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Caregivers are the backbone of senior life

As the population ages their families turn to caregivers for the ultimate in home health home care. There are four types of caregivers, 1) family caregivers who care for family members without compensation, 2) professional and trained caregivers who are hired to administer caregiving to the aging and ill 3) aides/nurses (skilled care) 4) respite care, temporary caregivers.

AARP Family Caregiving Guides include the following: 1.) Help assesing needs 2.) Start important conversations 3.) Asses your loved one’s needs 4.) Create and/or update your caregiving plan, including getting help and caring for yourself. 5.) Deal with grief and plan for life after caregiving. 

AARP resources are here for older adults in the area of caregiving. In recent years caring for a family member is an advantage to the overall health of the aging family member. Caregiving at home allows the older adult/patient to spend their senior years in the comfort of their own home without subjecting them to spending their remaining years in a nursing facility. The overall caregiving is in the comfort of the older adult’s home where comfort, familiarity and safety is a plus.

Trained caregivers provide the best nutrition for the well being of their client. Their attention to the client’s medication, their daily hygiene, and safety are all priorities to enrich the life of their patient. Their attention to the client’s needs is first and foremost. Doctor visits and other appointments are yet another important duty of a caretaker. Transportation provided by the caretaker provides safety and convenience for the well being of the patient.

Caretakers are indeed the new answer to personalized care and attention to detail. The older population and their families are still dependent upon professional healthcare from their doctor, but caregivers ease the care details that ease the older adult’s later years.

AARP Resources provide tips and information for older adults’ caregiving needs. You can access state by state information. The information addresses caregivers personal care, medical management and financial guidance for caregiving.

Today there are government programs that ease the financial side of caregiving and AARP provides that state-by-state information. For instance, AARP4Care is a program that helps determine if an individual is eligible for the benefit.  

In regard to health, it should no longer be a stressful time in once’s later years. Caregiving is a valuable asset available to ease one’s golden years helping the older adult live a healthy and safe life.

Visit https://www.aarp.org/caregiving/ for more information and resources.

Denver rejects Federal repeal on assault weapons ban

Mayor Mike Johnston was joined by public safety and civic leaders in rejecting a demand from the U.S. Department of Justice to repeal the city’s longstanding ban on assault weapons. The demand, which suggested a lawsuit would be filed if Denver does not comply, came last week in a letter from the U.S. Department of Justice.

Mayor Johnston called the action a sweeping overreach of the federal government. He was joined Monday by Denver Police Chief Ron Thomas, City Councilwoman Serena Gonzales-Gutierrez, the Denver City Attorney’s Office, leaders from Everytown for Gun Safety, and Tom Mauser, whose son Daniel was murdered in the shooting at Columbine High School.

“Our first job is to keep Denverites safe, and we will not be intimidated out of doing it,” said Mayor Mike Johnston. “Denver’s law has stood for 37 years because it works, it saves lives, and it reflects the values of our community. No demand or lawsuit from Washington is going to change that.” 

“This ordinance has helped keep Denver safe for decades,” said Denver Police Chief Ron Thomas. “Repealing it would put my officers and our residents at greater risk and would violate our duty to protect and serve our city.”  

Denver’s law was passed in 1989 and restricts the possession and sale of guns with magazines carrying more than 15 rounds. Denver retains clear legal authority to regulate firearms within its borders to protect public safety, and the ordinance is consistent with both Colorado law and the U.S. Constitution. 

“Assault weapons take lives— that’s what they’re made for,” said Councilwoman Serena Gonzales-Gutirrez, I’m proud of our city’s longtime decision to ban these weapons, and we will fight back to protect our students, our families, and our loved ones should the Trump Administration try to take these protections away.”

“If the DOJ’s threat succeeds, Denver residents will be less safe. Assault weapons are weapons of war, and they have absolutely no place in our communities. It is heartbreaking that this would even be a question after the horrific events in Columbine, Aurora, and Boulder,” said Janet Carter, managing director of Amendment litigation at Everytown Law. “Denver’s life-saving ban is constitutional, and courts nationwide – including six federal appeals courts – have overwhelmingly upheld similar measures. We are proud to stand with Mayor Johnston and the city of Denver as they lead with courage, and will fight tirelessly to ensure this vital public safety measure remains in place.”

