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Valdez steps into President’s role

You might call San Luis Valley native Armando Valdez a man who knows the value of time. He wastes very little of it and jumps at the opportunity to do something with it, to create.

Photo courtesy: CSU Pueblo

“Everything,” said the affable and newly christened president of Colorado State University-Pueblo, “needs to be done yesterday.” That philosophy is as applicable to the role he’ll step into February 1st as the school’s 16th chief executive as it is to the work of running his family’s farm and ranch in the hamlet of Capulin, a pristine speck in the road of the San Luis Valley.

Valdez, who was selected by the Colorado State University Board of Governors on December 15th, said that while he was not actively pursuing his new job, it’s also something he’s prepared for his whole life.

“I come from a long history of educators and teachers,” he said in a weekend telephone interview. “My mom was a teacher,” he said. His father was also a well-educated man.

“I was also a teacher for 25 years.” And while he is not a first-generation college graduate, the school he’ll be presiding over is well represented with first-in-family college students. A fact, he said, that inspires him to commit heart and soul into the new job.

Even though he’s still a few days away from officially assuming his leadership position, Valdez already has an idea of how he’s going to run things.

“I see myself as a role model,” Valdez said. Indeed, if any student needs an inspiration on what a college degree can mean, it takes only a quick look at the new president’s résumé.

Valdez, who currently serves on the CSU Board of Governors, is involved in community, regional and statewide boards and organizations. He’s also a product of the CSU system, having reached the pinnacle of what it offers. He holds a graduate degree from CSU-Fort Collins. He was also a faculty member at the Valley’s own educational flagship, Adams State University.

Foremost for Valdez in his new position is maintaining the vitality of his new school. A lot of smaller schools like CSU-Pueblo struggle with maintaining enrollment. “How do we stabilize…create growth,” he asks. School enrollment hovers just below 5,000 students.

One way is to create a school for all of southern Colorado, from the small towns dotting the Arkansas Valley east of Pueblo to the vastness of Valdez’s own San Luis Valley to the deepest corners of southwestern Colorado. “I want to represent a school that is welcoming. I want to show that anyone no matter lifestyle, geographic background” is welcome. “I have a continuous improvement approach…you don’t bask in achievement, you go forward.”

Valdez credits his family and its farm life work ethic with forging his approach to any job he’s ever held. “I was raised in a hardworking family,” said the Valley native. His own family, he said, can trace its roots in the region back “16 generations.”

While education has provided the foundation for his professional career, Valdez said that his roots and his heart remain firmly planted in farming and ranching. “The farm and ranch, the livestock,” he says, “I’m very passionate about.”

Valdez even says that despite how others feel about the Valley’s deep-freeze winters and the season’s shorter days, it’s his favorite time of the year. The early sunsets, he said, allow him to come in early. Longer days, as long as he can remember, mean there’s still enough daylight to get other things done. And there is always something else needing to be done.

While Valdez points to his family, its work ethic and stressing of education, he’s also been blessed with a handful of mentors who recognized something special in him and helped him in finding a path that led to this moment.

“I was fortunate,” said the part-time rancher, now full-time university president. A professor in his freshman year at Adams State, he recalled, “was the most caring, supportive individual,” he remembered. “She was enthusiastic about me trying new things. She shaped my willingness to take risks.” “When things don’t go right,” she would say, “we’ll find another way to make it better.” From her, Valdez learned a life-long lesson: failure was a learning experience.

While CSU-Pueblo is a federally accredited Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI), meaning its enrollment exceeds 25 percent Hispanic students, Valdez wants every student to feel welcome. “We want to be inclusive.” Every viewpoint, like every student, is welcome. “The strength of conversation is listening, not talking.”

In his new job, Valdez will be hitting the road both as CSU-Pueblo’s new chief executive and as a Valley farmer-rancher. The commute to Capulin is a two-and-a-half-hour drive from Pueblo. At home he’ll get to spend time with wife Angelica and his two children, one who’ll be graduating high school in the spring and a son, still a few years away from a high school cap and gown. His oldest daughter lives in Denver.

While his new duties at school and his job running the family ranch will get most of his time, Valdez hopes to continue with a hobby he says he truly enjoys. He’s a serious fantasy football and baseball guy. But, he’ll also be making time to tinker. “I love doing things with my hands, electrical work, building trades. I love taking things apart and putting them back together.”

