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Tag: Denver

  • A beloved Denver ghost tour is ending: What we learned on its near-final ride

    A beloved Denver ghost tour is ending: What we learned on its near-final ride

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    Local historian Phil Goodstein has written so many books about Denver that he’s lost count. His favorite subjects are bumbling politicians, cheats, liars and crooks who got the city started.

    He’s perhaps best known, though, for the ghost tours that he has conducted for decades. And it’s a tradition that may be coming to a close soon. 

    “This might be my last tour season,” he wrote in a recent email to his followers.

    That was some truly scary news, so we joined Goodstein on a walk last weekend to hear his glorious ghost stories once more. If you want to catch his (possibly) final ghost tour, it’s this Thursday, Oct. 31.

    Tourgoers follow Denver historian Phil Goodstein into Capitol Hill during one of his signature ghost tours. Oct. 26, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    These ghost tours combine history, horror and pulp fiction.

    “Across the street from us is what might be the most haunted house of all in Denver, something called the Whitehead Peabody Mansion,” the historian said, ominously, to a group gathered around him on a Capitol Hill sidewalk last weekend.

    “Trays are always tipping over. Glasses break on tables. Knives and forks supposedly fly around the kitchen. There’s mysterious crying sometimes heard up on the second floor.”

    The place at Grant Street and 11th Avenue was built for Dr. William Riddick Whitehead, a surgeon who Goodstein said killed a lot of his patients. Its second occupant was James Peabody, who served as Colorado’s governor in the early 1900s and is remembered for calling in the National Guard to put down striking miners.

    Maybe it was  the owners’ follies that instilled the home with so many spirits.

    “Mysterious things keep happening,” Goodstein creaked.

    The Whitehead Peabody Mansion in Capitol Hill, what historian and tour guide Phil Goodstein says is one of the city’s most haunted houses. Oct. 26, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    There’s a “crotchety old man” haunting the third floor, but he won’t bother you, so long as you don’t try to bartend in his space. A pretty young apparition named Ella, or Eloise, appears to handsome young men and jealously pinches waitresses who get too close to them.

    A six-year-old boy messes with the chandelier, causing lights to flicker despite electricians’ best efforts to fix them. Psychics have flocked to the place to hold seances and communicate with its dead.

    Meanwhile, restaurateurs have tried and failed to keep businesses afloat here; none of them lasted long. Once, the tax collectors came knocking after a bar went belly-up, Goodstein said. The clairvoyants tried to defend the place.

    “[The mediums] go down to the basement and they say, ‘Spirits, we are going to be leaving you. Evil forces are going to be taking our place. We want you to take possession of their calculators and their newfangled cell phones and laptops,’” he said. “And I put a sign in front of the place declaring ‘Our ghosts now rest with the IRS.’”

    This is a typical arc for a Goodstein story: Hook your audience with lore, lead them into bona fide local history, and end with a punchline. The punching bag is usually the government.

    Denver historian Phil Goodstein puts on one of his signature ghost tours, on the steps of the Capitol Hill Mansion at 12th Avenue and Pennsylvania Street . Oct. 26, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Goodstein has been steeped in local history for decades.

    It was 1986 when Goodstein first discovered the power of the walking tour. He was teaching local history when, one evening, nobody showed up to class.

    “I got bored and I decided to go out for a stroll. And here I was, simply walking down Colfax backwards, wildly waving my arms about talking to myself — pre-cell phone era — and people started following me around,” he told a crowd gathered around him last weekend.

    “I figured I might as well give walking tours,” Goodstein continued. “However, no sooner am I giving walking tours, I have the challenge: Do I tell the upright positive version of events? Or the outrageous, scandalous version of events?”

    The crowds seemed to love stories that were scandalous, fantastical, or both.

    The home of the Pillar of Fire Evangelical sect on Sherman Street, next to the Capitol, a stop on Denver historian Phil Goodstein’s signature ghost tours of Capitol Hill. Oct. 26, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “Originally, a criticism I had of my tours, there was too much history,” he said. “People wanted more ghosts.”

    It’s one reason his tours near the Capitol have skewed south of Colfax Avenue.

    “That sort of is becoming the standard. I don’t know whether it’s the best idea,” he added. “There’s better ghosts to the south. There’s more bloody murder to the north.”

    But during his tour Saturday night, his audience found they liked the true history that underpinned Goodstein’s stories of poltergeists.

    “I do like the mix of history and the kind of spooky, outrageous, scandalous stories,” Krista Wells said as we walked into the neighborhood. “He’s a great storyteller.”

    “I enjoyed his personality,” Alan Pagan added, “Just how excited he was … Sounds like this area overall is pretty haunted.”

    Denver historian Phil Goodstein begins on one of his signature ghost tours of Capitol Hill, starting with ghouls known to haunt the Colorado State Capitol. Oct. 26, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Is this really Goodstein’s last season?

    Ghost walks weren’t a thing when he began this work, all those years ago.

    “When I started, nobody else was doing tours like this,” he told us.

    Times have changed. As Goodstein dug into Capitol Hill’s ghouls last weekend, he steered his audience through a neighborhood haunted by several other guides, who had their own big groups.

    But it’s not the crowded field that’s pushing him toward retirement.

    “I have been getting increasingly tired on my tours. I almost collapsed twice,” he said, after his guests dispersed for the evening. “The magic is gone.”

    He’s still thinking about a succession plan, he added.

    Denver historian Phil Goodstein tells the story of Baby Doe Tabor, the young wife of a powerful businessman who died a pauper and may still haunt the lot where her home once stood on Sherman Street, during a ghost tour of Capitol Hill. Oct. 26, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “I have a couple of people that have expressed interest in taking them over,” he said. “I just don’t know that I have the eagerness, energy to keep at it.”

    Though Halloween is nearly here, there are still opportunities to hear Goodstein spin unsettling tales. He is slated for a series of talks about his latest book, “Fairmount: Denver’s Ultimate Cemetery,” through the end of the year.

    And even after he ends his ghost junkets, the sardonic storyteller will still be telling Denver’s history — perhaps.

    “Either that or I’ll be like some of the ghosts,” he said. “They just disappear and fade away.”

    The Colorado State Capitol on a warm autumn evening. Oct. 26, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

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    Kevin Beaty

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  • Nikola Jokic triple-double leads Nuggets to second straight overtime win on road

    Nikola Jokic triple-double leads Nuggets to second straight overtime win on road

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    BROOKLYN, N.Y. — To get their first win of the season, the Nuggets almost had to sacrifice their second.

    Michael Malone knew the risk he was taking. It narrowly paid off Monday night in Toronto with an overtime breakthrough. But the physical strain on his starters was visible 24 hours later as they instantly struggled to defend the perimeter against a team widely projected to be the worst in the NBA.

    The Nuggets allowed 40 first-quarter points and fell behind by as many as 17 in the second before they revived themselves again for a 144-139 win over the Nets on Tuesday — again, in overtime.

    Nikola Jokic lifted his team with another masterpiece: 29 points, 18 rebounds and 16 assists on 9-of-16 shooting. In a deja vu sequence down by three at the end of regulation, the Nuggets opted to go for two points with 33.8 seconds left. Malone called for a Jokic post-up, like Monday, which Jokic easily executed, like Monday. Then, like Monday, the Nuggets’ opponent missed a free throw, allowing them a chance to tie it in the final seconds without needing a three. Again, Denver dialed up a Jokic post-up.

    “We are trying to get there to see, are they gonna double?” the center said.

    Brooklyn didn’t. The three-time MVP backed his way to an effortless baby hook with nine ticks left.

    “They doubled him a lot tonight,” Malone said. “This was more, they waited for him to dribble the ball and then the double came. I’m so happy I get to coach Nikola because I can’t imagine game-planning for guarding that guy.”

    The only difference between their back-to-back magic acts: This time, the Nuggets left enough time to give up a wide-open corner three as time expired. Dorian Finney-Smith clanked it.

    And again, the starting lineup found itself logging extra hours at the office. Malone had already gone to an eight-man rotation in the second half of the Toronto game.

    “Obviously we found ourselves in a game last night that we kind of shortened our rotation up a little bit in the second half, feeling the pressure of trying to get the first win of the season,” he said before opening tip at Barclays Center. “And when you look at the box score after the game, especially going into the second night of a back-to-back in Brooklyn, you have your starters all at or near 40 minutes. And that’s not sustainable. We can’t do that. Game three, it was cool, man. Let’s get our first win, kind of take a deep breath. But that’s not sustainable.”

    His foresight was probably more immediate than he hoped. The Nets shot 12 of 24 from beyond the arc in the first half. When they weren’t launching, Denver’s defenders took the bait anyway, allowing drivers to get behind them and playing catch-up on rotations. After another rough bench stint, Brooklyn led 47-30 with 9:42 remaining in the half.

    The Nuggets’ collective redemption arrived in the form of a snarling, sharpshooting Russell Westbrook about an hour later. He had already been the best version of himself in the first half, zipping brilliant entry passes to Jokic and bullying his way to the foul line with the second unit (then converting the free throws). But on the last possession of the third quarter, with Denver trailing 99-93, he stepped into just his second 3-point make of the season. On the first possession of the fourth, he drove and kicked to Peyton Watson for a corner three. Tie game.

    His next pull-up 3-point attempt, ill-advised or not, gave him 22 points on 12 shots and capped a 13-2 run. It was 106-101, Denver.

    Russ giveth and Russ taketh. He shanked an uncontested dunk with his left hand during a quick 5-0 answer from Brooklyn, setting the stage for Denver’s second consecutive suspenseful finish.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • First Denver snow and freeze may hit Wednesday, but Halloween should be warmer

    First Denver snow and freeze may hit Wednesday, but Halloween should be warmer

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    Snow showers are in the forecast beginning Wednesday morning, followed by sub-freezing temperatures on Wednesday night.