Denver’s city attorney sent a formal response to the DOJ today, which you can read alongside the initial letter. The DOJ’s demand comes as the Trump administration has moved to weaken gun safety regulation more broadly, including recent rollbacks at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives that loosen oversight of firearm dealers and reopens the gun show loophole.

Mayor Johnston has made public safety the centerpiece of his administration, with homicides falling last year to the second lowest rate since 1990. In addition, Denver has filed five lawsuits and five amicus briefs against the Trump Administration to preserve Congressionally appropriated funding, push back against National Guard and ICE deployments in cities, protect reproductive rights, and preserve the city’s values around equity, diversity, and immigration. In March, a federal judge sided with Denver and Colorado in dismissing an attempt by the Trump Administration to overrule local immigration policies.   

Source: Denver Mayor’s office

Colorado’s 2026 Teacher of the Year

If anyone gave Pueblo teacher Janae Passalaqua an apple, the veteran educator would thank the student and then immediately look for ways to prepare it, either exotically or conventionally. That’s just her nature. 

Passalaqua, ‘Miss Pass’ to her students, is Pueblo East High School’s culinary arts teacher. She is also Colorado’s 2026 Teacher of the Year, so named by the Colorado Teachers of Family and Consumer Sciences. 

The Pueblo native, teacher and businesswoman, has been polishing her craft for 27 years, the first seven as a science teacher. Finding herself teaching culinary arts was not the plan. But like finding a winning lottery ticket, things worked out perfectly. 

Twenty years ago, in the old East High—it’s since been demolished and replaced with a brand new building—Passalaqua’s principal asked, “Would you be interested in teaching Culinary Arts?” The question surprised her, but not in a bad way. As surprises go, it was a gift!

She already had a background in cooking and baking from helping her mother run her mom’s mid-town bakery, Aileen’s Cake Décor. There, she learned both baking and business, biscuits to billing. “We bake cakes for everybody,” she said. “We don’t care,” referencing a Denver-area baker who several years ago chose not to do business with a gay couple. That case made it all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court where the baker ultimately prevailed.

Passalaqua also co-owns “Little Bits of Heaven,” a boutique bakery housed in Pueblo’s historic Union Depot and more recently, with family, bought a religious memento store, “Angels of Hope,” in the city’s midtown shopping center.

Teaching culinary arts, 21st century home economics, said Passalaqua, should not be thought of as an ‘easy credit.’ Baking, she said, requires that students apply science, precision and economics to their work. Measuring, converting and timing aren’t accidental. ‘Miss Pass’ stresses to her students that perfection, though not always achieved, is always the goal. 

“I had a group of boys, they would drive me crazy,” she recalled. “They found a recipe on TikTok and asked, ‘Can we make this?’” They followed the recipe with precision. “Their cookies came out fantastic!” That single moment affirmed her belief that “they’ll grow, they’ll just get better.” 

“I have every level of student,” said Passalaqua. Some are high achieving, middle of the road and low achievers, including “kids who don’t even like to come to school—the whole gamut.” But Passalaqua says no matter where they fall, each is treated fairly, firmly and with consistency.

Passalaqua’s affection for her students is evident in her voice. But when she’s teaching, she makes it clear, she’s in charge; she’s the boss. Her technique, she said, is simple: “Real world, real life.”

While there are similarities, her classes, she said, are all different and often surprising. “When you believe in all your students, you can get real results,” Passalaqua said citing a recent incident reaffirming her beliefs.

Passalaqua’s charges often bake for school functions and periodically for events outside of the building. Her students have also won cooking and baking competitions at the state level. 

When she’s not in class or helping at one of her family’s businesses, Passalaqua is one of Pueblo’s biggest and most fanatic Denver Bronco fans. It’s an addiction—a good one—nurtured by her late father. 

Sundays and the Broncos with her father was just what they did. “I became infatuated and crazy (for them),” she said. Sealing the deal with the team came when she was in elementary school and Bronco legend John Elway visited her school. “I got his autograph!” 

