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Tag: Denver

  • Nikola Jokic triple-double, Michael Porter Jr. 31-point game lead Nuggets to win over Knicks

    Nikola Jokic triple-double, Michael Porter Jr. 31-point game lead Nuggets to win over Knicks

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    After a successful week on the road, the defending NBA champions treated Ball Arena to a quintessential Denver Nuggets game.

    Michael Porter Jr. continued his hot streak with 31 points on 13-of-16 shooting, and Nikola Jokic amassed 30 points, 14 rebounds and 11 assists in a 113-100 win over the New York Knicks on Thursday night.

    Jamal Murray added 23 points before going to the locker room early with an apparent leg injury in the last minute of regulation, as Denver (49-21) was pulling away for its 13th win in 15 games since the All-Star break.

    “Just turned his ankle a little bit,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said, not seeming too concerned despite the prolonged amount of time Murray took to get up after an awkward landing.

    The Nuggets and Thunder are tied atop the Western Conference standings, though Oklahoma City possesses the edge in win percentage as well as the head-to-head tiebreaker.

    Porter is averaging 21 points per game since the break.

    When they visited Madison Square Garden at the end of a five-game January road trip, the Nuggets sleep-walked through their worst assist-to-turnover game (20 to 19) of the season. New York’s formidable defense stood tall, with OG Anunoby snatching six steals.

    “When you get your (butt) kicked,” Malone said pregame Thursday, “they have our full attention.”

    Except this time, the Knicks were wrapping up a four-game Western Conference trip, and Anunoby (among other key players) was out with an injury.

    Denver’s extraordinary starting five feasted. Jokic was one rebound shy of his 22nd triple-double of the season by halftime. Porter had a 6-for-6 shooting half, reminiscent of his recent perfect game in Los Angeles. Murray combined unlikely off-hand finishing with adventurous play-making. Aaron Gordon spun around defenders for a transition dunk. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope minimized Jalen Brunson as much as possible, keeping his 26 points to 23 shot attempts.

    “I just really, sincerely hope that the national media and everybody else following this great league really takes into account the great job he does every night,” Malone said. “We see it. I see it every day. … But he is an incredible defensive player You don’t stop a guy like Jalen Brunson. He had two 40-point games on this road trip. But I thought he made him work for everything tonight.”

    In a particularly breathtaking third-quarter sequence, Gordon initiated a set from the left wing by passing to Jokic, who was stepping up toward the top of the key. He thrives when he can operate from the middle of the floor with his back to the basket. From the right wing, Porter motioned to his right to push his defender (Donte DiVincenzo) back a step, to the same level as Jokic — basically creating a screen for himself. Porter slid back to the left, received a dribble handoff as DiVincenzo went underneath Jokic, and shot-faked as DiVincenzo left his feet to contest. Gordon’s man, Josh Hart, was stuck in no man’s land as Gordon slipped to the basket. Porter passed to him, and Gordon kicked to Caldwell-Pope in the corner as Brunson collapsed. Two extra passes, three points.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Lakewood activists want to force developers to create open space and parks when they build apartments | Denverite

    Lakewood activists want to force developers to create open space and parks when they build apartments | Denverite

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    Cathy Kentner solicits signatures for her petition to oppose development at Lakewood’s Belmar Park, outside of the Belmar Library. March 21, 2024.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    On Thursday morning, Lakewood resident and former mayoral candidate Cathy Kentner stood outside the Belmar Library collecting signatures for a petition to change the city’s rules and force developers to create open space and parks whenever new, multifamily projects are created. 

    Lakewood has become a “concrete jungle” over the past decade, she said, pointing to new developments at Belmar and on West Colfax. 

    The proposed change to the law would likely slow down growth in the city, a goal of Kentner and others who argue that development is compromising the environment, disrupting the community and upending what made Lakewood a desirable community to live in to begin with: lots of green space.   

    Cathy Kentner watches as Josh Molyneux signs her petition opposing development at Lakewood’s Belmar Park, outside of the Belmar Library. March 21, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The Lakewood law currently states: “All residential developers shall provide a minimum of 5.5 acres of park area per 1,000 anticipated population or cash in lieu thereof.” 

    Kentner wants voters to strike the cash buyout that she argues gives developers an affordable way to shirk their responsibility to keep Lakewood green. 

    The signature drive has launched as the city weighs approving Texas-developer Kairoi Residential’s 412-unit apartment complex, on the site of an old office building, near Belmar Park.

    A group, Save Belmark Park, has been trying to stop the development, arguing it would disrupt unprotected habitat for 230 species of birds.

    Kentner says that if the developer was required to create open space or pocket parks instead of buying out of that responsibility, 69 nearby mature trees could be saved. 

    “People can see that this is unhealthy, not sustainable, unaffordable, and destroying the quality of life that we all move to Lakewood to enjoy,” Kentner said. 

    Kairoi Residential, a $9.7 billion company, has not immediately responded to Denverite’s requests for comment on this story, but we will update it if we hear back.

    Managing growth and a housing affordability crisis has become a statewide issue.

    Democratic lawmakers have been trying to address a housing affordability crisis and create mechanisms for new residential development, including passing policies targeting what they call local “anti-growth” policies. In response to state laws, Lakewood reversed its own “strategic growth” policy last year

    Meanwhile, Denver metro housing activists have been fighting to increase density, pointing to multiple studies demonstrating fewer regulations and more market-rate housing lead to lower home prices. They look to cities like Houston where fewer housing regulations have led to more affordable homes. 

    Cathy Kentner speaks to Robert Smith as she solicits signatures for her petition to oppose development at Lakewood’s Belmar Park, outside of the Belmar Library. March 21, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Chris Miller, a member of the housing activist group YIMBY Denver, says that while his group champions preserving open space and protecting the metro area’s tree canopy, he thinks there are better ways to increase density than opposing individual developments. His group’s fighting to eliminate government-mandated parking minums that require developers to add parking to their projects and also pushing to build more density near transit to reduce car dependency.  

