me down and not taking things for granted,” Simmons said in his first public comments since his Broncos tenure ended this spring. “This offseason has been such a blessing. I’ve had a tremendous opportunity in my eyes to regain some lost moments of hanging out with family, I’ve got to go to my daughter’s dance recitals and I’ve got to see them grow and I’ve got to be home a lot more. All while training and staying ready so I don’t have to get ready.

    “One door closes and another opens and that’ll open at some point here in the future.”

    The two-time Pro Bowl safety didn’t want to talk much about football or about his future prospects with a pair of reporters on hand, but he readily acknowledged a piece of symmetry that borders perhaps on poetic.

    The organizers of this event, Nashara Ellerbee and Naja’Ray West, are graduating seniors and off to Colorado State University in the fall. It’s a time of change in their lives. A time of excitement but also anxiousness. When you’ve made the impact they’ve made on a community, you don’t know quite what’s coming behind you, but if you’ve made your mark well, you can have confidence that it’s something good.

    That’s Simmons, too. He doesn’t know where he’ll be playing next year just yet, but he knows he’s enjoying this offseason. He knows he finds himself feeling every bit as rooted here among the familiar faces and folks who perhaps once saw him as a football player but now just see him as justin.

    “Honestly, even now in this time of transition, I’ve talked to them because they’re both getting ready to go off to college and we’re talking about next steps and who’s roommates and classes and what are we going to do here and when do we get to visit family?” he said. “And I’m talking them through it from my experience in college. But similarly I’m taking the same step just with another team at some point. And so it’ll be the same thing, right? New locker room, new coaches, wanting to fit in, wanting to establish yourself with your play. So we’re both in this thing almost together in different aspects. I’m looking to them for encouragement and they’re encouraging me and I hope I’m doing a good job encouraging them.

    “They’ve just been a huge blessing. I love their heart, I love their passion for people and their community and that’s what I’ve learned the most from them is just how impactful you can be just by loving on people.”

    It’s one more way in which West, Ellerbee and Simmons have drawn from each other over several years worth of their respective lives and development.

    “I’ve learned so much, even the intentionality that they’ve put into trying to help their own hometown, backyard,” Simmons said. “For me, you’re so plugged into trying to help as many people as you can. And I think Nashara and Ray Ray have done a good job of putting into perspective for me as, like, helping the people that you’ve done life with. That’s super important. Never lose sight of that. I think it’s great if you want to help as many people as you can and inspire as many people as you can, but you never want to forget the community and the people that helped you along the way and helped raised you and helped grow with you.”

    Simmons, of course, is a Florida native. He went to college at Boston College. Now he’s been in Denver since 2016. The past several years, this has been his community.

    “This is our brother at the end of the day,” West said of Simmons. “Regardless of where we end up and they end up, where he ends up on a new team, we’re family. We’re always going to have each other. When he comes to this event he comes not as a football player but as himself. Justin Simmons the guy that we know. Not the Denver Broncos safety.

    Added Ellerbee, “I just know that he’s going to be there for us. He goes to our graduations, both of our senior nights. He’s just a guy we can count on if we need anything.”

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    Parker Gabriel

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  • As tuition and cost of living climb in Colorado, families look out-of-state

    As tuition and cost of living climb in Colorado, families look out-of-state

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    DENVER — As the costs to learn and live in Colorado continue to climb, many college-bound students and their families are finding that the most affordable options are farther away from home.

    Denver7 went in-depth on the trend that’s scattering Coloradans across the country for higher education, and its implications — both positive and negative.

    Claudia Llado considers her options

    Like many high school seniors, Claudia Llado has spent a lot of time over the past couple of years planning for her future. She’s applied to more than a dozen universities, both close to home here in Colorado and as far away as other countries.

    “It’s definitely really important, because — I don’t want to say you don’t want to mess up, but it’s where you’re going for the next four years,” she told Denver7 as she scrolled through her many submitted college applications on her laptop. “And that’s really important.”

    Both of Llado’s parents went to the University of Colorado Boulder, so it was on the list of options from early on in the college decision process. As that process unfolded, however, Llado and her family came to learn that CU Boulder was not going to be their most affordable option.

    “That was a big eye-opener for us,” said father Lucas Llado. “Colorado — everybody wants to live here or come spend time here. So demand is really high. Schools are, you know, [their] fees are crazy.”

    As acceptance letters began to roll in for Llado, she and her family found tuition rates and scholarship offers at out-of-state and international universities made education less expensive. That has made them take a harder look at those farther-away options.

    “College is a big decision,” said mother Josee Roberge. “You don’t necessarily want to get out of college with hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt. So yes, if it could be a little bit more affordable, definitely that would be nice.”

    College costs in and out of Colorado

    Llado and her family are not alone. Denver7 has spoken with several families and college planning professionals who detail the same scenario: Colorado families are finding it more affordable to attend colleges out of state despite the in-state tuition benefits they are entitled to here.