    Berkeley Lake on a snowy morning. Nov. 25, 2023.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    It’s been unseasonably warm this fall, but that hot streak may end with the first Denver snow of the season, and the first freezing temperatures, on Wednesday.

    The city’s first snow showers of the season may fall Wednesday morning, according to the National Weather Service. While snow has fallen this week in parts of the Front Range, Denver has yet to see a flake. Typically, Denver gets its first snow by the end of October.

    Then, on Wednesday night, temperatures will plummet below freezing in Denver and its surrounding suburbs, with an expected low of around 27 degrees.

    Overnight cold-weather shelters have not been activated by the city. The forecast hasn’t hit the three thresholds the city has set to open the warming centers.

    If you’re worried about your crops, read CPR News’ guide to winterizing your garden. If you have sprinklers that you haven’t blown out yet, it may be too late to get an appointment. You may want to look into temporarily winterizing your irrigation system instead.

    And you may want to add some layering to your Halloween costume, or you may end up looking like an icicle. Halloween evening, which is Thursday, is expected to be in the 40s with (hopefully) dry weather, per Weather Underground’s forecast.

    Any moisture will be much appreciated, as Denver is currently in severe drought, and parts of northern Colorado are in extreme drought. Early-season snowpack is also running behind the median in the central mountains, though that can change quickly at this time of year.

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    Paolo Zialcita

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  • Denver woman bought four jumping spiders. Now she has 98

    Denver woman bought four jumping spiders. Now she has 98

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    Victoria Chaffin, a legal billing specialist by day and thrash metalhead by night, sits on the puffy couch in her Denver living room, grinning as she peers into her personal spider farm. 

    Chaffin takes a translucent plastic jar, pulsating with fruit flies. She shakes a few flies through a straw into a clear plastic cube. They unwittingly plummet toward their doom.

    Inside the cube, a clutter of baby spiders awaits. They cling to the walls, waiting for Chaffin to look away before they gobble up their dinner.

    Some of Victoria Chaffin’s many baby jumping spiders, in their box in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    She takes care to keep her new pets full. If they get too hungry, they might resort to cannibalism  — a bad habit that’s hard to shake. 

    Watching this sacrificial rite after weeks of covering political drama, crime and immigration, I wonder: What am I doing here?

    The answer is not that complicated. I met Victoria Chaffin through our Denverite Classifieds series, where Denverites meet other Denverites. In her posting, she described herself as a “full-time spider breeder looking for nerds and alt friends to enjoy outings.” 

    I am a nerd, so I called her up, and she invited me over for a spider feeding. Needing a break from hard news, I took her up on the offer to learn about spider feeding and breeding — and here I was, witnessing the drama of life and death on a coffee table.

    After the babies eat, Chaffin feeds her bigger jumping spiders a supersized snack to stave off their cannibalistic urges: silkworms. They look dead, until the spider venom penetrates them and they squirm one last time.

    Shadow, Victoria Chaffin’s young bulb jumper spider, heads towards a mealworm in his box in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    What makes a baby jumping spider a pet, and a silkworm food for that pet, when most people view them both as pests? 

    Perspective.

    “Some people keep mice as pets,” Chaffin says. “And some people feed them to their snake.”

    Most of the baby spiders are smaller than a Grape Nut. 

    They don’t seem particularly interested in leaving their cubes and hopping onto Chaffin’s hand, despite her urging. 

    When one finally does, it hangs out for a bit before leaping to the floor and disappearing into the carpet.

    When the babies grow up, Chaffin might sell them for $25 to $45, depending on their size. But for now, the babies are like her kids. And she wants the runaway spiderling — a pet for today and a long-term investment for tomorrow — back on her hand.

    Victoria Chaffin holds Shadow, a young jumping spider, in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    I spot the baby waiting on the carpet. It’s frozen, hoping we look away. And then it darts. After a short chase, Chaffin relaxes as she finally ushers the spiderling back into its home. 

    She swears the eight-legged leapers have distinct personalities. As those personalities evolve, she’s started naming them. 

    The mom, dubbed Mama, fiercely protects her babies and refuses to come out when strangers are present. Chaffin named one of the babies Shadow — a curious tween arachnid.

    Shadow, Victoria Chaffin’s young jumping spider, in his box in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Chaffin has always loved spiders.

    A couple months ago, she ordered her first four jumping spiders.

    She’s not sure if one was already pregnant, or if they bred in her City Park apartment. 

    But one of the spiders started growing… and growing… and growing.

    A jumping spider web in a terrarium in Victoria Chaffin’s apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Chaffin worried something was wrong, so she posted an image of the spider to an arachnophilic corner of Reddit. A squabble erupted: Some argued she had overfed the spider. Others claimed the spider was pregnant. 

    Soon, the spider mom settled the feud with two fuzzy egg sacs. After a few months, tiny, yellowish spiderlings crawled out, while some of their smaller siblings stayed in the sling. 

    Mama would leave yellow droplets of spider milk, rich in sugar, fats and proteins around the sac. Some tots enjoyed the snack-on-the-go, while other babies would sip milk straight from the birth canal.

    Victoria Chaffin plays with Shadow, a young jumping spider, in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    So I ask: Is a spider’s birth canal more like an anus, a vagina or both? Maybe they have the all-of-the-above orifice known as a cloaca, where the reproductive and digestive tracks merge?

    Chaffin picks up her phone.

    “Do spiders have cloacas?” Chaffin asks. The answer befuddles her. “Oh, they actually do. They do. I was wrong. OK, so their birthing canal is also their butthole.”

    But do spiders have cloacas?

    We really didn’t want to mess up a spider fact in our spider article. We got clashing explanations about spider cloacas from spider social media and other sources. ChatGPT and Google’s AI, as they often do, gave us confidently contradictory information.

    We finally reached out to Butterfly Pavilion‘s Entomology Manager, Cori Brant, to clear things up.

    “Spiders do have a stercoral pocket also called a ‘cloaca’ that connects into the hind gut before opening into the anus,” Brant wrote in an email.

    But that’s a different sort of cloaca than some vertebrates have.

    Shadow, Victoria Chaffin’s young bulb jumper spider, in his box in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    For vertebrates, the cloaca is the outlet for intestinal, urinary and genital systems. For spiders, uric acid and soil waste combine and then move through the anus. The genitals, it turns out, have nothing to do with that cloaca of a spider. 

    So, for Chaffin’s jumping spiders, their buttholes are not their birthing canals or baby spider milk troughs. 

    “Long story short, same word but very different meanings between vertebrate and invertebrate,” explained Brant. 

    There’s more to learn every day. 

    Chaffin has long been obsessed with other oddball animals.  

    She started her collection with Mango, a rotund South American “Pac-Man” frog with a massive mouth that looks like the Atari ghost eater. On this October night, Mango’s tumefied, suffering from what Chaffin calls his “piss balloon” — the bloat that happens when her frog has to take a leak. 

    Soon, he’ll be relieved, but for now, he’s awkward.

    Getting this urine-pressurized frog was the beginning of an animal arms race in Chaffin’s household. After Mango came the jumping spiders. 

    Then, Chaffin’s fiance, a Siberian asylum seeker who delivers packages for Amazon by day and lacerates himself with death metal by night, got jealous. So, he bought a tarantula.

    Aegon, Victoria Chaffin’s lizard, in his terrarium in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    In turn, Chaffin bought a skink a bashful lizard. She named him Aegon after the Game of Thrones character. 

    Now, her fiance, who declined to talk to me, is beginning to look for his next pet for their collection. 

    “I’m trying to convince him that we should wait ‘til we get a house,” Chaffin said. “We’re trying to save up for a house.”

    A big, hairy and brown tarantula, with golden stripes along her arms and back, sits in a human's hand.
    Sara Stevens, director of animal collections for the Butterfly Pavilion, holds a so-far unnamed Chaco Golden Knee tarantula. July 16, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    But if she can find a female tarantula to pair with her fiance’s, she might try another round of breeding. 

    Chaffin and her fiance are set to marry this fall. They don’t plan to have human children.

    “There’s something about giving birth,” she says, “that just creeps me out.”

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  • Denver e-bike rebates are back for the last round of 2024

    Denver e-bike rebates are back for the last round of 2024

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    Christopher Urias teaches Fany Ventura to use an e-bike at the Montbello Organizing Committee’s new Electric Bike Library. May 23, 2024.

    Want the City of Denver to help you pay for an electric bicycle? Better act fast. The last Denver e-bike rebates of the year will be available at 11 a.m. on Oct. 29.

    If you’re hoping to get a rebate, check out the website and register ahead of time. Then, be ready to act at 11 o’clock sharp.

    In August, the vouchers were claimed in a minute flat

    The program, so far costing the city $8.6 million since 2022, offers up to a $300 rebate on an e-bike or a $500 rebate off an e-cargo bike for all Denver residents. Income-qualified residents can get a steeper discount of $1,400. 

    If you’re lucky enough to get a rebate, there are 28 bike shops in Denver, Aurora, Lakewood, Colorado Springs, Wheat Ridge, Centennial and Littleton where you can shop. 

    For those who don’t qualify, the State of Colorado offers $450 tax credits you can access at participating bike shops year-round. You cannot use the city and state programs simultaneously.

    How many e-bikes has Denver helped buy?

    The program launched in April 2022. Since then 9,169 e-bike vouchers have been redeemed, according to the city’s climate office. 

    Of those, 46 percent are e-cargo bikes (kind of like the bike version of an SUV) and 53 percent are standard e-bikes. Less than 1 percent are adaptive e-bikes for people with disabilities.

