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Trump’s order undoing anti-climate change efforts draws ire of Colo. Dems, applause from GOP
DENVER – President Donald Trump’s executive order Tuesday aimed at ending Obama-era climate change rules and curbing climate regulation enforcement sent ripples across Colorado’s political spectrum.
Colorado Democrats hammered Trump and his order to review and possibly rewrite the Clean Power Plan as a major threat to the environment and peoples’ health, but the order was lauded by state Republicans, who said that the order would free up the energy sector to expand the nation’s economy.
Trump himself says that the order would revive the coal industry, which had been in a steady decline since the mid-1980s, but lost more jobs and money at the onset of the Great Recession and thereafter.
He pledged during his campaign that he would undo Obama’s plans to cut down on fossil fuel emissions, and this order does just that by stripping a handful of regulatory measures.
The Clean Power Plan, which required power plants to reduce their carbon pollution by 32 percent by 2030, is the main target in the order. The Obama-era order has long been targeted by coal and oil and gas-rich states and companies that say it hampers their ability to profit from their natural resources.
Trump has also campaigned to bring coal jobs back to an industry that has suffered major losses, though the industry represented just 0.12 percent of the U.S. workforce according to Bureau of Labor Statistics. In 1920, coal mining jobs alone made up nearly 2 percent of the U.S. workforce.
The Energy Department said in January that coal mining jobs amount to only 75,000 across the county, but there are approximately 650,000 renewable energy jobs in the U.S.
Another facet of the order strips a three-year moratorium imposed in January 2016 on the granting of coal leases on federal lands, and other parts of it roll back rules aimed at reducing carbon and methane emissions.
Both Trump and EPA chief Scott Pruitt have made alarming statements about climate change in recent months. Trump at one point said climate change was a “hoax” invented by the Chinese, and Pruitt has said that he doesn’t believe carbon dioxide is a main contributor to climate change – statements that have both been widely slammed by the scientific community.
Mixed reaction from Colorado Democrats, Republicans
Colorado’s Democrat Senator Michael Bennet was the first to attack Trump’s order Tuesday.
“President Trump’s decision to rewrite the Clean Power Plan could jeopardize thousands of new jobs and billions to our economy, and produce a confusing patchwork of state laws for American businesses,” he said in a statement. “It also could prevent the EPA from regulating clean air and water, sacrificing a rigorous scientific process in the name of ideology. Instead of leading the fight against climate change and transition to clean energy, this Administration has abandoned it.”
But he said he and Colorado would remain committed to meeting its target for clean energy and emissions under the Clean Power Plan. He also sent a letter, along with nine other U.S. senators from across the West, asking Trump to rescind the order.
“We stand ready to work with you and your Administration in reaching a balance between achieving energy independence, promoting innovation, and growing our rural economies,” the letter says, in part. “Unfortunately, your Executive Order takes the nation in the wrong direction.”
The renewable energy industry brings in billions of dollars each year for many western states. In 2015, 14 percent of the total electricity generated in Colorado was from wind generators, while the ranked 11th in the nation for solar energy capacity in 2016.
Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper said he would continue to work to address climate change in Colorado.
“Today’s Executive Order by the President pulling back on policies addressing climate change will not deter Colorado’s efforts. Natural gas has become more economical than coal, and Colorado is a national leader on wind and solar energy, which are a boon to our economy, jobs and the environment,” he said.
Democrat Reps. Jared Polis, Diana DeGette and Ed Perlmutter all denounced Trump’s order Tuesday as well, saying it would negatively affect peoples’ health.
But Republican Reps. Scott Tipton, Ken Buck and Doug Lamborn applauded Trump’s order.
“State and local communities know what is best for them…#energyindependence,” Lamborn tweeted.
“The Obama Administration did everything in its power to pick winners and losers in American energy production. That era is now over,” Tipton said.
“The President’s action today will contribute to lower electricity and energy prices in Colorado’s Fourth Congressional District,” stated Congressman Ken Buck. “This executive order plays a key role in unleashing American energy and creating well-paying jobs through Colorado.”
The U.S. Energy Information Administration released a report last year showing that natural gas was set to pass coal in terms of the highest percentage share of electricity generation in the country late last year, and that forecasted generating costs were supposed to level out with coal in the next several years.
Colorado miners, energy industry react
“This is the end of a policy that’s designed to keep coal in the ground,” said Stan Dempsey, the president of the Colorado Mining Association, who said the order will also help level the playing field with natural gas. “We’re not going to see as many mines close as quickly as they possibly could.”