    This is especially true for schools in the western United States, thanks to a program called the Western Undergraduate Exchange (WUE). WUE allows students residing in participating states to attend a university in another participating state for one and a half times the cost of in-state tuition or less. For example, a student from Colorado would pay $13,624 per year in tuition to attend the University of Colorado and $12,896 per year to attend Colorado State University. Through WUE, that same student could attend the University of Idaho for $12,616 per year in tuition; the University of Montana for $11,434 per year; or the University of Wyoming for just $8,438.

    When room and board are factored in, Colorado’s higher cost of living puts many states even further ahead.

    Claire Frey counsels college-bound students and their families

    Denver7 spoke to Claire Frey, owner of Cadeau College Planning in Lone Tree, about the rising costs of college. Having made a career out of helping Colorado families make the best educational choices with their goals and budgets — including the Llado family — she has tracked a growing number of clients who received better financial offers away from home.

    Public universities in other states are often cheaper options, both in tuition and cost of living, Frey explained. They also tend to offer her clients more financial aid.

    “It’s just supply and demand. It’s economics,” Frey said. “We live in a beautiful state. [Colorado] schools are close to skiing and snowboarding. And I don’t think that’s a problem we’re going to see resolved because people are going to want to continue going to school in Colorado.”

    Frey also encourages her clients to look into private schools. Many are skeptical at first, she said, because private schools often have higher tuition costs listed. However, she also finds private schools often offer a great deal more in scholarships, to the point that the actual cost of attendance is on par with or less than other state schools.

    “Private schools are privately funded,” Frey said. “They have huge endowments and a ton of flexibility as to how they do their discounting and allocate aid.”

    In Frey’s eyes, it’s not necessarily a bad thing that Colorado’s universities have higher costs — it’s “great that Colorado is doing well,” she said — but she does see it as a good reason for families with high school students looking at college to keep an open mind as they start their search.

    “Information needs to be shared with families to understand what other options exist,” she said. “There are colleges that are out of state that can actually be more affordable than our in-state options.”

    Ruby Gilliland is enjoying the sun and the savings in Arizona

    Ruby Gilliland is on the other side of this very decision. She has lived her entire life in Fort Collins, until now.

    “I go to school at the University of Arizona,” Gilliland told Denver7 from her dorm room. “And I’m studying computer science.”

    Gilliland looked at Colorado State University in her hometown, but like many others, found her best financial options came from elsewhere. The University of Arizona offered her a scholarship, and her other costs are lower in Tucson, as well. The warmer climate was an added bonus in her decision.

    “This is great that I get to experience being out of state, and also it literally costs less than going to school in my hometown,” Gilliland said.

    The palm trees and the savings have been great for Gilliland and her family. She’s found an added benefit — being away from home has broadened her horizons and helped her grow.

    “I think it’s a nice thing to be prompted to look at, especially for a lot of people that just are like, ‘Oh, I’m here, I’m in Fort Collins, why not go to CSU?’” Gilliland said. “You know it’s like, okay, let’s kind of take a look outside and see what else you can do for the same amount or even less.”

    Editor’s Note: Denver7 360 | In-Depth explores multiple sides of the topics that matter most to Coloradans, bringing in different perspectives so you can make up your own mind about the issues. To comment on this or other 360 In-Depth stories, email us at 360@Denver7.com or use this form. See more 360 | In-Depth stories here.

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    Rob Harris

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  • CSU study: Apex predators not ecosystem quick fix

    CSU study: Apex predators not ecosystem quick fix

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    Newswise — A Colorado State University experiment spanning more than two decades has found that removal of apex predators from an ecosystem can create lasting changes that are not reversed after they return – at least, not for a very long time. 

    The study, funded by the National Science Foundation and published in Ecological Monographs, challenges the commonly held belief that the reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park restored an ecosystem degraded by their absence.  

    Researchers in CSU’s Warner College of Natural Resources examined the effects of three apex predators – carnivores at the top of the food chain not preyed on by other animals – in Yellowstone. Depleted populations of cougars and grizzly bears naturally recovered about the same time wolves were reintroduced to the park in 1995. The absence of these predators for nearly a century transformed the food web and landscape.  

    Yellowstone’s northern range shifted from willow and aspen stands along small streams with beaver activity to grasslands due to intensive browsing by elk. The widespread changes stabilized into an alternative ecological state that resisted returning to previous conditions once the carnivores were restored, according to authors of the study, Tom Hobbs and David Cooper. 

    This designed experiment conducted in Yellowstone is the longest of its kind and adds to evidence supporting the theory that degradation of ecosystems may not be reversed when harmful stressors are mitigated. 

    “When you disturb ecosystems by changing the makeup of a food web, it can lead to lasting changes that are not quickly fixed,” said Hobbs, lead author and professor emeritus with the Department of Ecosystem Science and Sustainability and the Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory. “We can’t rule out the possibility that the ecosystem will be restored over the next 40 years as a result of the return of apex predators. All we can be sure of is what’s observable now — the ecosystem has not responded dramatically to the restored food web.” 