    The advocacy organization Up for Growth published a recent report stating that Colorado is behind more than 100,000 units of needed housing in order for the market to stabalize. The Denver Housing Authority’s former director told Denverite the city is behind 60,000 units of income-restricted housing alone.

    Building apartments allows developers to concentrate more housing in a smaller amount of space, cutting back on sprawl.

    “One of the major reasons we support more infill is that so that fewer trees have to be cut down,” Miller said. “But we also need housing.”

    An old office building that may be slated for redevelopment in Lakewood’s Belmar Park. March 21, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Kentner doesn’t buy that the state needs more housing, in general. Instead, she wants to see more income-restricted and naturally affordable housing.

    Increasing supply of market-rate housing alone, as she sees it, won’t provide that.

    “That is a wonderful theory of trickle-down housing that has never played out in reality,” she said.

    Kentner would support dense housing that came with an increase in protected open space. But without that, she’s concerned new development with threaten the health of children and other residents.

    “People can see that this is unhealthy, not sustainable, unaffordable, and destroying the quality of life that we all move to Lakewood to enjoy,” she said.

    Correction: The City of Lakewood is still considering approving the development.

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  • Colorado Division of Motor Vehicles services impacted by nationwide outage

    Colorado Division of Motor Vehicles services impacted by nationwide outage

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    A nationwide outage is interfering with Colorado Division of Motor Vehicles services today, including most driver’s license and online services.

    The outage stems from the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators, the agency announced in a news release Thursday morning.

    Services that are still up and running include driver’s license knowledge tests, endorsement tests, commercial driver’s license instruction permit tests, scheduling hearings and requesting motor vehicle records.

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    Katie Langford

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  • The last radical change is coming to the 1700 block of Julian Street in Denver’s West Colfax neighborhood | Denverite

    The last radical change is coming to the 1700 block of Julian Street in Denver’s West Colfax neighborhood | Denverite

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    1700 N. Julian St. in West Colfax. Jan. 30, 2024.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Over the past half-decade, District 3 Councilmember Jamie Torres has watched the West Colfax neighborhood change as fast as any in town. 

    Three-story, flat-roof condos and apartment buildings have engulfed many of the community’s streets, leaving the few once naturally affordable single-family homes awkwardly sandwiched between cookie-cutter, rectangular buildings with all the architectural wonder of a painted slab of drywall. 

    Some of those new homes cost between $750,000 and $1 million — far higher than the median price of a Denver house — and far above the median price of a condo.  

    Many of the multigenerational families who once lived in the community have sold or were priced out, and the new residents tend to be living in two-person, adult-only households. 

    Despite greater density and wealthier residents, West Colfax has fewer kids than before, Torres said, and the local schools are struggling with enrollment and funding.     

    On a recent Tuesday afternoon, Torres drove by the 1700 block of Julian Street, once full of naturally affordable single-family homes. She hardly recognized what she saw. 

    “It is completely transformed,” Torres said. “A 180.” 

    Now condos and apartment buildings lined the street, with units far out of reach for most Denverites, including Torres herself.

    She wasn’t surprised, though. Change here has been swift and obvious.

    Since she took office in 2019, towering apartment buildings have risen along Colfax Avenue, and nearby blocks have seen a rise in multi-family housing replacing single-family and row homes from the 1950s. 

    The neighborhood’s flexible zoning rules and proximity to bus lines on Colfax have made it a popular spot for developers to build.

    The laws of supply and demand suggest that with more homes prices would drop. The possibility that more new housing could eventually stabilize the housing market and working people could eventually afford to live in West Colfax again is cold comfort for the longtime working-class families who once lived in the naturally affordable single-family homes that were demolished and who can no longer afford their community.

    Instead, as newer, wealthier residents have moved into the neighborhood, old-timers who owned, in many cases, have sold. Those who rented were priced out and pushed elsewhere, often further south and west in Denver or out of the city altogether.

    These new buildings, Torres said, are what gentrification looks like.

    Empty lots in West Colfax are rare — and that makes a fenced-off patch of grass at the 1700 block of Julian Street particularly intriguing.

    Back in 2011, the 1700 block was full of yellow-brick rowhomes where working-class families lived. But over the next decade, the homes were painted blue, the landscaping was spruced up, and while those changes looked radical, they were nothing compared to what was to come. 

    Sometime after 2019, the homes were demolished and the land was sold. Most of the block has already been developed into trendy, flat-roof townhomes that dominate so much of the West Colfax neighborhood. Now more of that will likely be coming to the last swaths of grass on the block. 

    Community Planning and Development, the city’s planning department, has completed its review of plans for the next round of townhomes being planned by a company registered as 1700 Julian Venture Inc.

    If those plans go through, 30 townhomes, in five buildings, will be coming to the nearly one-acre section of the block. There will also be what the developers describe as an “attached private shared amenity.” 

    The proposed building will rise 35 feet high and include three stories, along with 45 parking spaces — looking largely like everything else on the block. 

    Torres says she’s been hearing complaints from the neighbors who recently moved to the West Colfax neighborhood. 

    Those who moved in during the pandemic are surprised by how noisy the area is and how much crime occurs along Colfax. 

    While they like their homes, they don’t love all the new construction. 

    She’s heard from people on the west side of the 1700 block of Julian concerned the new building proposed for the patch of grass could block their views. Wouldn’t a single-family home, the sort that was demolished, be a better fit? 

    The irony of not-in-my-backyard grievances from newcomers in multifamily buildings isn’t lost on Torres. 

    “I have to remind them: One — your views aren’t protected. And two — the same zoning that allowed their home to be built over a single-family home or a duplex is the same zoning that allows this guy to build.” 

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  • Fiancée of man killed in I-70 road rage incident happy with shooter’s 22-year sentence

    Fiancée of man killed in I-70 road rage incident happy with shooter’s 22-year sentence

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    DENVER — The fiancée of a man who was killed in a road rage incident on Interstate 70 in July 2022 said she is happy with the 22-year sentence that was handed down to the shooter Tuesday.

