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Lessons and laws about immigrant workers

David Conde, Senior Consultant for International Programs

On May 10th of this year, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed into law Senate Bill 1718 that makes E-Verify mandatory for employers that have 25 or more workers, provides for harsher penalties for employing the undocumented, enhances sanctions for human smuggling, invalidates ID cards for immigrants provided by other states and mandates a record of every health service to this community among others.

Although Governor DeSantis is using this and other restrictive measures as part of a political platform to back his run for the presidency, the new Florida legislation is typical of many red states and their leadership that see images of immigrants on our southern border as a politically winning issue.

The vicious cycle where state immigration laws are passed, result in the field workers leaving, the crops are not picked and the farmer loses the harvest, a lesson not learned by the political establishment.

It appears that the farm workers involved in this lesson are thrown into a general theme of border security along with the mass of people that want to come to the United States for a variety of reasons.

Back in 2011, the beautiful fields of Chandler Mountain in northern Alabama had a similar issue happen to them. Brian Cash, a farmer that had 125 acres of tomatoes also had a stable seasonal work force of mostly immigrants that came to prepare and harvest his crop every season, that is, until the State of Alabama passed laws similar to those of Florida this year.

The day the Alabama new law was announced, Cash had 64 farm workers in the field. The next day he had only 11 and the day after that, none.

Cash and the other farmers tried to get others to help with the harvest with little results because of the hard work involved. In the end, the tomatoes rotted in the fields and the investment in the crop was lost.

The situation in Florida and in the country stands to become worse. Florida is the starting point for the migrant stream of workers that go north up the coast and into the Midwest to harvest the food that goes on the grocery shelves of America. All of this is supposedly done to make a political point and a campaign issue.

I had an opportunity to see two of the morning information sessions that Mexican President Lopez Obrador holds everyday in Mexico City. In the second of these, an American reporter was allowed to ask questions and began by inquiring as to the President’s immigration policy views.

Lopez Obrador was quick to answer that we should be about ameliorating the causes that make people decide to make the great sacrifice of leaving home and going to a foreign land. Not satisfied, the reporter asked about the great number that are already in Mexico and those on the border and in the United States itself.

President Lopez Obrador talked about human rights and respect for human dignity regardless of whether we accept or reject their application to enter the country. That kind of treatment tends to go away when immigrants are used as pawns to advance an ideology as well as submit to the temptation of seeing them as less than human.

The irony is that we are very short of real workers at a time when immigrants are the best available option for the market. That has been the case since we became a country of immigrants and thrived on their labor and industry.

The views expressed by David Conde are not necessarily the views of La Voz Bilingüe. Comments and responses may be directed to News@lavozcolorado.com.

A Week In Review

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Africa

Uganda launches new anti-gay law – Uganda President Yoweri Museveni signed the Anti-Homosexuality Bill into law. Now, anyone convicted of homosexual acts will face life in prison. Lawmakers also approved the death penalty for “aggravated cases” like having gay sex with someone below the age of 18 or where someone is infected with a life long illness like HIV. Various health campaign groups said they were deeply concerned about the new law, including the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief, and the Global Fund.

Drone strikes kill two in Libya – At least two people were killed while several others were injured from drone strikes in Libya. Politicians accused the Tripoli-based national unity government of targeting the home of a local member of parliament. The group denied targeting the politician, and instead said they were targeting drug smugglers and people traffickers.

Asia

China offers new passenger jet – The Commercial Aviation Corporation of China recently released its C919 passenger jet into the sky. The jet holds 164 seats and is aimed at competing with jets from Europe’s Airbus and the US airplane maker Boeing. However, the aircraft still includes Western components like its engines and avionics. China President Xi Jinping described the jet as one of China’s most innovative achievements.

Dozens of crocodiles kill Cambodia man – Luan Nam, a 72 year old crocodile farmer in Cambodia, was killed by around 40 crocodiles after he fell into their enclosure. Nam was reportedly trying to move one of the animals out of its cage when it grabbed his stick in it its mouth and pulled him into the enclosure. His body was covered with bite marks and one of his arms was missing. Nam was the president of the local crocodile farmers’ association.

Europe

Climate protesters arrested in Netherlands – More than 1,500 climate protesters were arrested by police in Netherlands. The protesters, organized by Extinction Rebellion, blocked a major motorway as they demanded an end to fossil fuel subsidies. Police used a water cannon to try to break up the group. Around 40 of those who were arrested will be prosecuted. The demonstration included Dutch celebrities like actress Carice van Houten, who played Melisandre in the TV show Game of Thrones.