During the fall, Passalaqua boards the Bronco bus for the two-hour trip from Pueblo to Mile High. “I buy half a season of tickets,” and regularly includes her nephews for the trip, her voice failing to conceal a genuine affection.  

Passalaqua is happy with her career and even happier that it took place in Pueblo. “I love Pueblo, just love this town,” she gushes. It’s the city’s “people and the culture…how this community takes care of family.”

Passalaqua’s looking forward to summer break, a well-deserved summer break. But when summer ends, she’s always excited about getting back to the classroom and, next term, that means a classroom with “a new stove.” Always the little things. 

The Fall will mark the start of her 28th year in the classroom. She’s OK with that but also looking ahead. “I’m gonna go seven more years,” she says. Then she’s passing the torch. It’ll be time to move on.

The 2026 Toyota Prius Nightshade Plug-in Hybrid owns the road

Photo courtesy: Toyota

An attractive sporty designed vehicle for your eyes, the 2026 Toyota Prius Nightshade is equipped with a 2.0 DOHC HV VVT 4-cylinder engine, with a plug-in hybrid system w/EV and HV modes provides a high-performance engine for your travels and everyday use on Colorado’s highways.

For your safety and convenience, the 2026 Toyota Prius sporty hybrid is equipped with the Toyota Safety Sense 3.0 with fire/collision, with automatic braking, safe exit alert, blind spot monitor with rear cross traffic alert, 3-door Smart Key system with push-button start, and much more.

The 2026 Toyota Prius Nightshade exterior includes a roof-mounted shark-fin antennae, LED headlights and LED DRL’s, rain-sensing wipers and much more to make your driving safe and convenient.

For your comfort and convenience, the 2026 Toyota Prius Nightshade interior includes 5-way power driver seat w/lumbar, heated steering wheel, six USB-C ports, wireless Smartphone charger, and much more for your everyday driving 

The sporty 2026 Toyota Prius Nightshade registered 48-mpg between highway and city driving. Combining the best of a high performing engine and hybrid plug-in, its duo engine/hybrid capabilities is a sure winner for the environment and an economic win for your pocketbook. 

Without hesitation, drive down to your nearest Toyota dealership and test drive the 2026 Toyota Prius Nightshade, an attractively-designed car that also serves as a high-performing vehicle to get you from Point A to B in maximum comfort, space, convenience and safety.

A day to show love to our mother

David Conde, Senior Consultant for International Programs

I recently spent time with a family in Mexico who I met two decades ago. At that time, the mother was working hard to take care of her 4 children on the salary of a hotel worker. 

Our meeting after such a long time was marred by news of the disappearance of one of her daughters who has not been seen since 2017. It is a story all too common in the era of cartels. 

The mother has actively been looking for her daughter ever since and has joined in association with a group of other mothers that also have had loved ones disappear. Collectives such as the one she belongs to are popular, numerous and supported by the Mexican government with accommodations, stipends and security details during every search.

The work is hard and, at times, dangerous especially when they travel to the countryside where there are signs of foul play. It is a labor of love for their children as well as an existential effort to find some kind of closure.

As of March 2026, the record shows that there are more than 130,000 family members that have disappeared in Mexico. The number of collectives searching for them is also numerous.

The mothers remind me of La Llorona that howls in the wind of the night by the river looking for her lost children. Many of us have heard her cries of anguish that ends only with the light of day.

This kind of thing is not as prevalent in the United States largely because we are mostly the users of drugs that provide the freight for cartels to do the dirty work somewhere else. Our 60 million drug users help pay for the pain inflicted on others around the world.

In a normal world, the mother we most relate to carries the tradition of nurturing our fantasies and consoling us when they are not realized. She is our earliest educator and enforcer of good behavior as well as the place of rest and recuperation when things go wrong.

In a talk to a Migrant Head Start early childhood program some years ago, I mentioned that my mother was my Head Start. She taught me how to read and write during what would have been my pre-school years.

I remember reading my first novel, The Count of Monte Cristo, the year I entered the first grade. She did not seem surprised at the time but did appear happy with her role in my scholarship.

Throughout my career and life until her passing away, mom was always there cheering my accomplishments, helping to solve problems and finding ways to make my failures not look so bad. Although she never pretended to understand me, she always found a way of saying the right thing at the right time.