    Tamra Holton said she misses the little things from her time with Kevin Piaskowski.

    “It’s just the day-to-day things — coffee and breakfast and movies and walks,” Holton said. “We had gotten engaged a month-and-a-half before he was killed. So we, you know, we were best friends.”

    Piaskowski was on his way home when he was killed during a road rage incident at I-70 and North Quebec Street on July 31, 2022. Prosecutors said the shooter — Jameel James — was driving a stolen vehicle at the time of the incident.

    James, now 18, pleaded guilty in September 2023 to second-degree murder in connection to Piaskowski’s death. He was 17 years old at the time of the shooting. He was sentenced on Tuesday to 22 years in prison.

    Holton said the family was hoping for the best but preparing for the worst.

    “Given, like, history and, like, statistics and how juveniles are treated in the system, it’s very unlikely to get anything,” she said. “I think we all went into it expecting the worst, which would have been seven years in a youth facility center. So when we heard 22 years, we were all pretty relieved.”

    In a statement, Denver District Attorney Beth McCann said Tuesday that James was “old enough to know what he was doing and must be held accountable.”

    “This was a senseless and completely unprovoked murder on one of Denver’s major highways. Mr. Piaskowski was simply driving his car when he was shot and killed by Jameel James,” said DA McCann, “Although Mr. James was young at the time, he was old enough to know what he was doing and must be held accountable for this tragic event. We agree with the judge’s sentence and hope that it sends a message to young people in Denver that the use of guns to cause injury and death will not be tolerated.”

    Holton said it’s important that she continues speaking out.

    “I think there’s a lot of shootings that have taken place that are with youth and underage people that are, you know, if we would have gotten to trial, he could have walked free depending on how that went,” said Holton, “I just think it’s time for them to start making a change, you know, the justice system and treating them more like adults.”

    Although no amount of jail time can bring Kevin back, the fiancée hopes this can help spark a change.

    “There’s like no justice that will feel that’s ever served. But given the circumstances and entering a plea deal with him guaranteeing time instead of going to trial, we all felt that it was almost closest to the max of the sentencing he could have,” said Holton.


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    Kristian Lopez

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  • Colorado public defender ransomware attack may have exposed Social Security numbers, personal data

    Colorado public defender ransomware attack may have exposed Social Security numbers, personal data

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    The Office of the Colorado State Public Defender has acknowledged personal data may have been stolen during a ransomware attack that crippled the statewide agency in early February — but won’t say much else about the ongoing effort to restore its systems after the hack.

    Files “were copied without permission” during the cyberattack, which was discovered on Feb. 9, and those files may have included names, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, medical information and health insurance information, the agency said in a statement Friday.

    Officials from the public defender’s office are still investigating whose personal data may have been stolen, and whether the personal data of attorneys or their clients was compromised, they said. A statement on the agency’s website urges “individuals” to remain vigilant against identity theft and fraud.

    It’s been more than a month since public defenders across the state were locked out of their computers and files in the ransomware attack and hundreds of court hearings were delayed over the next week because public defenders couldn’t do their jobs.

    Officials this week refused to answer questions from The Denver Post about what particular parts of the agency’s systems remain inoperable. In a ransomware attack, hackers use malware to hold an organization’s data hostage then demand a payment in cryptocurrency in order for organizations to regain access to that data.

    The public defender’s office also would not disclose the amount of ransom demanded or whether a ransom was paid. A statement on the agency’s website says the office has “made progress in returning to full operations.”

    Heavily redacted emails and text messages released to The Post by the Governor’s Office of Information Technology this week in response to an open records request mention the cyberattack recovery law firm Mullen Coughlin. Chief Deputy Public Defender Zak Brown would not confirm whether the public defender’s office is working with the firm.

    “We have provided all the information we are able to at this time,” he said in an email.

    A message left with the Pennsylvania-based law firm was not returned Wednesday.

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    Shelly Bradbury

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  • Capitol Hill’s Esquire Theatre is closing this summer, four years short of 100 | Denverite

    Capitol Hill’s Esquire Theatre is closing this summer, four years short of 100 | Denverite

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    Avoiding demolition, owners plan to repurpose the existing building for “upscale office, restaurant and retail uses.”

    The Landmark Esquire on Downing Street. (Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite)

    Capitol Hill’s Esquire Theatre at 590 Downing Street is closing its doors for good this summer, just four years short of its 100th birthday.

    The movie theater’s owners plan to repurpose the existing building for upscale office, restaurant and retail use.

    “We’ve received great support from the Esquire Theatre ownership team, however, as we evaluate this market and our long-term business strategy, we have decided to close the Landmark Esquire Theatre,” said Kevin Holloway, President of Landmark Theatres in a news release.

    Landmark’s Mayan Theatre, Chez Artiste, and The Landmark at Greenwood Village will remain open. 

    Owners submitted plans to redevelop the property in late 2023. The theatre will close in July 2024. 

    The building remodel will go through the Adaptive Reuse program, offered by the City and County of Denver, intended to encourage the reuse of older and historic buildings. A tree canopy, landscape island planters for pedestrian safety, and new eight-foot sidewalks will be built in order to help create a “walkable amenity for surrounding neighborhoods.”

    Adaptive reuse plans were approved by Denver’s Landmark Preservation Commission.

    “The plans we have seen for the adaptive reuse of the Esquire Theatre are terrific,” said Steven Simard, President of the Alamo Placita Neighbors Association in the statement. “The building’s owners and their design teams have proven that creativity can allow an old building to serve a new purpose in a historic neighborhood.” 

    This will also prevent the demolition of the old building on the corner of 6th and Downing, a topic of interest for those following this week’s news that Monfort Companies plans to demolish El Chapultepec, a legendary jazz club in the Ballpark neighborhood.

