Home Blog Page 135

Volunteers of America, a perfect nonprofit for older adults

0

Who We Are

Volunteers of America Colorado (VOAC) is a nonprofit, faith-based organization dedicated to helping those in need transform their lives. Through more than 50 distinct human service programs, VOAC changes the lives of over nearly 100,000 people in-need each year. VOAC’s services include housing and emergency shelters, hunger and nutrition services, and many other community support programs. Our work touches the mind, body and heart of those we serve by integrating compassion into our highly-effective programs and services that build and strengthen communities.

Who We Serve

For 125 years, our ministry of service has supported and empowered Colorado’s most underserved residents. Volunteers of America Colorado supports diverse populations, including families, children, veterans, and older adults. We address unmet needs within our communities and create programs that empower our neighbors to become self-sufficient and reach their full potential.

What Makes VOAC Special

Volunteers of America Colorado believes unique challenges require unique and thoughtful solutions. VOAC creates specialized programs to meet the critical needs of the communities we serve—meaning our services across Colorado look different because each community is distinct. VOAC recognizes the individual needs of the senior who needs a wheelchair ramp to be safe at home, and the preschooler whose family needs additional resources due to the COVID-19 crisis. We support veterans experiencing homelessness who have been under-served, and provide a safe place for women, men, and children escaping domestic violence. Wherever we go, we utilize faith, relationship-building, and volunteers to lift up and support Colorado’s most vulnerable populations.

Our administrative offices are located at 2660 Larimer Street, Denver CO 80205. To speak to someone about our programs or volunteering opportunities you may email us at info@voacolorado.org or call 303-297-0408. To keep up with our news and activities, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Volunteers of America Colorado programs are available to all people regardless of race, age, gender, color, religion, sexual orientation, gender variance, marital status, national origin, military status or physical or mental disability. To learn more, visit our DEI page.

Older Adults make up a high percentage of Volunteer of America volunteers. VOA is an organization whose hours are flexible and a good fit with your personal schedule. It is an excellent way to stay connected to your community and where needs can be addressed by your volunteerism.

The Denver Broncos reveal ‘Snowcapped’ alternate helmet

0

As we reported last week the Denver Broncos would be revealing an alternate helmet. On Tuesday the Broncos revealed their ‘Snowcapped,’ alternate helmets, which will be worn for two games in the upcoming season.

Photo courtesy: Denver Broncos

The all-white shell is the Broncos first all white helmet which will feature the Broncos nostalgic Denver Broncos D logo which served as the Broncos primary logo for nearly 30 years.

The Broncos announced that the white shell helmet will be worn with the Broncos all-orange alternate uniforms. The white shell and facemask pay homage to Colorado’s towering snowcapped mountain ranges. The helmet will be on display this Saturday for fan-facing promotions during the Denver’s Back Together Weekend and during practice on Thursday, August 17.

The Denver Broncos lost defensive lineman Eyioma Uwazurike when the NFL announced his suspension for violating the leagues gambling policy. Uwazurike was in his second season with Denver after playing in eight games last season on 165 snaps. Uwazurike’s suspension is indefinite and he can petition for reinstatement no earlier than July 24, 2024. The Broncos will now have to find depth at that position.

In other sports the Colorado Avalanche are expected to sign forward Nikolai Kovalenko who is playing for the Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod in the Kontinental Hockey League. Over the weekend, the Torpedo’s announced that Kovalenko, “will soon be signing with the Avalanche.” The Torpedo’s went on to say that Kovalenko will be loaned back to the KHL for the upcoming season.

Kovalenko will join a number of acquisitions the Avalanche picked up in the off-season including Ryan Johansen who the Avs picked up from the Nashville Predators and Ross Colton who Colorado got from the Tampa Bay Lightning.

The Colorado Rockies have won three of their last five, with only one home game in that stretch. The Rockies defeated the Nationals on Monday 10 – 6 in the first of a three game series with Washington. The Rockies were in Miami over the weekend to face the Marlins where they defeated Miami two games to one with wins in game one and two (game 1, 6 -1; game 2, 4 – 3) and a loss in game three (game 3, 2 – 3).

