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  • Things to do in Denver this weekend, March 8-11 | Denverite

    Things to do in Denver this weekend, March 8-11 | Denverite

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    By Cassidy Ritter, Special to Denverite

    Get out and support local restaurants by participating in Denver Restaurant Week. The celebration ends on Sunday.

    Other weekend happenings include goat yoga, several new art exhibit openings, and home games for both the Colorado Avalanche and Denver Nuggets.

    Don’t forget to set your clocks forward one hour on Sunday.

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

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

    Friday, March 8

    Kids and family

    Paper Flower Craft. Illiff Square Library, 2253 S. Peoria St., Aurora. 11 a.m-noon. Free.

    Paint a Pot. Martin Luther King Jr. Library, 9898 E. Colfax Ave., Aurora. 4-5 p.m. Free.

    Indoor Goatflix & Chill (Pete’s Dragon). The Shops at Northfield, 8246 Northfield Blvd., Suite 1690. 6-8 p.m. $20. All ages.

    Comedy and theater

    Ari Shaffir. Comedy Works Downtown, 1226 15th St. 7:30 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. $40.

    Arts, culture, and media

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

    No Man’s Land Film Festival. MCA Denver, 1485 Delgany St. 5 p.m. $30. (Read more about the festival here.)

    Opening Celebration – Women In Their Infinite Forms. Denver Milk Market, 1800 Wazee St. 6:30-8 p.m. Free.

    Spring Exhibit Opening Party. MCA Denver, 1485 Delgany St. 7:30-10 p.m. $30.

    Music and nightlife

    Chelsea Cutler. Fillmore Auditorium, 1510 Clarkson St. 7:30 p.m. Prices vary.

    Sports and fitness

    *Minnesota Wild vs. Colorado Avalanche. Ball Arena, 1000 Chopper Circle. Watch on NHL Network or Altitude. 7 p.m. Prices vary.

    Saturday, March 9

    Just for fun

    St. Patrick’s Day. Town Center at Aurora, 14200 E. Alameda Ave., Aurora. Noon-4 p.m. Free.

    Get Lucky Bingo. The Source Hotel, 3330 Brighton Blvd. 7-9 p.m. $5.

    Kids and family

    The Learning Lab: Colorado Ballet. Ross-Broadway Branch Library, 33 E. Bayaud Ave. 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Ideal for ages 6 and under.

    Children’s Second Saturday Extravaganza. Ross-Broadway Branch Library, 33 E. Bayaud Ave. 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Idea for ages 3-6. 

    Little U: Soccer Start with Colorado Rapids Youth Soccer. Hadley Branch Library, 1890 S. Grove St. 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Ideal for ages 5 and under.

    The Rock and Roll Playhouse: Music of Talking Heads + More For Kids. Bluebird Theater, 3317 Colfax Ave. 11:30 a.m. $18.75. All ages.

    Beyond the Bookshelves: A Girl’s Inc. STEM Extravaganza & Community Celebration. Blair-Caldwell African American Research Library, 2401 Welton St. 12:30-2:30 p.m. Free. Advanced registration is required. Ideal for ages 10-17.

    Egg Carton Flower. Blair-Caldwell African American Research Library, 2401 Welton St.  1-2 p.m. Free. Ideal for ages 5-12, when accompanied by an adult.

    Comedy and theater

    Ari Shaffir. Comedy Works Downtown, 1226 15th St. 9:45 p.m. $40.

    Art, culture, and media

    Free Days. Denver Botanic Gardens – Chatfield Farms, 8500 W. Deer Creek Canyon Road, Littleton. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Advanced registration required.

    Fazal Sheikh: Thirst | Exposure | In Place Member Preview. Denver Art Museum, 100 W. 14th Ave. Parkway. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free (members only). Advanced registration required for timed entry.

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

    28th Annual Denver Jewish Film Festival. The Elaine Wolf Theatre, 350 Dahlia St. 7:30 p.m. $15-$17 (individual film tickets for in-person and virtual showings), $140 (10-pack pass), $290 (all-access festival pass).

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

    Eat and drink

    Pop-Up Bake Sale. Reunion Bread at The Source Hotel, 3330 Brighton Blvd. 9 a.m.-noon. No cover.

    Wine School: The Wide Range of German Riesling. Noble Riot Wine Bar, 1336 27th St. 3:30-4:30 p.m. $49. Advanced registration required.

    Music and nightlife

    Queen City Rovers. Town Center at Aurora, 14200 E. Alameda Ave., Aurora. 2:30 p.m. Free.

    Darshan Dance Tribe. Lumonics Light & Sound Gallery, 800 E. 73 Ave., Unit 11. 7 p.m.-12:15 a.m. $25 (in advance), $30 (at the door).

    Nocturne’s Golden Anniversary. 1330 27th St. No cover. Reservation times vary.

    Wildermiss. Bluebird Theater, 3317 Colfax Ave. 9 p.m. $20.

    Sports and fitness

    Rainforest Yoga. Butterfly Pavilion, 6252 W. 104th Ave., Westminster. 7:45-8:45 a.m. $10 (members), $12 (non-members). Advanced registration required. 

    Baby Goat Yoga. The Shops at Northfield, 8246 Northfield Blvd., Suite 1690. 10-11 a.m. and noon-1 p.m. $27.

    *Colorado Mammoth vs. Toronto Rock. Watch on ESPN+. 3 p.m. Prices vary.

    Utah Jazz vs. Denver Nuggets. Ball Arena, 1000 Chopper Circle. Watch on Altitude or listen at 92.5 FM. 7 p.m. Prices vary.

    *Real Salt Lake vs. Colorado Rapids. Watch on Apple TV. 7:30 p.m.

    Sunday, March 10

    Just for fun

    Good Times Adventure Sled Dog Adoption. Denver Beer Co. – Platte Street, 1695 Platte St. 11 a.m. No cover.

    Kids and family

    DreamLab Birthday Party. Girl Scout DreamLab, 63 North Quebec St. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. All ages.

    Comedy and theater

    Louis Johnson. Comedy Works South, 5345 Landmark Place, Greenwood Village. 7 p.m. $14.

    Nick Swardson. Comedy Works Downtown, 1226 15th St. 9:15 p.m. $35-$45.

    Art, culture, and media

    28th Annual Denver Jewish Film Festival. Locations vary by showing 10:30 a.m., 2:30 p.m., 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. $15-$17 (individual film tickets for in-person and virtual showings), $140 (10-pack pass), $290 (all access festival pass).