The coal industry employs more than 2,700 people in the state, according to the Colorado Mining Association.
Energy analysts, though, said the order would have little impact on energy in the state., where more than half of the electricity is generated by coal.
“Trump’s reversal of the Clean Power Plan is going to have a much bigger impact on the eastern half of the United States,” said Bob Yu, a senior analyst with Platts Analytics, a leading provider of energy information. “In Colorado, it’s going to be very, very minimal. The coal generation here is already very cheap, so it’s already competitive to natural gas, and the coal retirements that are coming up are very small compared to the total stack of coal power plants.”
Coal has been struggling for years in Colorado, with a 32 percent drop in production last year alone.
Xcel Energy recently announced more investments in wind energy, and states that under 2010 state regulations, all the Denver metro area coal-powered plants have been converted to natural gas or decommissioned.
“Xcel Energy’s plans make economic and environmental sense regardless of the future of the Clean Power Plan. We intend to keep moving forward with a low-priced, clean energy strategy that provides the economical, clean energy our customers want,” said Ben Fowke, Chairman, President and CEO Xcel Energy.
Information from The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Man arrested in connection with vandalism attack on Fort Collins Islamic Center
FORT COLLINS, Colo. – Police on Monday identified and arrested the man suspected of vandalizing the Islamic Center of Fort Collins early Sunday morning.
Joseph Scott Giaquinto, 35, faces charges of criminal mischief, third-degree trespassing and bias-motivated crime for the incident.
Police say Giaquinto targeted the Islamic Center and threw several large rocks and a Bible through glass doors and into the prayer area of the mosque.
“We will not tolerate acts of hatred in our community, and I hope this arrest sends that message loud and clear,” said Fort Collins Police Chief John Hutto. “While the building can be repaired, this incident caused deeper hurt that won’t just go away. I urge all of our citizens to continue showing the kind of support and acceptance demonstrated at the Islamic Center rally on Sunday night.”
The Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations called earlier Monday for authorities to investigate the incident as a hate crime, which falls under Fort Collins’s bias-motivated crime statute.
“I have not in 20 years seen a case where somebody used a Bible to desecrate another faith’s place of worship,” said Corey Saylor, of CAIR. He knows what happened here isn’t isolated.
Soon-to-be-released data will reveal a more-than 50 percent jump in 2016 in anti-Muslim cases from the previous year.
“Now it’s more we’re seeing vandalism, arson, people firing shots at mosques,” Saylor said.
A GoFundMe page has been set up to help the mosque, a spokesperson told Denver7. The money will be used to invest in a strong security system and also to repair the glass doors.
Hundreds of people showed up to the center Sunday in support of the city’s Muslim community and mosque-goers, and the support poured over to Monday.
“It’s just a show of love and support and it’s really beautiful to see,” said Lamine Kane, the youth coordinator of the Islamic Center of Fort Collins. “Hopefully we see this as a sign that in the future, we don’t wait until something happens. We look at signs and we constantly come together.”
Giaquinto is being held at the Larimer County jail. A mugshot was not immediately available.
Colorado court records show he has previously pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor theft of between $750 and $2,500 charge in Fort Collins.
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ICE report targets ‘uncooperative’ cities in Colorado; local agencies say they’re in line with law
DENVER – Several Colorado agencies are named in the first weekly report issued by federal immigration authorities that documents where undocumented immigrants committed crimes and which local law enforcement agencies allegedly failed to comply with immigration detainers.
But the report is already raising eyebrows among the agencies in Colorado, as well as other in other cities across the country, who say the report from the Department of Homeland Security gets some of the data wrong and falsely accuses them of not honoring federal law in the latest fight over “sanctuary city” status. Continue reading
Man, 84, found in Texas charged in 1977 murder of Denver man
DENVER – Charges have been filed in a 1977 murder case out of Denver in what is the oldest ever prosecuted by the Denver District Attorney’s Office Cold Case Unit.
Benito Soto, 84, faces one count of first-degree murder in the June 1977 shooting death of Armanda Garcia at the Denampa Bar on Larimer Street in Denver.
The Denver District Attorney’s Office says that Soto was identified as Garcia’s alleged killer shortly after the murder, but Soto had already left Denver. A judge issued a warrant for his arrest, but the case went cold because no one could find him.
The DA’s Office says that the Denver Police Department’s Fugitive Unit found Soto living in Texas and re-opened the case.