    Just under half were claimed by income-qualified participants and 113 were claimed by moderate-income participants. 

    The city partners with 64 community groups that help publicize the program to people who might not be able to use the online system. Those efforts have led to 571 rebate redemptions. 

    What about Denver e-bike rebates in 2025? 

    In 2025, the city anticipates spending $2 million on e-bikes. That’s roughly the same that was available this year.

    Money for Denver e-bike rebates comes from the Climate Protection Fund, a sales tax voters passed in 2020. Each year the city has $40 million for all of its climate action programs, including the e-bike program, neighborhood environmental programs, solar power, energy efficiency and more. 

    It’s unclear what the 2025 e-bike rebate program might actually look like. After the city’s Office of Climate Action, Sustainability and Resiliency reviews data from this year’s program, changes could be made. 

    “CASR went through the same process last year after the final e-bike voucher release of the year,” explained Emily Gedeon, in an email to Denverite. “We looked through survey data from riders, talked to bike shops, and reviewed other market data.”

    This year’s program included a few changes compared to last year, including limiting the vouchers to e-bikes with UL-certified batteries and giving people more time to redeem the vouchers.

    Do you have an e-bike? Tell us your stories about getting around at [email protected]

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  • Affordable housing for seniors comes to Harvey Park in Denver

    Affordable housing for seniors comes to Harvey Park in Denver

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    Catholic Charities’ All Saints Senior Housing at 2595 S. Federal Blvd. Oct. 25, 2025.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    A new 63-unit senior housing project just opened in the Harvey Park neighborhood at 2595 S. Federal Blvd. 

    It’s the latest example of a movement that is sometimes called “Yes In God’s Backyard,” which has affordable housing developers partnering with local churches. The goal is to meet housing demand, and often provide some revenue for the churches, by building on parking lots and other church-owned land. 

    In this case, the land was near the Church of All Saints — hence the apartments’ name, “All Saints.”

    The building includes income-restricted studio and one-bedroom apartments for people over 62 years old making between 30 and 60 percent of the area median income, currently $27,400 and $54,780 for an individual.

    Catholic Charities’ All Saints Senior Housing at 2595 S. Federal Blvd. Oct. 25, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    It’s a project of Catholic Charities Housing, the charitable branch of the Archdiocese of Denver. The group operates nearly 2,000 units of affordable housing in Colorado and Wyoming. 

    All Saints was built on land owned by the Archdiocese. The city’s Department of Housing Stability provided nearly $2.5 million in financing. The Colorado Housing and Finance Authority and the Colorado Division of Housing also contributed.

    How much with this affordable housing development help?

    Denver Housing Authority leadership has said the city needs up to 60,000 more units of income-restricted housing. The city is currently financing 1,671 units at 23 sites that are under construction. Another 754 are in the planning stage.

    The new build includes community gathering spaces, rooms where residents can access mental health care, bike storage and nearby public transit. 

    “Affordable housing for our growing number of seniors is a crucial need in southwest Denver,” said City Councilmember Kevin Flynn, in a statement. “There is no more fitting location for it than here on Federal Boulevard, on a long-vacant piece of holy ground that seems it’s just been waiting for this purpose.”

    For more information about renting senior housing, including at All Saints, from Catholic Charities, go here. Here is a map of affordable housing projects citywide.

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  • Pedestrian killed in fatal Denver crash – The Cannabist

    Pedestrian killed in fatal Denver crash – The Cannabist

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    A pedestrian was killed Saturday night in a crash on the edge of Denver’s Hilltop neighborhood, police said.

    The crash happened near the intersection of East Alameda Avenue and South Colorado Boulevard, according to a 10 p.m. statement from the Denver Police Department on Saturday.

    The intersection is on the border of Denver’s Hilltop neighborhood, near the Cherry Creek and Belcaro neighborhoods.

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

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    The Cannabist Network

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  • Denver voting locations and deadlines: When to mail your ballot

    Denver voting locations and deadlines: When to mail your ballot

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    Jane Huyng processes ballots sorted for mailing by a massive machine inside the U.S. Postal Service’s sorting and shipping facility in Stapleton, Oct. 16, 2018. (Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite)

    Everybody’s heard: Elections matter. Voting is a citizen’s duty. And, in Colorado, we have this pretty efficient system of voting by mail. But if you’re planning to send your ballot through the U.S. Postal Service, you’ll need to get it in a mailbox by the end of Monday, Oct. 28.

    Where are Denver’s voting l

    If you miss that deadline, you can still drop your ballot in any official drop box, or vote in person at a polling center, through 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 5, which is Election Day. Here’s a map of Denver voting locations and more.

    What’s on the Denver ballot?

    This year, Denver voters are looking at dozens of items, from who’ll be the next president, to whether immigrants can serve in local public safety jobs, to whether you can still buy a fur coat in the city.

    As you ponder all those questions — some of which read like the paperwork that came with your credit card — well, you might need some help.

    And we know you want to vote responsibly — not just fill in bubbles for fun. (Ed. note: Bubbles are fun!)

    We spent weeks researching each ballot measure. We dove into the arguments for and against the various proposals. And we broke down the wonkiest of government jargon into language you can actually understand.

    So, check out Denverite’s voter guide for the information you need to make a solid decision.

    What if I need help?

    If you’re looking for in-person services, you can head to a Voter Service and Polling Site. Those locations can help you get a replacement ballot, access accessibility services and vote in person.

    Those are open at least two weeks before the election and until 7 p.m. on Nov. 5. 

    For more information about all of this, visit Denver Elections online.

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  • See the Nuggets’ new NBA Cup home court design for 2024 in-season tournament

    See the Nuggets’ new NBA Cup home court design for 2024 in-season tournament

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    The Nuggets have a new court for their in-season tournament home games this year, and it’s a bit more modest.

    Unlike the predominantly royal blue court that was rolled out at Ball Arena for the inaugural tournament in 2023, Denver’s floor will be yellow in the second edition of the event, now called the Emirates NBA Cup. It’s one of four courts around the league that will be painted yellow or gold, a somewhat more natural hue for hardwood.

    The baselines and sidelines surrounding the Nuggets’ court will be painted a dark shade of red. The words “MILE HIGH CITY” will be superimposed across the court in a faded yellow, while the tournament’s trophy will be featured at center-court and from the foul lines to each basket, like last year.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Metro Denver in the middle of its biggest apartment boom since the 1970s — but rent prices aren’t budging

    Metro Denver in the middle of its biggest apartment boom since the 1970s — but rent prices aren’t budging

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    Metro Denver developers pushed out more than 5,000 new apartments in the third quarter, and rents barely moved despite that high volume, according to a quarterly update from the Apartment Association of Metro Denver.

    For the past several quarters, developers have added as many apartments in three months as they would average across an entire year before 2011.

    “I have been concerned about this for some time that we would flood the market with lots of apartments and vacancies would shoot up,” said Cary Bruteig, author of the quarterly report during a press call Wednesday.

    Rising vacancies would in turn force landlords to slash rents. So far, that hasn’t happened.

    Average rents in the region rose $8 last quarter to $1,911 and are up 1.2% over the past year, below the 1.4% rate of inflation measured in September.

    The overall vacancy rate fell 0.3% to 5.3% and moved lower in 18 out of 33 submarkets. Denver, which has seen a high concentration of new multifamily projects, had the highest county vacancy rate at 5.8%. The Central Business District had the highest submarket rate at 6.6%.

    Fueled by strong migration to the state, the 1970s was a boom era for apartment construction. But after an oil bust and then a real estate bust, things calmed down in the following decades. The region averaged about 5,000 new apartments a year until 2011, when the average kicked up to around 10,000 a year, Bruteig said.

    Over the past 12 months, developers have added 21,158 new apartments. That is double the pace seen last decade and equivalent to about 5% of all the existing apartments built in the past 100 years, Bruteig said.

    Even though fewer people are moving to metro Denver from other states this decade compared to last, Bruteig said, “We see no softening in terms of people moving into new apartments in the metro area.”

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  • Immigrant workers may be the first casualties of a “war on factory farming”

    Immigrant workers may be the first casualties of a “war on factory farming”

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    Editor’s note: This article contains numerous images from a slaughterhouse.

    They came to Denver from Honduras, Colombia and Mexico. Here, they work behind a locked gate, in a plant that smells of manure, raw meat and soap. Each day, they kill, gut, butcher, package and ship roughly 1,500 sheep for Superior Farms. It’s the largest lamb slaughterhouse in the United States — and the only slaughterhouse in Denver. 

    The workers, clad in lab coats and masks, make the same cuts all day long: throats, pelts, shoulders, loins and legs. In a refrigerated room where breath turns to steam, decapitated lambs hang from hooks.

    Most meat-eaters will never see this gory scene. But this fall, Denver voters are being asked to look inside the slaughterhouse and decide: Should this place be shut down, sacrificing about 160 local jobs to further a global movement for animals and the environment? 

    That’s the question that animal rights activists have posed with Ballot Measure 309, which would ban slaughterhouses from the city of Denver. 

    The trimming line in Superior Farms’ meat processing operation in Globeville. Aug. 30, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The only slaughterhouse to ban is Superior Farms, this 37,000-square-foot plant on the northern edge of the city. Besides being a premier source of Halal meat for Muslim diets, it is a longtime employment hub for immigrants in the city.

    The activists, banding together as Pro-Animal Future, want voters to feel revolted by the slaughterhouse. They aim to recruit vegans and carnivores alike to abolish factory farming in Denver — and eventually nationwide. They argue that Superior Farms is unusually cruel and irresponsible. 

    “This is about declaring war on the factory farming industry,” said Pro-Animal Future co-founder Aidan Kankyoku. He believes that Denver voters will agree the slaughterhouse is “a violation of our moral concept of how animals should be treated.” Another measure from the same groups would also limit sales of fur in Denver.