    Eat and drink

    Drag Bingo Brunch. Denver Milk Market, 1800 Wazee St. 11 a.m.-1 p.m. No cover.

    Music and nightlife

    I Dream of a World – Songs of Love and Unity. OvationWest Performing Arts at Wellshire Presbyterian Church, 2999 S. Colorado Blvd., Unit 6607. 4:30 p.m. $12 (student), $24 (senior), $28 (adult).

    Sports and fitness

    Backlight Goat Yoga. The Shops at Northfield, 8246 Northfield Blvd., Suite 1690. 7-8 p.m. $27.

    All Weekend

    Comedy and theater

    Hairspray. Buell Theatre, 1350 Curtis St. 7:30 p.m. (Friday and Saturday), 2 p.m. (Saturday and Sunday). $35-$120.

    Art, culture, and media

    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. 

    Danielle SeeWalker: But We Have Something to Say. History Colorado Center, 1200 N. Broadway. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free (members and children 18 and under), $15 (adults). (Read more about the artist and exhibit here.)

    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 Restaurant Week. Locations vary. Times vary by restaurant. $25, $35, $45, $55. (Read more about the event here.)

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  • Nuggets, Celtics to play 2024 preseason games in Abu Dhabi, NBA announces

    Nuggets, Celtics to play 2024 preseason games in Abu Dhabi, NBA announces

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    The Denver Nuggets and Boston Celtics will play a pair of 2024-25 preseason games in Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates, the NBA announced Wednesday morning.

    Part of an ongoing collaboration between the NBA and Abu Dhabi’s Department of Culture and Tourism, the games will take place Friday Oct. 4 and Sunday Oct. 6. The venue and ticket information will not be shared until a later date, according to a news release.

    “There is incredible momentum around basketball in the UAE and across the Middle East,” NBA deputy commissioner and COO Mark Tatum said in a statement, “and we believe these games as well as our year-round grassroots development and fan engagement efforts will be a catalyst for the continued growth of the game in the region.”

    The Nuggets (42-20) and Celtics (48-13) will face off Thursday (8 p.m. MT, TNT) at Ball Arena in their last meeting of the 2023-24 regular season. Boston holds the best record in the league, while Denver is the defending NBA champion.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Colorado lawmakers target HOAs with more restrictions to protect homeowners from foreclosure

    Colorado lawmakers target HOAs with more restrictions to protect homeowners from foreclosure

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    Homeowners associations’ foreclosure filings on thousands of Coloradans’ houses over unpaid fines and fees have spurred fresh attempts by lawmakers to better regulate HOAs and metropolitan districts with the hope of preventing more people from losing their homes.

    Lawmakers have introduced several reform bills that would restrict foreclosures from delinquent fees and require HOAs and metro districts to adopt written policies, enhance notifications to homeowners and add licensing requirements for professional managers. The legislation would also set regulations on how much homeowners can be charged. HOAs would be required to work with homeowners before beginning any foreclosure proceedings.

    “As more Coloradans find themselves living in HOAs and metro districts, it is more important than ever that homeowners be protected from losing the largest asset they will ever invest in through unnecessary foreclosure,” said Rep. Iman Jodeh, an Aurora Democrat who is sponsoring two bills.

    Homeowners associations in Colorado legally have the power to place liens on residents’ homes that supersede even those of the banks that hold their mortgages. An HOA can then sell a property to collect the money a resident owes — and the owner still would be left with mortgage debt and none of the equity they had built.

    About half of Colorado residents live in communities overseen by an HOA.

    The associations’ power drew more scrutiny in 2022 following media reports, including by The Denver Post, about the Master Homeowners Association for Green Valley Ranch in far-northeast Denver. That HOA filed nearly half of all HOA foreclosures in Denver the prior year.

    The foreclosed homes included affordable housing-designated units that were sold in auctions to investors, in violation of city covenants.

    Neighborhood residents who are Black, Asian or Latino said they sometimes weren’t notified of the fines or would continue to accrue new fees and interest even after resolving the violations. In some cases, residents didn’t even know their homes had been placed in foreclosure proceedings until someone showed up at their door and said they now owned the home.

    A 2022 analysis by ProPublica and Rocky Mountain PBS found that the state’s HOAs filed more than 2,400 foreclosure cases from January 2018 through February 2022.

    The legislature passed a law in 2022 to protect homeowners from accumulating HOA fines and fees that they may not be aware of by requiring HOAs to provide written notice to residents, in their preferred language, about any violations. It also capped the fees HOAs could assess.

    “We want to make sure people stay housed in Colorado”

    But lawmakers say there is much more to be done for communities across metro Denver to limit HOA-driven foreclosures and protect homeowners from predatory or mismanaged companies.

    “We’re fighting for homeowners,” said Rep. Naquetta Ricks, an Aurora Democrat, adding that this was especially important amid the state’s ongoing housing crisis. “We want to make sure people stay housed in Colorado.”

    A statewide committee, the HOA Homeowners’ Rights Task Force, was charged with studying issues related to metro districts and HOAs, and its members recommended multiple areas of focus for the 2024 session. Lawmakers have incorporated at least two recommendations into new bills — creating an alternative dispute resolution process and addressing licensure of community association managers.

    The task force is expected to release a final report by April 15.

    The new bills introduced so far during the 2024 session include:

    • HB24-1267, which would require metro districts that conduct covenant enforcement like HOAs to adopt written policies on fines and fees and on governing disputes. It also would prevent the metro district from foreclosing on any lien because of delinquent fees.
    • HB24-1158, which would require changes to HOA notifications to owners on delinquent accounts and before lien foreclosures, and it would establish a minimum bid.
    • HB24-1337, which would limit a homeowner’s reimbursement of collection costs and attorney fees to 50% and prohibit an HOA from foreclosing on a lien until it has tried to serve an owner with a civil action within 180 days or obtained a personal judgement in a civil action. It also would prohibit the purchaser of a home in foreclosure from selling for 180 days, with the former owner having first priority of buying the home again.
    • HB24-1078, which would reestablish license requirements for HOA community association managers (a program that expired in July 2018).

    So far, just two bills have been considered by committees. HB-1267 passed 10-0 in a House committee Wednesday, and no one spoke in opposition to the bill. Jodeh said she worked with metro districts when crafting the legislation.