Like so many others, I miss my mother and, at times, try to find ways to honor her memory. My debt to her grows with every passing day.

So, if you can be with your mother, do not hesitate to tell her that you love her and thank her for her blessings and the fact that she is with you. There is nothing better than a mom that loves unconditionally.

This year Mother’s Day falls on a Sunday. It is a great day to celebrate her life with her in the mix. 

If she has passed away, there are flowers to be taken and a prayer of thanks at her graveside. Make Mother’s Day very personal.

State health department to send Tdap vaccine reminder texts and emails

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Messages urge families to protect their children from whooping cough

Beginning today, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment will send text messages and email notifications to families of more than 110,000 children ages 11-14 years whose records in the Colorado Immunization Information System indicate they may be overdue for a tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis (Tdap) vaccine.

The text messages will come from 45778 and read: 

From CDPHE: According to our records, your child/children (11-14 yrs) may be overdue for their tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis (Tdap) vaccine. Tdap protects against whooping cough, which spreads easily in schools. The cough can last 10+ weeks and make it hard to breathe, eat, or sleep. Protection fades over time, making this Tdap booster important for your child. 

Starting with the 2026-27 school year, Colorado law requires Tdap before 7th grade. Beat the rush and schedule a visit now to check this off your to-do list and start the next school year with peace of mind.

Watch: youtube.com/watch?v=axU0ujeKIo8 

Find a vaccine provider near you: cdphe.colorado.gov/immunizations/get-vaccinated

You can exempt your child/children from school-required vaccines. For more info, visit cdphe.colorado.gov/vaccine-exemptions.

Emails will come from cdphe.vaccine.registry@state.co.us and read:

According to state public health records, your child/children aged 11 to 14 years may be overdue for their tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis (Tdap) vaccine. The Tdap vaccine provides protection against pertussis, or whooping cough, one of the most common vaccine-preventable diseases in the U.S. 

While most children receive their initial vaccine series as infants, the protection begins to fade over time. This makes the Tdap booster essential to renewing immunity and staying protected through the high school years. 

Whooping cough is very contagious and spreads quickly in schools and social settings. Whooping cough makes people cough uncontrollably. As people try to catch their breath in between coughs, it causes a “whooping” sound, which is why it is known as whooping cough. The cough from whooping cough can last for more than 10 weeks and makes it hard to breathe, eat, drink, and sleep.

To see why many Colorado parents choose to vaccinate their children, watch this brief video: youtube.com/watch?v=axU0ujeKIo8 

Starting in the 2026-2027 school year, Colorado law requires students to receive a dose of Tdap vaccine before their first day of seventh grade. Beat the rush by scheduling a visit now. Contact a vaccine provider to make an appointment.

If your child is already up to date with their vaccines, please complete this secure Google form and attach a copy of their vaccine record. We will update their record in the Colorado Immunization Information System and notify you by email once it is done.

You can exempt your child/children from school-required vaccines. For more information, visit cdphe.colorado.gov/vaccine-exemptions.

You can access the immunization record for yourself or your child from the online Colorado Immunization Information System self-serve portal. For more information, including step-by-step directions on how to use the portal, visit cdphe.colorado.gov/immunization/for-the-public/get-a-copy-of-your-records.

Most health insurance plans, including Medicaid and CHP+, cover the cost of routine childhood vaccines, so you don’t have to pay anything at providers that accept your health plan. Even if you don’t have any health insurance, you can get recommended vaccines for free at one of nearly 600 vaccine providers statewide.

A Week In Review

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Africa 

Three die on cruise ship in Atlantic Ocean 

The World Health Organization confirmed that three people died on a cruise ship from a suspected hantavirus outbreak. There were five other suspected cases, and one 69-year-old is in intensive care in South Africa. Hantavirus causes severe respiratory illness and is rarely transmitted between people. 

Man sentenced for murder of Uganda toddlers 

Christopher Okello Onyum has been sentenced to death by hanging for the murder of four toddlers. In April, Onyum entered a nursery school and fatally stabbed the infants. Uganda has not carried out capital punishment since 2005. In court, he admitted to the crime and called it a “human sacrifice” to make him rich. 