    Though not a quick and easy solution, Hobbs said, restoration of apex predators produces healthier ecosystems in the long run.  

    “The conservation message is don’t lose them in the first place,” Hobbs said. “Keep the food web intact, because there’s not a quick fix for losing top predators from ecosystems.” 

    Can Colorado learn from Yellowstone? 

    Colorado Parks and Wildlife introduced five wolves to the state Dec. 18 with plans to bring in more in coming years. Wolves were eradicated in the state by the mid-1940s, but Colorado voters approved their restoration by a narrow margin in 2020.  

    This study may hold lessons about how restoring apex predators affects the ecosystem, but Hobbs said that the environmental degradation resulting from Yellowstone’s policy not to cull elk was never replicated in Colorado. 

    “Unlike Yellowstone, Colorado’s landscapes have not experienced widespread excessive grazing or browsing from elk,” Hobbs said. “The state has done a good job of managing elk populations using hunting.” 

    Hobbs and Cooper said there are many good reasons to restore wolves; just don’t expect them to cause immediate ecosystem improvements. 

    “Our work supports the fact that wolves are important components of ecosystems,” said Cooper, a research scientist emeritus in the Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship. “They will have some ecosystem benefits by reducing some large herbivore populations. Over the next hundred years, they’ll have a greater role in regulating some of the ecological processes that we’ve been studying.” 

    What do willows have to do with wolves?  

    Wolves and cougars were wiped out in Yellowstone by the early 1920s. Without apex predators or human hunters to control their population, elk fed on the willows along small streams in Yellowstone’s northern range, depleting beavers’ food supply and building materials and causing them to abandon the streams in favor of more suitable areas. 

    Historically, beavers and willows relied on each other to thrive. Flooding caused by beaver dams created favorable soil moisture conditions for willows, and willows provided food and dam-building materials for beavers. Without beaver-engineered flooding, small streams in the northern range cut deeper into the landscape, disconnecting roots of willows from groundwater. Willows never recovered their former height and density. 

    Following the reintroduction of wolves to the park in 1995, as cougar and grizzly populations were rebounding on their own, the elk population dropped from both predation and hunting by humans along park borders.  

    However, overall browsing of woody food sources has not declined proportionally. As the number of elk has decreased, bison herds have increased. Yellowstone’s carnivores typically don’t prey on bison because their large size makes them dangerous. 

    Long-term experiment 

    In 2001, CSU ecologists began an experiment to gauge whether the Yellowstone ecosystem would recover due to the restoration of apex predators. They established four study areas in the park’s northern range, fenced off eight plots to prevent browsing and constructed simulated beaver dams in some fenced and non-fenced plots to raise the water table. They also left control areas unaltered. In 2009, they added 21 more control plots to ensure the results of their experiment were representative of the landscape. 

    If predators regulated the elk population, preventing them from cutting down willows, the landscape would hypothetically return to its previous state. Instead, the willows remained short on control plots, while the fenced sites with simulated dams showed dramatic recovery.  

    Willows grew more than three times taller in the fenced, dammed areas than in the control plots, indicating the importance of groundwater access in addition to mitigation of browsing. 

    By manipulating one factor at a time – browsing and hydrology – at many sites for a long time, the researchers were able to show that carnivores were not causing landscape restoration.  

    “We learned from the science that it was way more complicated,” Cooper said.  

    “Our result is well supported by ecological theory and empirical results from all over the world,” Hobbs added. “Disturbing food webs can cause persistent changes in ecosystems.”   

    Research in Yellowstone is common, but this study was rare in its manipulation of the landscape and its duration. Hobbs and Cooper worked closely with park management and biologists, including Yellowstone National Park Senior Wildlife Biologist Daniel Stahler, to answer questions relevant to the park’s needs and share results to help guide park policy.

    “This research contributes greatly to our understanding of Yellowstone by teasing out the degree to which complex links in a food web affect ecosystems under native species recovery,” Stahler said. “Importantly, it is among few published studies to date on the Yellowstone ecosystem that highlight that not just wolves, but multiple predator species together have contributed to changes in elk abundance. This point has ramifications for how we evaluate how complex ecosystems respond to carnivore presence and absence.”

    He continued, “This long-term research conducted by the CSU team also highlights the value of national parks in helping us understand ecological processes, in order to better protect ecosystems. We should not only cherish our national parks because they protect, preserve and allow people to enjoy nature, but because they provide a place where well-designed science can elevate our understanding of its complexity.” 



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  • Deer Are Beta-Testing a Nightmare Disease

    Deer Are Beta-Testing a Nightmare Disease

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    Scott Napper, a biochemist and vaccinologist at the University of Saskatchewan, can easily envision humanity’s ultimate doomsday disease. The scourge would spread fast, but the progression of illness would be slow and subtle. With no immunity, treatments, or vaccines to halt its progress, the disease would eventually find just about every single one of us, spreading via all manner of body fluids. In time, it would kill everyone it infected. Even our food and drink would not be safe, because the infectious agent would be hardy enough to survive common disinfectants and the heat of cooking; it would be pervasive enough to infest our livestock and our crops. “Imagine if consuming a plant could cause a fatal, untreatable neurodegenerative disorder,” Napper told me. “Any food grown within North America would be potentially deadly to humans.”

