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Tag: Erie

  • ‘Up and coming’: Denver7 | Your Voice visits Erie to discover the people and places that make it unique

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    ERIE, Colo. — Perfectly positioned between Denver and Boulder is the town of Erie, with a charming main street that brings together local businesses and the loyal community members who support their favorite spots. Denver7 | Your Voice visited the area to hear from the people who live and work there about what makes this place so special.

    Briggs Street bustles with businesses and local stores and is known as the Old Town district. Denver7 | Your Voice stopped inside Fox Dog Coffee to experience the local flavor and community charm firsthand. Steph Hauser and her husband opened the doors to the business in 2019. Since then, they have been serving up coffee drinks and bites to eat.

    “Our biggest mission in building Fox Dog was to create a space where the community could come together, and our biggest motto is love, serve, inspire,” Hauser said. “So, what we do is we sort of want to create the environment for our friends here in Erie to come and feel like they can be loved on, they can be served, but they can also serve and love each other.”

    Having been in the business for seven years, Hauser has witnessed the area’s remarkable growth and the community’s generous heart.

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    “There is nothing like this group of people here in Erie,” Hauser said. “They are so supportive of each other. They are so wanting to do good for their neighbors. We’ve seen that time and time again. We just have such a lucky vantage point from behind the counter here.”

    Behind the counter, customers can see a mural depicting the town of Erie and the surrounding cities. Hauser understands the importance of the town’s location and its ability to bring together people from all walks of life.

    “It’s become the sort of nucleus for big families, starting families, people who are retiring,” Hauser said. “You have this incredible mix of people who have been here for decades and decades, and seeing the city change over time, and us coming in — we get to be a part of that change.”

    On a cold January day, Larry Faulks and Seajay Crosson were inside the business enjoying a warm drink along with the pastry. The two moved from Fayetteville, Arkansas, to Erie to be closer to family.

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    “It’s a different world here. I’m familiar with Texas plants and Arkansas plants, and she’s familiar with Indiana plants and Arkansas plants,” Faulks said. “But Colorado is a different world.”

    While the two moved to an unknown place, they quickly discovered the strong sense of community and the immense pride many have for Erie.

    “When we moved here, a couple neighbors actually brought us over cookies, and I don’t think I’ve ever lived somewhere where neighbors brought us cookies,” Crosson said.

    When it comes to the biggest challenges of living in Erie, the two expressed concerns about the rapid growth impacting the small-town charm and the lack of grocery stores nearby.

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    “You actually have to get in the car and go quite some distance to get some groceries, and then another thing: It’s mostly restaurants here. So, I wish there was a fuller array of businesses so that we didn’t have to drive so much to other places,” Crosson said.

    Carly Brooks Rogers was another customer enjoying a cup of coffee. Originally from Washington, she moved to Erie to stay close to family and loved that it felt like a safe place to call home.

    “I was kind of deciding between places and wanted to be closer to family, and I had only been here during the winter, actually, because I used to work with a ski team, so I would go to the mountains, and then I would come here and see my aunt. So, I just wanted to be closer, and it was a cute small little town,” Rogers said.

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    During her time living in Erie, Rogers has watched the town become “up and coming” and wonders how the continued growth might impact crime and traffic.

    Just a couple of blocks from the coffee shop is Briggs Street Books and Music, run by Casey and Dan Gump. The store celebrated a major milestone recently: one full year in business after opening on Feb. 1, 2025.

    “We wanted to add something to the community down here, and we really love it down here,” Dan Gump said. “So, we need more retailers.”

    The store is located inside the Coal Park building and is upstairs next to the restaurant Piripi. Besides books, records are on sale, where there is a listening station for customers to enjoy.

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    Cesar Sabogal

    “Music brings people together, and so we wanted that kind of space that like, you can just come out, you can come hang out and go sit at the listening station and listen to some music,” he said. “Buy a book, sit in the corner, hang out, go grab a cup of coffee and come down, or have dinner across the hall.”