Asia 

Drone sales set to be banned in Beijing 

China is banning the sale of drones in Beijing and owners will be required to register their devices with police. Officials have expressed public safety concerns in the past. In parts of China, drones are used for food delivery, agriculture and cleaning buildings. Drones and flying taxis are expected to generate more than $290 billion by 2035 for China. 

Man accused of murdering 5-year-old girl 

A man in Australia has been charged with murdering a five-year-old girl. The victim is identified with the pseudonym, Kumanjayi Little Baby. The man, Jefferson Lewis, is age 47, and is scheduled to appear in court this week.  The victim’s body was discovered last Thursday after a major police search. 

Europe 

Russia/Ukraine war continues 

Russian strikes killed at least 10 people in Ukraine while Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine struck three Russian oil tankers, a cruise-missile carrier warship, and a patrol boat. Recently, Ukraine has intensified its drone strikes inside Russia. Russia has accused Ukraine of attacking civilians, while Ukraine said it is hitting legitimate military targets. 

Man arrested after rat poisoning found in baby food 

A man in Austria has been arrested in connection to a case where rat poison was found in jars of baby food. Recently, a jar of carrot and potato puree contained poison in the state of Burgenland. The manufacture HiPP then recalled an entire range of its products. Officials safely recovered five contaminated jars in Austria, the Czech Republic and Slovakia before they were consumed. 

Latin America 

US charges Mexican governor with aiding cartel 

Mexico’s Sinaloa Governor Ruben Rocha Moya has been accused by the United States of conspiring with cartel drug traffickers. The Mexican government released a statement saying US documents requested his arrest lacked sufficient evidence. US Attorney for the Southern District of New York Jay Clayton said in a statement that the Sinaloa cartel would not operate freely without corrupt politicians. 

Indian billionaire’s son wants to buy Pablo Escobar’s hippos 

Anant Ambani, the son of Asia’s richest man Mukesh Ambani, offered to purchase around 80 of Pablo Escobar’s hippos for his private Vantara zoo. Escobar, a notorious drug lord, illegally imported male and female hippos. Since then, Columbia has struggled with controlling the animal’s population. The country has yet to respond to Ambani’s offer. 

North America 

DeVaux wins Kentucky Derby 

Cherie DeVaux has become the first female trainer to win the Kentucky Derby with her horse Golden Tempo. The horse was in last place before winning by a neck at Churchill Downs. DeVaux said she is glad to be a representative of women everywhere. 

Chick-fil-A employee charged in scheme 

Police in Texas have charged a former Chick-fil-A employee for defrauding the company. Keyshun Jones, age 23, is accused of ringing up catering-sized portions of macaroni and cheese and then refunded the cost to his personal credit cards. Police said Jones refunded a total of $80,000 to his personal credit cards. 

Our Government

White House

President Donald J. Trump signed an Executive Order to increase access to high-quality, low-cost Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs), and up to $1,000 in Federal matching contributions, to strengthen the financial security of American workers.  The Order directs the Secretary of the Treasury to establish TrumpIRA.gov, a new Federal platform designed to connect American workers who do not have access to employer‑sponsored retirement plans.

Colorado Governor

Governor Jared Polis and FWD.us joined business leaders from across Colorado to discuss a new report that details how immigrants strengthen Colorado’s workforce and are driving economic growth across the state. “Hardworking and law-abiding immigrants make important contributions to our workforce, economy, and communities. I call on Congress to take meaningful action to solve our broken immigration system, so our economy and workforce can fully benefit from the skills, culture, and hard work immigrants bring to our state,” said Governor Polis.

Denver Mayor

Mayor Mike Johnston has announced an expanded vision for East Colfax that will include retail and workforce housing alongside a rebuilt Denver Police District 6 Station. The development is timed to take advantage of the new East Colfax Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) line, which is expected to wrap construction along that section of Colfax this year.  “Colfax has a little bit of everything, but if there’s one thing it could use more of its housing,” said Mayor Mike Johnston.  “This project delivers affordability without sacrificing Colfax’s unique character, and with the BRT line in its final stages, will come just in time to enjoy one of the easiest commutes in the city.” 

