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Our Government

White House

Statement from Vice President Harris on Record Declines in Crime: “New data submitted to the FBI confirms that our dedicated efforts and collaborative partnerships with law enforcement are working; Americans are safer now than when we took office. Last year, we saw the largest ever one-year decrease in the homicide rate, which now stands 16 percent below its 2020 level. Violent crime is at a near 50-year low. Our progress is continuing this year and builds on substantial decreases during the previous years of our administration.”

Colorado Governor

“Three years ago our community felt the unbearable pain of losing ten of our fellow Coloradans in a senseless attack on the Boulder community. That day loved ones, friends, and neighbors were taken from us far too soon by an act of pure evil. Today, justice is served. Though I know this guilty verdict won’t heal the pain so many of us feel, or bring back those who were killed, I hope that it can provide some peace. My thoughts are with the family members and friends of Eric Talley, Rikki Olds, Teri Leiker, Denny Stong, Suzanne Fountain, Tralona Bartkowiak, Neven Stanisic, Lynn Murray, Jody Waters, and Kevin Mahoney, as well as the entire Boulder community. We are all still Boulder Strong.”

Denver Mayor

Mayor Johnston, Governor Polis, and other local officials celebrated “powering up” a solar array at Denver Botanic Gardens Chatfield Farms. This community solar project is one of 12 solar garden sites operating now that were funded by Denver’s Office of Climate Action, Sustainability and Resiliency (CASR) across the city.

A Week In Review

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Africa

Niger delays school year

Heavy rainfall and flooding has caused officials in Niger to delay the new school year by almost a month. The government said several schools have been affected by the weather and others are being occupied by those impacted. Flooding has caused at least 300 deaths in Niger the past few months.

Kenya sending more police to Haiti

Officials in Kenya are planning to send 600 more police officers to Haiti in the coming weeks. Since June, Kenya has supported Haiti’s fight against gang violence by providing the country with police force. Once the 600 police officers arrive in Haiti, Kenya’s police presence in the country will increase to nearly 1,000.

Asia

Japanese boy killed near Chinese school

A 10-year-old Japanese student was killed in China after being stabbed near his school. His attacker, a 44-year-old man, was arrested on the spot. It is unknown what the motive for the attack was. Earlier in the year, a Japanese mother and her child were also targeted by an attacker in China.

Flooding kills dozens in Myanmar

Severe flooding in Myanmar has killed more than 100 people. At least 113 people have been confirmed dead while 64 others are missing. The weather has caused over 320,000 people to be forced to evacuate to temporary shelters. The Yagi storm, which caused the flooding, has also impacted other countries like Vietnam and the Philippines.

Europe

Trans woman killed in Georgia

One day after Georgia passed a major anti-LGBT bill, a well-known transgender woman was killed in her home. The woman, Kesaria Abramidze, was stabbed to death, and a 26-year-old man was arrested in connection to the attack. Several rights groups said the attack was linked to the new law. Abramidze was a model, influencer and was seen as a trans leader in the Georgian community.

Scandinavian flight interrupted, forced to land abruptly

A Scandinavian Airlines plane, which was traveling from Norway to Spain, was forced to make an emergency landing after a passenger found a mouse that was alive in a meal. Typically, airlines have strict restrictions with rodents on board planes. The restrictions are usually in place to prevent electrical wiring being chewed through.

Latin America

Brazil fines X

Brazil has fined Elon Musk’s social media platform X after some Brazilians were able to briefly use the app. Last month, a Brazilian court imposed a ban on X and recently fined the company $920,000. Musk’s firms have previously ignored Brazilian court orders but said X’s restoration in Brazil was unintended.

North America

Alabama mass shooting

Police in Birmingham, Alabama said multiple shooters fired on a group of people, leaving four dead and 18 others injured. No suspects have been arrested as of Sunday, and police believe the shooting was not random. The shooting occurred in the Five Points South district, an area known for its nightlife.

South Carolina executes inmate

Freddie Owens, 46, became the first death row inmate to be executed in South Carolina in 13 years. He was found guilty by a jury of killing shop worker Irene Graves during a robbery in 1997. Owens’ co-defendant recently signed a sworn statement claiming Owens was not present at the time of the robbery and killing. He was executed last Friday evening and made no final statement.