    This nightmare illness doesn’t yet exist. But for inspiration, Napper needs to look only at the very real contagion in his own lab: chronic wasting disease (CWD), a highly lethal, highly contagious neurodegenerative disease that is devastating North America’s deer, elk, and other cervids.

    In the half century since it was discovered in a captive deer colony in Colorado, CWD has worked its way into more than 30 U.S. states and four Canadian provinces, as well as South Korea and several countries in Europe. In some captive herds, the disease has been detected in more than 90 percent of individuals; in the wild, Debbie McKenzie, a biologist at the University of Alberta, told me, “we have areas now where more than 50 percent of the bucks are infected.” And CWD kills indiscriminately, gnawing away at deer’s brains until the tissue is riddled with holes. “The disease is out of control,” Dalia Abdelaziz, a biochemist at the University of Calgary, told me.

    What makes CWD so formidable is its cause: infectious misfolded proteins called prions. Prion diseases, which include mad cow disease, have long been known as terrifying and poorly understood threats. And CWD is, in many ways, “the most difficult” among them to contend with—more transmissible and widespread than any other known, Marcelo Jorge, a wildlife biologist at the University of Georgia, told me. Scientists are quite certain that CWD will be impossible to eradicate; even limiting its damage will be a challenge, especially if it spills into other species, which could include us. CWD is already a perfect example of how dangerous a prion disease can be. And it has not yet hit the ceiling of its destructive potential.


    Among the world’s known infectious agents, prions are an anomaly, more like zombies than living entities. Unlike standard-issue microbes—viruses, bacteria, parasites, fungi—prions are just improperly folded proteins, devoid of genetic material, unable to build more of themselves from scratch, or cleave themselves in two. To reproduce, they simply find properly formed proteins that share their base composition and convert those to their aberrant shape, through mostly mysterious means. And because prions are slightly malformed versions of molecules that our bodies naturally make, they’re difficult to defend against. The immune system codes them as benign and ignores them, even as disease rapidly unfolds. “This is an entirely new paradigm of infectious disease,” Napper told me. “It’s a part of your own body that’s turning against you.”

    And yet, we’ve managed to keep many prion diseases in check. Kuru, once common in the highlands of Papua New Guinea, was transmitted through local rituals of funerary cannibalism; the disease fizzled out after people stopped those practices. Mad cow disease (more formally known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy) was contained by culling infected animals and eliminating the suspected source, cow feed made with infected tissues. Even scrapie, a highly contagious prion disease of sheep and goats, is limited to livestock, making it feasible to pare down infected populations, or breed them toward genetic resistance.

    CWD, meanwhile, is a fixture of wild animals, many of them migratory. And whereas most other prion diseases primarily keep quarters in the central nervous system, CWD “gets in pretty much every part of the body,” Jorge told me. Deer then pass on the molecules, often through direct contact; they’ll shed prions in their saliva, urine, feces, reproductive fluids, and even antler velvet long before they start to show symptoms. Candace Mathiason, a pathobiologist at Colorado State University, and her colleagues have found that as little as 100 nanograms of saliva can seed an infection. Her studies suggest that deer can also pass prions in utero from doe to growing fawn.

    Deer also ingest prions from their environment, where the molecules can linger in soil, on trees, and on hunting bait for years or decades. A team led by Sandra Pritzkow, a biochemist at UTHealth Houston, has found that plants can take up prions from the soil, too. And unlike the multitude of microbes that are easily done in by UV, alcohol, heat, or low humidity, prions are so structurally sound that they can survive nearly any standard environmental assault. In laboratories, scientists must blast their equipment with temperatures of about 275 degrees Fahrenheit for 60 to 90 minutes, under extreme pressure, to rid it of prions—or drench their workspaces with bleach or sodium hydroxide, at concentrations high enough to rapidly corrode flesh.

    Infected deer are also frustratingly difficult to detect. The disease typically takes years to fully manifest, while the prions infiltrate the brain and steadily destroy neural tissue. The molecules kill insidiously: “This isn’t the kind of disease where you might get a group of deer that are all dead around this watering hole,” Jorge told me. Deer drift away from the herd; they forage at odd times. They become braver around us. They drool and urinate more, stumble about, and begin to lose weight. Eventually, a predator picks them off, or a cold snap freezes them, or they simply starve; in all cases, though, the disease is fatal. Because of CWD, deer populations in many parts of North America are declining; “there is definitely some concern that local populations will disappear,” McKenzie told me. Researchers worry the disease will soon overwhelm caribou in Canada, imperiling the Indigenous communities who rely on them for food. Hunters and farmers, too, are losing vital income. Deer are unlikely to go extinct, but the disease is depriving their habitats of key grazers, and their predators of food.