    “We have entertained the possibility of leasing to another theater tenant,” said Sam Leger of ownership group Franklin 10 LLC in the release. “Unfortunately, we’ve been unable to find a partner for this opportunity. We have been and will continue to work with neighborhood groups as well as the city to create a desirable addition to the neighborhood.” 

    Denver-based architecture firm Neo Studio will be focused on the rework of the 9,175 square-foot building, and the iconic Esquire signs will be “refurbished and prominently featured” in the new designs.

    “As we move forward with our work on the Esquire Theatre site, we’ll continue to work closely with our neighbors and on guidelines set out by the city,” Leger said. “We’re honored to be one the first projects in Denver to work in conjunction with this program.”

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  • Denver 420 fest: See Gucci Mane, Afroman, Big Boss Vette for free – The Cannabist

    Denver 420 fest: See Gucci Mane, Afroman, Big Boss Vette for free – The Cannabist

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    An edition of The Denver Post. All contents Copyright © 2024 The Denver Post or other copyright holders |

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    All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed for any commercial purpose.

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    The Cannabist Network

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  • Double homicide at Denver homeless shelter under investigation

    Double homicide at Denver homeless shelter under investigation

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    No arrests have been made in a double homicide at a Denver homeless shelter and Denver police are asking for the public to help in the investigation.

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    Bruce Finley

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  • Denver weather: Sunshine and a warmup to start the week

    Denver weather: Sunshine and a warmup to start the week

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    DENVER (KDVR) — Sunshine moves back into Denver’s weather forecast for the start of the workweek.

    This will contribute to a rise in temperatures to the 50s on Monday, then 60s for the rest of the week.

    Weather tonight: Cloudy, seasonal

    Clouds will linger Sunday night as temperatures fall to the mid to upper 20s, which is right in line with normal for this time of year.

    Weather tomorrow: Sunny, seasonal

    Monday, sunshine returns to the forecast. This will help to boost high temperatures to the upper 50s.

    Looking ahead: Sunny and warmer workweek

    Tuesday, the warming trend continues. High temperatures will climb into the 60s alongside plenty of sunshine.

    Highs will stay in the mid-60s for the rest of the week and even into the start of the weekend. This will be followed by the next chance for showers, which is on track to move in Saturday and Sunday.

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    Liz McGiffin

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  • One person killed in crash involving motorcycle in northeast Denver

    One person killed in crash involving motorcycle in northeast Denver

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    One person was killed Sunday morning in a crash involving a motorcycle in northeast Denver.

    The crash involved a vehicle and a motorcycle and happened in the 5100 block of North Quebec Street, the Denver Police Department reported on X just before 12:30 p.m.

    Police are investigating the crash.

    Sign up to get crime news sent straight to your inbox each day.

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    Jacob Factor

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  • Encampment near Elitch Gardens still up after storm, set to close at the end of month

    Encampment near Elitch Gardens still up after storm, set to close at the end of month

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    DENVER — The heavy snow this week was not enough to shut down a large encampment full of newcomers from Central and South America that has been set up near Elitch Gardens in Denver.

    Wednesday, outreach workers with Denver Dream Center visited the encampment to offer shelter to dozens who have been living in tents there, ahead of the big snowstorm.

    That day, Denver7 saw at least 50 residents at the encampment, including five children.

    While all of the families with children took the help and got into a shelter ahead of the snow, the majority of individuals staying at the encampment decided to brave the weather.

    Juan Carlos Peoltelli said he decided to stay put.

    “Not just me, several of these guys decided to stay here,” Peoltelli told Denver7 in Spanish.

    Peoltelli said that decision came because they didn’t want to lose their spot and several of them used the opportunity to make some money by shoveling snow.

    Encampment near Elitch Gardens still up after storm, set to close at the end of month

    “The next day, even the same night, they all went to work,” he said.

    Peoltelli was told that the encampment would be cleared out on March 28.

    Jon Ewing with Denver Human Services said Elitch Gardens has requested that it all be resolved by the end of the month.

    Ewing added that the park has been patient and willing to work with the city and folks in the encampment.

    Ewing said everyone at the encampment will be offered time in congregate shelter while they figure out their next move. He said they will allow individuals to stay in the shelters for 21 days.

    Peoltelli tells Denver7 that all they are asking for is the opportunity to work.

    “All we’re doing here is trying to survive,” Peoltelli said.


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    Kristian Lopez

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  • PHOTOS: The Denver St. Patrick’s Day Parade marches on

    PHOTOS: The Denver St. Patrick’s Day Parade marches on

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    On Saturday morning, March 16, 2024, thousands of parade goers flocked to lower downtown Denver to enjoy the annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade which had over 120 floats and entries that featured dancers, marching bands, dignitaries, police and fire departments, clowns, car clubs and many other organizations.

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    Andy Cross

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  • Developers want to bring outlawed single-stair buildings to a block near you, as Denver firefighters sound the alarm | Denverite

    Developers want to bring outlawed single-stair buildings to a block near you, as Denver firefighters sound the alarm | Denverite

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    A cacophony of saws and hammers echoes off Colfax Avenue and Downing Street, where a massive full-block apartment development is under construction next to the site of the old Smiley’s Laundromat, where the Ramada Inn used to be.

    “That’s music to my ears when I go to a site,” says Peter LiFari, executive director of Maiker Housing Partners, a company that describes itself as a “socially conscious” developer. “They are working.” 

    LiFari and architect Sean Jursnick, of the Shears Adkins Rockmore firm, stand across the street, on a Capitol Hill sidewalk, preaching the gospel of gentle density — how to pack as many homes as possible on one block without obliterating the character of the neighborhood.

    Architect Sean Jursnick and developer Peter LiFari stand in front of a huge apartment project and a small single-stair apartment building on Downing Street in Capitol Hill. March 6, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The duo studies the medley of building styles along Downing: historic single-family homes that date to the late 1800s; the new, massive construction that dominates them all, and single-stair apartment buildings that go back to the 1920s that would, as state and city law are currently written, be illegal to build right now. 