Vice President Harris wins debate

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Vice President Harris wins debate, shows ‘presidential’ skills against ex-president

In a presidential debate, you should never show up unprepared or, as Joe Biden did earlier this summer, under the weather and heavily medicated. Biden did both in the June 28th debate and it changed the whole trajectory of the 2024 Presidential race.

Fast forward to September 10th and the two adversaries for the second scheduled debate did not include Biden but Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. In a race that Democrats had just about written off after Biden’s June face plant, Harris ascension had suddenly jolted new life into a down and dejected party.

But if Trump expected a smackdown against Harris, he pulled ‘a Biden.’ Viewers saw a low energy candidate answer in half-truths, non sequiturs and, at other times, provable lies. By most accounts, even among Republicans, Harris won and easily.

One such Republican was retired grande dame Colorado legislator Norma Anderson. Anderson, who once led her party in both the Colorado House and Senate, called it for the Vice President. “Harris won,” she said bluntly. “She carried herself as presidential, he was unbalanced. All he could do is respond with lies.”

While a legend in Colorado politics, Anderson also has her name on a now famous United States Supreme Court ruling. Trump v Anderson, a case in which the Supreme Court ruled that only the federal government and not the states had standing to keep a presidential candidate off the ballot. Anderson and five other plaintiffs had sued to keep Trump of the state’s primary ballot for his part in the January 6th insurrection.

Anderson’s opinions of the ex-president, she said, were not only confirmed by his debate performance but for his long personal history, one replete with repeated dalliances with criminality.

“Back in the seventies, when no one was charged with discrimination, he and his father were.” Trump and his father were federally cited for discriminating against Black people wanting to rent Trump-owned apartments. The Trumps denied the charges but later signed off on an agreement that ended the case without having to admit guilt.

Anderson, who plans to vote for Harris in November, said she legitimately fears a second Trump presidency. “Where could I move,” she asked, only half-jokingly. “We would not have the same country.”

In citing her opposition to Trump, Anderson referred to his repeated promises to deport millions of immigrants. It might make him happy, Anderson acknowledged, but cause irreparable damage to countless lives along with that of the U.S. economy. “He’s had six bankruptcies. The U.S. would be number seven.”

Former Denver Mayor and Presidential Cabinet Secretary Federico Peña agreed that Trump lost the debate but worries that he still could win the presidency.

Peña was one of the loudest voices opposing Trump when he ran for president in 2016. Perhaps his biggest objection to Trump was the Queens tycoon’s unbridled anti-Mexican slurs on the day of his announcement.

“When Mexico sends its people,” Trump said in launching his campaign, “they’re sending people with lots of problems…they’re bringing drugs, they’re bringing crime. They’re rapists.”

“We now all see that he will act on his bias,” said Peña. “We will have the most dramatic assault on the Latino community in my lifetime.” Trump has made no secret of his almost visceral disdain of undocumented immigrants whose numbers he says are populated with criminals, cartel members, terrorists and the mentally ill.

The Heritage Foundation authored Project 2025, which Trump has denied knowing anything about but has also acknowledged it in speeches, clearly maps out a plan for the mass removal of undocumented.
Trump, said Peña, often clumsily masks his contempt for immigrants by going right to the edge of candor only to switch direction. When asked directly about his plans, Peña says Trump equivocates or simply “doesn’t answer the question.” In recent days, Trump has traveled with and been photographed with one of his most virulent anti- immigrant voices and supporters.

It is impossible to predict if Trump can execute his planned mass deportation. But Peña says the promise he makes at his rallies are almost unthinkable and not just for immigrants. Can you imagine, Peña asks, being stopped and asked for documentation. “They will stop me, stop you. How do you prove (citizenship) that on the sidewalk?”

Trump, who rarely backs away from bombast, again told reporters in Los Angeles on Friday that “We’re going to have the largest deportation in the history of our country…and we’re going to start with Springfield (Ohio) and Aurora (Colorado).” The two cities have recently been in the news over immigrant issues. Fact checking, however, proved that Trump’s description of each has been factually wrong or overstated.

But Denver’s first Latino mayor suspects that it is not so much the office of President that fuels Trump’s desires. He guesses it’s something a lot more compelling. “He’s running primarily to stay out of jail.”

Trump has been convicted of 34 felonies in a New York court case and sentencing is scheduled for November 28th. Each of the felonies in his ‘hush money’ case carries up to a $5,000 fine and four-year prison sentence.