    Aidan Kankyoku canvasses in support of ballot measures to ban slaughterhouses and fur sales in Colorado, during the annual Tennyson Street Fall Festival. Oct. 19, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The activists point to footage captured in the slaughterhouse – images that show violations of animal protection laws, animal rights lawyers allege. Previously, Superior Farms also settled a lawsuit by a former worker who alleged racism and violations of Halal practices.

    In contrast, the owners of Superior Farms tout their care of animals and support of small farmers. And many of the workers agree, saying it’s a place where decades of immigrants have found careers, ownership stakes, benefits and belonging.

    Paulina Herrera, a mother of three who immigrated from Mexico, has worked in the factory for 30 years.

    “It has given me everything,” she said, taking a break from the butcher line. “A house, food, benefits, health insurance. I own this very place. I have shares, and when I leave, I’m going to cash them in. I’m very happy to have come here.”

    Paulina Herrera gets emotional as she speaks about the possibility that a Denver ballot measure could shutter Superior Farms’ slaughterhouse and meat processing operation in Globeville, where she’s worked for years. Aug. 30, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The company denies that the hidden-camera video shows inhumane slaughtering practices and allegations of workplace racism and Halal violations.

    For Pro-Animal Future, the Denver election is part of a larger plan to shut down factory farming and ultimately the meat industry itself. Animal rights activists, including California-based foundations, have spent about a quarter-million dollars on the Denver campaigns as of mid-October. 

    Meanwhile, the opposition campaign has raked in about $1.7 million from the Washington D.C.-based Meat Institute, Superior Farms and meat trade groups.

    City Council member Darrell Watson speaks as officials and members of the local livestock and restaurant industries meet to oppose a ballot measure that would ban slaughterhouses in Denver. Sept. 11, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Numerous workers of Superior Farms are organizing against the ban, and they’ve been joined by some Democratic heavy hitters — including several Denver City Council members and the vast majority of the local Democratic Party.

    “Please understand that our workers did not ask for this,” wrote Bob Mariano, the plant’s marketing director, in an email to Denverite. 

    Weeks before the election, activists gathered in the lobby of a posh apartment building to carve pumpkins at a vegan potluck.

    They had spent their day calling voters, driving a truck with TVs displaying gory slaughterhouse footage, and pedaling the “Lamb-borghini” — an e-bike with a big fake sheep on the back.

    They want this to be just one of the first of hundreds of nationwide campaigns to abolish factory farming over the next decade.  

    “We’re really excited about ballot initiatives as a way to drive this conversation forward and make a lot of progress, whether we win or not in a given year,” Kankyoku said. And he’s increasingly confident, he said, that the Denver campaign will work. 

    Proponents of ballot measures to ban slaughterhouses and fur sales in Colorado canvass for their causes during the annual Tennyson Street Fall Festival. Oct. 19, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    For the activists, this is a moral mission: They see the meat industry as antiquated and needlessly cruel.

    But for decades, the animal rights movement has struggled to make progress. Should they encourage individuals to go vegan? What about disruptive protests? Perhaps animals should be illegally rescued from factories and feed lots? 

    In recent years, many activists have shifted away from the idea that they can convince Americans to eat less meat. And many now see it as too risky to practice sabotage and other direct action, thanks to stiffer criminal penalties for disrupting agriculture.

    Instead, they’re asking voters in places like Denver whether “factory farming” should exist at all.

    Justin Clark canvasses in support of ballot measures to ban slaughterhouses and fur sales in Colorado, during the annual Tennyson Street Fall Festival. Oct. 19, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “There’s just no better way to put Animal Freedom and factory farming in front of people, with their ‘voter hat’ on, in a literally actionable way,” Kankyoku said. 

    If the public could embrace legal cannabis and same-sex marriage after multiple ballot campaigns, the thinking goes, maybe the activists could force a conversation about animal liberation, too. 

    More than 90 percent of Americans eat meat, according to a Newsweek poll. Yet, paradoxically, nearly 50 percent might support a ban on slaughterhouses nationwide, according to another poll from the Sentience Institute, an animal ethics think tank. 

    Superior Farms’ meat processing operation in Globeville. Aug. 30, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    But this strategy brings a new challenge: Convincing voters to shut down a specific business in their own community.

    The advocates point to studies that show slaughterhouse workers face higher rates of PTSD, anxiety, addiction and domestic violence. Some believe shutting down the factory would do the workers a favor — even if it puts them out of work.

    Closing Superior Farms could eliminate 164 jobs. Many of the supporters see that as an unfortunate but necessary byproduct of their mission.

    Anne Fulton, who quit her job at a mineral store to work on the campaign, says she is concerned about the workers, but that the campaign is “not personal.” 

    “I wish there was a way to ensure that all those people who put in a lot of time at Superior Farms would be able to land on their feet and get another job, or, like, get whatever support they need,” she said. “But yeah. That’s hard.”

    Anne Fulton (from left) and Justin Clark canvass in support of ballot measures to ban slaughterhouses and fur sales in Colorado, during the annual Tennyson Street Fall Festival. Oct. 19, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The ballot measure includes promises that, if it passes, the city must prioritize former slaughterhouse workers for job training programs. The animal advocates say the workers will find new jobs, and that the Denver economy can sustain the disruption.

    Company spokesman Mariano countered that the job promises are “misleading,” saying that the “non-binding suggestions don’t guarantee anything.”

    Jose Hernandez flips ground lamb patties onto a packaging line in Superior Farms’ meat processing operation in Globeville. Aug. 30, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    As workers walk in and out of the facility, their plastic shoe covers stick to a fat-soap slurry coating the floor. 

    Denverite spoke with more than a dozen workers at the factory. They said Superior Farms is a rare source of stability in the U.S.

    Superior Farms, headquartered in Sacramento, California, has run the slaughterhouse in an industrial part of Denver’s working-class Globeville neighborhood for more than 40 years — taking over a facility that has existed for eight decades in all. The company is employee-owned, meaning workers have a share in profits from their first day on the job and are fully vested after three years.

    However, the details of Superior Farms’ wages are unclear. The company declined to share Superior Farms’ median pay or how much Chief Executive Officer Rick Stott makes. 

    “Any details we provide would be used out of context by our opponents to portray us as a ‘greedy corporation’ no matter how much context and data we include to show that our pay is highly competitive,” wrote spokesperson Mariano.  

    The workers at the factory are largely Spanish-speaking immigrants. Some are citizens who have been in the United States for decades. Others are still figuring out how to bundle up for the cold slaughterhouse and Colorado winters. 

    At lunch, they sit outside, surrounded by warehouses and the stench of dung, and eat from Tupperware containers.

    Superior Farms’ slaugterhouse and meat processing plant in Globeville. Aug. 30, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Isabel Bautista started working at Superior Farms 24 years ago. 

    In the late ‘90s, Bautista’s family immigrated from the Mexican state of Oaxaca to California. Later, she decided Colorado would be the best place to raise kids.

    Her mom already had a job at the slaughterhouse. Bautista and her brother started working at Superior Farms in 2000, and were later joined by other relatives too.

    “Almost every single employee here has a family member that either works here currently or has worked here,” Bautista said.

    Bautista has worked in nearly every department and learned to speak English, fill out paperwork and use a computer at Superior Farms. Three years ago, the company promoted her to operations manager. She credits the company for her family’s success — her son has entered the Army and her daughter has finished medical school.

    Superior Farms operations manager Isabel Bautista speaks as officials and members of the livestock and restaurant industries gather to oppose a ballot measure that would ban slaughterhouses in Denver. Sept. 11, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    As operations manager, Bautista supervises the slaughter process.

    Most days, the sheep arrive by the hundreds to the factory, where workers feed and water them before herding them into a holding pen.  Unless a sheep is sick or injured, it will be killed within 12 hours.

    “They get an electrical stun, so they’re asleep before we start the process,” Bautista says.

    A Muslim worker slits the sheep’s throats — a requirement for Halal certification.

    Each employee has a single job, like cutting off the head, removing the hooves, or stripping off the pelt. The carcass is washed to remove debris, and workers cut off visible contamination before the carcasses are cleaned and inspected once more.

    Some carcasses are sold whole, while others are butchered into cuts of meat, packaged, labeled and shipped around the country. 

    The process is humane and the animals don’t suffer, Bautista and colleagues insisted. 

    Francisco Arteaga stands among the lamb carcasses hanging in Superior Farms’ slaughterhouse and meat processing plant in Globeville. Aug. 30, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Animal rights activists say otherwise.

    Supporters of the slaughterhouse ban claim Superior Farms is a particularly bad actor.

    Just before ballots dropped, Pro Animal Future released hidden-camera footage shot inside the slaughterhouse. They say it shows workers using a non-Halal kill method, with two cuts instead of one decisive slash. They also say that the video captured improperly stunned sheep thrashing on hooks, as well as animals with broken limbs and prolapsed organs. 

    “It’s clear that Superior Farms is engaging in not only animal cruelty, as prohibited by state law, but is also in violation of the federal Humane Methods of Slaughter Act,” said Attorney Chris Carraway, a University of Denver law professor with the Animal Activist Legal Defense Project.

    The company denies that the video shows illegal activities. 

    “The video is yet another example of proponents of the slaughterhouse ban misunderstanding or misrepresenting standard, legally compliant parts of the slaughter process in an attempt to shock voters and influence an election,” wrote Superior Farms spokesperson Mariano.

    Advocates also point to the Environmental Protection Agency fining the company for failing to adequately manage the toxic chemical anhydrous ammonia in its Denver plant.  Mariano says the company voluntarily entered into an agreement with the EPA to upgrade refrigeration systems and prevent air quality violations.