    The developer and the architect talk about the benefits and costs of each style of home, what’s affordable, and what they wish they could create if local government would trash those pesky safety codes that get in their way. 

    Sure, they see the value of massive blocky apartment buildings — particularly for housing singles and couples. But such buildings aren’t what they believe middle-class families in Denver who have largely been priced out of the market want.

    A single-family home on Downing Street in Capitol Hill. March 6, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    What working families need, as LiFari and Jursnick see it, is outlawed in Colorado. 

    Right now, they are touting the virtues of the single stair: skinny, multi-family buildings with just one staircase that can be built on half a lot, rise to five stories or even higher in some cities, and offer families more natural light than big-box apartments.

    Tall single-stair buildings would often come with elevators and would need to meet Americans with Disabilities Act requirements. 

    By increasing supply and also more affordable, entry-level condos, these buildings could help working people find a naturally affordable, stylish home in a city that has few such places available, LiFari said.   

    Jursnick became infatuated with the new wave of single-stair buildings on a recent trip to Seattle, another city dealing with a housing affordability crisis. 

    He was impressed by their design, functionality and ability to pack many people on a block while integrating tidily into neighborhoods. 

    Such buildings would be good for the real-estate business, LiFari explained. Smaller developers who couldn’t afford to build a massive project but would like to provide dense housing could get in on the action, opening up development opportunities to more companies. 

    Affordable housing developers have been pushing for single stairs, as have housing activists in the Yes in My Backyard YIMBY movement.

    Single-stair buildings may be trendy in the pro-density crowd, but they’re nothing new. 

    Back in the day, Denver builders constructed those single-stair apartment buildings throughout Capitol Hill and beyond. 

    But when building codes were written to take into account fire safety, multifamily buildings were required to have two stairwells, raising the cost of construction and increasing the size of land to build a multifamily property.  

    The single-stair building didn’t just fall out of fashion. Building such structures was outlawed decades ago. 

    Architect Sean Jursnick stands in front of a small single-stair apartment building on 14th Avenue in Capitol Hill. March 6, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Now, LiFari and Jursnick are championing legislation proposed by State Rep. Alex Valdez and State Sen. Kevin Priola at the Capitol to allow single-stair multi-family projects statewide.

    Their message: If Denver’s going to be affordable, more new homes need to go up, infill could address the affordability crisis and there are better ways to do things than the current building code allows.

    Eventually, as in Europe, single-stair buildings could become part of a social housing movement, offering architecturally beautiful, dense living with government support. 

    “What we find is that in Europe is that they’re going 16 stories, higher, public housing, social housing — which I would love to get to,” LiFari said.”

    Outdated safety code requirements — like buildings needing more than one stairwell — need to be reevaluated, as other cities have done worldwide thanks to new fire prevention technologies, LiFari said. 

    Many firefighters, in turn, are alarmed at reducing fire-safety measures.

    Denver Fire Department spokesman J.D. Chism says the city’s firefighters are formally opposing the legislation to protect their own safety and that of residents. 

     “If you do have people trying to evacuate while we’re trying to get in, there’s a lot of potential for residents and firefighters to run into each other and delay each other’s progress,” Chism said. “We don’t want the residents’ progress to be delayed in evacuating if there’s a fire. At the same time, we don’t want our progress to be delayed in getting up to them.”

    The bigger problem, from the Denver Fire Department’s perspective, is that if fire is blocking the stairwell, the only other way to evacuate residents would be through firefighters’ ladders. While firefighters are trained to clear a building that way, it should be a last resort, and residents would be better served and safer having multiple routes out on their own. 

    “You don’t want to set something up where it’s unsafe for a majority of residents,” he said. 

    Proponents of single-stair construction argue modern building materials and fire-prevention methods, such as sprinklers, radically reduce the likelihood of a fire. 

    LiFari points to European cities with a greater number of single-stair buildings that have better fire safety outcomes than those in American cities without them.

    Cities like Seattle have building code requirements that apartment entrances near a stairwell. They limit the number of units in buildings. They require sprinklers and stairwell pressurization that pushes smoke away from stairwells. 

    “They’ve developed their code with officials and experts in a way that they’ve found to be safe over the decades,” Jursnick said. 

    The International Building Code, LiFari says is “all about safety back in the early 1900s, when we didn’t have the engineering and the fire safety advances that we’ve had today.”

    But firefighters like Chism don’t buy that mandatory sprinklers and better building materials and improved engineering mean fires will never happen. 

    “If a fire does start for whatever reason, you still need people to be able to evacuate the structure,” Chism said. 

    Registered neighborhood groups and many Denverites have historically resisted new types of design. 

    For example, a few years back developers started bringing slot homes to neighborhoods, where front doors faced each other, not the sidewalk. City Council and neighborhood groups hit the brakes and outlawed the building form, still allowing something similar with a few modifications. 

    Is the single-stair building the new slot home — a design form developers are pushing onto the community? 

    “This is one of the key elements of a single-stair building is that they are beautiful. They are gorgeous,” LiFari said. “Now, if you just don’t like any type of new housing development, then it’s going to be difficult to win you over. But the buildings are drop-dead gorgeous”

    He points to Brooklyn brownstones that were ridiculed when they were first built and are now viewed as a cherished part of architectural history. He thinks single-stair buildings will be revered the same way. 

    “It will take a little bit of getting used to,” LiFari said. “I truly believe that these buildings are going to be viewed as architectural gems.”

    Correction: This story has been updated to clarify where the building sits in relation to the old Smiley’s Laundry site.

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  • Things to do in Denver this weekend, March 15-17 | Denverite

    Things to do in Denver this weekend, March 15-17 | Denverite

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    By Cassidy Ritter, Special to Denverite

    Don’t forget to wear green this weekend! St. Patrick’s Day events are in full swing, from a parade in Downtown Denver (read more here) to a festival in Arvada and live music and cooking classes at several local businesses. This weekend is also Denver Black Restaurant Week, the 48th annual Denver March Powwow and Cirque du Soleil is in town.