Turkey president remains in power – Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdogan celebrated another election win as he secured another five years in power. During his victory speech, he targeted a jailed Kurdish leader and the LGBT community. Turkey’s opposition leader and Erdogan’s opponent, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, said the election was the most unfair one to take place in Turkey in recent years. International observers said media bias and limits to freedom of expression contributed an advantage for Erdogan.

Latin America

Search for missing children continues in Colombia – Officials are still searching for four children who have been missing since May 1 after their plane crashed in a Colombian jungle. Authorities recently discovered belongings of siblings in two different locations in the rainforest. The children’s mother and other adults on board the plane died during the crash. Small footprints were also discovered last week, suggesting that the children survived the crash. The children are from the Huitoto indigenous group, and the group is hopeful the children’s jungle survival skills will keep them alive.

Brazil declares animal health emergency over bird flu – Several cases of avian flu have been found in wild birds in Brazil, prompting the country to declare a six-month animal health emergency. In total, seven cases have been reported in the Espirito Santo state and in Rio de Janeiro state. Brazil is the world’s largest chicken meat exporter. The cases were discovered far from Brazil’s main areas of chicken production, authorities said.

North America

“Witches” exonerated in Connecticut – Connecticut is prepared to exonerate 12 people after they were convicted of witchcraft more than 370 years ago. The majority of those who were convicted were hanged after trials that lawmakers said were a “miscarriage of justice.” The resolution was pushed by the CT Witch Trial Exoneration Project, a group founded by descendants of those who were accused of witchcraft. The purpose of exonerating the bodies is to clear the names of those wrongfully accused of being witches.

Oath Keepers founder sentenced – Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the far-right militia Oath Keepers, has been sentenced to 18 years in prison for his role in the US Capitol riot. He was convicted of seditious conspiracy and other crimes. The sentencing is the longest one yet given to a Capitol rioter. Rhodes coordinated the riot with Kelly Meggs, a leader of the militia’s Florida chapter, and others who stormed the building. Meggs was jailed for 12 years.

An added remembrance this Memorial Day

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It is little-known, but the first incarnation of what we know today as Memorial Day was begun May 1st, 1865, just weeks following the South’s surrender ending the Civil War. A group of formerly enslaved Americans dug up the bodies of 257 Black Union soldiers who had been thoughtlessly and callously buried in a mass grave in a Confederate prison camp. The Charleston, South Carolina, group felt the fallen soldiers deserved a respectful, dignified burial for helping secure their freedom.

Still, while that may have been the first such commemoration of America’s fallen, a number of cities across several states boast of being the baptismal ground for Memorial Day. It is a mystery that may never be solved.

It would be three years later, in 1868, when the first decoration of the graves of soldiers became more formalized. Major Gen. John A. Logan ordered that Decoration Day be observed each May 30th. The date was chosen because flowers for placing at gravesites would be in bloom everywhere in the U.S. It wasn’t until 1971, however, that Decoration Day became Memorial Day and was officially adopted as a federal holiday. Today, Memorial Day is observed on the last Monday in May.

But like many things, a day of remembrance means different things to different people. Families will still pay respectful visits to national cemeteries, including Denver’s Fort Logan National Cemetery, where tiny American flags stand in the shadow of the gleaming alabaster headstones of long-ago soldiers, airmen, sailors and Marines. There, they will place flowers or leave thoughtful mementos. But in cities and towns across the country, Memorial Day is not a single day, but an often sad and painful everyday.

Today, May 24th, marks the one-year anniversary of last spring’s tragic mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas, in which 19 children and two teachers were killed. The mas- sacre occurred while more than a hundred law enforcement officers stood outside the classroom, weapons drawn, as the gunman methodically and gruesomely exacted his toll. Inexplicably, they failed to act. Families of the victims still await an official explanation for the police response.

For most families this Memorial Day, time will have made many of these holiday gravesite visits less painful. Tears now shed will be shed less from loss and more from a memory that touches the heart more gently.

But the gravesite sadness for fallen soldiers is different than the heartbreak that grips Uvalde and the nearly 400 U.S. cities and towns where it will be children—first-graders, young teens, never to graduate high school seniors—who will be mourned. It will also be the nurturing teachers, many of whom died while shielding those very same children, who will be remembered. For too many families, Memorial Day will simply be another day, one filled with tears, sadness and, most painfully, nowhere to turn.