After interviewing witnesses in the case and Soto himself, a warrant to get Soto from Texas was obtained, and he was arrested and brought back to Denver this month.
The DA’s Office says the case, at nearly 40 years old, is the oldest cold case prosecuted by its cold case unit.
Soto was first advised in court on his charges on March 14 and is next scheduled for a preliminary hearing on April 21.
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Bennet is ‘keeping an open mind’ on Gorsuch confirmation as he, Gardner introduce SCOTUS nominee
DENVER – Colorado’s Democratic Senator, Michael Bennet, joined his Republican counterpart, Sen. Cory Gardner, in introducing Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch to the Senate Judiciary Committee, in a move Bennet said was aimed at bridging Congress’s partisan divide.
At Monday’s introduction of Gorsuch, who is from Colorado and has spent the past several years as a judge on the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, Bennet lamented his colleagues’ failure to give President Barack Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, a hearing – in some cases, not even a meeting. Continue reading
Man, 19, arrested in murders of 2 Colorado Springs teens
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Deputies in El Paso County have arrested a 19-year-old man for the alleged murder of two Colorado Springs teenagers found dead south of Fountain last week.
Gustavo Antonio Marquez, 19, faces two counts of first-degree murder, two counts of kidnapping, two counts of aggravated robbery and one count of child abuse resulting in death stemming from the deaths of Derek Benjamin Greer, 15, and Natalie Partida, 16.
The El Paso County Sheriff’s Office says it booked Marquez “in the late evening” on Sunday.
The two teens, whose deaths were ruled homicides, were found dead around 8:45 a.m. on March 12 along the side of Old Pueblo Road, about three-quarters of a mile south of Hanover Road. The Pikes Peak International Raceway is just across I-25 from where the bodies were found.
El Paso County jail records show Marquez is being held without bond on the charges. He appeared in court Monday afternoon for an advisement status hearing.
State court records show Marquez was also arrested Feb. 24 by the Fountain Police Department on two felony and two misdemeanors charges. He was charged with second-degree kidnapping, second-degree assault with attempted serious bodily injury, third-degree assault, and child abuse.
Records show Marquez posted a $5,000 bond in that case on Feb. 27. He appeared in court on March 8 in that case. A spokeswoman for the sheriff’s office said she had “not been made aware of any connection” between the two cases.
Court records also show that Marquez has had restraining orders filed against him in the past, though neither involved the teens who were killed.
The sheriff’s office still has not said how the two teens were killed. A spokeswoman says Marquez’s affidavit is sealed.
The investigation into the teens’ deaths is ongoing. Anyone with information on the murders is asked to call the sheriff’s office’s tip line at 719-520-6666 or 719-520-7777.
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Colorado Sens. Gardner and Bennet will introduce Neil Gorsuch at onset of SCOTUS confirmation
DENVER – Colorado Sens. Cory Gardner and Michael Bennet will introduce Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch to the Senate Judiciary Committee Monday to kick of his confirmation hearings.
It’s customary for the senators of the states in which the nominated judge hails from to introduce them before the committee. Gorsuch is from Colorado and has worked as a judge on the Tenth Circuit since he was confirmed in 2006.
Gardner says he will support Gorsuch’s confirmation.
“A fellow Coloradan, Judge Gorsuch is an exceptional jurist who will bring a Western perspective to the Supreme Court. I enthusiastically support his nomination and I look forward to introducing him at his upcoming hearing,” he said in a statement.
Bennet will also introduce Gorsuch, though he has not taken a stance on whether or not he supports Gorsuch’s confirmation.
Denver7 is set to interview Gardner ahead of the introduction Monday morning, Leave comments for questions for him on the Denver7 Facebook page.
To see how Colorado reacted to Gorsuch’s nomination in January, click here.
For more on Gorsuch’s judicial history from the Associated Press, click here.
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Hickenlooper signs Colorado bill allowing ‘ballot selfies’
DENVER – You’ll be able to take a selfie with your ballot in Colorado next election after Gov. John Hickenlooper signed the so-called “ballot selfie bill” into law Thursday.
House Bill 1014 eliminates the penalty in Colorado for taking a “ballot selfie” – an issue that was heavily litigated ahead of last November’s election.
A federal judge granted a preliminary injunction that kept the state attorney general and district attorneys from prosecuting people who took or posted a picture of their completed ballot.