    In laboratory experiments, CWD has proved capable of infecting rodents, sheep, goats, cattle, raccoons, ferrets, and primates. But so far, jumps into non-cervid species don’t seem to be happening in the wild—and although people eat an estimated 10,000 CWD-infected cervids each year, no human cases have been documented. Still, lab experiments indicate that human proteins, at least when expressed by mice, could be susceptible to CWD too, Sabine Gilch, a molecular biologist at the University of Calgary, told me.

    And the more prions transmit, and the more hosts they find themselves in, the more opportunities they may have to infect creatures in new ways. Prions don’t seem to evolve as quickly as many viruses or bacteria, Gilch told me. But “they’re not as static as we would like them to be.” She, McKenzie, and other researchers have detected a multitude of CWD strains bopping around in the wild—each with its own propensity for interspecies spread. With transmission so unchecked, and hosts so numerous, “this is kind of like a ticking time bomb,” Surachai Suppattapone, a biochemist at Dartmouth, told me.


    The world is unlikely to ever be fully rid of CWD; even the options to slow its advance are so far limited. Efforts to survey for infection depend on funding and researchers’ time, or the generosity of local hunters for samples; environmental decontamination is still largely experimental and tricky to do at scale; treatments—which don’t yet exist—would be nearly impossible to administer en masse. And culling campaigns, although sometimes quite effective, especially at the edges of the disease’s reach, often spark public backlash.

    Deer that carry certain genetic variants do seem less susceptible to prions, and progress more slowly to full-blown disease and death. But because none so far seems able to fully block infection, or completely curb shedding, prolonging life may simply prolong transmission. “Once an animal gets infected,” Abdelaziz told me, there’s almost a “hope it dies right away.” Even if sturdier prion resistance is someday found, “it’s probably just a matter of time until prions start to adapt to that as well,” Gilch said.

    Vaccines, in theory, could help, and in recent years, several research groups—including Napper’s and Abdelaziz’s—have made breakthroughs in overcoming the immune system’s inertia in attacking proteins that look like the body’s own. Some strategies try to target the problematic, invasive prions only; others are going after both the prion and the native, properly folded protein, so that the vaccine can do double duty, waylaying the infectious invader and starving it of reproductive fodder. (So far, lab animals seem to do mostly fine even when they’re bred to lack the native prion protein, whose function is still mostly mysterious.) In early trials, both teams’ vaccines have produced promising immune responses in cervids. But neither team yet fully knows how effective their vaccines are at cutting down on shedding, how long that protection might last, or whether these strategies will work across cervid species. One of Napper’s vaccine candidates, for instance, seemed to hasten the progression of disease in elk.

    Vaccines for wildlife are also tough to deliver, especially the multiple doses likely needed in this case. “It’s not like you can just run around injecting every elk and deer,” Napper told me. Instead, he and other researchers plan to compound their formula with a salty apple-cider slurry that he hopes wild cervids might eat with some regularity. “The deer absolutely love it,” he said.

    Should any CWD vaccines come to market, though, they will almost certainly be the first prion vaccines that clear the experimental stage. That could be a boon for more than just deer. Another prion disease may spill over from one species to another; others may arise spontaneously. CWD is not, and may never be, the prion disease that most directly affects us. But it is, for now, the most urgent—and the one from which we have the most to lose, and maybe gain.

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    Katherine J. Wu

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  • Colorado Rallies Back To Beat Colorado State In Double Overtime Thriller

    Colorado Rallies Back To Beat Colorado State In Double Overtime Thriller

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    BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — His mom gave the pregame speech. His defensive-back son started the scoring with an 80-yard pick-six. His quarterback son won it with a 98-yard drive for the ages and an overtime not soon forgotten.

    It was quite a day for Deion Sanders. With a bunch of celebrity friends in town, too, to take it all in.

    Shedeur Sanders threw a TD pass to Michael Harrison in the second overtime after leading the drive to tie the game with 36 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter and No. 18 Colorado rallied to beat Colorado State 43-35 early Sunday in front of a full house packed with famous names.

    Sanders connected with Harrison for an 18-yard score and then found an open Xavier Weaver on the 2-point conversion. The Colorado defense took it from there, with Trevor Woods intercepting Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi’s pass on fourth-and-23 to end the game at nearly 12:30 a.m. local time.

    It set off a celebration as fans rushed the field for a second straight week. This was the biggest fourth quarter comeback for Colorado since 2005.

    “We showed that we have no surrender or give-up in us,” Buffaloes coach Deion Sanders said. “They never doubted themselves.”

    In the first OT, Shedeur Sanders patiently waited in the pocket until Harrison flashed open for a 3-yard score. Fowler-Nicolosi followed by connecting with Tory Horton on an 8-yard score.

    With 2:06 remaining in the fourth quarter, Sanders and the Buffaloes (3-0) got the ball back on the 2-yard line and trailing 28-20. He led a seven-play drive that culminated with a 45-yard TD pass to Jimmy Horn Jr. with 36 seconds left. Sanders hit Harrison for the 2-point conversion.