He also said he likes to “push boundaries…not to create controversy but to create.” He’ll certainly get his chance as the countdown to his first official day on the job looms. February 1st he officially becomes President Armando Valdez, 16th president of Colorado State University-Pueblo.

Student of the Week – Isabella Massena

Isabella Massena – East High School

Photo courtesy: Isabella Massena

Profile:

Isabella Massena is a high school senior at East High School who currently holds a 4.7 GPA. Massena’s academic achievements include National Hispanic Recognition Program, Seal of Biliteracy, Principle’s Honor Roll, and Sages Medical Conference. Massena is President of National Honors Society, Captain of Varsity Tennis Team, DECA Club Officer, and is involved in Link Crew. Massena volunteers for the Center of Surgical Innovation at the University of Colorado Hospital.

Favorite Book: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer

Favorite Movie: The Notebook

Favorite Subject: Science

Favorite Music: Country

Future Career: Family Nurse Practitioner

Hero: Dr. Jane Aronson

Favorite Hobby: Playing Tennis

Favorite Social Media Follow: Humans of New York (Instagram)

Words to live by: “When you are tempted to give up, your breakthrough is probably just around the corner.” — Joyce Meyer

Community Involvement: “DECA, volunteering, NHS Tennis Coaching Kids.”

Why is Community involvement important? “Community involvement is important because it provides a. space for all walks of life to come together and create a close-knit community through different passions.”

If I could improve the world I would…

“Provide free mental health support for kids, especially those who are going through tough times.”

College of choice: University of Missouri, Depau University, Lake Forest College, Lewis and Clark College, Merrimack College, Elon University, College of Charleston, St. Olaf College, Creighton University. Massena has been accepted at the University of Colorado.

Trump’s immunity ideas are a take from 007

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David Conde, Senior Consultant for International Programs

I was a very young airman in Germany when I had an opportunity to see Sean Connery in the first of his 007 spy movies. Dr. No (1962) whet my appetite for this rugged looking actor doing exciting and exotic things in international settings.

For me at the time, going to the movies on base was a weekly activity that allowed me to see so many great movies produced in that decade. Before I left for home, I had to the opportunity to also see From Russia with Love (1963) and admire the special acting characteristics displayed by Connery, who went on to become an icon of the screen.

The 007 series with Sean Connery as the star continued with Goldfinger (1964), Thunderball (1965), You Only Live Twice (1967), Diamonds are Forever (1971) and Never Say Never (1983). One of the intriguing aspects of the movies was the 007 designation.

The 007 label gave the protagonist a license to kill as part of his service to the British Empire. The idea of killing enemies and not be charged or prosecuted is an intriguing concept.

Reminiscent of the 007 movies, Donald Trump is claiming the same kind of power as part of being President of the United States. It appears that being guilty of other “high crimes and misdemeanors” such as insurrection and fraud while being in office is not enough.

He also wants to add murder to his portfolio. The expressed notion actually began as part of a political stunt during his successful run for the presidency in 2016 when said that, “I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn’t lose votes.”

Now Trump argument of affirming full immunity while being President covers actual killings of his political oppo- nents among others. In fact, his attorney agreed that the President should be able to send US Navy SEAL Team 6 to assassinate folks.

This brand of absolute power is very much in the style of dictators who find murder as a convenient tool that facilitates staying in power. A current example of the sinister practice appears to be employed by President Putin of Russia whose political opponents are poisoned or fall to their deaths out of windows.

Currently there is a large number of low-budget narco movies that I see on TV in Spanish. They are mini action productions that seem to spend minimum time on the buying and selling of the product.

Rather, they concentrate on the relationships of the families running the businesses and the fights for control of territories that they call “plazas.” The strongest depictions that these cheap movies present are the gunfights for the sake of vengeance and what they call “ajuste de cuentas,” a kind of payback.

It occurs to me that this is the political and cultural world that former President Trump is attempting to fashion and sell to the American people in his campaign for another turn at being President. The irony is that our southern borders is full of refugees from countries that are acting out that kind of smallness in partisan vision like that of banana republics with dictators that wants to use their people as purveyors of their every whim.

Donald Trump had an opportunity to pick up a gun to defend our way of life in Vietnam. He refused that service to the country.

Now he insists on that authority so that he can kill his personal enemies. That is more like a Mafia Don than 007.