But as families grieve, they will also rage knowing that they are not the last to lose a loved one in a classroom or on a campus, but only the latest. They know, if past is prologue, their pain, like a phantom, will soon land in another town and on another family and, saddest of all, by gun violence.

Since Columbine, the 1999 Littleton, Colorado, massacre that has come to define school shootings and where twelve students and a teacher were killed by two fellow students, school shootings have plagued America. From preschool to high school, escape drills are now as much a part of the curriculum as math and science.

The pain from school shootings, while most searing for loved ones, also ricochets as unpredictably as lightning. Proof can be found in a 2012 photograph taken by White House photographer Pete Souza. It shows a then President Obama being briefed on the Sandy Hook school shooting by

Homeland Security advisor John Kelly. The President is seen leaning against a sofa, arms crossed, shoulders slumped, eyes closed. He calls that moment, that December day, “one of the darkest” of his time as president. Twenty first graders and six adults died that day.

From Columbine more than two decades ago to Nashville and the March 2023 Covenant School shooting in which six victims, including three 9-year-olds died—the deadly arc of this formerly unthinkable crime has only lengthened. The only thing that has changed is the new left behind victims and those who loved them will carry for a lifetime.

Gun laws, including those that might restrict the sale of assault weapons—a common link in school shootings—have only been addressed in a handful of states, Colorado among them. Amazingly, a number of states have actually loosened gun laws. Florida, as an example, recently passed legisla- tion allowing anyone to carry concealed weapons without a permit. It was officially signed into law by soon-to-be presi- dential candidate Governor Ron DeSantis.

On Memorial Day, flowers, notes, special remembrances will still be left at the headstones of our fallen warriors— both men and women—along with softly spoken goodbyes. But for those families that will never watch their child grow out of their fantasy affection for Spiderman or other super- heroes, it will be just one more day of thoughtful curiosity and momentary melancholy about just who their little boy or girl would have become. For them, it will be just another memorial day.

Remembering those who paid the ultimate sacrifice

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Memorial Day is right around the corner, and it’s the perfect time to honor and remember those who have paid the ultimate sacrifice for our country.

Since the end of the Revolutionary War, around 646,596 American troops died during battle while another 539,000 troops died from non-combat related causes like diseases — particularly during the Revolutionary War.

The American Battlefield Trust, a nonprofit organization that preserves America’s battlegrounds and educates the public about the country’s conflicts, estimates that around 6,800 American troops died during the Revolutionary War during combat. However, diseases like dysentery, malaria or smallpox were deadlier and killed 17,000 American troops during the war.

Disease was also the leading cause in deaths during the War of 1812. Around 15,000 Americans died during the war, but only 2,260 of those deaths were because of fighting. The rest of the casualties were all died from diseases.

The Civil War was America’s most deadly war and caused 620,000 war time deaths, according to data from the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs. The deadliest battle of the Civil War took place at the Battle of Gettysburg where more than 7,000 Union and Confederate soldiers perished.

World War II caused the second highest amount of war time deaths in the country’s military and reported that 420,000 troops died. At the time of World War II, nearly 12 percent of the total U.S. population was a part of the country’s military, according to data from the Census Bureau and Department of Defense.

Remembering Latinos who defended freedom

Since the Revolutionary War, soldiers of Spanish or Latin American heritage have fought in every U.S. conflict.

La Voz Staff Photo

Joseph H. De Castro, who served in the Civil War as the Massachusetts Infantry’s color-bearer, was the first Hispanic recipient of the Medal of Honor, the highest award in the armed forces. As the years went on, more than 60 other Hispanics eventually were awarded the Medal of Honor.

The Department of Veterans Affairs estimates that there are nearly 1.3 million Latino veterans, or about 8 percent of the veteran population. The Department of Defense says Latinos make up 17 percent of active-duty service members with the Marine Corps having the highest percentage of Latino active-duty members at 23 percent.

From Decoration Day to Memorial Day

Looking for a way to honor those who died during the Civil War, General John A. Logan declared the first official Decoration Day on May 30, 1868. The day was observed at Arlington National Cemetery where volunteers decorated the graves of more than 20,000 Union and Confederate soldiers.

As World War II ensued, Decoration Day was expanded and renamed Memorial Day to honor those who died in military service. In 1971, the day became a national holiday.