    “Well, we do it in practice all the time, so it’s not really a surprise to us,” Sanders said of the 98-yard drive. “We like these high-pressure moments”

    “This is who he is,” Deion Sanders said.

    A 23 1/2-point underdog, the Rams led for a large chunk of the game. Their unraveling was 17 penalties for 182 yards, including a flag for a block below the waist that nullified a touchdown in the second overtime.

    Rams coach Jay Norvell added spice to the Rocky Mountain Showdown earlier in the week by taking a jab at Deion Sanders for not taking off his sunglasses and hat in interviews. After the game, Sanders and Norvell shook hands near midfield amid a sea of fans.

    “This rivalry has been going on way longer and before I got here,” said Norvell, who’s in his second season at Colorado State. “It’s going to be going on way after I leave.”

    As for their squabble, it’s water under the bridge to Sanders.

    “I wish the best for him,” he said.

    Sanders and the Buffaloes fed off the perceived slight all the way into the game. Shilo Sanders donned sunglasses after his 80-yard interception return for a touchdown in the first quarter as his proud father raced down the sideline in happiness.

    “Those ticket prices were worth it today,” Shilo Sanders said.

    Colorado head coach Deion Sanders, right, hugs his son, safety Shilo Sanders, after he returned an interception for a touchdown in the first half of a game against Colorado State on Saturday in Boulder, Colorado. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

    Shedeur Sanders finished with 348 yards, four TDs and one interception for the Buffaloes, who won their sixth straight over the Rams (0-2). Sanders was missing receiver/cornerback Travis Hunter, who was ruled out in the third quarter with an undisclosed injury and taken to the hospital for further evaluation. He could be out a few weeks.

    Colorado State put a bye week to good use by finding ways to contain Sanders and the explosive Colorado offense for moments of the game. The Rams tried to spoil the party hosted by Deion Sanders, who had big-name celebrities in town such as Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and rapper Lil Wayne.

    Fowler-Nicolosi had 367 yards and three TDs. Receiver Tory Horton caught a TD pass and threw another on a trick play to tight end Dallin Holker.

    “Every loss hurts but this one does hurt a little more just the way we lost it,” Fowler-Nicolosi said. “It’s brutal.”

    It was chippy at times, with Rams defensive lineman Mohamed Kamara getting a finger in the face mask from Shedeur Sanders after a play. Kamara was later disqualified in overtime for a targeting call on Sanders.

    The emotions heated up early, too, with both teams gathering at midfield about an hour before kickoff and exchanging some words. Hunter left the gathering to run over to the student section and fire up the fans.

    Deion Sanders has turned the Buffaloes into the talk of college football since taking over a team that went 1-11 last season.

    This weekend, both ESPN’s “College GameDay” and Fox’s “Big Noon Kickoff” were both on campus. Some of the biggest names in sports and entertainment turned up in Boulder, including “The Rock” appearing on the set of GameDay and took off his jacket to reveal he was wearing Shedeur Sanders’ No. 2 jersey. The Buffaloes took the field to a mini-concert performed by Lil Wayne in the end zone just before kickoff ( Deion Sanders gifted him a jersey).

    “They’ve got Lil Wayne over here, Coach Prime doing his thing. They’ve got a whole animal running around,” Shilo Sanders said of the pregame festivities that also included the live buffalo mascot Ralphie running the field. “I would’ve been so scared if I was the other team.”

    THE TAKEAWAY

    Colorado State: The Rams have lost 17 straight games to ranked teams on the road, according to Pac-12 research.

    Colorado: The announced attendance was 53,141 in a game where tickets were going for an average purchase price is $214, according to TickPick. The Buffaloes have sold out five home games this season and are close to selling out a sixth (Arizona on Nov. 11).

    POLL IMPLICATIONS

    Hard to say how voters will judge this. It was an epic comeback. But the Buffaloes were a big favorite.

    UP NEXT

    Colorado State: Play at Middle Tennessee on Saturday.

    Colorado: At No. 13 Oregon on Saturday.

    AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll

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  • We Have a Mink Problem

    We Have a Mink Problem

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    Bird flu, at this point, is somewhat of a misnomer. The virus, which primarily infects birds, is circulating uncontrolled around much of the world, devastating not just birds but wide swaths of the animal kingdom. Foxes, bobcats, and pigs have fallen ill. Grizzly bears have gone blind. Sea creatures, including seals and sea lions, have died in great numbers.

    But none of the sickened animals has raised as much concern as mink. In October, a bird-flu outbreak erupted at a Spanish mink farm, killing thousands of the animals before the rest were culled. It later became clear that the virus had spread between the animals, picking up a mutation that helped it thrive in mammals. It was likely the first time that mammal-to-mammal spread drove a huge outbreak of bird flu. Because mink are known to spread certain viruses to humans, the fear was that the disease could jump from mink to people. No humans got sick from the outbreak in Spain, but other infections have spread from mink to humans before: In 2020, COVID outbreaks on Danish mink farms led to new mink-related variants that spread to a small number of humans.

