Denver, CO
Migrants camping near Denver’s Zuni, Speer intersection to be moved into shelters
The City and County of Denver continues to support migrants arriving from Central America and South America. Denver is currently operating seven migrant shelters.
Two more congregate shelter sites will open on Wednesday for the migrants gathered near Zuni Street and West 27th Avenue in Denver. The encampment will be cleared on Wednesday morning.
The downtown encampment has been growing for months. Piles of clothes, furniture and trash bags full of belongings line the tent-filled street. Buses and city services will arrive on Wednesday morning to clear the area and transport migrants to one of two new congregate shelter sites.
Jon Ewing, spokesperson for Denver Human Services, says the encampment is no longer safe.
“It’s not humane. It’s not in the best interest of the people staying there,” Ewing said. “It’s going to be cold this week. Let’s get a roof over their heads. It will also make it easier for us to work with them and get them on to a better solution.”
The goal is to connect migrants to housing or travel to preferred destinations.
The city’s currently sheltering nearly 4,500 migrants. The addition of these two shelters will hold 320 more.
“The ultimate goal once they get into that congregate shelter site is for them not to be there in 30 days. The goal is to get them on to housing or something else,” Ewing explained.
The city’s been hosting housing clinics for the last week.
Ewing says 300 applicants have filed and 95 migrants are either in or on their way to rental homes.
The city will help cover their expenses.
“We got the first month’s rent, we got the deposit, we got the security fees – that’s covered. That’s if you’re working. If you’re not working, we can do this for maybe up to three months with the expectation that you will continue looking for work,” said Ewing.
Ewing acknowledged that finding work has been difficult for many.
CBS Colorado spoke to migrants eager for work and shelter as temps drop.
“It’s getting cold. I’m a man, and I can’t stand it. What these children need is a lot of support,” said Alberto, a Venezuelan migrant living at the encampment. “Supposedly, they are going to take us to a shelter. We don’t know where it is.”
The city’s asked that we do not disclose the location of the two new shelters sites.
Denver continues to remain a welcoming city for all migrants, but DHS says it doesn’t have the resources to aid them forever. As of Jan. 2, the city has supported 35,834 migrants at a cost of more than $36 million.
“We need significant federal funding in the coming year. We’ve been saying that for months. We continue to say because it continues to be true. There is no way that Denver can do this alone and shouldn’t have to,” Ewing said.
The city says it’s grateful for funding it has received so far to support migrant sheltering operations, including a reimbursement award of $3.5 million from the State of Colorado. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has advanced $1.6 million, and approved Denver for reimbursement of up to another $9 million in federal assistance.
Venezuelan migrants save Denver girls in icy lake
Denver, CO
No. 2 Arizona Puts Together a Dominating Effort in Win Over Denver
Fresh off an impressive 71-67 win over then-No. 3 UConn, No. 2 Arizona (6-0) traveled back home to square off against Denver in a late Monday night game looking to keep the train rolling after climbing two spots in the latest AP Poll.
One of the toughest things to do in college basketball when you have a young team with seven freshmen is to stay sharp and ready for these games against lower-level Group of Five teams when coming off the highs of back-to-back wins over highly ranked opponents.
Although Arizona has a lot of youth, the WIldcats have the right mix of veteran leadership and coaching that kept everyone on track against Denver. UA throttled Pioneers 103-73 to lock in the team’s sixth win of the season.
In the last game against UConn, Arizona saw freshman Brayden Burreis struggle with just scoring four points on 2 of 4 shooting from the field.
Against Denver, Burries found his groove again and dropped 20 points while going 7 of 13 from the field and collecting seven rebounds and four assists in his 23 minutes.
It was a game of the freshmen as forward Ivan Kharchenkov recorded a career-high 20 points while going an impressive 9 of 12 from the field. Meanwhile, Kharchenkov dropped two 3-point shots.
Another freshman that was able to have an impact on the game was forward Dwayne Aristode, who scored 17 points on 6 of 11 shooting. Aristode managed to collect five rebounds for the night.
It was one of those games where the starting lineup didn’t get as many minutes as they usually do given the way the game was getting out of hand early in the night.
Still, point guard Jaden Bradley was able to score nine points and three assists while having zero turnovers.