Colorado Lottery hires full time player health program manager

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This week Colorado’s lottery hired an industry expert in Responsible Gaming (RG), Amanda Quintana, as the new in-house Lottery player health program manager. In this role, Quintana will exclusively focus on RG and advancing the Lottery’s player health programs. The decision to hire a full-time player health expert aligns with Gov. Polis’ priority of making Colorado one of the top 10 healthiest states.

Quintana relocated to Colorado and started with the Lottery Jan. 16. She will serve as the subject matter expert on the Lottery’s RG programs, helping to guide the program’s growth and promote safe play by Lottery players. Quintana has a public health background and brings years of experience in problem gambling (PG) and RG. She will be an integral part of ensuring the Lottery continues to improve its RG program and retains its Level 4 RG certification from the World Lottery Association (WLA). The Lottery is one of only nine lotteries in the country that hold the WLA’s highest level of responsible gaming certification.

Quintana most recently served as program manager at the National Council on Problem Gambling (NCPG), where she was responsible for sustaining and strengthening NCPG’s programs and providing leadership and expertise in responsible and problem gaming services. She has a rich background in community-based addiction services and holds a Master’s degree in Population Health Management from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

“We are thrilled to welcome Amanda to the State of Colorado and the Colorado Lottery to help us further our commitment to player health and help us take our Responsible Gaming efforts to the next level,” said Tom Seaver, director of the Colorado Lottery. “By bringing a responsible gaming expert onto our staff, we will be able to grow our pillar of responsibility and further operate under RG best practices in the industry to keep our players safe while we continue to grow revenue to support the conservation, outdoor recreation and schools across the state. Not only are we proud to have attracted Amanda to the Lottery, but we are also proud to have brought her talent and expertise to Colorado.”

The Lottery’s decision to appoint a dedicated manager to oversee responsible gaming efforts demonstrates how much the Colorado Lottery’s program has grown over the last few years. Only a handful of other lotteries across the country have a manager dedicated solely to player health, and many of them are much larger organizations than Colorado’s lottery. Dedicating a full time employee to manage our program, provide valuable insight and train our staff demonstrates the Lottery’s commitment to continuing to provide a safe and responsible gaming environment for players.

Free service through IRS.gov available for millions of taxpayers

The Internal Revenue Service today announced that IRS Free File Guided Tax Software service is ready for taxpayers to use in advance of the opening of tax season later this month.

Marking its 22nd filing season, IRS Free File went live today, more than two weeks before the 2024 filing season start date. The IRS starts accepting and processing individual tax returns on Jan. 29.

Millions of taxpayers across the nation can access free software products provided by IRS Free File trusted partners by visiting IRS.gov.

”The IRS continues its partnership with Free File Inc. to give taxpayers an opportunity to file their taxes electronically for free,” said IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel.

“Taxpayers will always have choices for how they file their taxes. They can file using tax software, a trusted tax professional, Free File, or free tax preparation services through IRS partners. Through the years, Free File has helped millions of taxpayers, and it remains an important option for people to consider using to quickly and easily file their taxes.”

IRS Free File is one of many free options available to taxpayers for filing their returns either online or in person. It’s offered via a public-private partnership between the IRS and the Free File Inc., formerly the Free File Alliance. Through this partnership, tax preparation and filing soft- ware providers make their online products available to eligible taxpayers. Free access to online products is only available by starting from IRS Free File.

Eight private-sector partners will provide online guided tax software products this year to any taxpayer with an Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) of $79,000 or less in 2023. One partner will offer a product in Spanish.

Because the filing season does not start until Jan. 29, IRS Free File providers will accept completed tax returns and hold them until they can be filed electronically on that date. Other software companies also offer this option.

Those with an AGI over $79,000 can use the IRS’s Free File Fillable Forms (FFFF), the electronic version of IRS paper forms beginning Jan. 29. This product is best for people comfortable using IRS form instructions and publications when preparing their own taxes.
How IRS Free File works

Each IRS Free File provider sets its own eligibility rules for products based on age, income and state residency.

Taxpayers with an AGI of $79,000 or less in 2023 will find a product that matches their needs. Some providers also offer free state return preparation. Active-duty military can use any IRS Free File product if their AGI was $79,000 or less in 2023.

IRS Free File is a great way to claim valuable tax credits for those eligible

IRS Free File is a free, easy way to claim the full amount of tax benefits, including the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), the Child Tax Credit and other credits a taxpayer qualifies for. The EITC is a tax credit for qualified taxpayers who have earned income under $63,398. The EITC Assistant can help taxpayers see if they qualify. It’s available in English and seven other languages.