    HB-1078, the licensure bill, passed 8-3 in a House committee Feb. 14, eliciting support from homeowners who had faced HOA foreclosures and opposition from community management associations.

    Vicki Souder, left, and Linda Wilson protest against foreclosures in front of the Master Homeowners Association for Green Valley Ranch offices on Friday, April 1, 2022. The HOA filed 50 foreclosures in 2021, nearly half the total of all HOA-initiated foreclosures in Denver that year. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    Arvada Democratic Rep. Brianna Titone, a former HOA president, is one of the sponsors of the bill. The legislature passed a similar bill in 2019, but Gov. Jared Polis vetoed it. At the time, Polis’ office said he was concerned about costs to get licensed that would then be passed to consumers, even though a 2017 report from the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies recommended an extension, and a 2021 report also recommended regulation.

    Titone said the new licensing bill would “make sure that people are educated about the law and make sure that no felons are getting involved in having full access to communities’ money.”

    The bill would also ensure managers know how to do their jobs, Titone added, so that they don’t have to hire attorneys to help, costing residents even more money. And it would require companies to disclose relationships that include identifying whom they’re providing kickbacks to, she said.

    The requirements would apply only to professional management companies, not employees directly hired by HOA boards.

    “I’ve come here with licensing in 2019. I’ve come with licensing in 2022. And I’ve come with licensing today,” Titone said at the committee hearing, and “nobody has ever suggested an alternative. … They just say no. … You should ask yourself why they don’t want this. It’s because because they’re making a lot of money off of the backs of the people they work for and they’re hired by.”

    Licensing bill draws opposition

    Despite the bill’s similarity to the 2022 bill Titone worked on with Colorado’s Division of Real Estate, Deputy Director Eric Turner testified against the bill at the hearing, calling it “well-intentioned.” He said it “does not address the various issues about living in an HOA, imposes barriers to entry into the profession and increases costs for homeowners.”

    John Kreger, who testified for Associa, the largest community management association in the country, jokingly said that “after the unflattering characterizations of our industry today, I feel compelled to assure the committee that on behalf of Associa and the hundreds of Coloradans we employ, we are not crooks or idiots.”

    Kreger and other community association managers argued the bill would not be effective at protecting consumers but instead would just raise costs. Kreger said there wasn’t enough data to show a widespread problem, and any theft of funds or misuse should be handled within the criminal justice system.

    Homeowners and nonprofit foreclosure attorneys have attended committee hearings to describe horror stories about themselves or their clients losing their homes over fines and fees from HOAs and metro districts, even if they’d never missed a mortgage payment.

    Monica Villela, who lived in a Green Valley Ranch home with her family for 19 years, choked back tears at Wednesday’s hearing. She told lawmakers that during the COVID-19 pandemic, it became difficult to keep up with maintenance and HOA fees that ballooned.

    Her family had never missed a mortgage payment and had never even refinanced their home, she said, but they didn’t have the money to pay the $8,000 in fees they owed or for an attorney to fight them.

    They lost their home, just as her son would have started college.

    “We no longer have that option,” she said. “Our family has honestly been deeply affected. It really hurts seeing my kids being depressed by this horrible situation. We have been hurt.”

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    Saja Hindi

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  • Nuggets dominate clutch minutes again to spoil Lakers’ celebration of LeBron James scoring milestone

    Nuggets dominate clutch minutes again to spoil Lakers’ celebration of LeBron James scoring milestone

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    LOS ANGELES — The clutch-time Nuggets spoiled another landmark night for the Lakers.

    On the night LeBron James became the first player to ever score 40,000 career points, Denver came back from an 11-point deficit for a 124-114 win, the team’s sixth consecutive since the All-Star break, on Saturday night.

    Nikola Jokic went for 35 points and 10 rebounds. Michael Porter Jr. added an immaculate 25 without missing a single shot. He was 10 for 10 in the game, including 5 for 5 from beyond the arc.

    The Nuggets (42-19) have won eight consecutive games over the Lakers.

    They entered the fourth quarter of this one tied at 89 and needing a key stretch from the second unit. It mostly delivered, until the very end of Jokic’s rest minutes. Peyton Watson supplied four points and an emphatic block as the Nuggets took a five-point lead, but James nullified the block by absorbing contact with Zeke Nnaji for an and-one. He missed the free throw that would’ve tied the game, but a Denver turnover seconds later led to a go-ahead James three. Timeout Michael Malone, down two.

    Enter Jokic. Cue clutch finish for Nuggets starters.

    They trailed 108-105 as clutch time officially began in the last five minutes. Justin Holiday sank a 3-pointer while playing for Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, out for personal reasons. Aaron Gordon finally cashed in on an open corner three for the lead. Then Jokic and Jamal Murray took over again. The game ended on a 19-6 run.

    Public and media anticipation surrounding the final meeting of the regular season between these teams wasn’t particularly concerned with the matchup or its implications. Denver was going into a building sold out by box score watchers experiencing LeBron Fever. He entered the game an inevitable nine points away from the never-achieved milestone, and for the first quarter and change, that was the primary focus every time he had the ball. Malone was effusive in his praise of James while fielding a handful of questions about him pregame, but in terms of the moment itself, the ninth-year Nuggets coach was definitive.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Suspect shot by Denver police after stabbing at 7-Eleven

    Suspect shot by Denver police after stabbing at 7-Eleven

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    A person was shot by Denver police after allegedly stabbing a clerk at a 7-Eleven near West Fifth Avenue and North Federal Boulevard on Friday night.

    Officers responded to reports of a 7-Eleven store clerk who had been stabbed and found a suspect near West Fifth Avenue and North Federal Boulevard at approximately 6:49 p.m., police spokesperson Kurt Barnes said Friday.

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    Katie Langford

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  • Keeler: Nuggets star Jamal Murray could ruin LeBron James’ record-setting night. But is that worth risking Murray’s bad ankle?

    Keeler: Nuggets star Jamal Murray could ruin LeBron James’ record-setting night. But is that worth risking Murray’s bad ankle?

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    Michael Adams’ heart did a one-handed push shot right past his chest, then sank straight into his hands.

    There he was, baseline royalty, right under the basket. First time back at Ball Arena in about six years, and Jamal Murray lands like a dead fish three feet in front of him, rolling on the floor.