The wrap up their road stretch with game three against the Nationals on Wednesday before returning home to host the Oakland Athletics for a three game series that kicks off on Friday. Colorado will start the week off with divisional foes, the San Diego Padres on Monday with a three-game series that ends on Wednesday.

The Denver Nuggets are less than a month away before the NBA releases the 2023-24 season schedule with training camp just over two months away.

This week marked one month since the Denver Nuggets became NBA Champions and while fans are excited to see their team back on the court, Denver’s star Center Nikola Jokic has opted out of playing in the FIBA World Cup this summer.

Senior musician produces first CD

Growing up in Pueblo, Vicente Martinez was like his father’s shadow. He went everywhere with him, including places where he admits today, he probably should not have been. His old man, Palemon Martinez, who worked at a long ago Pueblo factory that made pistons, was a musician. As a result, some of the places young Vicente would find himself, including at times that might not have been good for a child, were in the bars that once lined Pueblo’s Union Avenue.

Photo courtesy: Vicente Martinez

“My dad sang and played guitar,” said Martinez, who now makes his home in San Antonio, Texas. The Union Avenue bars were once favorite haunts where “you could go bar to bar” and play your music. Back then you didn’t need a booking to play Union. You just showed up. His dad played “at Billy’s Place,” a beer joint that today could be an antique store or an ice cream shop. Union has gone upscale. “That’s how I started playing.” Sometimes his dad would stand him on the bar, other times on an old fashion bar shuffleboard surface. There he was, a four-year-old kid belting out ‘Blue Suede Shoes,’ or ‘Love Me Tender.’

After high school, Martinez worked the nine-to-five circuit “selling appliances and electronics.” Being a salesman was how he financed his true avocation, music. Today, with a hint of pride, Martinez says, “I’m a full-time musician,” playing the same circuit that his long-ago musical idols, “Little Joe,” and Sonny of “Sonny Ozuna and the Sunliners,” used to play.

In 1992 Martinez moved to Texas. The move was simply practical but also part of the journey. San Antonio is the ‘Mecca’ of the music he likes to play, Chicano and Tejano. Of course, he also mixes in a little rock and roll, and country. “But my heart is Tejano.” He’s also in Texas because it’s where he can get topflight music producers for fine tuning his music. Now as an older adult Martinez just released his first CD, ‘Alegria.’

The disc, said Martinez, is “pure joy, just like its name.” He describes it as a collection of “energetic music that makes you want to get out and dance.” The CD is his first, but he said he’s already at work on another. His second will be homage to mariachi.

In San Antonio, Martinez fronts an eleven-piece band. Like old time music directors, Martinez insists on choreographing everything, including how the band presents itself. The horn section dresses the way he chooses, same for guitars. He makes sure that when ‘the curtain opens’ people will know who they’re seeing. “I’m real strict,” he says. Nothing is left to chance.

“We come out with a little salsa,” he said, mimicking the sound. “Bompa, bompa…people really get into it. Then I have the horns move a certain way and then it’s ‘Vicente Martinez and his Orchestra!’”

Martinez deviates a bit in speaking about his father and his music, chuckling that looking the way he looked always made his mother jealous. “The women were always kissing him on the cheek.” His dad, Martinez said, was always well dressed. “He was real country, real rock and roll. He also dressed a little like Elvis.”

Martinez said that his music is played on radio in San Antonio. It’s also on-line. For that, Martinez asked that his producer be named. Rick Fuentes is the brainchild of Martinez CD.

The pair is already talking about a CD that will pay tribute to a handful of artists Martinez has sampled over his career. “I plan to do old country,” he said. “Merle Haggard, Roy Orbison, the old Hank Williams and Marty Robbins, too.”

As Martinez CDs are produced, he hopes it will showcase the eclectic variety of music in his repertoire while, at the same time, honor the artists, from the Chicano pantheon of Little Joe to Sonny Ozuna to Rueben Ramos to mainstream icons, Elvis to Orbison. “I’m versatile,” he said. “That’s what makes me so saleable.”

And coming from a career salesman who once made his living peddling big box items to now being a musical artist selling everything from rhythm and blues to Tejano, the man knows his craft.