Memorial Day is more than just another day off or a time to have a barbeque with friends and family. It’s a time to remember those who committed an unselfish act and gave their lives for their country.

The Denver Nuggets are Conference Champions!

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For the first time in franchise history the Denver Nuggets are on their way to the Finals. On Monday night in Los Angeles the Lakers hosted the Denver Nuggets in game four, a must win game for the Lakers trailing 0-3 in the Western Conference Finals (WCF).

Photo courtesy: Denver Nuggets Twitter

The game was what you’d expect from a desperate Lakers team, with their star player Lebron James shoot- ing a phenomenal 31 points in the first half to give L.A. a 15-point lead. The Nuggets struggled early to get shots to drop but soon found their stride in the third quarter outscoring the Lakers 36-16 and taking a five-point lead heading into the fourth.

Luckily for Denver, Lebron’s stellar first half performance may have gassed the 38-year-old superstar, as he didn’t score again until just under three minutes to play in the third. The fourth quarter was all defense with both teams scoring under 25.

Lebron ended the night with 40 points, 10 rebounds and 9 assists, one assist shy of a triple double. The Denver Nuggets Nikola Jokic on the other hand chalked up his eighth triple double scoring 30 points, 14 rebounds and 13 assists while passing the all time great Wilt Chamberlain who’s 56-year record stood unscathed until last night. Jokic also took home the Earvin ‘Magic’ Johnson Trophy (WCF MVP trophy).

While Jokic’s triple double puts his name in discussions with some all-time greats it wasn’t just his performance that made it into the record books. The Denver Nuggets had never swept a team in the playoffs until last night against the L.A. Lakers in the WCF and again, for the first time in Denver Nuggets basketball history, they are on their way to the Finals.

What the L.A. Lakers accomplished wasn’t a small feat either, for a team that struggled in the regular season without James due to a foot injury that kept him sidelined a good portion of the season, came back at the end of the season to compete in the play-in tournament, to beat Minnesota Timberwolves, the Memphis Grizzlies in round 1, and the Golden State Warriors in round 2. The storylines for both of these teams are ones that will forever go down in history as two of the greats from the West.

Now with 9 days off, the Denver Nuggets have an opportunity to rest and recharge for their matchup against one of two teams in the Boston Celtics (who are down 0-3 in the Easter Conference Finals [ECF]) or the Miami Heat. The Miami Heat’s story rings similar to that of the Lakers with the Heat also playing just good enough to compete in the play-in-tournament where they defeated the Chicago Bulls and the Atlanta Hawks before moving on to defeat the New York Knicks and now have a 3-0 lead over the Boston Celtics (no results of game four of the ECF available at the time of this writing).

The Nuggets can now sit back and watch all the critics that said they were never really competitors, as they eat humble pie made of crow. Of course the Nuggets aren’t content with just the WCF Champs, and are poised to finish what they started and get their first Chip!

Ladies and gentlemen, your 2023 Western Conference Champions, the Denver Nuggets!

Photo courtesy: Denver Nuggets Twitter

Gratitude to a living Colorado soldier this Memorial Day

When not even a senior in high school, Puebloan Larry Ruybal made a momentous decision to join the Army, actually the Army National Guard. His mother, he said, had no objection. So, he did it. A few years later that same impulse inspired him to join the Navy. He was still in the Guard when he signed on to become a sailor.

Photo courtesy: Larry Ruybal Family

The retired Pueblo city employee laughs a bit when recounting his youthful decisions to join the military. But the laugh grows even deeper when he explains that his decisions those many years ago also meant enduring not one, but two basic trainings. Still, he thinks of his youthful desire to serve his country as ‘just something he did.’

The 83-year-old Ruybal was born in Antonito, Colorado. He moved to Pueblo after his parents divorced and has lived there—save his time in the Navy—ever since. It’s where he and his wife, Libby, have lived and raised their family, one daughter and a son. His children are a source of price. His daughter, now retired, became a school principal. His son an IT worker. Both live in Pueblo.

Some of the details of Ruybal’s first enlistment are lost to time. But he remembers both his years in the Guard and the Navy fondly. For a kid still in high school, it was a grand adventure.

“It was 1957,” when he first joined. “I think my mother had to sign, but I don’t remember. I think I forged her name,” he said with a degree of impish pride. Whatever he did, he doesn’t remember her getting angry. “I think she was kind of glad.”