    Suddenly, in a cruel twist of irony and a crueler twist of an ankle, one of the greatest shooters in Nuggets history had a front-row seat to watch the Blue Arrow, his spiritual successor, writhe in agony.

    “I just heard him say, ‘Oh my God,’” Adams, the Nuggets’ 3-point ace from 1987-91, said of the Blue Arrow’s sprain just before halftime, the one that cast a pall over the Nuggets’ scrappy 103-97 victory over the Miami Heat in an NBA Finals rematch.

    “So when (Murray) grabbed his ankle, I was like, ‘OK, it’s his ankle … it wasn’t his knee.’”

    Join the club, brother.

    I know what you’re thinking: Man, the Lakers are next. Is there a better, sweeter feeling for Nuggets faithful than watching Murray prop his feet up on the couch in The House Kobe Built and drop daggers all over Tinseltown? Especially on LeBron’s big night? Over his last six regular-season appearances against the Lake Show, the Blue Arrow’s averaged 23.5 points, 6.3 assists and 3.2 treys.

    But by the same token, did you see the anguish on the guy’s face as he staggered off the baseline and limped to the locker room? Why push your luck? Especially when that luck is as fickle as Jamal’s?

    “Injuries happen,” Adams told me, “but in this situation, you want the Nuggets to be healthy toward the end of the season … if he’s not ready to go, they’ll sit him down and let him get healthy. They’ve still got some time (to finish) the season with him on the floor.”

    This ain’t about want-to. Or toughness. Murray was raised like a basketball ninja in chilly Ontario, a childhood montage that included push-ups in the snow and balancing cups of hot tea on his thigh during squats. The Arrow would sooner swim through shark-infested waters wearing a chum suit than accept defeat.

    Still, if I’m Nuggets coach Michael Malone, I’m overriding Murray’s inner Bruce Lee and reaching for the bubble wrap.

    The NBA Playoffs, the land of bright lights, big stages and swollen egos where No. 27 reigns supreme, is seven weeks away yet. The No. 1 seed in the West is a heck of a target, yes, and the Nuggets went into Friday trailing the Wolves by a game-and-a-half.

    Everything’s on the table now. Including disaster. And you sure as heck don’t get a parade in June by redlining Murray in early March.

    “When Jamal realizes, ‘Hey, man, we’ve got 23 games to go, this (ankle) is not feeling great right now,’ I think it’s great for him to realize being cautious right now is probably the really prudent decision,” Malone said late Thursday night. “And that shows also (his) maturity. He’s growing and realizing that we (need him long-term) …

    “(People insist), ‘You should be the No. 1 seed.’ Yeah, that’d be great. I want to be healthy. Because I know if we’re healthy, that we can beat anybody, anywhere.”

    Dang straight.

    Murray ended the first quarter Thursday by draining a 3-pointer at the buzzer with four Miami hands in his face. He ended the second in the bowels of Ball Arena, getting treatment on a right ankle that got rolled during an accidental collision with teammate Aaron Gordon.

    The tumble happened, as kismet would have it, right in front of Adams, now 61 and working with the Washington Wizards, and his son.

    “I actually wanted to bring my All-Star ring here to let him hold onto it until he actually made one,” said Adams, who represented Washington at the NBA’s mid-winter classic back in 1992. “And to (tell Murray), ‘You deserve to be on an All-Star team.’ I didn’t do it. But I wanted to.”

    In his salad days, Adams was Steph Curry before Steph, 5-foot-10 with a funky release, cold-blooded to the core, a shooter ahead of his time. Especially once ex-Nuggets coach Doug Moe gave him the green light.

    “I’m a big fan of Murray — obviously, him and Nikola (Jokic) are just out-of-this-world players,” said Adams, who averaged 18.2 points and 7.2 dimes over four seasons with Denver. “I love watching him play. I was just telling my son, ‘If I was backing up Jamal Murray, and he just went out of the game, I’d be happy to be on the floor with the rest of those guys right now.’”

    He’d be happier still to see Murray rest that ankle until the Arrow’s closer to 100%. And like Malone, he’d rather have the Nuggets healthy come mid-April than exhaust their stars in a seeding chase.

    “You want (those starters) on the floor, but health is No. 1,” Adams said. “I think the Nuggets can beat anybody on the road (in the playoffs) if they had to.”

    Nine solid weeks of Murray in the spring is worth its weight in gold. At least 29 pounds of it, last we checked.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Forest Service tribal liaisons work to bridge gap between federal government, Indigenous communities

    Forest Service tribal liaisons work to bridge gap between federal government, Indigenous communities

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    PUEBLO, Colo. — The U.S. Forest Service is working to bridge the gap between the federal government and Indigenous communities through the work of tribal liaisons.

    Dr. Jason Herbert was hired to serve as the first tribal liaison for the Pike-San Isabel National Forests & Cimarron and Comanche National Grasslands region. He started his position in August 2023.

    “The idea behind this is to better administer these lands by talking to the Indigenous stakeholders here, the people who have always lived here in Colorado, western Kansas,” said Herbert. “There are tribal leads liaisons throughout the federal government, whether you’re talking about the National Forest Service, the United States Forest Service, Fish and Wildlife, National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management. There are tribal liaisons everywhere.”

    Herbert said the start of his new position consists of a lot of learning, both from other Colorado tribal liaisons, tribal leaders and the landscape itself.

    “If I was going to come out here, I felt like I owed tribes my due diligence to come out here and learn these landscapes that they call home,” said Herbert. “My job is to talk to people. And ultimately, that’s all a tribal liaison does is I want to make sure that tribal voices are being heard within our national forest system.”

    Ultimately, Herbert said his goal is to ensure everyone benefits from a better administration of the federal land.

    “The whole reason we have these national forests is because we have a 250-year-old system of colonialism,” Herbert said. “The reason why I’m out here is because the people who call Colorado home were violently removed from these landscapes. Now, I don’t tell people that to upset them or to make them feel guilty. You didn’t do this, but you are responsible. And by that, I mean, you’re responsible for learning about these pasts, right? So that we can create a better present, so we can create a better future.”

    A historian at heart, Herbert said he wants to first establish a real working relationship with tribes based on trust.

    “The only way to do that is to be humble, is to be serious about the nature of the job,” said Herbert. “I look at myself here as a guest upon these lands. And in my position, I have to. These are native lands.”