Koa Peat recorded 12 points while going 6 of 10 from the field and grabbed three rebounds in just 22 minutes on the court.
Overall, Arizona shot 57% from the field and knocked down 12 3-point shots while holding Denver to 40% shooting on the other end.
In the paint, Arizona did what it has done all-season-long and dominated the low-post with 50 points and grabbed 50 rebounds. The Wildcats scored 16 second-chance points against the Pioneers.
With the bench getting more of a look, the Wildcats added 35 bench points with Tobe Awaka and Aristode being the main scoring options for Tommy Lloyd.
Arizona will play one more game this week as the team faces off against Norfolk State on Saturday with the game set for a 2 p.m. (MST) tip off and will be streamed on ESPN+.
Please be sure to share your thoughts on the game by clicking on the link to our X account.
Denver, CO
Cheapest gas prices in Denver hit less than $2 Sunday ahead of Thanksgiving weekend
Where to find the cheapest gas prices in Denver
DENVER (KDVR) — Gas prices in Denver are trending down just in time for the busy Thanksgiving travel weekend, with one station in the city even hitting less than $2 on Sunday, according to GasBuddy.
Just in the last week, gas prices in Denver have fallen 14.5 cents per gallon, hitting a $2.47 per gallon average Monday morning, Gadbuddy reported. That number is lower than the national average of $3.03 per gallon, and it is even nearly 30 cents lower than Denver’s average prices a year ago.
This is the lowest average gas price for this day, Nov. 24, in Denver since 2020, according to GasBuddy, and omitting the 2020 dip caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the last time Denver saw this or a lower average price on Nov. 24 was in 2017.
Monday’s $2.47 average price per gallon is also the lowest average so far this year.
Here’s where the cheapest gas prices were in Denver on Sunday and Monday:
- Shell, 7273 E. Evans Ave. – $1.94
- Sinclair, 2101 S. Holly St. – $2.03
- QuikTrip, 6477 E. Evans Ave. – $2.03
- Murphy Express, 4990 E. Evans Ave. – $2.03
- Conoco/7-Eleven, 7080 Tower Rd. – $2.05
The Shell station on Evans Avenue was also the lowest gas price in the state at the time, GasBuddy reported. the most expensive gas price in the city at the time was $1.35 higher at $3.29 per gallon.
Neighboring areas and the state as a whole are also seeing lower average gas prices.
Fort Collins’s average was $2.59 per gallon, down 7.3 cents from the week before; Colorado Springs had a 14.7-cent drop to an average of $2.49 per gallon; and Colorado as a whole had a 12.8-cent drop to $2.71 per gallon.
Denver, CO
Denver Public Schools swears in new board members, delays officer elections amid questions of transparency
Denver Public Schools officially has a new school board, but not a new board president or vice president, despite attempts to vote on leadership on Friday.
Four newly elected board members took the oath of office: DJ Torres, Monica Hunter, Amy Klein Molk, who won the at-large seat, and returning member Xóchitl Gaytán. The ceremony met the state’s 10-day requirement following election certification.
“We have a lot of staff gone for the holidays, and we also have board members traveling,” Gaytan said. “We were able to bring our new incoming colleagues together for this ceremony.”
But for some community members, the concern wasn’t the swearing-in; it was the plan to elect new officers. Under state law, school boards have 15 days after certification to select officers, which aligns with the already scheduled Dec. 2 meeting.
“There’s a lack of transparency from the top down in our world right now,” said Rosemary Rodriguez with EDUCATE Denver, a civic coalition for DPS students. “It’s really important that our trusted institutions, like our school system, be as transparent as possible.”
Torres said his focus is on rebuilding trust.
“Given the community feedback, and given that some of us are new to the role, if people feel we’re not being transparent enough, I felt confident saying: let’s pause,” he said.
A few board members were unable to attend because of the holiday. The board ultimately decided to hold the officer elections on Dec. 2, allowing the full board and community members to participate.
The district says this is one of the most diverse school boards in DPS history.
It includes leaders from Black, Latine, LGBTQ+, immigrant, and multilingual communities, reflecting the lived experiences of the students and families the district serves, the district said in a press release.
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