EITC is just one refundable tax credit related to family and dependent care that someone without a filing requirement may be eligible to receive. Refundable tax credits mean a taxpayer can claim them and get a refund even if they don’t owe taxes. A refundable credit may also reduce the amount of tax owed and that could result in a refund. Go to Earned Income Tax Credit for more information on these and other credits.

To find the right IRS Free File product, taxpayers can:

  1. Go to IRS.gov/freefile,
  2. Click on Explore Free Guided Tax Software button. Then select the Find Your Trusted Partner tool for help in finding the right product, or
  3. Use the Browse All Trusted Partners tool to review each offer,
  4. Select the desired product , and
  5. Follow the links to the trusted partner’s website to begin their tax return.

No computer? No problem. IRS Free File products support mobile phone access. Taxpayers can do their taxes on their smart phone or tablet.

IRS Free File participants

For 2024, the following trusted partners are participating in IRS Free File:

For 2024, ezTaxReturn.com will provide an IRS Free File product in Spanish.

IRS Free File is a great resource to help taxpayers save money and file their taxes with ease. Visit IRS Free File (https://www.irs.gov/filing/free-file-do-your-federal-taxes-for-free): Do your Taxes for Free for more information or to start filing your tax return today.

Source: IRS.gov

DIA saw drastically reduced car thefts at the end of 2023

Denver International Airport (DEN), in partnership with the Colorado Auto Theft Prevention Authority, Denver Police Department, CATPA-Metropolitan Auto Theft Taskforce (C-MATT), and Colorado State Patrol today announced that their combined efforts have helped to drastically reduce auto thefts over the last two months of 2023.

November saw vehicle thefts reduced to 11, compared to 39 in November of the prior year, and 61 vehicle thefts in October of 2023. The busy holiday travel season for the month of December saw 10 car thefts. Overall, vehicle theft at DIA is trending down significantly from the peak during the summer months.

“One auto theft at DEN is one too many. But through a focused and coordinated effort with our partners throughout 2023 to improve and increase security measures, surveillance, and enforcement, we have finally begun to see thefts at DEN trending down,” said DEN CEO Phil Washington. “We will stay vigilant and continue our joint efforts to ensure vehicles are safe while parked at DEN.”

In 2023 DEN implemented several important measures to help mitigate auto thefts, including:

  • Installing 11 additional HALO cameras in the East and West Economy lots as well as in the Pikes Peak lot. That brought the total to 15 HALO cameras across these three lots increasing security surveillance by 75 percent
  • Increasing the presence of security officers across the lots and constructed concrete barriers at the exit of these three lots to help reduce gate crashing
  • Installing new barriers at key parking lot locations to help prevent criminals from leaving parking exit lanes and damaging gate arms
  • Integrating cutting-edge technology that alerts security personnel when stolen vehicles enter key locations on airport property

“The Colorado Auto Theft Prevention Authority and the Colorado State Patrol are full of appreciation to the DEN administration for their dedication and rapid response to increase the security of their physical location while maintaining full collaboration with law enforcement agencies to reduce auto theft quickly and effectively at DEN. Through collaborative efforts like this, with dedicated partners such as Denver PD, C-MATT, CSP, and DEN, the near elimination of auto theft is possible anywhere in Colorado,” said Cale Gould, CATPA Outreach Coordinator.

DEN’s 51,000 parking spaces encompasses 53 square miles. More than 14 million vehicles parked in DEN’s lots last year.

Travelers who park at DEN are encouraged to remain vigilant by ensuring they’ve locked their car and taken their keys with them before leaving. For cars on the top ten most stolen vehicles list, CATPA recommends taking extra security precautions to secure the vehicle such as a steering wheel lock, an aftermarket alarm system, or advanced measures like a vehicle kill switch or immobilizer.

Disclaimer: Stolen vehicle data is sourced from the Colorado Stolen Vehicle Database Repository (SDVR) which provides law enforcement reporting of stolen vehicles to the Colorado Crime Information Center (CCIC). The SVDR is managed by the Auto Theft Intelligence Coordination Center, a grant project funded by the Colorado Automobile Theft Prevention Authority. The SVDR contains information on the number of reported stolen vehicles, data results may vary from the Colorado Bureau of Investigations crime data on the incidence (or police cases) of motor vehicle theft/attempts into UCR/NIBRS reported by Colorado law enforcement agencies. Additionally, information contained in the SVDR is considered dynamic as modifications to records are made on a daily basis. Stolen vehicle records were screened for accuracy and normalized for standardization prior to use in this analysis. Percentages are rounded to the nearest percent.