    “I don’t think it’s too much to do right by tribes and the United States Forest Service. We can accomplish both of those things,” Herbert continued. “When you change the landscape, you change culture. When you change the culture, you threaten the viability of people. That’s what’s at stake here is making sure that we honor these landscapes and manage them in ways that are appropriate to Indigenous communities.”


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    Colette Bordelon

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  • Midwest-based coffee chain to continue NC expansion with Lake Norman area location

    Midwest-based coffee chain to continue NC expansion with Lake Norman area location

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    The Lake Norman area store will be in Denver.

    The Lake Norman area store will be in Denver.

    Dan Powers/USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin / USA TODAY NETWORK

    A Midwest-based drive-thru coffee chain plans to continue its expansion in North Carolina by adding a location in the Lake Norman area.

    Scooter’s Coffee, based in Omaha, Nebraska, is currently under construction at 689 N.C. 16 Business North in Denver, according to the company’s website.

    With nearly 750 stores in 30 states, Scooter’s Coffee is known for its espresso drinks, fruit smoothies, baked-from-scratch pastries and its signature drink, the Caramelicious.

    About Scooters

    The first Scooter’s Coffee franchise in North Carolina opened in Monroe in 2020, according to a news release from the company.

    The company has since added three locations in the Charlotte area — Lincolnton, Monroe and Indian Trail.

    A grand opening date for the Denver store has not yet been announced.

    This story was originally published February 28, 2024, 11:20 AM.

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Evan Moore is a service journalism reporter for the Charlotte Observer. He grew up in Denver, North Carolina, where he previously worked as a reporter for the Denver Citizen, and is a UNC Charlotte graduate.

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  • Colorado House committee defeats bill to repeal anti-BDS law on PERA investments

    Colorado House committee defeats bill to repeal anti-BDS law on PERA investments

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    Colorado’s public pension program must continue divesting from companies that economically boycott Israel after a state House committee rejected a bill that would have repealed the requirement.

    The 10-1 bipartisan defeat of HB24-1169 late Monday in the House Finance Committee came after hours of emotional and tense testimony. The discussion often spiraled into support or condemnation for Israel and its months-long military campaign in the Gaza Strip.

    More than 100 people testified for or against the measure, which would have repealed a 2016 state law that requires the Public Employees Retirement Association to divest from companies that participate in the BDS movement. That movement promotes boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel as a way of protesting the country’s treatment of Palestinians.

    Only three companies have been flagged under the law, according to PERA. It applies only to international companies. The law costs roughly $10,000 a year to administer.

    Just one member of the Democrat-controlled finance committee, Rep. Lorena Garcia, an Adams County Democrat, voted to advance the bill. The measure was sponsored by Rep. Elisabeth Epps, a Denver Democrat. She was reprimanded by House leadership last month for, among other things, disrupting House proceedings and joining pro-Palestinian protesters seated in the House’s gallery during the November special session.

    Nearly 30,000 people have been killed in Gaza during Israel’s war with Hamas, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Israel launched the war in response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 terrorist attacks, which killed 1,200 people and included the taking of about 250 hostages, some of whom are still being held.

    Epps told fellow lawmakers Monday that she repeatedly had been told the legislature had no business weighing in on international affairs, but she argued that the 2016 anti-BDS law did just that.

    “There is a particularly insidious criticism that is made of folks who are protesting a range of issues,” she said. “The central element of that criticism is that we’re not doing it right. … If you want to petition your pension board to do an economic boycott, that’s not right either. That can’t be how we continue to do business here.”

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    Seth Klamann

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  • Denver opening severe weather shelter Tuesday night

    Denver opening severe weather shelter Tuesday night

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    Denver city officials will open a severe weather shelter Tuesday night as temperatures are forecast to drop below 20 degrees.

    The McNichols Civic Center Building at 144 W. Colfax Ave. will be open from 6 p.m. Tuesday to 9 a.m. Wednesday for walk-up service, the city said in a news release Monday.

    People can also access shelter through the city’s other access points, including:

    • For individual men at the Lawrence Street Community Center, 2222 Lawrence St.;
    • For individual women at Samaritan House, 2301 Lawrence St.;
    • For youth ages 15-20 at Urban Peak, 2100 Stout St.

    Families in need of shelter should call the Connection Center at 303-295-3366.

    Get more Colorado news by signing up for our daily Your Morning Dozen email newsletter.

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    Katie Langford

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  • Nikola Jokic on his defense after 4 steals vs. Warriors: “I think I’m not bad, not good. I’m in the middle.”

    Nikola Jokic on his defense after 4 steals vs. Warriors: “I think I’m not bad, not good. I’m in the middle.”

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    SAN FRANCISCO — The cartoonish Defensive Player of the Game chain is objectively the Nuggets’ corniest tradition, a blinged-up symbol of morale and affirmation usually reserved for college football sidelines rather than NBA locker rooms. If it seems one is too many, brace for impact.

    “We only travel with one. We’ve gotta change that,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said after a 119-103 win over the Warriors on Sunday. “Because if we had two chains, Nikola would have gotten the other one.”

    The lone chain couldn’t belong to anyone else but Kentavious Caldwell-Pope for his dogged efforts in trying to out-cardio Steph Curry in the half-court. But in Nikola Jokic’s trio of videogame performances since the All-Star break, his defense has stood up respectably next to his offense. He’s averaging 27.3 points, 16.7 rebounds and 15 assists on 68.7% shooting … plus three “stocks,” a combination of blocks and steals.

    When he’s on the floor this season, the Nuggets are allowing 112.1 points per 100 possessions, 1.3 below their overall total as a team.

    As a crowded MVP race heats up with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Luka Doncic, Jokic’s four steals against Golden State were a testament to the trickiness in evaluating his defense. He’s not always noticeably impactful — the No. 1 argument skeptics make against his annual candidacy is that he’s a liability, even — but when he’s engaged in the game plan and actively anticipating an opponent’s next move the way he does on offense, he can be a master of his role in Denver’s defensive system.

    “I think I’m not bad, not good,” Jokic said Sunday at Chase Center. “I’m in the middle.”

    By the same token that Jokic doesn’t dunk the basketball often, he rarely swats shots or plays above the rim defensively. Instead, the Nuggets maximize their center’s strengths by having him guard higher up against ball screens than most big men in the NBA, subsequently leaning heavily on weak-side help from Aaron Gordon and Michael Porter Jr. to contain rollers. When Jokic can play from the middle of the floor, his vision and IQ work in sync with his quick hands.