    Erick Hernandez moves boxes of ground lamb towards a shipping bay in Superior Farms’ meat processing operation in Globeville. Aug. 30, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Separately, the company faced a 2021 lawsuit from Mohammed A. Sayed, who had worked as one of the company’s Halal butchers. He alleged that the company violated Halal practices by allowing non-Muslims to slaughter animals and killing the animals via electrocution. Sayed claimed that he was forced to quit after raising objections. He also alleged that Muslim workers were subject to racist slurs from other workers.

    The company said in court filings that it addressed the racist slurs, but denied Sayed’s claims about Halal violations. The parties settled the lawsuit in 2022.

    An inherently inhumane industry?

    Kankyoku, one of the architects of the Pro-Animal Future ballot measure, says the Denver slaughterhouse ban is “a drop in the bucket” of what needs to be done.

    The ballot measure, according to Colorado State University researchers, could reduce the state’s economic activity by $861 million and affect 2,787 jobs whose work is related to Superior Farms. 

    Kankyoku thinks that analysis is overblown. A Denver slaughterhouse ban would be a small but symbolic first step toward stopping all animal slaughter, he argued. “I wish that it was going to have the impact that CSU says it’s going to have,” he said. 

    Ban supporter Mickey Pardo, a post-doctorate fellow at Cornell University who studies how animals communicate, says slaughterhouses are inherently inhumane. 

    “The science is pretty clear that these animals are motivated to live, that they’re smart enough to understand what’s happening to them, that they feel fear,” he said.

    Proponents of ballot measures to ban slaughterhouses and fur sales in Colorado canvass for their causes during the annual Tennyson Street Fall Festival. Oct. 19, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    When ewes and lambs are separated, they’re distraught, crying aloud and pacing back and forth. In nature, lambs may nurse for six months. In factory farms, they are weaned far younger. Lambs raised for meat are typically slaughtered after half a year, compared to a natural lifespan between 10 and 20 years.

    “They’re going to see the other sheep, many of whom they’re most likely very closely bonded with, being killed right in front of their eyes,” Pardo says. “And they’re going to hear that and smell that and see that before it’s finally their turn.”’

    Lamb carcasses hang in Superior Farms’ slaughterhouse and meat processing plant in Globeville. Aug. 30, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The factory’s workers have been living in the shadow of the election.

     Some have attended rallies, starred in TV ads and distributed flyers arguing for their jobs.

    But on a recent Saturday,  a couple dozen left their anxiety over Ballot Measure 109 behind to play indoor soccer in Central Park. 

    At 41 years old, match organizer Francisco Arteaga was not diving for the ball like his younger coworkers. The father of three plans to work for the company until retirement.

    Superior Farms’ staff play at Central Park’s TOCA Soccer and Sports Center. Aug. 31, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Arteaga fears that he’ll lose out on health, vision and dental insurance and the retirement benefits he has worked toward for over two decades.  While the ballot measure would give former slaughterhouse workers priority in receiving workforce training from city programs, it does not guarantee anybody a new job. 

    “It’s probably back to Mexico,” Arteaga said. “Superior Farms – that’s my life.”

    Tatiana Cala, a former Superior Farms worker, was at the soccer match, too. An immigrant from Colombia, she respects the animal rights activists’ moral stance. But she hopes voters remember families like hers. 

    “I know that sacrificing animals is a very hard thing, but it’s something that is seen every day,” she says. “And it is part of the food chain, for both us, human beings, and animals.” 

    Tatiana Cala and her daughter, Nahomi, hang out on the sidelines as Superior Farms’ staff play at Central Park’s TOCA Soccer and Sports Center. Aug. 31, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Ultimately, voters will make the decision.

    Best friends Kelly Edmondson and Cameran Simpson discussed the slaughterhouse ban while their kids practiced soccer in City Park.

    Edmondson is a meat eater, though she tries to buy grass-fed beef and pasture-raised chickens. 

    Two friends smile for the camera in City Park.
    Kelly Edmondson and Cameran Simpson hang out in City Park, Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kyle Harris / Denverite

    “I support jobs for immigrants, and if that’s helping immigrants get their citizenship, I absolutely support it,” Edmondson says. “I eat meat, so I guess I support slaughterhouses in general, if the animals were killed instantly and not put through a bunch of pain and agony.”

    Simpson, on the other hand, rarely eats meat. She thinks the ballot initiative could lead people to think more critically about the impacts of eating animals.

    “I’m glad that it’s even a conversation,” Simpson said — though she worried that shutting down Superior Farms would just send the slaughterhouse to another city.

    Proponents of ballot measures to ban slaughterhouses and fur sales in Colorado canvass for their causes during the annual Tennyson Street Fall Festival. Oct. 19, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “Why not support it here — especially with our influx of immigrants trying to make a life — if it’s an opportunity for immigrants,” Edmondson said. “And the sheep are going to be killed and eaten.” 

    “I think that’s the part I’m sad about,” said Simpson. 

    By the conversation’s end, carnivore Edmondson had decided to do more research, but she was leaning toward supporting the slaughterhouse.

    Superior Farms’ staff pose for a photo after a soccer game at Central Park’s TOCA Soccer and Sports Center. Aug. 31, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Simpson thought differently. 

    “The more we talk about it, and hearing the underlying thing of just removing factory farms from our nation, actually the more I support banning it,” Simpson said. 

    “I can see that, too,” Edmondson told her.

    Election day is Nov. 5.

    For more information about the election, read Denverite’s voter guide here.

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  • New proposal to ban flavored tobacco in the works in Denver

    New proposal to ban flavored tobacco in the works in Denver

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    The Denver City Council is poised to revisit one of its most high-profile debates of recent years, with a new proposal to ban the sale of flavored tobacco.

    A group of city council members held a one-hour virtual community conversation Wednesday evening to discuss the impacts of flavored tobacco on Denver kids and a proposal to end its sale in Denver.

    Serena Gonzales-Gutierrez, Shontel M. Lewis and the office of Darrell Watson hosted the event.  A briefing on the issue is on the agenda for the council’s budget and policy committee meeting on Monday.

    The proposal will call for an end to the sale of all flavored tobacco products in the city “to protect our kids and advance health equity,” as one slide presented stated.

    It would prohibit the sale of all flavored tobacco products in Denver, including fruit and candy flavored e-cigarettes, menthol cigarettes, flavored hookah tobacco and flavored chew and pouches. If passed by the council, the measure would go into effect on April 1, 2026, to allow retail shops to come into compliance, Gonzales-Gutierrez said.

    A man vapes on the 16th Street Mall. Jan. 4, 2020. (Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite)

    Another community conversation is planned for Thursday from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the Martin Luther King Jr. Recreation Center at 3880 Newport St. in Denver.

    Flavored tobacco is marketed toward and appeals to kids, said Gonzales-Gutierrez, who holds an at-large seat. “We are seeing how this is negatively impacting kids in our communities,” she said. “For me, this is a no brainer.”

    Councilmember Serena Gonzales-Gutierrez.
    Hart Van Denburg/CPR News

    “The tobacco industry knows that those are starter products that kids like and that they get them hooked on tobacco at a very young age, creating lasting addictions and lifetimes of health issues,” said Lewis, who noted she’s an ex-smoker.

    “I actually became addicted to smoking because of the flavors. The product that I was ingesting was mint. And I love the scent of mint,” said Lewis, who represents District 8. “So I have real-life experience when it comes to this.”

    “I’m very much in favor of ending the sales of flavored tobacco. I think it disproportionately impacts African-Americans,” Councilmember Watson, who represents District 9, told CPR News in a recent interview.

    Councilmember Shontel Lewis speaks indoors at an event celebrating the opening of the yurt.
    City Councilmember Shontel Lewis.
    The office of Councilmember Shontel Lewis

    A panel of experts made the case that nicotine is a highly addictive drug, one to which adolescents and the teen brain are especially vulnerable.

    They said menthol cigarettes, which taste like mint, and other flavored tobacco are key to youth initiation.

    “They come in flavors from banana split and root beer float to menthol flavored cigarettes,” said Jodi Radke, who directs advocacy for the Rocky Mountains/Great Plains for the non-profit Campaign for Tobacco Free kids. “And banana flavored cigars.”

    She noted about 9 percent of Colorado high school students and about 7 percent of Denver high schoolers are current e-cigarette users, with flavors driving consumption.

    Radke cited data showing menthol’s “devastating” impact on a variety of diverse groups, including the Black, Latino, Asian Pacific Islander communities, with “cancer being a leading cause of death and disease in these communities. And this is why this makes this so critically important that we work on these prevention strategies.”

    Flavored tobacco for sale at a Sheridan Boulevard gas station. Oct. 27, 2021.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The industry has also targeted LGBTQ+ youth and women, she said. “We know that the use rates are higher in these populations. But also correlated to that is that we have higher numbers of those who suffer from chronic disease related to their use within these specific populations that have been marketed to,” Radke said.

    “It’s a social justice issue because of the predatory marketing to not only the Black population, not only to youth, but also other marginalized communities,” said Dr. Terri Richardson, a retired primary care physician who has worked on the issue for decades. “We can’t wait for the feds to ban menthol. There’s a slow churn of justice while people are dying.” 

    Last month, Denver’s school board passed a proclamation calling on the City Council to pass a ban on flavored tobacco. 

    Three years ago the Council passed a similar proposal, which was vetoed by then-mayor Michael Hancock. He said he thought a statewide or metro area ban would be a better approach. A few months after his veto, Colorado lawmakers considered such a measure, before it failed.

    An estimated 5,000 Colorado adults die from smoking-related illnesses each year. It also costs the state more than $2 billion annually on health care costs for illnesses caused by smoking.

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has described cigarette smoking as the leading cause of preventable death and disability in the U.S.

