Denver, CO
69 businesses in Denver receive grant to offset negative impacts of homeless encampments
More than 60 businesses in Denver have received grants to help with the impacts of homeless encampments in the city.
From restaurants to boutiques and bridal shops, 69 businesses are getting an upwards of up to $15,000 to help them bounce back from negative impacts they encountered due to the unhoused community.
The money was determined based on their annual gross income and businesses within two blocks away from the encampments were asked to provide evidence of plummeting sales and safety issues.
Robert Herrera has been managing the restaurant since his father’s passing.
“This is Denver, this is real Denver, the heart of the city,” said Herrera.
Up until a few years ago, mainly during the pandemic, Herrera says things changed and Downtown Denver did not feel the same anymore. This includes the flood of homeless encampments in the area which impacted their restaurant.
“We would all drive up to work and every day we were cleaning because people had been here. We actually had people camp out outside of our patio area,” said Herrera.
This includes cleaning up things such as drug use and feces. They even had to clean up the area around their dumpsters. Herrera adds that homeless residents would dig through their trash and make a mess.
This forced the restaurant owners to make major safety adjustments.
“We’ve installed cameras, which we never had before and have added more lighting to help us keep the crime out,” said Herrera.
According to Herrera, these adjustments cost the restaurant thousands of dollars as they lost customers due to safety concerns.
“We got questions from our customers all the time, like ‘how are you dealing with this?”’ he expressed.
However, a $15,000 grant from the city is helping offset those costs.
“It’s getting better,” said Herrera.
Though it is still an uphill battle, other businesses told CBS News Colorado reporter Jasmine Arenas that they’re thankful for the grant, but the damage is done already.
Nelly Bernal, a small business owner of a boutique set up just a block away from the Denver Rescue Mission, had plans to shut down her business by the end of the year.
“I’ve seen it all, I am right by the shelters, the feces, the drug usage,” said Bernal.
She adds the encampments have made her lose out on business plenty of times.
“I’ve had a customer with piles of clothes ready to check out and a guy comes in and solicits them and I never saw that customer come in again,” said Bernal.
Bernal also received a $15,000 grant and says this was her determining factor in whether to close her store or remain open.
“We would’ve had to make a decision by September which is when our lease is expected to end. So, it actually did help us make the decision to keep it open,” said Bernal.
With the city stepping in, both businesses remain hopeful for the future.
Bernal looks to use the funds to remain in business, start a men’s line, pay her staff and invest in helping those who aspire to own their own boutique by taking them to conferences.
“I am looking forward to the summer and getting people to come into the shop,” said Bernal.
Herrera looks to use some of the funds to pay his staff and make some repairs after a pipe burst on Jan. 16 that led to the restaurant closing temporarily.
“We will continue to do everything we can to keep things going,” said Herrera.
The grants are a result from federal relief funds that’s been assisting businesses since 2022 as a part of the city’s plan to help them survive and thrive after the pandemic.
In the last two years, nearly $6.7 million in federal funds have been granted to Denver businesses to help them come back from the impacts of the pandemic.
Denver, CO
The hippo had to go, but the Denver Zoo slashed its water budget
Rocky Mountain sandhill cranes battle warmer conditions due to drought
Wildlife biologist Jenny Nehring and farmer Rob Jones talk about Sandhill cranes and their impact on the San Luis Valley.
DENVER — Zoos are of necessity big gulpers of water, a fact that has some zookeepers in the drying American West working to rapidly upgrade efficiency and reduce unnecessary irrigation or leaks.
Denver Zoo, formally known as the Denver Zoo Conservation Alliance, has rapidly reduced its demands on threatened and declining water sources, including the Colorado River.
Among the upgrades is a sea lion water filtration system that allows most of the water to be cleaned and reused each time the pool is drained. That’s saving more than 8 million gallons a year, zoo sustainability director Blair Neelands said. “You can get in there, scrub it with a toothbrush and refill it with the same water,” she said.