Florida highlights the stain of slavery

David Conde, Senior Consultant for International Programs

The Florida political leadership has decided to balance the stain of slavery with some sprinkling of benefits offered by Southern White ownership of Blacks in history books for students in the State. These revisions are designed to lower the guilt associated with that institutional practice and normalize particularly the separation of the Southern White community from its own history.

This process of rewriting ethnic and racial history in America points to a fear and, at times, a violent resistance to a developing stream of circumstances that is making the country less White. Our nation fought a civil war (1861- 1865) and adopted the 14th Amendment to the Constitution in 1868 in part to end slavery and reverse the notion that one person can own another.

The effort in Florida to educate children about the “good” part of slavery regresses White people’s relationship and view of African Americans to a time when that “peculiar institution” was driving the wealth creation of the agricultural South. Teaching students that being a slave “was good for you” and in some way “makes you a better person” exacerbates the decline and decadence of a majority that is beginning to show that it is not fit to govern.

I was 7 years of age when our crew was assigned to work a spinach field in Central Texas. As we toiled in the field, we noticed another large crew working in the distance.

That crew was supervised by men on horseback with rifles. We saw that they were prisoners when the group got closer and we could see them better. As they came nearer, I got scared because the men on horseback began to also surround us. It soon became clear that we had for the moment lost our freedom and were subject to the same conditions as the prisoners.

Later I found out that we were kind of detained and not allowed to do anything other than work forsecurity reasons. However, the feeling of having my family and myself subjected to the decisions of others for that long afternoon has stayed with me and influenced my life. Because of this, I also have wondered about how one can live a whole life under those conditions. To me, slavery was something one reads about in the Bible or world history but not live it.

In the Old Testament, Moises removed the stain of slavery for the Jews and led them to freedom in the Promise Land. The Black slave community in the United States did not have that option because their masters broke up families and facilitated the loss of identity with the various regions of Africa.

So, despite efforts to find a new home for the African American community in places like Liberia, it was all along evident that Black folks were “home.” It was America that had to accommodate to the destiny of these traumatize people.

Now in Florida, the original covenant that came about as a result of the American Civil War is beginning to erode as the backward step toward a favorable view of slavery is taking place in authorized history books. This appears to be part of a plan to indoctrinate children about the value of power exercised by the oppressor over the oppressed.

This brand of power politics features an attempt to control a people by revising their history, diminishing their humanity and schooling the next generation to do the same. The evil in Florida shows again why our country deserves leaders that love America.

The views expressed by David Conde are not necessarily the views of LaVozColorado. Comments and responses may be directed to news@lavozcolorado.com.

Software upgrade planned for emergency telephones at RTD A, B and G rail stations

Customers encouraged to use Transit Watch app or call 911 for emergency assistance during outage

Public emergency telephones at the Regional Transportation District’s (RTD) A, B and G Line stations will be unavailable for a brief period beginning at 2 a.m. Thursday, July 27, as commuter rail concessionaire and operator Denver Transit Operators (DTO) conducts an upgrade to the system software and tests the phones. The outage is expected to last up to three hours as crews complete service upgrades to approximately 20 phones along these lines.The emergency telephones, illuminated by blue light, connect customers at rail stations with RTD’s Transit Police. During the planned emergency telephone out- age, customers can use the Transit Watch app to report suspicious behavior or call 911 to report an emergency.

The Transit Watch app is a quick, easy and anonymous way to report an incident. App users have the option of directly calling RTD’s Transit Police or sending an incident message. The app can be downloaded for free on Android and Apple devices and can be used in English or Spanish.

Customers can also report safety and security concerns by calling 303-299-2911 or texting 303-434- 9100.

CDPHE to text and email parents and guardians about routine vaccines

0

Outreach stresses the importance of staying up to date on childhood and adolescent vaccines

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment continues to notify parents and guardians of children who may be due for certain routine vaccinations. Starting July 25, 2023, CDPHE will send text message and email notifications to parents and guardians of more than 134,000 children from birth through 4 years whose records in the Colorado Immunization Information System show they may be due for one or more routine childhood vaccines. Vaccines included in this effort are: hepatitis A, hepatitis B, measles, mumps, rubella, rotavirus, haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), pneumococcal, varicella (chickenpox), polio, and diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus (DTaP). The text messages will originate from 45778. Emails will originate from cdphe.vaccine.registry@state.co.us.