    While the business is fairly new to the area, Gump has lived in Erie since 2020 and has watched more people discover the town alongside the other local businesses that have opened.

    “It’s growing, it’s changing. We’ve got new restaurants coming in. We’ve got new retail things coming in, and it’s just I would say it’s very up and coming, and give it a shot,” Gump said.

    A short drive from the Old Town district is Lil’ Buckaroo’s Petting Zoo, which opened in 2021. The farm manager, Martina Carlucci, said there are 40 animals total, including miniature donkeys, miniature belted galloway cows, alpacas, and more.

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    Cesar Sabogal

    “It’s really cool to see people come in here and just light up and laugh and giggle when they’re feeding the goats, and it’s a really big confidence builder for little kids as well, to go in there with an animal that’s maybe larger than their comfort zone,” Carlucci said.

    Growing up around horses, Carlucci said she went to college for horse management and has always wanted to be around these animals. She first started working on the property on the horse boarding side and then moved over to the petting zoo.

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    Cesar Sabogal

    “There’s a ton of benefits to being with animals from a mental standpoint. It also gets people outside, and you’re able to meet people in your area. It’s a fun rainy day activity,” Carlucci said.

    Over the years, she has also seen firsthand how Erie has developed.

    “Even just when I moved here a couple of years ago, there were a lot less neighborhoods around us, so I’ve been here about four years,” said Carlucci. “There’s been some pretty rapid growth around here.”

    As more people move to Erie and call it home, Carlucci believes the town’s small business community will flourish alongside it.

    In these Denver7 | Your Voice stories, we want to hear from you about what matters most in your community. We hope to hear what makes our communities special, the challenges facing them, and everything in between. Have an idea or want to share your thoughts? Fill out the contact form below.

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    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Maggy Wolanske

    Denver7’s Maggy Wolanske is a multimedia journalist who covers topics that have an impact across Colorado, but specializes in reporting on climate and environment, as well as stories impacting animals and wildlife. If you’d like to get in touch with Maggy, fill out the form below to send her an email.

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  • Former teacher arrested on child sexual assault material charges hired in Jeffco after SVVSD recommended he not return

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    A former Arvada teacher arrested Monday for reportedly creating and selling child sexual assault material was found to have violated St. Vrain Valley School District policies in 2023 for interactions he had with students at Erie Middle School, and officials recommended the teacher not return to the district.

    That finding was not shared with Jefferson County School District when it hired the teacher, according to an arrest affidavit.

    SVVSD officials said Wednesday that they were evaluating whether they could fire the teacher, 39-year-old Patricio Alejandro Illanes, when he resigned in late 2023.

    Illanes faces 40 counts of sexual exploitation of a child in addition to 10 counts of unlawful practice of occupation or profession, according to a Boulder County Sheriff’s Office release.

    Illanes reportedly photographed or took videos of at least 10 students at four different schools or youth program locations, including Centaurus High School, New Meridian High School and Erie Middle School, over the course of nine years, according to an arrest affidavit.

    In 2023, a school employee reported to an Erie police school resource officer that he had overheard a 14-year-old boy describe an interaction he had with Illanes to another student.

    The boy said Illanes had asked him to stay after class to help him with a video project, and the boy agreed, according to the affidavit. Illanes then instructed the boy to remove his shirt and shoes and pretend to be a lifeguard. The student said Illanes told him that he would pretend to chloroform him and instructed the student to pretend to be knocked out.

    When Erie police interviewed Illanes, he “provided a similar story” but said he never touched the students inappropriately and that their shirts remained on, according to the affidavit. Illanes gave police the videos he had recorded, which showed the interaction described by the student, but with the student wearing a lifeguard shirt over a long-sleeve shirt.

    Two other minors later told police Illanes asked them to help him with a project, then videotaped or photographed them in costumes.

    In an October 2025 interview with police, Illanes said he did not use the videos for sexual gratification and understood the incident was “not an appropriate thing,” according to the affidavit.

    The Erie police criminal investigation into the incident was “unfounded,” according to the affidavit.