    Given the snowy weather on Thursday, please double-check events are still taking place before hitting the road. 

    Whatever you get up to, make it a great weekend!

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

    Friday, March 15

    Comedy and theater

    Trixx. Comedy Works South, 5345 Landmark Place, Greenwood Village. 7:15 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. $26.

    Joe Pera. Comedy Works Downtown, 1226 15th St. 7:30 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. $35.

    Don’t Tell Comedy Show. The Source Hotel, 3330 Brighton Blvd. 8-9:30 p.m. $25.

    Arts, culture and media

    Nomadic Daydreams. Walker Fine Art, 300 W. 11th Ave., Unit A. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Free.

    Third Friday Collector’s Night. Art District on Santa Fe, 858 Santa Fe Drive. 5:30-9:30 p.m. Free.

    Immersive Jazz-Art Experience. Lumonics Light & Sound Gallery, 800 E. 73 Ave., Unit 11. 7-9:30 p.m. $20 (in advance), $25 (at the door).

    Eat and drink

    Magnificent Malaysia. Uncorked Kitchen & Wine Bar, 8171 S. Chester St., Suite A, Aurora. 6:30-9:30 p.m. $295 (per pair).

    Music and nightlife

    Yheti. Mission Ballroom, 4242 Wynkoop St. 7:30 p.m. $29.50-$35.50.

    Sports and fitness

    *Denver Nuggets vs. San Antonio Spurs. Watch on Altitude or listen at 92.5 FM. 6:30 p.m. 

    Saturday, March 16

    Just for fun

    *Denver St. Patrick’s Day Parade. Starts and ends at Coors Filed, 2001 Blake St. 9:30 a.m. Free.

    Pop Up Used Book Sale. Bear Valley Branch Library, 5171 W. Dartmouth Ave. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. No cover.

    March Makers Market. The Source Hotel, 3330 Brighton Blvd. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. No cover.

    *Shamrock the Block. Dairy Block, 1800 Wazee St. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Free.

    *Annual St. Patrick’s Day Festival. Olde Town Arvada. Noon-6 p.m. Free. 

    Little Saigon Community Memory Workshops. Far East Center, 333 S. Federal Blvd., Unit 130. 1:30-3:30 p.m. Free. Advanced registration required.

    Skate Patties, A Roller Burlesque and Variety Show. Town Hall Collaborative, 525 Santa Fe Drive. 7-11:55 p.m. $18.

    Kids and family

    The Learning Lab: Playdough. Ross-Broadway Branch Library, 33 E. Bayaud Ave. 10:30-11 a.m. Free. All ages.

    Family Day Out: St. Patty’s Day Celebration. Uncorked Kitchen & Wine Bar, 8171 S. Chester St., Suite A, Aurora. 11 a.m.-1 p.m. $69.

    Family Bingo. Rodolfo “Corky” Gonzales Branch Library, 1498 N. Irving St. 2-3 p.m. Free. All ages, children must be accompanied by an adult. 

    Comedy and theater

    Trixx. Comedy Works South, 5345 Landmark Place, Greenwood Village. 7:15 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. $26.

    Joe Pera. Comedy Works Downtown, 1226 15th St. 9:45 p.m. $35.

    Art, culture and media

    Nomadic Daydreams. Walker Fine Art, 300 W. 11th Ave., Unit A. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Free.

    Lumonics Immersed. Lumonics Light & Sound Gallery, 800 E. 73rd Ave., Unit 11. 8-10 p.m. $20-$25.

    Eat and drink

    Party Like A Piñata. Federales, 2901 Larimer St. 9 a.m.-noon. Starting at $35.

    Grand Opening of RareTea Aurora. RareTea Aurora, 14535 E. Alameda Ave., Aurora. 11 a.m.-9 p.m. No cover.

    St. Paddy’s Post Parade Parade. Mile High Spirits, 2201 Lawrence St. 11 a.m.-9 p.m. No cover.

    Wine School: Women Winemakers // Europe. Noble Riot Wine Bar, 1336 27th St. 3:30-4:30 p.m. $49. Advanced registration required.

    Modern & Tasty Irish Food. Uncorked Kitchen & Wine Bar, 8171 S. Chester St., Suite A, Aurora. 6:30-9:30 p.m. $295 (per pair).

    Music and nightlife

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

    Celtic Awakening. Newman Center for the Performing Arts, 2344 E. Iliff Ave. 2:30-4:30 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Prices vary.

    Bailen. Bluebird Theater, 3317 Colfax Ave. 8 p.m. $25.95.

    Sports and fitness

    *St. Patrick’s Day 5K. Town Center South, 9352 Dorchester St., Highlands Ranch. 9 a.m.-noon. $40 (ages 2-12), $65 (adults).

    *Snowboarding lessons and tubing. Ruby Hill Rail Yard, 1200 W. Florida Ave. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free.

    *Seattle Sounders FC vs. Colorado Rapids. Watch on Fox or Apple TV. 1:30 p.m.

    *Colorado Avalanche vs. Edmonton Oilers. Watch on ESPN+. 8 p.m. 

    Sunday, March 17

    Just for fun

    St. Patrick’s Day Performance by Celtic Steps. Stanley Marketplace, 2501 Dallas St., Aurora. 1 p.m. Free.

    Spring Equinox Celebration. 1455 S. Pearl St. 4 p.m. $15-$40. Advanced registration required.

    Cirque Du SoSlay. Meow Wolf, 1338 1st St. 8 p.m. $32.50-$42.50.

    Kids and family

    Photos with the (sensitive) Easter Bunny. Town Center Aurora, 14200 E. Alameda Ave., Aurora. 9-10:45 a.m. Prices vary by photo package. Advanced registration recommended.