Our Government

White House

Statement from President Joe Biden on the Deaths of Two U.S. Navy SEALs: “Jill and I are mourning the tragic deaths of two of America’s finest—Navy SEALs who were lost at sea while executing a mission off the coast of East Africa last week. Over ten days, the United States military conducted an extensive search and rescue mission. Recovery efforts are still continuing as we grieve this profound loss for our country. These SEALs represented the very best of our country, pledging their lives to protect their fellow Americans. Our hearts go out to the family members, loved ones, friends, and shipmates who are grieving for these two brave Americans. Our entire country stands with you. We will never fail to honor their service, their legacy, and their sacrifice.”

Colorado Governor

Governor Polis and fellow Governors called upon Congressional Leaders and the Biden Administration to come together to reach a border security deal that will support states, like Colorado, seeing an influx of new arrivals. “We need Congress to take action to secure our border and pass comprehensive immigration reform. States can’t do this alone. It’s time to put politics aside and deliver the real solutions and support that states like Colorado, and many others, need,” said Colorado Governor Jared Polis.

Denver Mayor

Over the past few months, Mayor Johnston has led a coalition of mayors from major American cities to press the federal government to take swift, common-sense action to support cities managing an unprecedented influx of migrants. As federal lawmakers continue to work toward a border deal, Mayor Johnston will meet with White House and Administration officials, members of Congress, and fellow mayors to pursue solutions that will help manage this crisis, including increased work authorization, a coordinated entry program, and more federal dollars for cities.

A Week In Review

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Africa

Kenyan police recover a head

Police in Kenya have discovered a head that is believed to have belonged to a 20-year-old student who was killed in the capital, Nairobi. Other parts of the student’s body were discovered earlier this year in trash bags at a short-term rental apartment. Other belongings from the victim, Rita Waeni, like her phone and personal items, were discovered with her head. The kill- ing has caught the attention of thousands of Kenyans because of the brutality of the incident.

First malaria vaccine distributed in Cameroon

Health officials in Cameroon began distributing the world’s first routine vaccine program against malaria. The vaccine is projected to save thousands of children’s lives in Africa from the disease that kills around 600,000 people a year. Children under five make up nearly 80 percent of those who die from malaria in Africa. The vaccine is being offered free of charge to all infants up to the age of six months old.

Asia

India opens grand temple

India officially inaugurated a grand temple to the Hindu god Ram. The temple resides in the city of Ayodhya and replaces a 16th century mosque torn down by Hindu mobs in 1992. India Prime Minister Narendra Modi performed religious rituals inside the temple on television along with priests and others. The temple cost $217 million and was funded from private donations.

Police chief charged in South Korea

Seoul Chief of Police Kim Kwang-ho, the highest ranking police chief in South Korea, was charged with negligence after a 2022 Halloween crush killed 159 young people. He is accused of failing to ensure there were enough officers in the area during the time of the incident. The charges stem from a gathering of more than 100,000 people, and only 137 officers were deployed on the ground at the time.

Europe

Ukraine drones reach St. Petersburg gas terminal

Ukraine deployed drones at a major gas export terminal near St. Petersburg in Russia. The drones caused an explosion, and Russian officials said no injuries occurred. Fuel at the gas exports was being used to supply Russian troops in their war against Ukraine, Ukraine officials said. Officials called the attack an economic blow to Russia.

France bans fishing at Bay of Biscay

Officials in France have instituted a temporary ban on nearly all commercial fishing in the Bay of Biscay. The move was made as a way to protect dolphins, and the ban will last until at least Feb. 20. Around 9,000 dolphins die in the bay each year after accidentally being caught in fishing gear. The government promised compensation to local fishermen who expressed fear of losing money during the ban.

Latin America

Mexican cartel leader captured

Jose Alberto Garcia Vilano, who allegedly leads the violent Los Circlones cartel has been arrested. The group is accused of kidnapping four Americans last year. Two of those who were kidnapped were killed. Footage showed Vilano and his associates being taken through a mall by armed police. Vilano was also wanted by the US Drug Enforcement Administration.