Parents and guardians should talk with their child’s health care provider or local public health agency about any questions they may have about vaccines and ask about scheduling an appointment. These vaccines can be safely given with other vaccines, including COVID-19 vaccines.

The majority of health insurance plans, including Medicaid and CHP+, are required to cover recommended vaccines at no cost to patients. Some children may also be eligible for free vaccines. Colorado has tools to help parents and guardians make informed choices about vaccinating their children.

• COVax4Kids.org helps people find out if their children are eligible for low- or no-cost vaccines and helps them find a provider who gives them.

• COVaxRecords.org directs people on how to request vaccination records for their children.

• COVaxRates.org makes it easy for people to look up vaccination and exemption rates for schools and child care facilities in Colorado so they can make the best decision for their children.

• ChildVaccineCO.org provides more information on routine vaccinations, as well as where to find a provider who offers low- or no-cost vaccines.

Source: Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment/CDPHE

Colorado’s first human case of West Nile virus identified for 2023

0

State health officials confirmed the first human case of West Nile virus in a person from La Plata County this year. Additionally, West Nile virus has been found in mosquitoes in seven counties throughout Colorado this season, including Arapahoe, Boulder, Delta, Denver, Larimer, Pueblo, and Weld. Mosquito populations are at historic levels in some parts of the state due to the high rainfall this year. This unusually high mosquito activity along with known presence of the virus has caused an elevated risk of West Nile virus transmission to humans.

While most people infected with West Nile virus don’t have symptoms, some can develop a serious, potentially deadly illness. In 2022, Colorado had 206 reported human cases of West Nile virus, including 20 deaths. People aged 60 years and older and those with certain medical conditions are at greater risk of serious illness. Talk with a health care provider if you develop severe headaches or begin experiencing confusion.

West Nile virus is most commonly spread to people by the bite of an infected mosquito. To protect yourself:

  • Use insect repellents when you go outdoors. Repellents containing DEET, picaridin, IR3535, oil of lemon eucalyptus, or para-menthane-diol products provide the best protection. For more information about insect repellents, visit the EPA’s information webpage. Always follow label instructions.
  • Limit outdoor activities at dusk and dawn, when mosquitoes are most active.
  • Wear long pants, long-sleeved shirts, and socks in areas where mosquitoes are active. Spray clothes with insect repellent for extra protection.

In addition to eliminating standing water around your home weekly, you can also mosquito-proof your home by installing or repairing screens on windows and doors.

You can find additional data going back to 2003 on CDPHE’s West Nile virus webpage, which is updated weekly throughout the season.

Our Government

White House

A Proclamation on Establishment of the Emmett Till and Mamie Till-Mobley National Monument: The brutal lynching of Emmett Till in Mississippi in 1955 and the subsequent courage of his mother, Mamie Till-Mobley, to ensure his death would not be in vain helped bring broad national attention to the injustices and inequality that Black people experienced during the Jim Crow era across the United States and, in particular, the South. Conserving the Roberts Temple Church of God in Christ, the Tallahatchie County Second District Courthouse, and Graball Landing will ensure that the historical value of these sites will remain for the benefit of all Americans, providing opportunities to learn about Emmett Till’s life and death and the historical and cultural context interwoven with his story.

Colorado Governor

The Polis administration and the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) announced that the state is cutting its Bustang fares in half for most routes in August and September, providing a lower-cost alternative to driving and helping to support statewide efforts to mitigate ground-level ozone pollution. “During the hot summer months, it is important we find ways to reduce ozone emissions, and making public transportation more accessible is a great way to achieve this. I am thrilled to announce half-price tickets on many Bustang lines for the second year and encourage Coloradans to take advantage of this opportunity to save money,” said Governor Polis.