    Family Fun Day. Green Valley Branch Library, 4856 N. Andes Ct. 2-3 p.m. Free. All ages.

    Comedy and theater

    St. Paddy’s Day with Kevin Fitzgerald. Comedy Works Downtown, 1226 15th St. 7 p.m. $17.

    Eat and drink

    St. Patrick’s Day Brunch. Six Capital Brewing and BBQ, 16705 E. Iliff Ave., Aurora. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. No cover.

    St. Patrick’s Day Cookie Decorating. Little Man Ice Cream Factory, 4411 Colfax Ave. Noon. $8 (for four cookies). Advanced registration required.

    Music and nightlife

    Celtic Awakening. Newman Center for the Performing Arts, 2344 E. Iliff Ave. 2:30-4:30 p.m. Prices vary.

    Sports and fitness

    *Denver Nuggets vs. Dallas Mavericks. Watch on Altitude or listen at 92.5 FM. 1:30 p.m. 

    All Weekend

    Just for fun

    Cirque du Soleil. Ball Arena, 1000 Chopper Circle. 7 p.m. (Friday), 11:30 a.m., 3:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. (Saturday), and noon (Sunday). Prices vary.

    The 48th annual Denver March Powwow. Denver Coliseum, 4600 N Humboldt St. 10-8 p.m. 6 and under free. $7 per day or $20 for three-day pass. 60+ $3 per day and $9 for three-day pass.

    Kids and families

    Photos with the Easter Bunny. Town Center Aurora, 14200 E. Alameda Ave., Aurora. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. (Friday-Saturday) and noon-6 p.m. (Sunday). Prices vary by photo package. Advanced registration recommended.

    Comedy and theater

    Wizard of Oz. Ovation West Performing Arts Center Stage, 27608 Fireweed Drive, Evergreen. 7:30 p.m. (Friday and Saturday) and 2:30 p.m. (Sunday). $16 (students), $28 (seniors), $32 (adults). 

    Art, culture and media

    Colorado Dragon Boat Film Festival. Sie FilmCenter, 2510 E. Colfax Ave. Times vary. (Read more here.)

    28th Annual Denver Jewish Film Festival. Locations vary by showing. Times vary. $15-$17 (individual film tickets for in-person and virtual showings), $140 (10-pack pass), $290 (all access festival pass).

    Space Explorers – The Infinite. Stanley Marketplace, 2501 Dallas St., Aurora. 2-7 p.m. (Friday), 11 a.m.-7 p.m. (Saturday) and 11 a.m.-6 p.m. (Sunday). Prices vary. Advanced registration required for timed entry.

    Wild Color. Denver Museum of Nature & Science, 2001 Colorado Blvd. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Free (members, children ages 2 and under), $19.95 (guests ages 3-18), $21.95 (seniors ages 65 and older), $24.95 (adults). All ages. Advanced registration recommended. 

    Have a Seat. Denver Art Museum, 100 W. 14th Ave. Parkway. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free (members and guests ages 18 and under), $15 (seniors 65+ and Colorado students), $18 (Colorado residents), $19 (non-resident adults and college students), $22 (non-resident adult).

    Museum of Illusions Denver. 951 16th Street Mall. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. (Friday and Saturday) and 10 a.m.-8 p.m. (Sunday). $20 (children ages 5-12), $22 (seniors and active military), $24 (adults). Advanced registration required for timed entry.

    The Museum for Black Girls. 500 16th Street Mall. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. $30. (Read more about the museum and its creator here.)

    Eat and drink

    Denver Black Restaurant Week. Locations vary. Times vary by restaurant. Prices vary. (Read more about the event here.)

    Worth the drive

    Saturday Frozen Dead Guy Days Festival. Estes Park Events Complex, 1125 Rooftop Way, Estes Park. Noon-7 p.m. $49 (general admission).

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  • Why Nuggets want Reggie Jackson to stay aggressive during slump: “This team is mad at you if you don’t shoot”

    Why Nuggets want Reggie Jackson to stay aggressive during slump: “This team is mad at you if you don’t shoot”

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    MIAMI — The backcourt that shepherded Denver to consecutive road wins in Miami during last year’s NBA Finals was waiting to check back into the game, waiting to send Heat fans marching toward the exits once again. Clutch time is when the Nuggets’ starters thrive.

    But these two starters decided they’d rather let the backup backcourt do the honors.

    After a barrage of Reggie Jackson jumpers, Jamal Murray and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope went to coach Michael Malone and told him to keep Jackson and Christian Braun in the game. Malone obliged, and the Nuggets kept pulling away for a 100-88 win that they hope will be important for reasons that transcend their temporary, solitary claim to first place in the West.

    Jackson needed a new dose of confidence.

    “I’ve been in a crazy slump,” he said.

    Earlier in the fourth quarter, Braun scored seven critical points during Nikola Jokic’s rest minutes to protect a slim lead. Then Jackson took over, scoring from 17, 15 and 26 feet on three consecutive possessions in a span of 1:12 to double Denver’s lead and force an Erik Spoelstra timeout.

    “I had Jamal Murray and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope at the scorer’s table during that stretch. And this speaks a lot about our group,” Malone said. “Both those guys said to me, ‘Coach, let Reggie ride. Let CB ride. This group is playing well.’ And part of our culture — because we do have a culture in Denver as well — part of our culture is being selfless. Getting over yourself. And I think that’s another example of how our team is always getting over the individual, thinking about the collective. Really happy for Reggie Jackson.”

    Malone was not-so-subtly throwing shade at Miami’s “Heat Culture” mantra in his postgame comments, but his proud advocacy for Nuggets Culture was validated by the team’s reaction to Jackson’s heat check.

    “You could see it transpire on the court. That was the cool part,” Jackson told The Denver Post. “I’ve been playing long enough. You see a lot of things the older you get. You witness it. I knew my minutes were kind of up. I knew Jamal was supposed to come on the court. … And then I see Jamal motioning to Coach, like, ‘Keep him in. Let him play.’ I saw Pope doing the same thing for C.B. So that was a really cool moment for C.B. and myself.”