Millions of dollars of cocaine discovered on sub

Colombia’s Navy discovered a semi-submersible carrying about 800kg of cocaine. Officials estimate the cocaine was worth $27 million, and it is believed the sub was heading to the United States or Europe. Two people on the submersible were arrested and transported to a Colombian port city. Narco-submersibles are a popular way to transfer drugs and are typically homemade with fiberglass and plywood.

North America

Alec Baldwin charged again over movie set shooting

Actor Alec Baldwin was charged by a grand jury in New Mexico with a new count of involuntary manslaughter. Baldwin was practicing firing a pistol before filming a scene in “Rust” in 2021 when the gun went off and killed 42-year-old Halyna Hutchins. Prosecutors said they have shared additional facts from forensic tests on the weapon. Other charges against Baldwin were dropped last April.

Ron DeSantis ends presidential campaign

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is dropping out of the presidential race and endorsing former President Donald Trump. He said he did not have a clear path to victory and leaves Nikki Haley as Trump’s last challenger for the Republican nomination. DeSantis was once thought to be a likely contender for the Republican nomination.

LaVozColorado has a permanent home at the Denver Public Library

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In the summer of 1974, there was no bigger story. In July of that year, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that then President Nixon must hand over secret Oval Office recordings that would soon doom his presidency. But something else was also happening that summer that continues to impact Denver and the Region.

LaVozColorado was born.

Jose and Wanda Padilla saw a need for a bilingual newspaper. So, with a few typewriters in the basement of their home, the first issue of LaVozColorado rolled off the presses and has continued without break for the last 50 years.

Besides recording the biggest events in Denver and Colorado for a half century, LaVozColorado will soon have a permanent, archived home at the Denver Public Library.

The Colorado Trust has awarded the Denver Public Library a grant to digitize the state’s largest and oldest bilingual newspaper. Awarding the grant, said Colorado Trust President and CEO Don Mares, was an easy call.

“I have grown up politically and as a person with LaVozColorado as a trusted resource,” said the Denver native. “The idea that we could help LaVozColorado celebrate this milestone they’ve achieved was just a wonderful opportunity.”

The Stanford alum has witnessed every significant event of Denver history that coincides with the LaVozColorado lifeline. He has served in the Colorado State Legislature, worked in the governor’s cabinet and held a number of executive level jobs since returning to Denver. Mares calls LaVozColorado an under-the-radar Colorado institution.

LaVozColorado has informed around so many different issues,” he said. “It helps foster discourse and debate. When policy makers are debating issues and when other folks are considering what direction to go, LaVozColorado has helped.”

Library Manager of Special Collections, Rachel Vagts, said barring any unforeseen complications the project should be complete by mid-summer which would coincide with the golden anniversary of LaVozColorado. Following full digitization, library patrons can access the final collection by physically visiting the library or even by accessing the archive on their own home computer. The collection, she said, will provide a priceless peek into the past. “One of the things we’re really excited about with this project is that every person who lives in Denver can recognize themselves and their community…this is a great step.”

The library’s LaVozColorado project will take its place alongside a number of other digitized DPL collections, said Vogts. “We have digitized over a million photographs in our collection,” she said. Other collections include a history of World War II’s 10th Mountain Division, a unit that trained for combat nearLeadvilleintheharshestwinterconditions.“Wehavealso digitized for the Blair-Caldwell Research Library,” and very soon, she added, “150 years of the Rocky Mountain News” will be added to the archives.

In the years since LaVozColorado first went to press, Denver has gone from a ‘fly-over’ city to an international des- tination. Its airport, which replaced an antiquated Stapleton International Airport, serves the world and offers many international routes, many non-stop. A recent survey placed DIA as the world’s third busiest airport.

Students accessing LaVozColorado at the Denver Public Library will be able to read real time stories of Denver’s first Latino Mayor, Federico Peña; read about its first African American Mayor Wellington Webb; its first Latino Attorney General, Ken Salazar, who went on to serve in in the U.S. Senate, the presidential cabinet and later as U.S. Ambassador to Mexico.

They will also read about the one-time NIMBY—Not in my neighborhood—argument against a light-rail system, a network of arteries that now blankets the entire metro area, the TREX project that expanded I-25 and the I-70 reconfiguration that runs over and through Globeville.

In addition, they will read the stories and view photographs of scores of Latinos and Latinas who became ‘firsts’ in their fields. They will read about Susana Cordova who began her career in teaching in a DPS classroom and rose to State Commissioner of Education.