Ruybal remembers his Army days fondly, despite spend- ing the summer in a hot and humid Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. “It was a little scary at first,” he said, “because I was so young and small.” But the then 96-pound teen did everything he was asked to do. “When I got there, they gave us a full pack—half my weight,” he said. But all the work he had done on his family’s San Luis Valley farm was good preparation for the Army training.

After basic training, he returned to Pueblo and finished school, graduating from Central High School. Because he was still in the Guard, he would attend monthly meetings. He would also spend the next two summers doing drills at Fort Carson, the Army’s sprawling facility just south of Colorado Springs.

It was as his enlistment in the Guard was ending that he decided to join the Navy. It may not have been his ideal first option, but “There was no work here in Pueblo.” That made his decision both easier and practical.

Like new sailors for decades, he was sent to basic training number two in San Diego. Again, he said, it was easy “because I had already done it once before.” He also got to maintain his Army rank, so the pay was a bit better than that of his fellow sailors.

He spent the first two years of his naval career not on the high seas but in the desert. “I went to China Lake,” he said. “It’s right in the middle of the Mojave Desert.” There he was an aviation storekeeper. The job was supplying the Pacific fleet with airplane parts. The closest proximity to water, he joked, “was a swimming pool.”

After two years in the desert, Ruybal was shipped out to Guam, a place many have referred to over the years as ‘The Rock,’ because of its isolation. “I had never heard of it, but I liked it right away.” Getting there may not have been so enjoyable. It was a 23-day trip aboard a naval ship with a single stop in Hawaii.

While the isolation of Guam may have been challenging, life on the island suited Ruybal just fine. “There were fiestas every weekend and I liked the culture. It was like being in Salt Creek,” he joked. Salt Creek is a mostly Latino, working-class Pueblo community. Also, serving in Guam had another benefit. “I got to see Bob Hope two times while I was there.”

After Ruybal’s tour, he returned to Pueblo and trained to become a licensed practical nurse. He didn’t mind the work, but the pay wasn’t enough to sustain a family, so he left and spent the next four years in a job at the steel mill. The pay was better but it wasn’t the kind of job he wanted for the next thirty years.

He applied to the city of Pueblo and hit the jackpot. “Once they called, I quit that night,” he said, a degree of pride in his voice. He spent the next 32 years doing highway maintenance rising to supervisor.

Ruybal has only fond memories of his service days. His only regret, he said, is not staying in long enough to retire. “I’m just proud that I served and happy with my choices,” he said.

Latinas for Kelly Brough

Latinas for Kelly Brough supported the candidate this past Sunday.

Election Held June 6th.

La Voz Staff Photos

La Voz Staff Photos

Honoring our fallen soldiers throughout history

David Conde, Senior Consultant for International Programs

We are watching the invasion of Ukraine by Russia and the live reports from the front. Most are used to seeing this type of media coverage since the war in Vietnam.

As we celebrate Memorial Day in honor of the over 1 million 2 hundred thousand American soldiers that have died since the founding of our country, it is important to note that, in the end, it is the ultimate sacrifice by these warriors that has achieved and sustained a unique way of life and an experiment that values democratic participation. Not every people that have attempted to adopt and live by this concept has succeeded and not every success has been sustained over time.

A prime example is Ukraine that is fighting for its very life as a new democracy. Russia, its giant neighbor to the north and east wants to reestablish an empire that came apart after 1988.

Autocratic designs are being advanced in a bloodletting that does not distinguish between the military and civilians. To date, the Russian invaders have lost over 60 thousand soldiers while the Ukrainian Army estimated death toll is between 16 and 17 thousand.

But the story of sacrifice and death is much larger than that as over 100 thousand Ukrainian civilians have lost their lives mainly to Russian military weapons and technology. The notion of the ultimate sacrifice and dying for your country and way of life is being turned up-side-down by the civilian community whose blood is being shed over all others.

In future years, their memorial monuments and celebrations will have to account for this sacrifice on behalf of freedom. Also, the blood on the hands of the Kremlin cannot be wiped clean by treaties, understanding or negotiations.

The 620,000 military dead in the American Civil War was, by far, the bloodiest and most costly in lives for the country. The sacrifice was equal to the task of building “a more perfect union.”

It could be argued that much of the cost in blood could have been avoided if our leadership could have tolerated more division in thinking and acting by the different regions of the country.

However, President Lincoln drew a line in the sand that held fast against the idea of dividing the nation into two countries or keeping America “half slave and half free.”

