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Tag: Southern Colorado

  • 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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  • 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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    Colette Bordelon

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