They will someday read about the legacy of iconic Denver news anchor Anne Trujillo who for decades shared the region’s news on Channel 7. Trujillo bid farewell to television news late last year.

LaVozColorado has also covered the highs and lows of Denver and Colorado sports. Because Denver is home to the ‘big four’ sports—baseball, basketball, football and hockey— the Avalanche, Broncos, Nuggets and Rockies all get regular coverageinitspages. Fromthe NationalFootballLeague’s 50th Superbowl won by the Denver Broncos to the Colorado Avalanche’s Stanley Cup championship, to the NBA’s Nuggets win against the Lakers, LaVozColorado has covered those iconic sports moments..

Researchers will have access to digitized LaVozColorado stories on the legalization of both medical and recreational marijuana, the latter in 2014. They will also read about the war on drugs which, in an almost surreal way, began in Colorado in 1937.

In October of that year, 57-year-old Samuel Caldwell was arrested in a Denver flophouse by federal agents for selling three joints. Two days earlier, 19-year-old Moses Baca was arrested for possession of less than an ounce of pot, also in Denver at a California Street rooming house. Both Caldwell and Baca were sentenced to Leavenworth Federal Prison.

“To have a permanent archived home at the Denver Public Library is an honor,” said LaVozColorado publisher Pauline Rivera. She and husband, Richard, purchased and took over the paper in 2008. “LaVozColorado Colorado fills an essential niche in Denver and Colorado,” she said. “While COVID threw a wrench in most everyone’s business LaVozColorado remained in print and kept their staff employed. All in all, our loyal readers continue to get the information that is important to them as well as the chance to read stories about Latinos and deserving students who don’t always make it to The Denver Post or TV news.”

Rivera said there will always be a place for LaVozColorado. A half a century in business is no small feat, and we are proud to be a continued part of a special effort to provide news and information in English and Spanish, perpetuating our culture and language.

Marlene De La Rosa advocates for minorities as member of Denver Board of Education

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Marlene De La Rosa, a staple in the Denver Public Schools community, has her our eyes on higher pay for teachers, closing the gap between students of color and white students on tests, and diversifying the teacher workforce.

Photo courtesy: Marlene De La Rosa for DPS District 5 Facebook

De La Rosa, who has served on school committees, district, citywide committees, and more, was elected to the Denver Board of Education this past November. The board is the policy making body for Denver Public Schools, Colorado’s largest school district.

De La Rosa’s journey in advocacy for Denver Public Schools began when her twins, who are now grown adults, were in preschool. She is known for her advocacy work for Latino parents and students and previously worked full time as an immigration court specialist for the U.S. Department of Justice.

De La Rosa’s campaign focused on working together in partnership and collaboration to create a better school experience for Denver Public Schools students. When her children were in school, De La Rosa worked to get parents more involved in their children’s education by organizing opportunities for parents to understand the teaching frame-work in Denver Public Schools, according to her website. She also advocates for hiring diverse teachers and staff.

Studies show that students, especially those from minority backgrounds, benefit from having teachers who share their race or ethnicity. This usually leads to improved test scores, higher graduation rates, and increased college aspirations when taught by diverse educators, according to research from the National School Boards Association. Diverse teachers can also draw on their own cultural experiences and understanding to make learning more relatable and engaging for students from different backgrounds. This leads to better comprehension, deeper engagement, and higher academic achievement, according to research from Learning Disabilities Association of America.

School safety is also at the top of De La Rosa’s agenda. Recently, Denver Public Schools approved a new safety and security plan that included a choice to have school resource officers return to schools. De La Rosa believes it is important for the board to continue to monitor the safety and security plan so that it meets the needs of students, school staff and families.

During the election process, De La Rosa was supported by several leaders and organizations, including Denver Mayor Mike Johnson, State Senator Julie Gonzalez, Denver Councilwoman Serena Gonzales-Gutierrez, and Denver Families Action, a political arm of the organization Denver Families for Public Schools.

Outside of her work in the schools, De La Rosa serves as a mayoral appointee to the Denver Parks and Recreation Advisory Board and the Denver Latino Commission. She also helped to establish LatiniasGive!, an organization that gives small grants to other organizations that serve the Latino community.

De La Rosa defeated Charmaine Lindsay, an incumbent, in the 2023 Denver Board of Education election.