The second biggest military death toll (420,000) was caused by World War II and the destiny of the United States that was to include becoming the international leader and the model for democracy around the world. The status as a superpower for the good continues today and is very evident in its role in helping to save Ukraine from tyranny.

Although the Vietnam War cost the country a fraction of the other two (58,220), it proved to be the moment to turn away from conscription and the draft to a volunteer and professional military. The national division created by that war helped force the change.

The shift has led to less deaths in subsequent wars like only 147 in the Gulf War, 4,431 in Iraq and 2,402 in Afghanistan. Also, a military career has become a genuine option at all levels.

The place to be this Memorial Day is the graveyard of a fallen loved one. In many cases, that place may be Fort Logan National Cemetery.

Before or after that gravesite visit, honor those fallen soldiers by attending one of several parades by veteran organizations and others. Enjoy the holiday and give thanks to those who secured your freedom.

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

Denver launches $25 million rebate programs

Rebate Program Expands from Residential Homes to include Commercial and Multifamily Buildings

Denver’s Office of Climate Action, Sustainability and Resiliency launched a building electrification incentive program to help existing commercial and multifamily buildings, including individual condominium owners, replace their air conditioners, furnaces and water heaters with energy efficient, electric heat pump technology.

Heat pumps are a cleaner, more energy efficient way to heat and cool buildings. Instead of creating heat like gas-fired equipment does, electric heat pumps move heat either into or out of a building to heat or cool it.

“Buildings and homes are responsible for 64% of greenhouse gas emissions in Denver. Denver’s rebate programs will make it easier for building or condo owners to install electric appliances powered by clean energy,” said Grace Rink, Chief Climate Officer with the City and County of Denver. “Installing electric heat pumps in the places where we live, work and spend most of our time keeps people safe and comfortable in the short term, and helps Denver be sustainable for future generations.”

The Commercial and Multifamily Equipment Rebates parallel Denver’s equipment rebates made available in 2022 for small residential homes. So far, more than 800 households have taken advantage of small residential homes rebates to install heat pumps in their homes. The newly launched rebates for commercial and multifamily buildings with five or more units offer higher rebate amounts than the program for small residential homes because there are limited utility rebates and federal tax credits available for commercial and multifamily buildings at this time. The newly launched rebates are for heat pump rooftop units, split air-source heat pumps, mini-split air-source heat pumps, and heat pump water heaters.

Building owners or tenants responsible for their HVAC (heating, ventilation, and air conditioning) and hot water heating equipment can take advantage of up to $60,000 in incentives per building. Equity Priority Buildings, which include human services non-profits, naturally occurring affordable housing, deed-restricted affordable housing and condo owners who meet certain income requirements, qualify for an additional $60,000, for a total of up to $120,000 in incentives per building.

The Energize Denver Ordinance, passed by Denver City Council in 2021, strengthens building code electrification requirements in existing commercial and multifamily buildings in 2025.

“We encourage building owners to start planning for equipment replacement today if their equipment is near the end of its useful life. The time is now to take advantage of our incentives to replace air conditioners and space and water heating with electric heat pump equipment,” added Rink.

For more information about signing up for the Commercial and Multifamily building electrification rebate program, visit www.denvergov.org/buildingelectrificationrebates.

What’s Happening?

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Community

Capitol Crossroads! Assemble Your Team Now for a Citywide Scavenger Hunt Presented by Historic Denver, Inc., — June 16-19.

Photo courtesy: Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center

Uncover more about Denver’s past, while following a series of clues through the city of Denver’s center. Assemble a team now for Historic Denver’s Capitol Crossroads: A Citywide Scavenger Hunt. Historic Denver invites you to flex your investigative muscles as a series of clues lead you to Denver’s key downtown historic places. Go on foot, by bike, or any way you like! The hunt is an innovative way to uncover more about the city you love, while enjoying a fun activity with family or friends — you can even do it on your own. Each year Historic Denver crafts a new route and new clues to share more details about Denver’s unique past. Teams have three days to complete the challenge. Prizes will be awarded to the teams for the fastest completion time, best team spirit photo, and most outstanding history buffs. Registration for the Capitol Crossroads Hunt is $18/adult and $12/child. Member discounts apply. Teams of four to six people are recommended. Visit www.historicdenver.org for tickets or call 303-832-4092 ext. 16.


Que Pasa? is compiled by La Voz Staff. To submit an event for consideration please email attractions@lavozcolorado.com with Que Pasa in the subject line by Friday at 5 p.m.