This Earth Day, take better steps for better air

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While it is now part of the calendar—it’s now turning 56—it was a new and special day for the planet. On April 22, 1970, not a day too soon, the first Earth Day was celebrated. 

Today, in Colorado, the country and in nearly 200 nations, Earth Day is marked. And accordingly, in each location, something is being done to either fix or bring attention to the man-made problems that chemicals and, of course, the carelessness with which we have used them. 

In Colorado, the state and various agencies, including organizations like the Regional Air Quality Council, the Front Range region’s lead air quality planning organization, are waging a long-running battle against air pollution, both the kind you can see and the kind you don’t see but is, perhaps, even more dangerous.

“We work on ground-level ozone,” said RAQC’s Communications and Programs Manager, Kelsey Simpkins. Ozone, an invisible, odorless gas formed when air pollutants combine in summer heat and sunshine, can threaten both life and quality of life especially for those with breathing issues. Prolonged or long-term exposure can compromise lung functions and sometimes lead to premature death.

The battle against these pollutants, despite marked success over the years, continues. But the progress made through education has been very nearly remarkable. Much of the credit is traced to the Clean Air Act, passed and signed into law by President Nixon in 1970. The act sets new regulations, both federal and state, limiting pollution caused by smoke-belching factories as well as others caused by motor—gasoline powered—vehicles.

But there are some other sources often given less attention, said Simpkins, that can make a real difference in reducing summer ground-level ozone pollution. Two examples, she said, are right in front of our eyes and contribute far more than most people imagine. 

Gas-powered lawn mowers are one culprit, and leaf blowers, more often thought of as aural irritants, top the list of usual suspects. 

“Running gas-powered lawn mowers for one hour,” she said, is equivalent to “driving a car for 350 miles.” It gets worse. In that same hour, said the manager of the RAQC’s Simple Steps. Better Air. education and outreach program, a leaf blower creates the same amount of air pollution as “driving a car over one thousand miles.” 

Laws are now in place or are being implemented in a number of states, including Colorado, to ban these two sources of pollution, but the effort may take years.

“We encourage people to electrify lawn equipment for both their own health, and our local environment,” Simpkins said, adding that as incentive, many stores statewide are offering point-of-sale discounts of 30 percent for mowers or blowers and similar electric lawn equipment, through the end of 2026. 

She reminds us that many other simple steps can make a timely difference for reducing ozone pollution on our blue-sky summer days—and reduce the impact on your budget. Residents are also encouraged to carpool and combine car trips, take public transportation, or for shorter trips, leave the car at home and walk, bike, or ride a scooter (with a helmet, of course!). The state, she said, is also offering $225 discounts on the purchase of e-bikes this year.  Another easy step is to avoid idling your car, when parked in school pick-up lines or parking lots, for example. 

RAQC’s Simple Steps. Better Air. program also offers literature and electronic tips to learn more about cutting your own fuel footprint and protecting your health each summer from ground-level ozone—including the option to sign up for free text and email alerts. The website address is SimpleStepsBetterAir.org, available in both English and Spanish

At Colorado State University, Milena Guajardo performs research on air quality. The California transplant visits with community groups to first gauge how best her work can help. “Do you think you can use this?,” is a basic question she asks of her audience.

Guajardo then tailors what she gathers to them, including providing essential data to the county’s Spanish-speaking residents. “We first present a draft of what they need,” said Guajardo, and “we redesign (information) to meet their needs.” The whole idea, said the CSU researcher, “is to co-design community strategies…leading to behavioral changes.” 

While some of the things she has shared may seem obvious, too often they can be ignored. “One of our grants was to build smoke-ready communities,” Guajardo said. With so much of the country dealing with wildfires, Guajardo’s work has helped prepare hundreds to prepare for minimizing smoke from not only local fires but from some smoke that leaks across borders from the massive blazes from other states. 

While Guajardo knows her work may only be touching a fragment of those who will most immediately benefit, she knows the information has a chance of reaching and helping others well into the future. “I have to hope that that we are going to live our lives differently,” said Guajardo, herself a new mother. Our hope, she said, is not only for today but for future generations.