    “The more he’s up in pick-and-rolls and on the ball … that’s what he’s great at,” Caldwell-Pope said recently. “Just being up. Active hands. Getting deflections when they try to make that pocket pass.”

    Jokic amassed five deflections to go with his four steals in Denver’s seventh consecutive win against the Warriors. As of the 56-game mark, he was tied for eighth in the league with 2.9 per game (as many as the absurdly wingspanned Victor Wembanyama). “That speaks to activity, that speaks to a physicality, that speaks to being in that right place in the right time,” said Malone. Disrupting the pocket pass is a facet of Jokic’s innate understanding of pick-and-roll angles, the same understanding that makes his two-man game with Jamal Murray so brilliant at the other end of the floor.

    It’s not Murray he’s generally teaming up with to defend the pick-and-roll, though. It’s Caldwell-Pope, who’s regularly charged with premier backcourt matchups. The experienced Caldwell-Pope is one of the best guards in the league at navigating screens. But the Nuggets have minimal off-day practice time during the season to refine two-man defensive chemistry, and Jokic and Caldwell-Pope haven’t been playing their entire careers together. So, says Caldwell-Pope, it’s a matter of “learn on the go.”

    “I feel like with Jok, in a pick-and-roll with him defensively, I know he’s gonna be up,” he said. “I know he has great hands, just like I have great hands. He’s gonna try to go for the steal as well. So just us two, being in that action, it helps me out a lot. It helps him just to get back to his man and helps me stay as close as possible to my man. That’s our game plan, him being up. And it’s good for our team, for him to be up.”

    Caldwell-Pope added that his individual emphasis, to hound the ball-handler through the screen while Jokic also stays up, is made easier by Jokic dropping marginally behind him and being able to see other aspects of the play unfolding. “He reads plays faster than I can sometimes,” the former Laker said.

    “That’s him, to be honest,” Jokic retorted of his chemistry with Caldwell-Pope. “I’m just there to not mess up. He’s a really good defender, and I’m there to just, try to help him a little bit. As much as I can. But it’s mostly him.”

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Top prosecutor in Derek Chauvin trial talks police reform during Colorado visit

    Top prosecutor in Derek Chauvin trial talks police reform during Colorado visit

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    DENVER — Sunday marked what would have been Elijah McClain‘s 28th birthday.

    McClain was killed in 2019 when Aurora Police Officers responded to a 911 call about a “sketchy” man. McClain, who was unarmed and had not committed a crime, was put into a neck hold by police. Paramedics administered a sedative called ketamine, which officials said led to cardiac arrest on the way to the hospital. He was declared brain dead days later and died Aug. 30, 2019.

    The two Aurora paramedics who injected McClain with ketamine were convicted of criminally negligent homicide, but the jury was split on the charges regarding the unlawful administration of the powerful sedative.

    Three former Aurora Police Officers — Jason Rosenblatt, Randy Roedema, and Nathan Woodyard — were all taken to trial. Only Roedema was convicted of the charges against him. He is appealing that jury decision.

    “I don’t think a ‘not guilty’ is a failure. I think the failure is to never even bring the case forward for consideration,” said the Minnesota Attorney General, Keith Ellison.

    Ellison was the top prosecutor in the case against Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis Police Officer convicted of the charges related to the killing of George Floyd in 2020.

    “2020 will be remembered as a time when, in the midst of a pandemic, we had a massive social reckoning,” said Ellison. “There were protests and demonstrations in almost every city, including Denver.”

    Hear Ellison’s message in the video below:

    Top prosecutor in Derek Chauvin trial talks police reform in Colorado visit

    Ellison wrote a book about what he learned during the trial, titled “Break the Wheel: Ending the Cycle of Police Violence.” On Sunday, Ellison visited Tattered Cover to discuss the novel with Colorado residents.

    “Not every police officer is Derek Chauvin,” said Ellison. “People like Derek Chauvin discourage good candidates from coming forth. I think that if people know that the dignity and the honor of the profession will be upheld, that it will attract people who want to do the job.”

    Ellison suggested a handful of ways to curb police violence. Some of the more attainable options, according to Ellison, are a greater emphasis on how to handle mental health crises, using cameras to enforce the law instead of traffic stops in certain situations, and a national database that tracks police violence.

    “What we’re doing is upholding high standards, and there’s nothing wrong with having high standards for law enforcement… If there’s no system of accountability, then almost every other measure you try to do will not work,” said Ellison. “We’ve got to put a system in place which will guarantee that the constitutional rights of everyone are going to be respected and observed… If we do that, better days are ahead. More cooperation, more public safety. Those things are around the corner for us if we’re willing to do those things.”

    In 2023, the City of Denver paid protesters a $1 million settlement.

    In Aurora, a record settlement of $15 million was paid to the parents of McClain.


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    Colette Bordelon

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  • Russell Wilson reiterates willingness to return to Denver despite uncertainty on podcast appearance: “People think I’m out of there. Maybe I am”

    Russell Wilson reiterates willingness to return to Denver despite uncertainty on podcast appearance: “People think I’m out of there. Maybe I am”

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    Russell Wilson reiterated that he hopes to return to the Broncos in 2024 but doesn’t know whether that will happen during a podcast with former Denver wide receiver Brandon Marshall.

    Over more than 80 minutes on Marshall’s “I Am Athlete” podcast, the pair talked extensively about Wilson’s career, marriage, family and much more but they also briefly got down to brass tacks about Wilson’s current limbo with Denver.

    “For me it’s about winning. In the next five years I want to win two (Super Bowls),” Wilson said. “I want to feel the chill of that trophy again. So yeah, I want to go back to Denver. I hope I get to go back. I’d love to go back, to be honest with you. I’ve got amazing teammates.”

    Wilson, though, acknowledged he doesn’t know if that will happen. Marshall tried to get him to talk about other potential destinations, but the veteran quarterback didn’t bite.

    “I honestly haven’t really thought about it. I’m still in Denver,” he said, later adding, “If it’s not there, though, I’d go to a place where we can win again.”

    Asked if Wilson could play again for Broncos head coach Sean Payton after their first season together, he said flatly, “Yeah.”

    Most in the NFL expect, though, that Denver will release or, far less likely, find a trade partner to jettison Wilson before March 17, when $37 million in 2025 base salary would become guaranteed.