    Over many decades, the tobacco industry targeted Black and Hispanic neighborhoods in Denver with extensive advertising and other efforts to encourage consumption of its products. A CPR News report last year uncovered numerous documents establishing the link.

    A man in a plaid button-up looks like he's crying, eyes red and staring into the middle distance.
    Mayor Mike Johnston. July 24, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Denver’s Mayor Mike Johnston could be more willing than his predecessor to back a flavor ban.

    “I had said before [that] I’d be willing to support it if the council wants to do it,” Johnston told CPR News in December. “I think that things that we can do to reduce usage, particularly to reduce adolescent usage, we know has a major impact. We know often people start smoking early in life. That’s how you develop a habit that’s hard to kick.”

    The last time the proposal came up, it sparked a spirited debate with education, public health, and anti-tobacco groups and other advocates facing off with businesses like vape shops and convenience stores and the industry that makes and sells flavored tobacco products. 

    Grier Bailey, executive director of the Colorado Wyoming Petroleum Marketers Association, which represents 2,200 retailers, including convenience stores, told CPR News last month that his group opposes flavor bans.

    He said many flavored products, like some chewing tobaccos, are mostly used by adults, not young people.

    “The presence of flavors themselves aren’t necessarily the problem. It’s how you market it. And are you generally trying to entice adult consumers or kids?” he said.

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  • Onions removed from Illegal Pete’s, Taco Bell menus due to ‘abundance of caution’ amid McDonald’s outbreak

    Onions removed from Illegal Pete’s, Taco Bell menus due to ‘abundance of caution’ amid McDonald’s outbreak

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    The Denver-based chain may be one of many businesses affected by onion recall. There’s no sign anyone was sickened.

    Illegal Pete’s location on Colfax Avenue, in City Park West. Oct. 23, 2024.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Editor’s note: This article was updated Oct. 25, 2024 to note that Illegal Pete’s has restored onions to its menu, using a new supplier that has not been connected to the E. coli outbreak at McDonald’s.

    Local chain restaurants including Illegal Pete’s and Taco Bell are temporarily removing onions from its menu amid a recall and concerns about an E. coli outbreak at fast-food giant McDonald’s.

    Illegal Pete’s received notice from its supplier on Wednesday of an onion recall due to “potential E.coli contamination,” according to Illegal Pete’s officials. The Denver-based burrito chain also posted signs telling customers about the change. By Friday, the chain had sourced onions from a new supplier and had returned to its regular menu.

    There is no sign that anyone has been sickened, and company officials believe that their onion supplier issued the recall as a precaution. It may be one of many restaurants to be affected by recalls after an outbreak at McDonald’s stores was linked to dozens of illnesses and one death in Colorado.

    In the south Denver metro, at least one Taco Bell operated by Alvarado Restaurant Nation similarly said that it was temporarily not serving onions “out of an abundance of caution.”

    A sign on the door of the Illegal Pete’s Colfax Avenue location says a national onion recall has canceled a bunch of their menu items, including beans, green chili and salsas. Oct. 23, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Illegal Pete’s typically uses onions from the same source, Taylor Farms, that has been linked to the McDonald’s outbreak, as do many other restaurants. However, Illegal Pete’s was not necessarily directly exposed to the outbreak, according to president and founder Pete Turner. Illegal Pete’s has since brought in onion products form different growers.

    “It’s important to note that we don’t use a diced/sliced white onion product that has been identified as the source at McDonald’s,” Turner wrote in an email to Denverite. The company instead buys peeled white onions from Taylor Farms through the distributor US Farms.

    “Taylor Farms has issued a blanket recall on their white onion product from a certain lots, as seen in the attached letter. We believe Taylor Farms is doing this through an abundance of caution  and we agree with the decision,” Turner wrote.

    After hearing about the recall, Illegal Pete’s management contacted each of its stores and told managers to follow the recall process, disposing of the onions and any food prepped with the onions.

    State health officials said they are unaware of any reports of illness linked to Illegal Pete’s. Local health officials didn’t immediately respond to comment. Alvarado Restaurant Nation couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. US Farms and Taylor Farms didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Editor’s note: This article was updated on Oct. 23, 2024, at 7 p.m. with additional information.

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  • More 911 calls may get a mental health co-responder in Denver

    More 911 calls may get a mental health co-responder in Denver

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    The Support Team Assisted Response van. June 8, 2020.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Since it launched in 2020, Denver’s mental distress response unit has expanded exponentially. 

    After starting with a skeleton crew and just one van, Denver’s Support Team Assisted Response, or STAR, now has a fleet of eight vans and responds to nonviolent crises citywide. 

    The police alternative is set to expand again in 2025, thanks to a grant from an external group and a bump in city funding, although Mayor Mike Johnston has denied a request for additional money beyond that.

    STAR started four years ago as advocates across the city called for police reform. Through STAR, paramedics and mental health professionals are sent to respond to nonviolent crises, especially people who are in distress or experiencing a mental health issue. Staff are trained in medical assessment, crisis intervention and de-escalation.

    The new $1.5 million grant will help STAR continue its partnerships for one year with the nonprofits Servicios de la Raza and WellPower, which help to operate the program.

    The one-year grant will allow WellPower to hire a behavioral health clinical supervisor and “create a more organized, responsive, and effective operational structure for STAR,” among other things. WellPower is a nonprofit recovery and treatment center in Denver.

    Caring for Denver has awarded a grant to STAR every year since it started in 2020. The grants have averaged roughly $650,000 a year, so this year’s grant represents a significant expansion. The Denver City Council approved the grant on Monday. 

    Caring For Denver is a nonprofit that awards grants for mental health and substance misuse prevention. It was established by Denver voters in 2018 and is funded through local sales tax revenue.

    STAR’s new grant comes as Denver City Council struggles to find more city funding for the popular service

    The service has been busy since its debut, with monthly STAR-eligible calls increasing each year. But supply has not kept up with demand for the program. The team could only respond to about half of the 15,000 emergency calls that were eligible for a STAR response last year, and not for lack of trying. 

    STAR officials said they could increase their response rates through more funding, which would allow the service to hire more staff, purchase more vehicles for its fleet and become a 24/7 service. While the program expanded rapidly between 2020 and 2023, this year marked a period of stagnancy for STAR. 

    The council has been open to requests for money, but its last effort to substantially increase STAR’s budget failed.

    For the 2025 budget cycle, Mayor Mike Johnston proposed an initial $6.9 million for STAR, up from this year’s $6.4 million allocation, which he said would allow them to hire a public health analyst and a behavioral health manager.

    In response, council members asked for an extra $50,000 for STAR, which would help build a new database system and purchase a new van to add to the fleet. 

    In Johnston’s revised budget released on Friday, he denied the request, saying that his initial budget would “improve the efficiency of current operations to support more STAR calls during operating hours.”

    “Additionally, in the spring, we are anticipating a report from Urban Institute, a third-party evaluator, which will include a study on costs, long-term outcomes, and a scaling assessment,” he wrote. “This report, which we will share with Council, will be invaluable as we plan for future expansions of the program.”

    City council members will be able to propose and vote on amendments to the budget by Nov. 4. The mayor can veto those amendments, but Denver City Council can override that veto if nine members vote to do so.

    Denver’s $1.76 billion budget is growing by only 0.6 percent next year, the smallest growth seen since 2011. Spending on homelessness and new immigrants, two issues that demanded much of Denver’s budget in 2023, is decreasing. Johnston’s office attributed budgetary woes to a slowdown in consumer spending.

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  • Rezoned for redevelopment: Denver City Council approves plan to transform area around Ball Arena

    Rezoned for redevelopment: Denver City Council approves plan to transform area around Ball Arena

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    DENVER — The Denver City Council on Monday approved a handful of key elements needed for Kroenke Sports and Entertainment (KSE) to advance its redevelopment plans for Ball Arena.

    In total, Denver City Council voted on five different agenda items related to the redevelopment.

    KSE plans to transform roughly 70 acres surrounding Ball Arena into a mixed-use development, complete with apartments, retail and office space. In order to do so, the land first needed to be rezoned.

    Specifically, KSE was seeking an exemption from the view plane in that area, which dictates how high buildings can be. The goal is to protect mountain views.

    In the only vote that was not unanimous, the Denver City Council exempted KSE, allowing them to build higher than the view plane.

    Officials with KSE told Denver7 that without this approval vote on the view plane, they would have withdrawn their plans.

    Kroenke Sports & Entertainment

    The only ‘no’ vote from the council regarding the view planes came from Councilmember Amanda Sawyer, who represents District 5.

    “So the question is, are we setting a precedent here? I understand that this specific view plane is defunct, then we should have repealed the whole thing. But allowing for a precedent where we are piercing a view plane where in fact you do have a right to that view, it’s in our zoning code,” Sawyer said before voting.

    Other councilors considered the increase in affordable housing units that comes with constructing higher buildings. KSE has pledged to allot 18% of its units as affordable housing.

    “The basic idea is the more they can build, the more affordable [housing] that they can build,” said Councilmember Chris Hinds before the public hearings. “If they get the height extension, they can build 6,000 units. Eighteen percent of that is 1,080 units. And so, having 1,080 units is pretty substantial when we’re in an affordable housing crisis.”

    More than two dozen people signed up to express their opinions to council members on Monday evening.

    “The unique beauty of Denver will be compromised forever with the addition of approximately 40 high-rise buildings blocking the view of the mountains,” said Casey Pitinga.

    Other members of the public in support of the plan said it would ease the affordable housing issues in the city while creating a place designed for people, not cars.