Peña, who served in President Clinton’s cabinet overseeing energy and transportation, said the nation needs a steady hand and Harris provides one. “If there was any doubt,” he said, her debate performance removed them.

In the two months since Harris became her party’s standard bearer, enthusiasm and fundraising have skyrocketed. Polling shows that deficits Biden could not overcome have taken on a new trajectory. Many now have Harris tied with or leading Trump, including those in crucial swing states.

Harris, who has encountered standing room only crowds at her post debate rallies, has hammered the ex-president and his long-standing opposition to the Affordable Care Act or Obamacare. Trump, she said, had four years in office to come up with something better. When debate moderators recently asked him if, after all this time, he has a plan to replace the ACA, Trump replied, “I have concepts of a plan.” Translation: No plan.

While there are still seven weeks remaining before the November 5th election, anything can happen. But Harris is smartly parlaying Trump’s ‘concept’ response into one of her rally’s best laugh lines as she reminds voters, especially younger women, that it was Trump who engineered the death of Roe and a women’s right to make her own health decisions.

While Harris and others have called on the ex-president for one more debate before the election, it appears the September 10th debate will be the last. Trump, who has spun his very dubious debate performance as a victory despite contrary opinions from party brand names, said there will be no more.

Kicking off National Hispanic Heritage Month

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National Hispanic Heritage Month Series

Sept. 15 officially marked the beginning of National Hispanic Heritage Month, which is celebrated each year from Sep. 15 to Oct. 15. This time of year gives us the opportunity to learn and celebrate the contributions of Hispanics, whose ancestors come from Spain, Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central and South America.

The Sept. 15 start for National Hispanic Heritage Month was chosen to coincide with the anniversary of “El Grito de Dolores,” which marks the beginning of Mexico’s War of Independence from Spain. Other countries like Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica celebrate their independence on Sept. 15, while Mexico celebrates its national day on Sept. 16.

Originally, there was Hispanic Heritage Week, which was born through legislation sponsored by U.S. Rep Edward R. Roybal from Los Angeles, a Mexican American, and signed into law in 1968 by President Lyndon B. Johnson. Today, the United States celebrates Hispanic heritages for a month rather than just one week.

Starting next week through October 23, LaVozColorado will feature several community leaders with Hispanic backgrounds in celebration of National Hispanic Heritage Month. To kickoff the celebration, here are some ways you can get involved and honor this important month.

Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month at History Colorado

Throughout Hispanic Heritage Month, History Colorado will feature numerous guest speakers and exhibitors to help visitors understand the history and lived experiences of Colorado’s populations while celebrating Hispanic Americans.

One of the exhibitions at the museum is “De la Tierra: Reflections of Place in the Upper Rio Grande,” which show- cases multiple generations of Hispano families and communities who played a role in shaping the region’s cultural identity. This exhibition will be available until April 2025.

For more information about hours and ticket prices, visit historycolorado.org.

Hispanic Heritage in Commerce City

Commerce City is celebrating National Hispanic Heritage Month in style with entertainment and free activities on Sunday, Sept. 22 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Entertainers will include Aztec dance, youth Mariachi, folk dance, and live music. Activities for children will also be available, like face painting, a photo booth, bouncy castle, crafts area, and Loteria. Vendors and resources will also be in attendance along with a Vaccine Mobile Unit where community members can get vaccinated for Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, Hib, HPV, Polio, Meningitis, MMR, Pneumonia, Rotavirus, and Tdap.

This event will take place in Downtown Derby near the intersection of 72nd Place and Monaco Street along Highway 2. More information is at https://www.c3gov.com/living-in/community-events/hispanic-heritage-celebration

Latin Beats: Sonidos de las Américas

The Mexican Cultural Center and the Colorado Symphony are preparing to present Latin Beats: Sonidos de las Américas, a unique, free concert. This performance will celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month and Latin culture’s influence on sound in the Americas by showcasing a fusion of traditional, classical, and contemporary music augmented by the Colorado Symphony’s orchestrations.

Tickets for this free performance are available two weeks prior to the event, which occurs on Sept. 26. For more information, visit https://tickets.coloradosymphony.org/7111.

Broncos falter in home opener against Steelers

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The Denver Broncos were at home over the weekend to kick off their home opener against at Russell Wilson-less Pittsburgh Steelers and if you watched Denver’s loss to the Seahawks the previous week you didn’t miss much.