    The podcast went live Sunday night, perhaps not coincidentally, just before the NFL descends on Indianapolis for this week’s Scouting Combine. It’s a time on the calendar when a lot of business gets done and a lot of groundwork for future moves is put into place. Payton and general manager George Paton are slated to speak Tuesday morning and now Wilson’s put his stance on the record ahead of time.

    Marshall at one point joked with Wilson about where he’d live if he returned to the Broncos because of recent Business Den reporting that he and his wife, Ciara, are taking showings and accepting offers on their Cherry Hills mansion.

    “My house ain’t for sale. It’s not for sale,” Wilson said before tempering that a bit.

    “It’s not on the market right now.”

    Either way, he said he feels like he bounced back from a poor 2022 season and is planning on playing at a high level well into the future.

    “People think I’m out of there. Maybe I am, but no matter what I’d love to go back,” he said. “I committed. There. I committed to be there. I want to win more Super Bowls there. I love the city and everything else, but you also want to be at a place that wants you, too.”

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    Parker Gabriel

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  • Sen. Bennet returns from trip to Ukraine

    Sen. Bennet returns from trip to Ukraine

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    DENVER (KDVR) — Colorado U.S. Senator Michael Bennet was back in Denver Saturday after a trip overseas to war-torn Ukraine. This week marks two years since Russia invaded Ukraine.

    “Ukraine is in a fight not just for Ukraine but for democracy, for freedom, and for the entire world,” Sen. Bennet said.

    Bennet made the journey with U.S. Senators Chuck Schumer (New York), Jack Reed (Rhode Island), Richard Blumenthal (Connecticut), and Maggie Hassan (New Hampshire). He said they needed to visit the country and said the United States needs to continue to support as the war continues.

    “Since Putin started this lawless war two years ago, the Ukrainian people have sacrificed their lives and won battle after battle against all odds. It’s time for America to lead the rest of the world in support of their bravery and resilience amid Putin’s aggression,” Bennet said.

    Bennet told FOX31 that there is a moral obligation to support Ukrainians.

    “I think this is a war for the West and I think Putin understands that,” Bennet said.

    While in Ukraine, the senators met with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy following Senate passage of the National Security Supplemental, which Sen. Bennet said would provide Ukraine with much-needed weapons and ammunition.

    But right now that bill is stalled at the house. Lawmakers who oppose the bill said they need to focus more on the continued discussion around the southern border.

    “I’m thankful to the people of Ukraine for the inspiration that they’ve given to all of us and I know we’ll be with them until the very end,” Bennet said.

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    Courtney Fromm

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  • Church in Denver’s Berkeley neighborhood sells for $1.5M after four months on market

    Church in Denver’s Berkeley neighborhood sells for $1.5M after four months on market

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    A Berkeley congregation has completed its real estate exodus.

    Highlands Lutheran Church sold its roughly 14,000-square-foot church at 3995 N. Irving St. last week for $1.48 million, or about $106 per square foot. It had been listed at $1.75 million.

    The buyer was Mounashram Inc., a faith-based nonprofit. Attempts to reach the organization were unsuccessful.

    Highlands Lutheran, which had been on Irving Street for the past century, moved last year to 7375 Samuel Drive, where it is renting a church from the Rocky Mountain Synod, the regional Lutheran Church organization.

    Pastor Samm Melton-Hill said the congregation is still figuring out what to do with the proceeds from the sale, but expects some of the funds to be used for community grants for those in need.

    “We’re really excited for what the space will look like for north Denver and hope it continues to be a center part of that community and neighborhood,” Melton-Hill said.

    The church building hit the market in October 2023 with the goal of selling quickly, as the congregation had no property manager and upkeep with the space became difficult, according to The McMillan Cos. broker Monnie Elliott, who represented the church along with Dana Crawford.

    But a quick turnaround could not come at the expense of the church’s mission, she added, saying it had to be sold to an entity that “would be of service to the community.”

    At one point, the property was under contract to a group trying to build a preschool there, but that deal fell through.

    “We had a tremendous amount of interest from churches and religious groups … We felt really good about it (the buyer) instead of selling it to someone who would bulldoze it and build two luxury homes on the property,” Elliott said.

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    Matthew Geiger

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  • Police investigate homicide in southeast Denver

    Police investigate homicide in southeast Denver

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    DENVER — Police in Denver are investigating homicide Saturday in the southeast area of the city.

    Police said a man’s death in the 400 block of S. Quebec Street was determined to be a homicide.

    The victim, whose identity is unknown, was pronounced dead at the scene.

    An official cause and manner of death has not been released.

    Police said investigators are working to develop suspect information.


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    Robert Garrison

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  • Empowered Youth Town Hall addresses gun violence, youth issues in Denver

    Empowered Youth Town Hall addresses gun violence, youth issues in Denver

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    DENVER — More than 100 people gathered for the Empower Youth Town Hall at West High School in Denver Saturday.

    The event was organized by the Silva Family Foundation and Generation Schools Network (GSN,) a Colorado-based nonprofit that co-creates healthy school ecosystems by partnering with educators, students, families and communities.

    The two groups have been a part of introducing new legislation, HB24-1216, that outlines the Justice-Engaged Student Bill of Rights (JESBOR).

    Sponsors of the bill said it would help students who get in trouble with the law, get back on track with their education faster.

    Alison Lauge, the Vice President of Development and Partnership for GSN said around 22,000 students in Colorado are impacted by this annually.

    “We found that there’s a lot of bumps and issues that they run into, and things that kind of prevent them from getting back into school quickly,” said Lauge. “We introduced a bill to talk about a Student Bill of Rights establishing a hotline. So once a student becomes justice-engaged, a parent can call into the hotline and get advice and guidance. And really, it’s just trying to solve for some of those students that run into issues once they become justice engaged to get them back into school quicker.”

    Empowered Youth Town Hall addresses gun violence, youth issues in Denver

    Denver7 spoke with a high school freshman who attended the town hall and said it was important for her to participate to speak about the variety of issues youth are facing.

    “We’re speaking for ourselves and speaking what we’re doing and speaking for the community,” said student, Angelique Lovato.

    Panelists included Denver city council members, Denver Police Chief Ron Thomas, Rep. Jen Bacon, DPS School board Director Marlene DelaRose, youth panelists and more. It took place to address the intersection of education, gun violence, justice engagement and community solutions, according to event organizers.