    As mammals ourselves, we have good reason to be concerned. Outbreaks on crowded mink farms are an ideal scenario for bird flu to mutate. If, in doing so, it picks up the ability to spread between humans, it could potentially start another global pandemic. “There are many reasons to be concerned about mink,” Tom Peacock, a flu researcher at Imperial College London, told me. Right now, mink are a problem we can’t afford to ignore.

    For two animals with very different body types, mink and humans have some unusual similarities. Research suggests that we share similar receptors for COVID, bird flu, and human flu, through which these viruses can gain entry into our bodies. The numerous COVID outbreaks on mink farms during the early pandemic, and the bird-flu outbreak in Spain, gravely illustrate this point. It’s “not surprising” that mink can get these respiratory diseases, James Lowe, a veterinary-medicine professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, told me. Mink are closely related to ferrets, which are so well known for their susceptibility to human flu that they’re the go-to model for flu research.

    Mink wouldn’t get sick as often, and wouldn’t be as big an issue for humans, if we didn’t keep farming them for fur in the perfect conditions for outbreaks. Many barns used to raise mink are partially open-air, making it easy for infected wild birds to come in contact with the animals, sharing not only air but potentially food. Mink farms are also notoriously cramped: The Spanish farm, for example, kept tens of thousands of mink in about 30 barns. Viral transmission would be all but guaranteed in those conditions, but the animals are especially vulnerable. Because mink are normally solitary creatures, they face significant stress in packed barns, which may further predispose them to disease, Angela Bosco-Lauth, a biomedical-sciences professor at Colorado State University, told me. And because they’re often inbred so their coats look alike, an entire population may share a similar genetic susceptibility to disease. The frequency of outbreaks among mink, Bosco-Lauth said, “may actually have less to do with the animals and more to do with the fact that we raise them in the same way … we would an intensive cattle farm or chickens.”

    So far, there’s no evidence that mink from the Spanish farm spread bird flu to humans: None of the workers tested positive for the virus, and since then, no other mink farms have reported outbreaks. “We’re just not very susceptible” to bird flu, Lowe said. Our bird-flu receptors are tucked deep in our lungs, but when we’re exposed, most of the virus gets caught in the nose, throat, and other parts of the upper respiratory tract. This is why bird-flu infection is less common in people but is often pneumonia-level severe when it does happen. Indeed, a few humans have gotten sick and died from bird flu in the 27 years that the current strain of bird flu, known as H5N1, has circulated. This month, a girl in Cambodia died from the virus after potentially encountering a sick bird. The more virus circulating in an environment, the higher the chances a person will get infected. “It’s a dose thing,” Lowe said.

    But our susceptibility to bird flu could change. Another mink outbreak would give the virus more opportunities to keep mutating. The worry is that this could create a new variant that’s better at binding to the human flu receptors in our upper respiratory tract, Stephanie Seifert, a professor at Washington State University who studies zoonotic pathogens, told me. If the virus gains the ability to infect the nose and throat, Peacock, at Imperial College London, said, it would be better at spreading. Those mutations “would worry us the most.” Fortunately, the mutations that arose on the Spanish mink farm “were not as bad as many of us worried about,” he added, “but that doesn’t mean that the next time this happens, this will also be the case.”

    Because mink carry the receptors for both bird flu and human flu, they could serve as “mixing vessels” for the viruses to combine, researchers wrote in 2021. (Ferrets, pigs, and humans share this quality too.) Through a process called reassortment, flu viruses can swap segments of their genome, resulting in a kind of Frankenstein pathogen. Although viruses remixed in this way aren’t necessarily more dangerous, they could be, and that’s not a risk worth taking. “The previous three influenza pandemics all arose due to mixing between avian and human influenza viruses,” Peacock said.

    While there are good reasons to be concerned about mink, it is hard to gauge just how concerned we should be—especially given what we still don’t know about this changing virus. After the death of the young girl in Cambodia, the World Health Organization called the global bird flu situation “worrying,” while the CDC maintains that the risk to the public is low. Lowe said “it’s certainly not very risky” that bird flu will spill over into humans, but is worth keeping an eye on. H5N1 bird flu is not new, he added, and it hasn’t affected people en masse yet. But the virus has already changed in ways that make it better at infecting wild birds, and as it spreads in the wild, it may continue to change to better infect mammals, including humans. “We don’t understand enough to make strong predictions of public-health risk,” Jonathan Runstadler, an infectious-diseases professor at Tufts University, told me.

    As bird flu continues to spread among birds and in domestic and wild animal populations, it will only become harder to control. The virus, formally seasonal, is already present year-round in parts of Europe and Asia, and it is poised to do the same in the Americas. Breaking the chain of transmission is vital to preventing another pandemic. An important step is to avoid situations where humans, mink, or any other animal could be infected with both human and bird flu at the same time.