Photo courtesy: Roman Rivera

In just the first half of play, the Broncos managed to get three first downs and their third down efficiency was 16.7 percent on 2 of 12. The Steelers running game was more effective than the Broncos with Bo Nix almost leading Denver in rushing yards with 13 yards. Denver running back Tyler Badie was the rushing leader for the Broncos with a single run for 16 yards. Javontae Williams recorded 10 yards while Jaleeel McLaughlin was negative 1 yard on two attempts.

Steelers back up quarterback Justin Fields completed 13 passes on 20 attempts for 117 yards and a 97.3 passer rating, while Denver Broncos rookie quarterback Bo Nix completed 20 passes on 35 attempts for 246 yards and two interceptions (QB rating of 55.2).

The Denver Broncos are now 0-2 to start off the season and it doesn’t appear that things will get any better. Granted, Broncos rookie, Bo Nix faced two top tier defenses in the Seahawks and the Steelers; it was really his only opportunity to show critics why he’s the man for the job in Denver.

Now of course, fans are unsure if the rookie quarterback will even make it another loss before being benched for Zach Wilson.

This week the Broncos are facing a 2-0 Buccaneers team who beat both the Washington Commanders and the Detroit Lions this past weekend. Tampa took a risk on Baker Mayfield and so far their decision has been a good one with Mayfield averaging a 73.5 quarterback rating and 5 touchdowns and 1 interception through two games.

The Broncos have a lot to figure out before next week’s game and with this year’s lineup of teams on the schedule, Broncos fans are facing a long and grim season ahead of them. Sunday’s game is an early morning game (11 a.m. MST) in Tampa.

In other sports the Colorado Avalanche welcomed back Logan O’Connor after his season-ending hip injury that kept him sidelined. O’Connor was on a season career-high run last year at 13-goals before his injury. His return is great new for fans especially with Artturi Lehkonen limited at practice, Gabriel Landeskog’s status is still unsure, and Valeri Nichuskin’s eligibility for return is not until November.

Pueblo’s Chile & Frijoles Festival a sure sign Fall is in the air

Those scents, those sounds wafting across the state remind us that it’s ‘that season’ once again. And nowhere is this sensory combination greater than Pueblo, home of what residents there call the ‘best damn chili’ in the world. And beginning on Friday evening, September 20th, the 30th celebration of Pueblo’s ‘Chile and Frijole’ Festival begins.

Photo courtesy: Chile & Frijoles Festival

Begun with a whimper and not a bang, this southern Colorado rite of the fall festival began as a way to bring people to Pueblo. Admittedly, said Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce Vice President Donielle Kitzman, it was a roll of the dice.

The chamber’s late President Rod Slyhoff and Pueblo city leader Dean Dennis came up with the idea. In 1994, the city, they thought, could use a shot in the arm. But how to do it was the question.

“The idea and intent,” Kitzman said, “was multi-faceted.” It was also, very generously, unconventional: brand Pueblo chili, one of the area’s best kept secrets, certainly best kept but not in Pueblo where local pallets celebrate their season.

For background, Pueblo chile is grown mostly in the rich soils of the St. Charles mesa, an area just south and east of the city. Early growers of the crop were almost exclusively Italian immigrants who initially came to Colorado to work in the coal mines that fueled the city’s steel mill ovens. Little did they suspect that their chile would one day be celebrated.

“Rod and other creators,” Kitzman said, “first had to convince the community and stakeholders” on the idea. It was going to take full support of everyone to launch this thoroughly wild idea. “The biggest sell was to get farmers to come downtown,” she said. It was more than a tough sell. Slyhoff, nonetheless, made his pitch, but only a single grower bit.

Kitzman, a volunteer at the first festival, said that grower, Ron Giodone, “brought one roaster and a pallet full of chile.” But his pallet emptied almost immediately, leaving just the scent of the roast. But the idea of ‘toasting the roasting,’ Kitzman said, suddenly didn’t seem so crazy after all.

What started out with a single block of historic Union Avenue reserved for the event has today morphed into a ten-block celebration. It’s also become more than a pleas- ant shock to the city’s economy.

Word of the festival, said Kitzman, brings out an estimated 150,000 for the weekend event. And celebrants come from across the state and beyond.

As the festival has grown, the roster of roasters has grown, as well. In fact, everything about the festival has become bigger than anyone could have imagined when the idea was hatched.

Vendors, music, a pre-festival concert are all now staples of the three-day event. It’s also evolved into as much as a $10 million economic shot in the arm for the region, said Kitzman.