Scott Landes is an air quality meteorologist at the Colorado state health department whose job keeps him focused on weather and weather patterns, past, present and future. Messaging ozone spikes is an everyday part of his job. 

“People today are more aware of air quality,” he said. But it’s not just man-made pollutants that Landes thinks about as a public health hazard, particularly with a drought that Colorado has experienced not only this year but going back several years. 

Blowing dust, not unlike the freak dust storm that caused a massive pile up south of Pueblo and killed five just weeks ago, does more than just reduce visibility, said Landes. The dust can also create air quality problems for local residents. The violent winds that wreaked havoc on the highway near Pueblo with dust are the same phenomena that added fuel to Boulder County’s Marshall Fire in late December 2021. Nearly 1,100 homes were burned down in the blaze. It was the state’s most destructive fire in its history. The smoke from that wildfire also produced air quality concerns.

“We issue lots of different (alerts) to make people aware of air quality issues,” said Landes. The alerts cover issues like blowing dust, wildfire smoke, and ozone pollution. Most of the ozone alerts, he said, occur in the warmer summer months. 

Weather patterns, those changing as a result of climate change and the normal seasonal ones, are gaining a greater importance in Colorado and elsewhere, the veteran weather expert says. His agency, the state health department’s Air Pollution Control Division, blogs about them, too. The Colorado Smoke Blog (https://colosmokeoutlook.blogspot.com/) along with information on the state health website (colorado.gov/airquality) will provide all the most current information.

While the global environmental challenges we face may feel overwhelming this Earth Day, “there are still a lot of ways that individuals’ daily actions add up, that can benefit our health, our wallets, and our communities,” said Simpkins.

The Colorado Avalanche advance to the next round

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Colorado finished the first round against the L.A. Kings with a sweep and will be waiting for the series between the Dallas Stars and the Minnesota Wild to wrap up. Both the Wild and the Stars have been battling it out over the last five games with the Wild taking a 3-2 series lead over the Stars. 

Game six of that series is scheduled for Thursday April 30th at 7:30 p.m. where the Wild have an opportunity to upset the Stars by defeating them in six games with a win on Thursday night. 

The Las Vegas Golden Knights are knotted up at two apiece with the Utah Mammoth after defeating them on Monday night in overtime 5-4. The Mammoth head to Vegas to face the Golden Knights tonight at 8 p.m. MST. 

In other sports Denver Nuggets extend their series with the Minnesota Wild after getting a must win in Denver on Monday night at Ball Arena. 

Game five of the series will be at Target Center on Thursday night at 7:30. The Timberwolves lead the series 3-2 and can close out the series with a win over the Nuggets. Nikola Jokic gave his take on what the Nuggets need to do to extend the series to game 7 and had this to say after game five, “I mean definitely more physicality, focus-wise” he continued with, “I have been here before and we know that we need to, in an elimination game, be extremely focused and extremely locked in. I think we did that for most of this game.”

The Colorado Rockies just wrapped up a series sweep of the New York Mets over the weekend in a four-game series that included a double header on Sunday where the Rockies outscored New York 6-1 over two games. 

The Rockies kicked off a three-game series with the Cincinnati Reds on Tuesday, losing game-one 2-7. The Rockies will play the Reds in game-two tonight (results of the game not available at the time of this writing) at 4:40 p.m. in Cincinnati before returning to Great American Ball Park for a morning game-three on Thursday to wrap up the series. 

The Denver Broncos wrapped up their 2026 draft with seven picks over seven rounds. Their first pick in the draft didn’t come until round 3 but they got a steal by drafting defensive tackle Tyler Onydeim from Texan A&M. Denver’s next pick came from the Washington Huskies when they drafted running back Jonah Coleman. 

The Broncos stuck to the interior line for their next pick in round four picking up an offensive tackle and Bronco from Boise State in Kage Casey. The Broncos then added two tight ends with Justin Joly from North Carlina State (Round 5) and Dallen Bentley from Utah (Round 7). 

The Broncos added depth to their already outstanding defense by drafting safety Miles Scott from Illinois (Round 7) and a linebacker from Buffalo in Red Murdock (Round 7).