    Denver

    Denver City Council to vote Monday on Ball Arena redevelopment plans

    Matt Mahoney, a representative of KSE, spoke with Denver7 about the concerns regarding parking in the area since the redevelopment will essentially transform the large parking lots surrounding Ball Arena into a community. He said there will still be parking available for people who drive to games at Ball Arena. There are also plans for parking garages above ground and underground.

    Most of the parking will be shared, according to Mahoney.

    He said the transformation could increase the number of parking spots in the area since it will utilize more space. However, KSE hopes the trend it has seen — where people choose other methods of transportation to commute to Ball Arena — continues to grow in the next few years.

    Mahoney said they hope to break ground on the project in either 2026 or 2027. He did not provide an exact dollar amount for the project as of Monday evening.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

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  • Denver City Council makes room for new skyscrapers around Nuggets, Avs arena

    Denver City Council makes room for new skyscrapers around Nuggets, Avs arena

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    The Denver City Council on Monday cleared the way for Denver Nuggets and Colorado Avalanche owner Stan Kroenke to build new skyscrapers on the expanse of parking lots around Ball Arena where those teams play.

    They also ensured the teams will stay on Kroenke-owned land in central Denver for another quarter century.

    The ability to construct buildings as tall as 30 or 40 stories around the arena is a critical component of plans to greatly expand downtown Denver. That density will provide room for up to 6,000 new apartments and condos in a city desperate for more housing, according to Matt Mahoney, senior vice president for development at Kroenke Sports and Entertainment.

    “We are committed to downtown. Our company offices downtown. Our teams win championships downtown,” Mahoney told council members Monday night. “Our plan is a pedestrian-focused development, placing a priority on open space and people, not cars.”

    View protections pierced

    The first in a series of six bills related to the future of the 70-acre Ball property that the council voted on Monday amended the city code to provide an exemption to the Old City Hall view plane.

    That view plane is essentially an invisible triangle the caps building heights on the properties that fall within it. It’s a legal mechanism to protect westward views from a specific point on the ground at the intersection of 14th and Larimer streets where the city’s original city hall once stood.

    City planning and legal staff informed council members that the view plane is already largely defunct. The Auraria Higher Education Center campus buildings along Speer Boulevard — built by a state agency exempt from city rules — have already blocked it out.

    That was reason enough for some council members to vote for the exemption Kroenke and company were seeking even if they had concerns about the broader impact on mountain views.

    “I’ve come to the conclusion that I am going to vote yes on this exemption … because of the fact that this view plane no longer exists,” Councilman Kevin Flynn said. “I would have actually preferred the (Community Planning and Development) had come to us and just said repeal this view plane.”

    Flynn voted with the majority in a 10-1 decision to allow properties with a specialized zoning to pierce the plane.

    The council also approved rezoning the arena property. The land was already zoned for buildings as tall as eight stories in places, according to city planning staff, but the specialty zoning that the council unanimously signed off on Monday allows for buildings that are much taller in exchange for the inclusion of more affordable housing on site.

    While the view plane vote allows Kroenke Sports and Entertainment and its namesake billionaire owner to move closer to its goals, some neighbors from the Lower Downtown neighborhood had their hopes of preserving their largely unobstructed views of the Rocky Mountains dashed.

    Casey Pitinga was among the residents of the Larimer Place condo tower at 1551 Larimer St. that urged council members to vote no on the view plane changes. She argued that it was not just her building that would be impacted by the appearance of new skyscrapers west of downtown. Businesses that tout rooftop views — including the recently expanded Colorado Convention Center which added a terrace as part of its $233 million expansion completed last year — could also be hurt, she said.

    “Most importantly, the unique beauty of Denver will be compromised forever,” Pitinga said.

    Amanda Sawyer was the one council member who sided with those neighbors. She noted that residents of her eastern Denver district benefit from a view plane that protects westward views from Cranmer Park.

    “It’s not a precedent I am willing to set,” she said of amending those legal protections even for a development she acknowledged may be something that could benefit the city.

    Benefit agreements inked with community group and the city

    An overwhelming majority of speakers who testified during a public hearing covering the rezoning spoke in favor of allowing dense development on the land and the new housing that it is expected to bring.

    “It’s exactly the type of project we need as a city,” Denver resident Matthew Larsen said. “It’s dense. It’s infill development. We need projects like this to meet our greenhouse gas goals in the state.”

    KSE last week signed a detailed community benefits agreement with a committee representing nearby neighborhoods and community organizations. That agreement, which was created with support from city leaders but independent of the authority of the city, includes a bundle of specific obligations that KSE must fulfill.

    Those include dedicating $3 million to programs, internships, and scholarships for young people who are from surrounding neighborhoods, are Indigenous or are from families that were displaced from the historic Auraria neighborhood that is now home to the arena and the neighboring higher education campus.

    La Alma-Lincoln Park resident Simon Tafoya co-chaired the committee that brokered that deal with KSE. In comments Monday night, he delved into some of the specifics including a guranteed that 50 housing units built in the forthcoming neighborhood will be reserved for people making 30% of the area median income. That’s $27,000 per year for a single person and $39,100 for a family of four.

    Councilwoman Jamie Torres is a descendant of people displaced from the Auraria neighborhood. She noted how important that agreement was to her constituents and her comfortability in supporting the package of bills.

    “The city did not dipalce 900 residents in the 1970s for us to build a shiny neighborhood that was inaccessible to them,” she said. “I could not be a part of something like that.”

    The council also approved a bill cementing the city’s own development agreement with KSE.

    That sets requirements including mandating that 18% of all new housing built on the Ball lots been reserved as income-restricted affordable housing. That figure exceeds the city’s existing affordable housing requirements by at least 3% and could result in 1,080 new units of affordable housing, according to city planners and KSE officials.

    The city ensured the agreement mandates that the affordable units be spread across the property instead of concentrated in one area, according to senior city planner Tony Lechuga.

    Property tax plan leaves some council members uneasy

    The council approved three other measures related to Kroenke’s ball arena plans before calling it a night on Monday.

    The very last of those bills amend an existing arena agreement between the city and KSE tying the Nuggets and Avalanche to the property until 2050.

    The chamber, largely filled with KSE staff members as the final was cast after 10 p.m., enrupted in applause when that passed unanimously.

    Another bill approved at the meeting extended the timelines for a development agreement governing the neighboring River Mile property, also owned in part by Kroenke. That agreement also now runs until the middle of 2050, matching with the Ball Arena timeline.

    The city agreed to vesting language that provides some zoning certainly for both properties for the next 26 years. Manhoney emphasized that KSE is approaching the combined 130 acres as one interconnected neighborhood.

    He acknowledged that Elitch Gardens Theme and Water Park will be moved as part of the company’s long-term development plans though a landing place for the park has not yet been determined.

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  • 29-year-old arrested for attempted murder after shooting police officer on Denver’s Auraria Campus, police say – The Cannabist

    29-year-old arrested for attempted murder after shooting police officer on Denver’s Auraria Campus, police say – The Cannabist

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    A 29-year-old man was arrested Monday on suspicion of attempted murder after an early morning shooting on Denver’s Auraria Campus, police said.

    Aaron Verner was arrested on suspicion of two counts of attempted murder and assault after shooting an Auraria Campus police officer in the arm, according to the Denver Police Department.

    The shooting happened about 1:18 a.m. Monday after two Auraria Campus police officers approached someone who was breaking into a car, according to a news release from the campus police department.

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

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  • Cocktail power couple to open cheeky new bar near Mission Ballroom – The Cannabist

    Cocktail power couple to open cheeky new bar near Mission Ballroom – The Cannabist

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    If you’re a cocktail drinker in Denver, you’ve likely tried a libation with a dash of creativity from Alex Jump and Stuart Jensen.

    Jump spent four years as the bar manager for Death & Co. in Denver before starting a consulting business and emerging as a leader in the low- and non-alcoholic beverage movement. Jensen is co-owner of local drinkeries Curio and Roger’s Liquid Oasis, and was part of the ownership group at the now-defunct Brass Tacks in LoDo.

    Together Jump and Jensen, who got married earlier this year, are a cocktail power couple shaking up the local scene, and in 2025, they’ll debut their first concept together.

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

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  • Broncos return from long weekend as big favorites over Panthers: “There’s still a lot of things we have to be better at” – The Cannabist

    Broncos return from long weekend as big favorites over Panthers: “There’s still a lot of things we have to be better at” – The Cannabist

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    The Broncos delivered a beatdown and earned a breather.

    Now they’ve returned from a long weekend and find themselves in relatively unfamiliar territory as they launch back into a regular schedule.

    They’re big favorites in Week 8. As of Monday morning, Sean Payton’s team is favored by 7.5 points over Carolina in Sunday’s game at Empower Field.

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

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  • Things to do in Denver this weekend, Oct. 18-20

    Things to do in Denver this weekend, Oct. 18-20

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    By Cassidy Ritter, Special to Denverite

    Happy weekend, Denverites!

    Halloween and fall festivals are in full force with a fall fest and pet parade in Tennyson, the Broadway Halloween parade and a “Hocus Pocus” showing at Halcyon. 

    Other happenings include Hardy performing at Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre and ThemFaire, a transgender & nonbinary vendor market.

    Whatever you do, make it a great weekend!

    Notes: Events with an * are taking place virtually or outdoors.

    Friday, Oct. 18

    Just for fun

    Classic Game Club. Smoky Hill Library, 5430 S. Biscay Circle, Centennial. 1-2:30 p.m. Free. Advanced registration is required.

    Meet Author Cynthia Swanson. Koelbel Library, 5955 S. Holly St., Centennial. 2-3:30 p.m. Free. Advanced registration is required.

    Cocktails and Conversations with Filmmaker & Speaker Denise Soler. Clayton Hotel, 233 Clayton St. 4-6 p.m. $10-$15. Advanced registration is required.