While the festival and its namesake crop are celebrated, the farmers who grow the crop are also celebrating. While there are roasters stationed strategically on historic Union Avenue, the festival honoring the tangy fruit—and yes, chile is a fruit—is more the appetizer. The big payoff, says the Pueblo Chile Growers Association, is the bounty of customers who make the trek to the county where they produce the crop. Many of the growers also have small stores that sell ‘everything chile’ from jams and jellies to chile-infused breads.

While outside of Pueblo, chile may not carry the same cachet, the battle over who grows the best crop crosses state boundaries. Hatch chile, named for the New Mexico town of the same name and once the 800-pound gorilla of the vine, now annually engages in a spirited battle with Pueblo over whose peppers are the best. Even the governors of the respective states have gotten involved.

Chile, said Pueblo Mayor Heather Graham, is not just a crop but also a means by which to introduce people to a community locals know and love.

“I am excited to welcome this event,” said Graham. From its modest beginnings, she said, the festival “has become a premiere, flagship event of our community” that puts on display Pueblo,‘a “agriculture, heritage and tradition.”

This year’s chile crop, said Pueblo chile farmer Randy Musso, is grading out well. Pueblo’s summer temperatures, perhaps a bit uncomfortable for most people, have been the perfect elixir for the peppers. “We welcome the heat,” he said. Also, hail, the bane of chile growers, has been non-existent. All in all, it’s a banner year for what he calls ‘the best chile in the country.’

Bushel prices may vary. But expect to pay around $40 per bushel with a $5 premium for the roasting. One bushel, for most, not all, should take you through the winter. But just in case, growers suggest, it might be wise to pick up two.

2024 Student of the Week Scholarship Winner – Luz Elena Parra-Ramirez

Photo courtesy: Luz Elena Parra-Ramirez

Luz Elena Parra-Ramirez has been selected as LaVozColorado’s 2023-2024 Scholarship winner. For Parra-Ramirez and her classmates from the graduating class of 2024, Antonito High School is a memory. Graduates have many paths to consider and decisions to make after high school. For some, the path will be college or university, some will join the military, others will select a trade or directly begin working. Whatever the choice, all begin a new life’s journey.

Luz Elena Parra-Ramirez, featured on December 13th, 2023 as LaVozColorado Student of the Week, is now enrolled at Adams State College. Parra-Ramirez begins her studies in Health Care Administration and Spanish Language and Communications. Parra-Ramirez hopes for a future career in Health Care and Communications.

Parra-Ramirez is a determined student whose actions serve to motivate, inspire and help others. Parra-Ramirez’s academic achievements include National Honor Society, Honor Roll, Destination Imagination, and many other character and excellence awards. Parra-Ramirez was also active in Varsity Volleyball, Cheerleading, Basketball, Cross Country and Track. Parra-Ramirez graduated as Salutatorian for the graduating class of 2024.

We congratulate Luz Elena Parra-Ramirez, our 2022-2023 Student of the Week Scholarship Winner!

Latino Heritage Month and a world of possibilities

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David Conde, Senior Consultant for International Programs

Senator JD Vance’s belief that women without children of their own should not be leaders in this country has created massive condemnation among the majority of Americans that have seen attempts to diminish the role of women across the board by people like Vance, his running mate Trump and the Republican Party in general. This concept goes beyond Roe v. Wade and is as serious or more than a woman’s right to choose.

His interviews on this matter constitute an emergency call to White America to reverse a birthrate trend that will soon have that group at less than 50 percent of the population. This issue is also tied to the demographic predictions about the rise of the “minority majority” that have been with us for over two decades.

The concern taken on by the Republican candidate for Vice President reminds me of reading about the German Nazi regime that planned for the replacement of soldiers lost in wars of conquest and for the growth of a population that would settle the new conquered territories. Among the outcomes of these plans was a program called “Lebenborn” instituted in 1935 by Heinrich Himmler and the SS. Lebenborn “provided welfare to its mostly unmarried mothers, encouraged anonymous births by unmarried women at their maternity homes, and mediated adoption of children by likewise “racially pure” and “healthy” parents, particularly SS members and their families.” That reference is made so that we can better consider the direction of Senator Vance’s ideas on the matter.

JD Vance is about families with lots of babies. The insistence on denigrating women without children shows a greater intent hidden in the pile of extreme right wing ideology.