    Since the COVID outbreaks, mink farms have generally beefed up their biosecurity: Farm workers are often required to wear masks and protective gear, such as disposable overalls. To limit the risk to mink—and other susceptible hosts—farms need to reduce their size and density, reduce contact between mink and wild birds, and monitor the virus, Runstadler said. Some nations, including Mexico, Ecuador, have recently embraced bird-flu vaccines for poultry in light of the outbreaks. H5N1 vaccines are also available for humans, though they aren’t readily available.  Still, one of the most obvious options is to shut mink farms down. “We probably should have done that after SARS-CoV-2,” Bosco-Lauth, at Colorado State, said. Doing so is controversial, however, because the global mink industry is valuable, with a huge market in China. Denmark, which produces up to 40 percent of the world’s mink pelts, temporarily banned mink breeding in 2020 after a spate of COVID outbreaks, but the ban expired last month, and farms are returning, albeit in a limited capacity.

    But mink  are far from the only animal that poses a bird-flu risk to humans. “Frankly, with what we’re seeing with other wildlife species, there really aren’t any mammals that I would discount at this point in time,” Bosco-Lauth said. Any mammal species repeatedly infected by the virus is a potential risk, including marine mammals, such as seals. But we should be most concerned about the ones humans frequently come into close contact with, especially animals that are raised in high density, such as pigs, Runstadler said. This doesn’t pose just a human public-health concern, he said, but the potential for “ecological disruption.” Bird flu can be a devastating disease for wildlife, killing animals swiftly and without mercy.

    Whether bird flu makes the jump into humans, it isn’t the last virus that will threaten us—or mink. The era we live in has become known as the “Pandemicene,” as my colleague Ed Yong has called it, one defined by the regular spillover of viruses into humans, caused by our disruption of the normal trajectories of viral movement in nature. Mink may never pass bird flu to us. But that doesn’t mean they won’t be a risk the next time a novel influenza or coronavirus comes around. Doing nothing about mink essentially means choosing luck as a public-health strategy. Sooner or later, it will run out.

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    Yasmin Tayag

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  • Soft skills: Researchers invent robotic droplet manipulators for hazardous liquid cleanup

    Soft skills: Researchers invent robotic droplet manipulators for hazardous liquid cleanup

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    Newswise — CSU researchers have created the first successful soft robotic gripper capable of manipulating individual droplets of liquid, according to a recent article in the Royal Society of Chemistry journal Materials Horizons.

    The breakthrough is the product of a collaboration between two different laboratories in CSU’s Department of Mechanical Engineering. It was accomplished by combining two applied technologies, soft robotics and super-omniphobic coatings.

    The soft robotic manipulator is made of inexpensive materials like nylon fibers and adhesive tape. It’s powered by an electrically activated artificial muscle. The combination can be used to produce lightweight, inexpensive grippers capable of delicate work, yet 100x stronger than human muscle for the same weight.

    The result is something that flies in the face of our cultural concept of what a robot is, and what it can do.

    Conventional robots are made of components that are heavy, rigid, and expensive. That makes them poorly suited for some tasks.

    Soft robots, on the other hand, can be lightweight and provide a gentle touch that’s difficult to achieve with conventional robots. They are far lighter and can be produced at a a fraction of the cost of their rigid cousins.

    “A single gripper as large as my finger is one or two grams, including the artificial muscle embedded. And it’s inexpensive – just one or two dollars,” said Jiefeng Sun, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Mechanical Engineering’s Adaptive Robotics Laboratory and co-first author on the paper.

    The soft robotic grippers are treated with a novel superomniphobic coating that makes the droplet manipulator possible. The superomniphobic coating resists wetting by nearly all types of liquids, even in dynamic situations where the contact surfaces are tilting or moving. When applied to the soft robotic manipulator, the coating enables it to interact with droplets without breaking their surface tension, so that it can grasp, transport, and release individual droplets as if they were flexible solids.

    The superomniphobic coatings employed in the droplet manipulator were developed at CSU by associate professor Arun Kota (now at North Carolina State University) and postdoctoral fellow Wei Wang (now an assistant professor at the University of Tennessee). Wang and Kota also contributed to the article.

    “It’s a very nice synergy between these two kinds of research. Dr. Kota was working on this very good coating, and we were working on this soft robot, to manipulate droplets, so we figured out this might be a good combination,” said co-author Jianguo Zhao, associate professor of mechanical engineering at CSU and director of the Adaptive Robotics Laboratory.

    In the early stages of their research, the team had difficulty attracting the attention of journal editors. The COVID-19 pandemic presented an opportunity to point out the potential of their invention.

    “Because of the pandemic, handling dangerous infective materials is a hot topic. So we added a blood manipulation experiment after the first revision,” said Sun. “That kind of helped us to get through the review process.”

    The combination of inexpensive materials and innovative capabilities has exciting applications. In many liquid spill scenarios, human cleanup can be dangerous due to toxicity, risk of contagion, or other hazards in the surroundings. These droplet manipulators are inexpensive enough to be disposable, but capable enough to do precise, lossless liquid cleanup work no other robot has ever done.

    “It’s a first, but it’s also a very unusual example of a high tech product that is not terribly expensive,” said Zhao.

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    Colorado State University

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