Colorado
Altitude-Comcast blackout: Colorado lawmakers end effort to force mediation during sports team blackouts
A proposed regulation, spurred by the continued dispute between Altitude TV and Comcast, to require skilled sports activities networks and cable suppliers to undergo arbitration to keep away from extended blackouts was deserted Thursday.
Colorado lawmakers within the Home Committee on Enterprise Affairs & Labor unanimously killed HB22-1058 on the request of sponsor Rep. Kyle Mullica, a Northglenn Democrat.
The invoice would have allowed the legal professional normal to mandate nonbinding mediation for any renewal disputes which have lasted no less than six weeks after a contract has expired.
Mullica stated he requested that the invoice be postponed indefinitely as a result of Altitude TV and Comcast are scheduled to satisfy for mediation in June and lawmakers wished to offer them a possibility to repair the problem.
“Our aim with this laws was to do the whole lot we may to carry the events collectively to finish this deadlock and get our groups again on TV,” Mullica stated in a press release. “With the events having agreed to mediation, transferring ahead with the invoice received’t make them attain an settlement any sooner. Nurses, academics, mother and father and hardworking Coloradans in all places simply wish to watch our groups.”
The mediation efforts between the 2 entities are nearing 5 months because the regional sports activities community introduced it could make a revised contract provide to the cable big. They’re subsequent scheduled to satisfy June 2, in accordance with the newest on-line courtroom filings. It’s unknown when Altitude final made a contract proposal to Comcast.
“I feel it’s simply actually irritating to be a fan proper now, and it’s disappointing that each entities are placing cash earlier than the followers,” Mullica informed The Denver Submit. “Our aim was to simply get the video games again on TV for the followers to get pleasure from. I feel we pushed the problem, and I’ll be ready in the event that they don’t determine it out.”
The Altitude-Comcast blackout began in September 2019 when the contract expired, leading to Colorado subscribers lacking full seasons of Avalanche, Nuggets and Rapids video games on native TV broadcasts.
Progress towards a decision is unclear as a result of “one of many circumstances the events agreed to when getting into mediation was that KSE and Altitude wouldn’t subject any public feedback on matter associated to the mediation whereas it’s ongoing,” Altitude stated in an April 7 assertion supplied to The Denver Submit. A request for remark from Altitude on Thursday was not returned.
Leslie Oliver, a spokesperson for Comcast, stated in an e mail that “Comcast stays open to contemplating contract phrases which might enable Comcast to point out the video games to these prospects who wish to subscribe to the video games with out elevating charges for all Comcast prospects.”
The Avalanche season is within the playoffs and the Nuggets season is now over, so Mullica stated if Altitude and Comcast can’t come to a decision quickly, he might be ready to carry ahead a invoice in the beginning of the subsequent legislative session. Mullica is working for election this yr because the Democratic candidate for State Senate District 24.
Reporter Kyle Fredrickson contributed to this story.
Colorado
'Thanksfest' giving back more than a meal to Colorado Springs families in need
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – This weekend was Thankfest, an event started by Vaughn Littrell, to give back to families in need. This year 250 families got all the ingredients they needed for Thanksgiving and more.
The families were chosen ahead of time through the CPCD Head Start Program. They help serve our community’s most vulnerable children and families.
The giveaway was a chance for families to come down and do some shopping for free. It was more than just getting food, families also received all the kitchen tools they would need to cook too.
It wasn’t just food either. Clothes and shoes were also available for those who needed them.
“Some of our families are in really, really bad situations. They need they need help. You know, and it’s this is a this is a tangible way that we can do something. We can’t do everything, but you can do something. We’re excited to be able to bless these families,” Vaughn Littrell told KRDO13.
Vaughn says he started the giveaway with just a few families. He says he knows what it is like to struggle, and wants the giveaway to keep growing so he can help more people.
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Colorado
I-70 closed near Vail, Silverthorne for safety concerns, weather hazards
Interstate 70 closed near Vail and Silverthorne on Sunday for “safety concerns” as snow battered the Colorado mountains, according to the Colorado Department of Transportation.
The eastbound interstate was closed between Exit 180 for East Vail and Exit 190 for Vail Pass Summit, about 1 mile west of Copper Mountain, as of 6 p.m. Sunday, CDOT officials said.
CDOT cameras in the area of the closure showed snow-covered roads and white-out conditions.
Westbound I-70 was also closed at 6 p.m. Sunday between Exit 216 for U.S. 6 near Loveland Pass and Exit 205 for Colorado 9 near Silverthorne, according to CDOT.
Multiple Waze users reported “weather hazards” in both closed sections of I-70.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
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Colorado
Shedeur Sanders shoves referee, ‘lucky’ to avoid ejection as frustrations boil over in Colorado loss
There was certainly a scenario Saturday night where Colorado would’ve needed to navigate the final 20 minutes of its upset loss to Kansas without star quarterback Shedeur Sanders.
Sanders, the son of Buffaloes coach Deion Sanders and a projected top pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, shoved referee Kevin Mar after taking a sack on third down with Colorado trailing by nine in the third quarter, and he was “lucky” that didn’t result in an ejection, Fox rules analyst Mike Pereira said on the broadcast.
“There’s no question that he does,” Pereira said when asked about Sanders shoving Mar. “Look, I get why he’s upset because people are almost climbing over him after he was down, but, you know, the officials can use their hands all they want to try to keep order. But you cannot come back as a player and push an official.
“In the chaos, the officials don’t see it, but he’s lucky that he wasn’t ejected from the game.”
After the sack, Sanders approached Mar from behind — who was surrounded by a cluster of players — and shoved the longtime official with his right arm.
By that point, three other referees had moved closer to the scuffle and attempted to separate the players and Sanders while protecting Mar.
Sanders, who finished 23 of 29 for 266 yards and three touchdowns during No. 16 Colorado’s 37-21 loss, wasn’t penalized on the play, but his frustrations had started to boil over.
The game featured plenty of physical hits, with Colorado’s College Football Playoff hopes at stake and Kansas attempting to claw its way toward becoming bowl eligible.
At one point in the first half, defensive end Dean Miller lowered his head and flung himself toward Sanders’ knees while he attempted a pass.
“I mean, I just don’t know how that’s legal overall,” Sanders told reporters after the game when asked about Miller’s hit. “I ain’t understand that, but, you know, it is what it is. There was a couple plays like that.”
The Buffaloes trailed 17-0 at one point but managed to trim its deficit to two points early in the third quarter, when Travis Hunter — also projected as a top pick in the upcoming NFL draft — and Sanders connected on a touchdown pass.
But Devin Neal accounted for the final two touchdowns, providing the Jayhawks with some cushion and ensuring Colorado was on its way to ending the night in a four-way tie atop the Big 12 standings.
Deion said after the game that Colorado had become “intoxicated with the success.”
“We started smelling ourselves a little bit,” Deion said, according to ESPN. “… We got intoxicated with the multitude of articles and the assumption that we’re this and the assumption that we’re that. And we did not play CU football. Therefore, we got our butts kicked. It is what it is.”
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