Vance and Trump focus on Latino immigrants on the border includes the issue of numbers. Numbers portray a reality indicating that in addition to the plural majority in California (largest state in the country) and New Mexico, Latinos have now reached a plural majority in Texas, a State that is at the center of the current immigrant surge.

New York appears to be next as Latinos are within 2.6 percentage points of equaling the current majority. New York has the fourth largest population next to Florida which is third.

It appears that the heritage of a people that lost so much in the American conquest of the Southwest is evidencing a process of recovery from the silence of the last two centuries. That is the genius of democracy that, helped by demography, can allow for a people to become politically relevant again.

Latinos are the fastest growing significant group in the country. The gradual process of becoming the majority across important regions of America takes us quite a ways in the journey that started in 1966 under a label that refers to Latinos as “the invisible minority.”

It is important to Latino heritage that the notion of a conquered people be reversed. The community, especially in the Southwest and other areas of conquest, requires a place at the head of the table.

It is clear that Vance and other extreme elements of the Party he represents do not appreciate the rise of a people from the ashes of “Manifest Destiny.” Much has happened in the last 200 years that established our way of life.

Much is happening as the forces of democracy fight for justice and model ideals. Much will happen in the next segment of our national history as a renewed America takes shape.

Latino heritage month is also a month of possibilities. Let us celebrate them.

Colorado among the first to implement historic broadband investment

The State’s grant program to award Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment funding is now accepting applications

Coloradans are closer to universal high-speed broadband coverage. Governor Polis and the Colorado Broadband Office (CBO) are excited to announce that Colorado is among the first states to open a state-managed grant program, Advance Colorado Broadband, to accept applications for this historic BEAD funding.

Colorado is receiving $826.5 million from the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) federal program to improve internet connections for Coloradans who lack access to high-speed, reliable broadband. Colorado will invest BEAD funding into critical infrastructure projects, primarily in rural areas, to build reliable, low-cost broadband networks that support work, education, healthcare and tourism in every Colorado community.

“We are working to ensure that every Coloradan has access to reliable, low-cost broadband and this funding will help us achieve universal coverage. This investment will help create thousands of jobs in Colorado, and thousands more across the country,” said Governor Polis. “Being one of the first to open this funding positions us ahead of other states and territories, and will lead to Colorado completing projects faster.”

“Too many Coloradans – especially those who live in rural areas, low-income neighborhoods, and communities of color – still lack access to affordable high-speed internet,” said Senator Michael Bennet. “That’s why I fought to include historic funding in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to close the digital divide and help every family participate in modern American life. I encourage all internet service providers, including electric co-ops, nonprofits, and local governments, to apply for this $826 million in funding so we can bring every family, small business, and community online.”

The State’s priority for BEAD (https://broadbandusa.ntia.doc.gov/funding-programs/broadband-equity-access-and-deployment-bead-program) funding is to connect unserved and underserved locations. Fiber is ideal because it offers the most reliable connection but the CBO will review every application to find the best fit for each community’s unique needs and obstacles.

“Colorado’s unique blend of mountainous terrain and rural plains encourage creative solutions and collaboration,” said Brandy Reitter, CBO executive director. “While fiber is ideal, we will evaluate every application and consider a variety of technologies to find the best solution for each community.”

Eligibility is determined by Colorado’s BEAD Eligible Location List, which was developed using the FCC’s National Broadband Map and an NTIA-approved challenge process that allowed Tribes, providers and communities to help determine exactly who in Colorado lacked adequate broadband.

The National Telecommunications Information Administration (NTIA) is managing the unprecedented $42.5 billion federal investment in broadband connectivity across the U.S. from the BEAD program, part of the Biden Administration’s bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

Our Government

White House

During a visit to Wisconsin last week, President Joe Biden and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Tom Vilsack announced more than $7.3 billion in financing for rural electric cooperatives to build clean energy for rural communities across the country through the Empowering Rural America (New ERA) program.

Colorado Governor

Governor Polis issued a declaration of disaster emergency to provide support and resources in response to the Pearl Fire in Larimer County. This declaration authorizes the Colorado Department of Public Safety, the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, and the Division of Fire Prevention and Control to assist in the response and recovery efforts.

Denver Mayor

The City and County of Denver announced it will provide more robust options for people experiencing homelessness during cold weather. In a coordinating move, the city will also consolidate newcomer shelter operations due to low occupancy. Changes will take effect in late September.