    An SVVSD internal investigation found that Illanes had violated district policies and recommended that he “not return” to Erie Middle School or any school in the district.

    Illanes resigned in December that year. He was hired to work at Arvada Senior High School in 2024.

    When Illanes resigned, SVVSD was evaluating whether it had “sufficient grounds” under state teacher employment laws to fire him, according to Kerri McDermid, the district’s chief of staff and strategic priorities.

    Jefferson County School District officials told police they never received the SVVSD internal investigation report, and had they known about it, they wouldn’t have hired Illanes, the affidavit stated.

    SVVSD officials told police Jeffco officials had not asked for the report and that they had been served a court document restricting them from sharing it, but did not provide the court document to police, according to the affidavit.

    McDermid said the SVVSD human resources department and Illanes’ former supervisor at Erie Middle School do not have a record of receiving a reference or information request from Jeffco officials until October 2025. At that time, the district provided the information they were allowed to disclose under law, she said.

    This is a developing story and may be updated.

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  • 2 killed in Erie plane crash were practicing touch-and-go landings, report finds

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    Two men killed in an Erie plane crash were practicing touch-and-go landings during an instructional flight before the crash, a National Transportation Safety Board report found.

    The plane completed four touch-and-go landings, but as it approached the runway a fifth time, it began to climb in elevation instead of touching down, according to the report.

    Witnesses reported seeing the airplane tumble or flip and surveillance camera footage showed the airplane spinning toward the ground.

    An emergency airframe parachute did not deploy during the crash, the report states.

    The NTSB has recovered the plane for further examination, according to the report.

    Niles August Tilenius, 22, of San Mateo County, California, and William Johnston, 21, of Hillsborough County, Florida, were identified as the two who died, according to Weld County Deputy Coroner Joey Weiner.

    Tilenius was a professional pilot and flight instructor, according to an online obituary. He was most recently a flight instructor at Odyssey Pilot Hours based in Erie, the obituary states.

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  • 2 killed in single-engine plane crash at Erie Municipal Airport

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    Two people died Sunday when a small plane crashed at Erie Municipal Airport in northern Colorado, according to the police department.

    “We are heartbroken to share that there were no survivors in the single-engine plane crash that occurred earlier today, east of the Erie Municipal Airport runway,” police said in an 8:55 p.m. statement.

    The plane’s two occupants were not Colorado residents, police said. The pair’s identities had not been released as of Monday morning.

    The crash happened at about 3:45 p.m. Sunday, Erie Police Department spokesperson Amber Luttrell said.

    Investigators with the Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board were working to identify the cause of the crash, she said. As of Sunday evening, the Erie Municipal Airport at 395 Airport Drive remained closed for the investigation.

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  • Small plane crashes at northern Colorado airport, Erie police say

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    Police are investigating after a small plane crashed Sunday afternoon near the runway at the Erie Municipal Airport in Weld County, according to the department.

    The Erie Police Department first posted about the single-plane crash at 3:59 p.m. Sunday. Department spokesperson Amber Luttrell said the crash happened about 15 minutes before that.

    Two people were on board the plane, Luttrell said. The extent of their injuries was not immediately available.

    Additional information about the crash, including the cause and the plane’s flight information, was not immediately available Sunday.

    The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board will investigate the crash, Luttrell said.

    Neither agency immediately responded to requests for comment on Sunday.

    This is a developing story and may be updated.

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  • New bipartisan bill to legalize marijuana in PA introduced to senate – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    New bipartisan bill to legalize marijuana in PA introduced to senate – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    A new bipartisan bill to legalize adult marijuana use is introduced in the State Senate.

    It’s a joint effort by Republican Senator Dan Laughlin from Millcreek and Democrat Sharif Street from Philadelphia.

    In announcing Senate Bill 846, Laughlin said legalized marijuana is supported by an “overwhelming majority of Pennsylvanians.”

    He added with neighboring states New Jersey and New York approving adult use, the bill is needed to avoid losing out on hundreds of millions of dollars of new tax revenue and thousands of new jobs.

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