Denver Mayor

The City and County of Denver activated its Emergency Operations Center and Joint Information Center today to coordinate and manage Mayor Mike Johnston’s urgent push to house 1,000 people experiencing homelessness by the end of the year and to permanently close encampments. Mayor Johnston issued an emergency declaration on July 18 and City Council is scheduled to vote on extending the order later this afternoon. “We have a moral obligation to make sure everyone in Denver can get indoors, and activat- ing the Emergency Operations Center is an important step in that direction,” said Mayor Mike Johnston.

A Week In Review

0

Africa

Mali army accused of abuse – Mali’s armed forces and foreign fighters believed to be from Russia’s Wagner Group have been accused of widespread abuses by Human Rights Watch. Those abuses include executing dozens of civilians and torturing detainees. Mali’s foreign minister said he isn’t aware of any abuses and denied any foreign forces being involved in military operations.
Bank of Zambia hacked on Facebook – Hackers targeted the Bank of Zambia’s Facebook page and changed its profile and cover pictures to an image of an unknown man and woman in a romantic embrace. The bank said it is conducting a thorough review of the incident and working with law enforcement to address the manner. Customers and the public were urged to be cautious and vigilant about potential phishing attempts or other suspicious activities.

Asia

China school roof collapses, kills 11 people – The roof of a school gymnasium in China collapsed while the building was being used by a girls’ volleyball team. At least 11 people died, and many of the victims are believed to have been children. Officials at a local construction company were detained by police. They are accused of dumping perlite, or a form of volcanic glass, on the roof while working on another building project.
New Zealand justice minister resigns – New Zealand Justice Minister Kirk Allan resigned from her position after failing an alcohol breath test following a car crash. She was charged with careless driving and resisting arrest. Allan will remain as a member of parliament for now and is due to appear in court at a later date. She apologized for her actions and said she will consider her future in politics.

Europe

Wildfires sweep through Greek island – Residents in Corfu, a Greek island, were told to evacuate the area because of wildfires. The island is popular among British tourists and is the latest Greek island to deal with wildfires. Rhodes, another Greek island, also told its residents to evacuate recently because of wildfires. Fires have blazed for nearly a week in some areas of Greece as the country deals with sweltering heat.
Putin critic detained – Igor Girkin, an outspoken pro-war blogger, was detained last Friday and is accused of extremism. He could face up to five years in jail. Girkin has criticized Russia’s military and President Vladimir Putin. It is unclear what led Russia’s Investigative Committee to charge him. Girkin is a former FSB intelligence colonel and played a key role in Russia’s 2014 landgrab of Crimea.

Latin America

Ecuadorean mayor killed – Agustín Intriago, an Ecuadorean mayor, was shot and killed while he toured his city. He was shot several times by a gunman who arrived in a stolen pick-up truck. Attacks on elected officials had been rare in Ecuador up until this point. Recently, a mayoral candidate in Salinas, a Ecuadorean costal town, was also shot and killed. No motives for the attack on Intriago have been confirmed by police.
Brazil tightens gun control laws – Brazil introduced limits on stockpiles of guns and ammunition and prohibited certain weapons like nine millimeter handguns. Brazil President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva had promised new gun control laws during election season. He blamed a rise in political violence on loose gun control laws. Brazil has nearly 800,000 registered gun owners.

North America

Woman found dead near Yellowstone National Park – Officials in Montana believe a woman that was found dead had likely come into contact with a grizzly bear. Tracks from a grizzly were discovered close to the woman’s body near the town of West Yellowstone in Montana. Days before the woman’s body was found, Montana warned residents of the increased danger from grizzlies and urged people to carry bear spray.
Twitter rebrands as X – Twitter has changed its logo from its famous blue bird to “X.” The new logo is white and appears on a black background. Tweets will now be called “x’s,” according to Twitter owner Elon Musk. He said he wants to create a super app and changed his profile picture to the new logo and added “X.com” to his Twitter bio. The new logo has yet to appear on the mobile app as of Monday morning.

New Denver Mayor delivers message of hope, optimism and encouragement

0

It may be only speculation but don’t be surprised that in just a matter of days or weeks before Denver’s new mayor is christened with a nickname. ‘MJ’ or ‘Mayor Mike’ seem likely possibilities. But whatever lands, Denver’s newly minted mayor will be calling the shots from City Hall for the next four years.