    “Just the response we’ve seen from students, I mean, it’s a beautiful Saturday morning, and yet they’re here because they want to give that input on their future, and those things that are affecting them,” added Lauge.

    Students and families can take part in the 100 Voices Student survey, to provide testimony to the legislature.

    You can click here for more information.


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    Kristian Lopez

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  • Michael Porter Jr. scores season-high 34 as Nuggets cruise past Trail Blazers

    Michael Porter Jr. scores season-high 34 as Nuggets cruise past Trail Blazers

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    PORTLAND, Ore. — Written on the locker room whiteboard Thursday night at Ball Arena was a summons for players to get to the Denver airport by 10:20 p.m. for their team flight to Oregon. It was an unrealistic goal, especially considering Nikola Jokic’s typically methodical postgame process and media obligation.

    So maybe the Nuggets were a little late to take off. They made it to Portland just fine.

    And after a slightly slow start at Moda Center the next night, the defending champions took off and earned a 127-112 win over the Blazers, sweeping a back-to-back out of the All-Star break. Michael Malone called a timeout after three early turnovers yielded an 8-3 deficit. Then Denver cruised.

    The Nuggets (38-19) gave Jamal Murray the night off to avoid straining him in the back-to-back after he went into the break dealing with shin splints. His absence was more for precautionary reasons after an encouraging performance against the Wizards and before a marquee matchup Sunday at the Warriors. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, on the other hand, played after missing the second half of Thursday’s game with a sprained finger.

    Without Murray, Nikola Jokic posted a triple-double by the end of the third quarter for the second time in 24 hours, and Michael Porter Jr. scored a season-high 34 points on 21 shots to go with a dozen rebounds.

    “I was just getting easy shots. My teammates were finding me in transition,” Porter said. “When a player like ‘Mal is out, a lot of guys have gotta step up.”

    “Michael is such a big target, and (defenders) play on the high side, so they’re trying to make him a 2-point scorer,” Malone said. “And he’s shown that he can do that just as efficiently (as scoring from three). This was a night when Michael played at a high level throughout the course of the game.”

    Jokic finished the night with 29 points, 15 boards and 14 assists on 12-of-17 shooting. With 2:37 remaining in the first half, he missed his first shot in 15 attempts since the break. Aaron Gordon also supplied another efficient and well-rounded game, going for eight points on 4-of-5 shooting (all in the first half) and seven assists.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • 3 bills aim to strengthen requirements of Colorado’s funeral home industry

    3 bills aim to strengthen requirements of Colorado’s funeral home industry

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    DENVER — State leaders have crafted three bills aimed at strengthening the requirements of Colorado’s funeral home industry.

    The legislative trio comes on the heels of a renewed push in Colorado for stricter regulations on funeral home directors. Just this month, a woman’s remains and the cremains of at least 30 other people were recovered from a Denver property rented by a former funeral home director.

    Last year, the owners of a Montrose funeral home that doubled as a body broker on the Western Slope were sentenced to federal prison. A former Lake County Coroner was sentenced to 180 days in jail for mishandling the corpse of a stillborn baby in his funeral home related to actions from 2020.

    In October 2023, reports of a horrific smell coming from a funeral home in southern Colorado sparked an investigation that led to the discovery of 189 bodies decomposing inside of Return to Nature Funeral Home. Jon and Carie Hallford, the owners of Return to Nature Funeral Home, face more than 250 charges each. They are set to be arraigned in March.

    Local News

    Search continues for man wanted after human cremains found on Denver property

    2:55 PM, Feb 22, 2024

    Funeral homes and crematories are regulated, which is necessary to register with the state, but funeral home directors do not have to be licensed.

    “It’s one thing to hold the business entity accountable. But at the end of the day, it’s actually the people who work within the funeral home that you really want to be held accountable,” said State Representative Matt Soper, R – Delta and Mesa Counties. “You really want the onus and the obligation on them.”

    Soper is sponsoring two bills surrounding the state’s funeral home industry, one of which was introduced Wednesday.

    “Two years ago, we worked on another law that gave the Department of Regulatory Affairs the power to actually go in and investigate a funeral home. The bill we introduced Wednesday makes 11 changes. Not all of them are high level or significant, but some of the ones that are significant play off the bill we passed two years ago,” said Soper. “It gives DORA the ability to investigate and inspect a funeral home at any time, not just during normal business hours. That’s kind of a significant change. Another change is it gave the head of DORA the ability to write rules regarding chain of custody of a body. So we know where the body has been within the funeral home, to be able to have more robust rules that actually put force behind the Colorado mortuary science code and part of the code that we see a lot of violations on concerns refrigeration.”

    Local News

    State recommends Colorado legislators regulate funeral directors

    10:33 PM, Jan 01, 2024

    Soper is most excited about a bill that will likely be introduced during the first week of March. He said it aims to license funeral home directors, morticians, cremationists and embalmers.

    The bill is still being drafted, but Soper said it would create a mortuary science practitioner license that would include embalming, cremating and funeral directing. However, Soper said there would still be individual licenses available for the same careers.

    A third bill, House Bill 24-1254, would continue the regulation of nontransplant tissue banks for nine years.


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  • Denver school collects more than $10,000 for cafeteria worker after house fire

    Denver school collects more than $10,000 for cafeteria worker after house fire

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    DENVER — A Denver school collected more than $10,000 to help a beloved cafeteria worker whose home was damaged in a fire.

    Rose Gianni’s dedication is well known at Denver Green School Southeast. After her north Denver mobile home was damaged by two electrical fires, school staff launched a GoFundMe fundraiser to help.

    Since Denver7 shared Gianni’s story, the GoFundMe has collected more than $10,000 in donations.

    “I feel so grateful. I wish I could tell everybody thank you. Thank you, thank you for everything they have done,” Gianni said Thursday.

    “I honestly didn’t think it was going to get the traction it received,” said Aleaha Harkins, a music teacher at the school.

    Harkins said she was inspired to start the fundraiser because of Gianni’s connection to students and staff.

    “It’s been incredible. When I first started this, I set a fairly small goal, and I thought that was going to be a huge feat. And once we surpassed that goal, it just filled my heart because now Rose is able to actually get the repairs that she needs,” said Harkins.

    Gianni said she will be able to move back after the necessary repairs are made. Electricians said her home will need to be rewired.


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    Kristian Lopez

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