Similar upgrades to an African penguin showcase reduced its water use by 95% by largely eliminating what’s sent down the drain. (Like a backyard swimming pool, though, these tanks sometimes still need to be drained and refreshed with new water to reduce mineral buildup.)
“The biggest thing for us is swapping from dump-and-fill pools to life-support systems,” Neeland said.
Another biggie is replacement of a 50-year-old water main with funding of about $3 million from the city. There’s no way of knowing how much that pipe had leaked over the years, but Neeland suspected it was more than a million gallons a year. The savings should become apparent as the zoo tracks its water use over the next few years.
Creating hippo-sized water savings
When The Arizona Republic visited in 2025, the zoo was on the cusp of eclipsing a goal to reduce its water use by half of what it had been in 2018. The zoo had used 80 million gallons in 2024, or about 219,000 a day, a 45% reduction in just a handful of years. Much of the savings had come in the form of smarter irrigation practices and use of drought-tolerant native plants where possible. The landscaping also pivoted to recycled “purple pipe” water from the city, which owns the zoo’s land, restricting potable water to areas where animals really need it.
“When people hear ‘recycled water,’ they get worried about cleanliness and hygiene,” zoo spokesman Jake Kubié said. “But it’s safe for the animals, and it’s not their drinking water.”
Getting past the water conservation goal would mean draining the pool where Mahali the hippo spent most hours lurking with just his eyes, ears and snout visible to visitors. Because he spent so much time in the pool, the water needed daily changes. It amounted to 21 million gallons a year, not to mention water heater bills that drove the cost to $200,000 a year, according to zoo officials. They estimated that Mahali used as much water as 350,000 four-person households.
“This facility is outdated,” Kubié said. “Some day this will become a huge saver of water.”
That day came before year’s end, and it indeed brought a tremendous savings. The zoo shipped Mahali to a new home (and a potential mate) at a wildlife preserve in Texas and drained the pool one last time. Ending the daily change-outs shaved more than a quarter of the zoo’s entire water usage from the previous year. It put the zoo significantly beyond its goal.
Denver Zoo’s water savings are part of a broader waste- and pollution-prevention effort aimed at being a good neighbor in uncertain times, Neeland said.
“Water savings and drought is top of mind for anyone who lives in the Western United States,” she said.
In Phoenix, a different mix of animals
That’s true of the Phoenix Zoo, as well, where zookeepers must maintain landscaping and animal exhibits in a city that baked under 100-degree-plus high temperatures for a third of the days last year. The zoo creates a “respite in the desert,” spokeswoman Linda Hardwick said, but has no hippos, penguins, grizzly bears or many of the other species that would require big water investments for outdoor swimming or cooling.
“We really specialize in animals that will thrive in the temperatures here,” Hardwick said.
The Phoenix Zoo uses most of its water on landscaping. After a consultant’s 2023 irrigation assessment, the staff centralized irrigation scheduling under a single trained technician and employed technologies including weather-based controllers and smart meters. Salt River Project awarded $70,000 in grant funds for the upgrades and several thousand more for training.
The zoo uses about 189,000 gallons a day, she said. That represents a 17% reduction from 2023, or 20% when adjusted for the year’s particular weather and evapotranspiration demand.
Brandon Loomis covers environmental and climate issues for The Arizona Republic and azcentral.com. Reach him at brandon.loomis@arizonarepublic.com.
Environmental coverage on azcentral.com and in The Arizona Republic is supported by a grant from the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust.
Follow The Republic environmental reporting team at environment.azcentral.com and @azcenvironment on Facebook and Instagram.
Denver, CO
New video shows trespasser on Denver airport runway before deadly collision
Watch CBS News
Denver, CO
Person dies after being hit by plane at Denver airport
A Frontier Airlines plane has hit and killed a person at Denver’s international airport, prompting the evacuation of passengers. Authorities say the man jumped a perimeter fence and ran in front of the plane as it was taking off to Los Angeles.
Published On 10 May 2026
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