Loss of Trinidad’s art-car parade and museum robs city of signature cultural event

Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:33:51 GMT

Loss of Trinidad’s art-car parade and museum robs city of signature cultural event In spite of desperate attempts to save Trinidad’s Artocade parade and Art Cartopia museum over the last week, the nationally renowned attractions are set to close permanently, dealing a staggering blow to the New Mexico border town’s years-long efforts to maintain a signature cultural event.“There’s no rescue available, the board voted to do this and that’s just the reality,” said Rodney Wood, an artist and former director of the nonprofit parade and museum. “A lot of the reasons floating around for it on (social media) are fiction. I’m actually getting a T-shirt made about it that says ‘Don’t believe everything you think.’ ”Artocade rocketed to national prominence shortly after it debuted a decade ago, becoming the nation’s second-largest art-car event after marquee gatherings in Houston and Seattle. Like the Artocade parade, the Art Cartopia museum featured hand-designed and repurposed cars made by individual ...

Family-run Federal Heating closes after 84 years of business in west Denver

Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:33:51 GMT

Family-run Federal Heating closes after 84 years of business in west Denver Federal Heating, a fixture on Denver’s South Federal Boulevard, has closed for good after more than 80 years in business as the third generation to own it contend with a changing industry and marketplace.Bo and Sherry Ramsour, who ran the business started by their great-uncle Bert Ramsour, believe it was the oldest HVAC business in Colorado.“I’ve always told Bo the two of us go out together, we have to go together. We kind of came in together,” said Sherry, who is 58.Bo, whose full name is Robert, graduated from college in 1982 and returned to work with his father, Robert “Bob” Ramsour.“I came back and never left,” said Bo, 63. “It’s been good. I have no regrets.”Federal Heating’s last day of business was the last day of June. Employees Janet Cordes and Mark Monheiser were there until the end and Monheiser said people asked, “What am I going to do now?”“I don’t even know what I’m going to...

Denver scrubbed its $40 million migrant crisis plan. Now what?

Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:33:51 GMT

Denver scrubbed its $40 million migrant crisis plan. Now what? The defeat of a $40 million proposal for private security corporation GardaWorld to take over migrant sheltering operations for Denver means the new mayor and City Council can pivot to an entirely different plan.Mayor-elect Mike Johnston has not publicly announced what he plans to do next, and it’s unclear what his advisers will advocate. A representative from his team said he was unavailable for an interview last week. But Johnston has told The Denver Post that the issue is critical and complicated, and one in which he hopes to work “collaboratively to identify an equitable and fair solution to this crisis.”Like his predecessor outgoing Mayor Michael Hancock, Johnston recognizes that the increasing number of migrants making their way to non-border towns like Denver is forcing local governments across the country to come up with strategies to help asylum-seekers without negatively impacting their residents. Hancock has said repeatedly that officials have to balance the desire ...

Dramatic protests in Iran over women’s rights are the subject of a show at Leon Gallery

Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:33:51 GMT

Dramatic protests in Iran over women’s rights are the subject of a show at Leon Gallery There is a lot to see in the series of photographs currently on display at Denver’s Leon Gallery: dramatic scenes of civil rights protests that took place in Iran last year; the defiant posturing of activists standing tall amidst chaos; the fires and the flowers that appeared at different times on the streets, alternately signifying anger and hope.In many of the photos, the protesters’ faces are obscured. The situation remains dangerous for them in Iran. (Provided by Leon Gallery)But it might be what you don’t see in these pictures, and what you can’t know about them, that tells a deeper story. There are few actual faces visible in the images, and the colorful, action-packed prints hung on the walls are all unsigned. Both the subjects here, and the photographers themselves, are compelled to remain anonymous. The situation continues to be dangerous for these 21st-century revolutionaries.The exhibition “Woman! Life! Freedom!” borrows its title from the three-word slogan that bec...

Travel can cement the bonds of friendship and prepare us for what lies ahead

Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:33:51 GMT

Travel can cement the bonds of friendship and prepare us for what lies ahead Jenny and I didn’t know that those three weeks in Southern California in 1996 would be our first trip of many. That 26 years later, we’d be packing our bags for a staycation at a Boulder hotel to celebrate what was unthinkable to us at the time: her pregnancy, created in a doctor’s office, costing unfair amounts of money, and done entirely, achingly, alone.We only knew that adulthood and babies and, sigh, relationships, were still out there. Beyond our 15-year-old grasps, but floating toward us under a veil of limitless possibility and euphoric certainty. Not among our possibilities? Single parenthood. The reality neither of us had considered but that we’d both, to varying degrees, face.CaliforniaAllyson and Jenny on that first trip together in 1996, to California. (Provided by Allyson Reedy, Special to The Denver Post)Jenny and I met in a seventh-grade Spanish class in 1993. Three years later, were traveled together for our first taste of freedom.She boarded a plane from Denver wit...