    For Jackson in particular, the vote of confidence was revitalizing. In the first 30 games of the season, he averaged 13.2 points on 48.6% shooting, including 38.1% from 3-point range. He led the Nuggets to a handful of wins in November when Murray was out with a strained hamstring. In the next 35 games entering this matchup, Jackson shot 38.7% from the floor and 30.9% from outside, averaging only 7.4 points and scoring in double figures only 10 times.

    After the win in Miami, he has still gone a season-long 10 consecutive games without touching double digits, but seven of his nine points Wednesday were scored during the game-clinching burst.

    He says his teammates have been urging him to take those shots despite the drop in efficiency.

    “They want me to continue to be myself. Continue to be aggressive. They’ve been kind of upset at me for not playing my game the last few,” Jackson said. “So then I started playing aggressive. Even still in the midst of missing shots. I think I had a 1-for-9 night. I had like a 1-for-7. But just hearing the encouragement from my teammates … once you have a great group like that — front office, coaches, teammates — believing in you like that, you can’t do anything but start believing in yourself again. So like I said: Hit a slump. Had some dark days. Tough days. But having that encouragement has made it easier to come out here and keep attacking, keep pushing ahead and just live with the results.”

    Jackson’s defining quality is his one-on-one scoring capability. There have been flashes in recent games when he puts the moves on an opposing guard but simply misses the shot he generates.

    “That’s the annoying part,” he said. “I think the reassuring part is that I can still get to a spot and get to a shot. So that’s always the best part. I think once I’m not able to get to a shot, that would be a little worrisome. That’s probably when you’ve gotta hang it up. … Just knowing I can still get there. And now it’s on me to go ahead and continue to get in the gym and find a way to complete the play. So that’s really what I’ve been trying to focus on. Footwork. Having my confidence down, and just continuing to trust in the reps, trust in the work.”

    Jackson’s rotations have changed recently. He’s not sharing the floor with Murray much anymore, after a stretch of games in which Malone tried a variation of the second unit that deployed both point guards at the same time. Instead, Justin Holiday is filling the extra backcourt spot in that lineup; Jackson is subbing back in with Jokic to give Murray a brief rest. That’s why Jackson was on the floor as a competitive NBA Finals rematch entered the last five minutes.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • East Colfax in Denver closed in both directions as firefighters battle abandoned house fire

    East Colfax in Denver closed in both directions as firefighters battle abandoned house fire

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    East Colfax Avenue is closed in both directions at North Franklin Street in Denver because of a fire at an abandoned house in the area, according to the Colorado Department of Transportation.

    Denver firefighters are fighting a fire at what appears to be an abandoned structure near the intersection of East Colfax and North Franklin, the Denver Fire Department posted on X just after 2 p.m. No injuries have been reported.

    Crews are fighting the fire from the outside and working their way in due to the complicated nature of the structure and current wind conditions, the agency said in a 2:20 p.m. update.

    This is a developing story and will be updated.

    Get more Colorado news by signing up for our Mile High Roundup email newsletter.

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    Katie Langford

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  • Free snowboard lessons come to Ruby Hill Park as Denver snow-sports season melts away | Denverite

    Free snowboard lessons come to Ruby Hill Park as Denver snow-sports season melts away | Denverite

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    Kyle’s been obsessing over Denver since he moved here from Chicago in 2005: What is this place? Who thrives here? Who’s pushed out? Who has room to create and fulfill their dreams? Whose dreams are squashed? And why? He’s the former culture editor at Westword, where he covered the city’s arts and music scene. Before that, he covered city and state politics as the managing editor at the Colorado Independent. He’s raced triathlons (slowly), grown food (well…with others), and toured the country in a folk-punk trio (apologetically). Now, he’s reporting about Denver’s growth and couldn’t be happier about it.

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  • 31-year-old arrested in fatal domestic violence shooting in southwest Denver

    31-year-old arrested in fatal domestic violence shooting in southwest Denver

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    Denver police arrested a 31-year-old man in a fatal domestic violence shooting in the 2700 block of West Iliff Avenue.

    James Lee Sanchez was arrested Thursday on suspicion of first-degree murder and second-degree murder in the shooting death of 39-year-old Desiree Terrazas on March 2.

    Officers responded to the shooting in southwest Denver and found Terrazas dead at the scene from a gunshot wound, according to the Denver Police Department.

    Sanchez is in custody at the Downtown Detention Center on a $3 million cash bail, according to court records.

    This is a developing story and may be updated.

    Sign up to get crime news sent straight to your inbox each day.

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    Katie Langford

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  • Russell Wilson planning to sign with Pittsburgh after release from the Broncos

    Russell Wilson planning to sign with Pittsburgh after release from the Broncos

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    Russell Wilson may play at Empower Field in 2024 after all.

    It would just be in the black and gold.

    Wilson, who has not even been formally released by the Broncos but is set to be later this week, announced Sunday night that he plans to sign with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Multiple outlets have reported that the sides have an agreement on a one-year contract.

    Wilson will likely play at the veteran minimum of $1.21 million because he has $39 million in guaranteed salary from Denver for the 2024 season. The Broncos will pay all of that amount except for Wilson’s salary with a new team, so there’s little incentive for the Steelers to pay him more than the minimum.

    The Broncos still must actually release Wilson, which they will do sometime between the start of the 2024 NFL league year at 2 p.m. Wednesday and March 17. After they informed Wilson of their intent to release him a week ago, Denver allowed Wilson to begin speaking with other teams as if he were already a free agent.

    When they do process his release, Denver will have to account for $85 million in dead salary cap charges over the next two seasons. The Broncos will decide whether to take $35.4 million in 2024 and $49.6 million in 2025 or $53 million in 2024 and $32 million in 2025.

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    Parker Gabriel

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