    SchadenBee: Adult Spelling Bee. Waldschänke Ciders & Coffee, 4100 Jason St. 6:30 p.m. Free.

    Comedy and theater

    Carlos Mencia. Comedy Works South, 5345 Landmark Place, Greenwood Village. 7:15 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. $31-$50.

    Arts, culture, and media

    ¡Viva La Causa! Long Live the Cause!: The Art of Change Opening. History Colorado Center, 1200 N. Broadway. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free (visitors 18 and under, members), $15 (adults).

    Living Rooms. Union Hall, 1750 Wewatta St., Suite 144. Noon-6 p.m. Free. 

    Flatstock 99 Artist Talk and Q&A. Venture X- Denver, 2590 Welton St., Suite 200. 6-7 p.m. Free.

    Zine Fest 2024: A Celebration of Independent Voices. Access Gallery, 909 Santa Fe Dr. 6-8 p.m. Free.

    Spooky Cinema Series: Hocus Pocus. Halcyon, 245 Columbine St. 8:30 p.m. $25.

    Eat and drink

    Date Night: Feed Your Autumn Appetite. Stir Cooking School, 3215 Zuni St. 6:30-9:30 p.m. $220 (per couple). Advanced registration is required.

    Music and nightlife

    *Gryffin. Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre, 18300 W. Alameda Parkway, Morrison. 7:30 p.m. Prices vary.

    Quarters of Change. Meow Wolf, 1338 1st St. 8 p.m. $25.75.

    Sports and fitness

    Colorado Avalanche vs. Anaheim Ducks. Ball Arena, 1000 Chopper Circle. 7 p.m. Prices vary.

    Saturday, Oct. 19

    Just for fun

    *International Archaeology Day. Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre, 18300 W. Alameda Parkway, Morrison. 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Free.

    *Witches & Warlocks on the Lake. Evergreen Lake House, 29612 Upper Bear Creek Road, Evergreen. Starting at 9:30 a.m. $35 (with your own watercraft), $45 (if renting a board and life jacket).

    *Fall Fest and Pet Parade. César Chávez Park and Tennyson neighborhood, 4147 Utica St. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Free.

    Halloween Art Market. 2240 S. Broadway. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Free.

    *Westy Fest 2024. Westminster City Park Soccer Fields, 10455 N. Sheridan Blvd., Westminster. Noon-8 p.m. Free.

    Halloween Extravaganza + Mystikal Makers’ Market. Aspen Grove Shopping Center, 7301 S. Santa Fe Dr., Littleton. 2-8 p.m. Free.

    *Broadway Halloween Parade. Along Broadway in Denver. Starting at 6 p.m. Free.

    Kids and family

    Bug-A-Boo. Butterfly Pavilion, 6252 W. 104th Ave., Westminster. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Free (members and children under 2), $10.95 (children 2-12), $13.95 (seniors 65 and older), $15.95 (adults). All ages.

    The Learning Lab: Calaveras de azúcar/Sugar Skulls. Ross-Broadway Branch Library, 33 E. Bayaud Ave. 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Ideal for ages 2-12, when accompanied by an adult.

    *Pumpkin Palooza. Quebec Square, 7305 E. 36th Ave. Noon-2 p.m. Free. All ages.

    Hispanic and Latino Heritage Month: Recuérdame: Faux Tin Frame Art. Montbello Branch Library, 12955 Albrook Dr. 1-3 p.m. Free. Ideal for ages 5 and up.

    *Trunk or Treat on Mainstreet. O’Brien Park, 19560 Victorian Dr., Parker. 3-5:15 p.m. Free. Advanced registration is required for timed entry.

    Spooky Streets. SouthGlenn, 6851 S. Gaylord St., Centennial. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Free. All ages. 

    Comedy and theater

    Carlos Mencia. Comedy Works South, 5345 Landmark Place, Greenwood Village. 7:15 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. $31-$50.

    Art, culture, and media

    Living Rooms. Union Hall, 1750 Wewatta St., Suite 144. Noon-6 p.m. Free. 

    Lumonics Immersed. Lumonics Light & Sound Gallery, 800 E. 73rd Ave., Unit 11. 8-10 p.m. $15-$28.52.

    Eat and drink

    *City Park Farmers Market. City Park Esplanade, East Colfax Avenue and Columbine Street. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. No cover. 

    *Glendale Farmers Market. 4601 E. Kentucky Ave. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. No cover.

    *University Hills Farmers Market. University Hills Plaza, 2500 S. Colorado Blvd. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. No cover. 

    Beetlejuice Tea. Brown Palace Hotel and Spa, 321 17th St. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Prices vary. Advanced registration is recommended.

    Fresh Pasta Workshop: Raviolis, Agnolotti & Tortellini. Stir Cooking School, 1801 Wynkoop St., Unit 175. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. $129 (per person). Advanced registration is required.

    Culinary Date Night: Italy. Cook Street, 43 W. 9th Ave. 6-9:30 p.m. $132 (per person). Advanced registration is required.

    Music and nightlife

    Chamber Music Concert. Decker Branch Library, 1501 S. Logan St. 2-3:30 p.m. Free.

    *Troyboi. Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre, 18300 W. Alameda Parkway, Morrison. 6 p.m. Prices vary.

    Iron Maiden. Ball Arena, 1000 Chopper Circle. 7:30 p.m. Prices vary.

    Carrie Newcomer with Pianist Gary Walters. Swallow Hill Music, 71 E. Yale Ave. 8 p.m. $40.13 (members), $45.28 (non-members). 

    JKYL & HYDE. Meow Wolf, 1338 1st St. 9 p.m. $30.75.

    Bao Buns & Boogies. Boa Brewhouse Tea Room, 1317 14th St. 10:30 p.m. Prices vary.

    Sports and fitness

    *Austin FC vs. Colorado Rapids. Watch on Apple TV. 7:15 p.m.

    Sunday, Oct. 20 

    Just for fun

    ThemFaire. Rainbow Dome, 1660 Federal Blvd. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Donation-based entry fee.

    *Pumpkin Patch & Painting Party. Denver Beer Co. locations Noon-2 p.m. and 3-5 p.m. $25 (includes 1 pumpkin and 1 draft beer).

    Kids and family

    Bug-A-Boo. Butterfly Pavilion, 6252 W. 104th Ave., Westminster. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Free (members and children under 2), $10.95 (children 2-12), $13.95 (seniors 65 and older), $15.95 (adults). All ages.

    *Trunk or Treat. Spirit of Hope Lutheran Church, 7060 Ponderosa Dr., Parker. 1-3 p.m. Free. All ages.

    Comedy and theater

    Today’s Topics with John Novosad. Comedy Works Downtown, 1226 15th St. 7 p.m. $14.

    Fantasy Fangirls. Comedy Works South, 5345 Landmark Place, Greenwood Village. 7 p.m. $30-$55.

    Eat and drink

    *South Pearl Street Farmers Market. 1400 and 1500 blocks of Old South Pearl Street between Arkansas Avenue and Iowa Avenue. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. No cover.

    Fall Desserts: The GREAT Pumpkin. Stir Cooking School, 3215 Zuni St. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. $109 (per person). Advanced registration is required.

    Swap & Sip: A Halloween Costume Exchange. Spirit Hound Denver, 3622 Tejon St. Noon-2 p.m. Free.

    5280 Dines. The Brighton, 3403 Brighton Blvd. 6-9 p.m. $75.

    Music and nightlife

    *Hardy. Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre, 18300 W. Alameda Parkway, Morrison. 6:45 p.m. Prices vary.

    A Better Trip with Shane Mauss (Late Show). Meow Wolf, 1338 1st St. 8 p.m. $35.75.

    All Weekend

    Just for fun

    *Pumpkin Harvest Festival 2024. Four Mile Historic Park, 715 S. Forest St. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $22-$45.

    *Fright Fest. Elitch Gardens Theme & Water Park, 2000 Elitch Circle. 6:10-9:40 p.m. (Friday), 6:40-9:40 p.m. (Saturday) and 6:10-8:40 p.m. (Sunday). Starting at $149.99.

    13th Floor Haunted House. 13th Floor Denver, 3400 E. 52nd Ave. 7-9:45 p.m. Starting at $32.49. Advanced registration is required for timed entry. 

    *Magic of the Jack O’Lanterns. The Hudson Gardens, 6115 S. Santa Fe Dr., Littleton. 7-10:45 p.m. (Fridays and Saturdays), 7-9:45 p.m. (Sunday). $21.99 (kids ages 3-12), $26.99 (ages 13 and up).

    Kids and family

    *Corn Maze. Denver Botanic Gardens Chatfield Farms, 8500 W. Deer Creek Canyon Road. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Free-$18. Advanced registration is required. All ages.

    Discovering Teen Rex. Denver Museum of Nature & Science, 2001 Colorado Blvd. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Free (members), $20.95 (ages 3-18), $22.95 (seniors 65 and older), $25.95 (adults). All ages.

    Wild Things: The Art of Maurice Sendak. Denver Art Museum, 100 W. 14th Ave. Parkway. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free-$35. All ages.

    Art, culture, and media

    Special Deliveries. History Colorado Center, 1200 Broadway. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free (children and members), $5 (children), $15 (adults).

    Movements Toward Freedom. MCA Denver, 1485 Delgany St. 7:30-10 p.m. (Friday), 10 a.m.-5 p.m. (Saturday and Sunday). Free-$14.

    Worth the Drive

    Sunday

    An Evening with Carrie Newcomer. eTown Hall, 1535 Spruce St., Boulder. 7-9:30 p.m. Starting at $41.56.

    All weekend

    *Fall Festival Pumpkin Patch. Lone Creek Farms, 3879 N. State Highway 83, Franktown. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. $24.95-$26.95.

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