Cycling documentary touring the globe highlights Colorado attorney

Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:33:51 GMT

Cycling documentary touring the globe highlights Colorado attorney After a four-year career as an elite racer in road and track cycling, attorney Megan Hottman took up the cause of representing victims of crashes involving motorists. Last summer, she became one of them.Related ArticlesOutdoors | Hit-and-run driver sentenced to 20 years for hitting two cyclists near Evergreen last summer Hottman — who calls herself Colorado’s Cyclist Lawyer — was badly injured by a motorist in a crash last June. Now, she’s back riding and representing cyclists, but she also has a compelling story to tell, and it is being told in a feature-length documentary about cycling, “The Engine Inside,” currently touring the globe.The film focuses on six cyclists with inspirational stories. Three are from the United States; Hottman is the only one from Colorado. The film will be shown Wednesday at the Dairy Arts Center in Boulder, with proceeds benefiting It Could Be Me, a non-profit devoted to improving relations between cyc...

This brewery tap room also serves as a trailhead for runners, hikers and mountain bikers | Opinion

Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:33:51 GMT

This brewery tap room also serves as a trailhead for runners, hikers and mountain bikers | Opinion Editor’s note: This is part of The Know’s series, Staff Favorites. Each week, we will offer our opinions on the best that Colorado has to offer for dining, shopping, entertainment, outdoor activities and more. (We’ll also let you in on some hidden gems). The popularity of Golden’s New Terrain Brewing Company tap room and beer garden among runners, hikers, cyclists and mountain bikers has been fueled almost entirely by word of mouth. And, in at least one case, the sound of live music heard high atop North Table Mountain.Thomas Eggar discovered New Terrain from a vantage point 670 feet above it while trail running on North Table.“It was a random Thursday night and I had no idea this place existed,” said, Eggar, 41. “From the top of North Table Mountain, you could hear the faint (sound) of a banjo and drums. I looked down and saw a bunch of lights, a bunch of people.”Eggar was intrigued, so he ran down to check it out. It happens that New Terrain has a sta...

15-foot python goes missing in Chatsworth; owners of small pets warned

Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:33:51 GMT

15-foot python goes missing in Chatsworth; owners of small pets warned Chatsworth residents have been asked to be on the lookout for a 15-foot reticulated python that escaped from a home and could be a danger to cats and smaller dogs.The snake disappeared from its owner's backyard in the 10500 block of Willowbrae Avenue on July 3, according to a post on the MyChatsworth Facebook page. Alex Villalta says the 8-inch thick constrictor snake is "really friendly to humans" but has the potential to eat cats and small to medium-sized dogs. The snake is light in color and had been a family pet for several years. Villalta said his son was sad the snake was missing and pleaded with the public to help find the snake. “Please do not kill her,” the post reads. Anyone who locates the snake was asked to call Los Angeles Animal Services at 888-452-7381.

This bill will make it harder for California school boards to ban books — and it’s picking up steam among lawmakers

Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:33:51 GMT

This bill will make it harder for California school boards to ban books — and it’s picking up steam among lawmakers California may make it harder to ban books in public schools — as it dives into the contentious, national debate pitting the First Amendment against conservative values.A new bill — AB 1078 — was approved by the Assembly and passed through the Senate Education Committee last week. The bill would require a two-thirds vote from a school board to remove books from the classroom and impose fines on school districts that refuse to provide materials with “inclusive and diverse perspectives.”“Our students of color and our LGBTQ+ students should not be threatened for their viewpoints, and they should not have education withheld from them,” said State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, a proponent of the bill.It’s a belief that the bill’s author, Assemblymember Corey Jackson, D-Perris, hopes will create a more “accurate, inclusive and equitable education system for all students in California.” But despite passing in the c...

Committee to weigh ‘safe parking’ sites for twice-convicted Bay Area rapist’s pending release

Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:33:51 GMT

Committee to weigh ‘safe parking’ sites for twice-convicted Bay Area rapist’s pending release SANTA CRUZ — The decision on where to house a 71-year-old twice-convicted rapist appeared no closer to conclusion Monday than when he was deemed eligible for conditional release and outpatient care in October 2019.“It’s 46 months later, and we don’t have a single property,” attorney Stephen Prekoski said on behalf of his client, Michael Cheek during a court hearing. “How long will the court tolerate that? It’s not a rhetorical question.”An effort for a housing committee designated to come to mutual agreement on Cheek’s placement appeared to have been stymied by concerns about the applicability of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act, a law governing all state boards and commissions.During this week’s hearing, Santa Cruz County Superior Judge Syda Cogliati chided the committee’s representatives, including The Department of State Hospitals, its contractor Liberty Healthcare Corp., defense and prosecution attorneys and the County of Santa Cruz for foisting blame on each other for the lack...