On Monday, July 17th, Denver’s 46th chief executive, Mike Johnston took the oath. In his first official address as mayor, the youthful looking Johnston threaded his speech with an almost buoyant optimism.

“For us to succeed,” he said, “every Denverite must take their own oath.” It was an altruistic urging for people to join with him in a singular community of hope.

That pledge called for ‘dreaming, serving and delivering’ what he called an essence of democracy empowering every citizen of the city to move ahead.

Also taking the oath with Johnston at the Ellie Calkins Opera House were members of the Denver City Council with whom he will have to work to cobble together his agenda. The 13-member council, for the first time, will be dominated by women. Nine of its members are women and six are Latinas, including Flor Alvidrez, who will be representing council District 7. Alvidrez gave Johnston’s speech high marks for its optimism and its call for results.

“I think him acknowledging the reality of where we’re at and being courageous enough to believe that we can solve these large problems,” was what Alvidrez liked best in Johnston’s short but uplifting inaugural address. “I also think the thing I carried away is how he talked about it being a team effort and that everyone is part of the team.”

Photo courtesy: mikejohnstonformayor.com

The 48-year-old Johnston enters what many believe to be the most powerful political position in the state with a blue-ribbon résumé. Johnston has served in elected office as a member of the state legislature. He also brings a long tenure as an educator and school administrator.

Johnston, married to a Denver Deputy District Attorney, is father to three young children. It is perhaps one of the reasons he seems to exude an optimism for the future, one that as mayor, he will play a major part in shaping.

For Johnston and the city to succeed, he will have to figure out how to meet some very immediate and daunting challenges. One is a homelessness crisis, an issue he repeatedly underscored in his campaign.

“Our dream for Denver,” he said, “is when you land at your lowest, without a job or a place to stay, shackled by addiction or struggling with mental illness, we will not judge you or give up on you. We will give you a home, we will get you help, we will get you healed.”

Johnston also assured the several hundred who came to the inauguration, including former Denver mayors Federico Peῆa, Wellington Webb and now Senator John Hickenlooper, that he also wants to find a way to stem the tide of people moving out of Denver because of real estate prices that have steadily risen and a spike in violent crime.

While the city has emerged from a seemingly interminable pandemic, some of the virus’s lingering residue remains. Once listed as the state’s number one tourist attraction, the 16th Street Mall no longer reflects vibrancy and an air of enjoyment. The mall is in the midst of a huge construction project designed to return it to its glory days.

Johnston is also the man now pulling the switches at DIA, now ranked as the third busiest airport in the world. The airport is also undergoing a serious facelift in what is knows as the ‘Great Hall.’ DIA passenger levels are up but for those who remember when it was streamlined and easy on the eye, many say it is now akin to watching a surgical procedure in real time.

Photo courtesy: mikejohnstonformayor.com

Johnston and his staff, along with City Council, must also figure out a way to address another highly visible scar left by the pandemic, a downtown whose occupancy rate has steadily inched up with once reliable firms now finding new homes and a workforce more than happy to work from home just as they did during the pandemic.

Once a dreamliner of a business hub for the entire region and that greeted more than 100,000 workers each day, Denver now finds itself struggling to right itself and rebrand as a certifiable gem and not costume jewelry.

A new mayor with a new vision also means a day of celebration and Inauguration Day in the city was no different this time. Denver Union Station was ground zero for the Johnston era celebration that stretched into a nearly perfect summer evening. It featured a menu of live entertainment, food and drink from the brick-and-mortar restaurants to a squadron of food trucks serving everything from crepes to carnitas.

Johnston, like other Denver mayors will be accorded a honeymoon as he settles in picking a cabinet and finding his footing. But his succinct day one message echoed the sentiments of another not that long-ago youthful politician who also dared to inspire.

‘If you wish to build a ship, do not divide the men and women into teams and tell them to simply go and gather wood,’ the late John F. Kennedy used to say. ‘Instead, inspire them to long for the sea.’