The Colorado rule was first written in the 1890s and has been reinterpreted over the past century.
The new bill, signed by the governor, changes one of those modifications, created by the Uniform Election Code of 1965 and Election Code of 1992, by eliminating language that prohibits voters from showing their completed ballot to anyone.
But it still allows county clerks and polling center workers to restrict photography at polling centers. Inducing any voter to show someone how they voted will still be against the law.
The bill underwent significant changes as it made its way through the Legislature.
The House added a provision that creates a new misdemeanor offense that will penalize people for trading votes or offering such.
But the Senate stripped that provision, which led to the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office to pull its support for the bill.
“We didn’t think it had enough controls in it,” Deputy Secretary of State Suzanne Staiert told Denver7 Friday. “We will seek legislation to specifically prohibit vote trading in the future.”
Six people have overdosed at Denver’s Central Library this year; staff trained for Narcan
DENVER – Staff at Denver’s Central Library is receiving training on how to administer Narcan after six people overdosed at the library since Jan. 1.
The Denver Public Library says it ordered 12 Narcan kits in February, which it received on Feb. 28. It says it used one of the kits to treat an overdose that very day.
“It’s a frightening thing,” said Rachel Fewell, central library administrator for the Denver Public Library. “And it can be scary. But, I’m feeling less scared now that we have a tool that can help keep people alive.”
The library this week received another shipment of 36 kits.
“We see customers in here experiencing all kinds of things,” Fewell said. “We started to notice that we had customers who needed some help.”
The library says that two community resource specialists, a peer navigator and 13 security officers have received training for administering Narcan.
“It was a really quick turn around. We kind of made the decision maybe in early February that yes, we really want to do this,” Fewell said. “It’s a nasal spray. It’s not a scary injectable.”
In simplest terms – Narcan immediately blocks an overdosing person’s brain receptors from receiving opioids.
Each kit costs $75.
The library says the instances in which security officers administered the Narcan resulted in the patient stabilizing and either being released on their own recognizance or being transported to a hospital.
Narcan is a nasal spray used to reverse the effects of an overdose from opioids, including heroin and fentanyl.
The library says it first started tracking overdoses when it first received the Narcan shipments.
A recent report shows that 197 people died across Colorado last year from heroin overdoses, including 31 in Denver. The statewide total is up 756 percent since 2001, and Denver’s overdose numbers are up 933 percent since 2002, when only three heroin overdoses were recorded.
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Authorities: 16 indicted in connection to illegal marijuana distribution raids in Colorado
ARAPAHOE COUNTY, Colo. – Sixteen people were indicted on felonies, including drug and organized crime charges, in relation to Thursday’s large-scale marijuana raid that targeted an illegal grow and out-of-state distribution ring operating in Colorado.
The raids happened Thursday in Denver, Arapahoe, Douglas, Elbert and El Paso counties.
Of the 16 people indicted, 18th Judicial District Attorney George Brauchler said at a joint news conference with DEA and Douglas County Sheriff’s Office authorities Friday afternoon that 15 of them were already in custody.
Read the indictments by clicking here.
Brauchler said the suspects’ ages range from 28 to 63 years old.
He said the investigation started last August in Elbert County, where 2,500 pounds of marijuana were found, but that it “turned into a much longer and broader investigation.”
He said that the group was growing close to 300 pounds of marijuana each month, which was all distributed to states across the country, including Arkansas, Illinois, Minnesota, Missouri, and possibly Florida and New Mexico, according to Brauchler.
Around 2,000 plants were taken from just one Denver warehouse Thursday during the raid.
Brauchler added that not only was the ring allegedly growing and distributing marijuana flower, but was also making and distributing hash oil. He said many of the transactions took place in broad daylight, including at an Aurora school’s parking lot and at a Castle Rock Starbucks.
The Drug Enforcement Agency’s Barbara Roach said the marijuana was specifically being grown to be sold and distributed out of state, and said she believes that people are coming to Colorado specifically for that reason.
Douglas County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Steve Johnson said that Colorado was fostering the “criminal enterprises,” and that illegal home grows are being found “on a daily basis.”
Nineteen locations were raided Thursday, during which authorities said they also seized 39 weapons.
Though there has been much apprehension over what new Attorney General Jeff Sessions will do when it comes to overseeing federal law enforcement regarding state laws on legal marijuana, the DEA says Thursday’s raids were not part of a new directive.
The Colorado Legislature is currently hashing out at least two bills aimed at cracking down on illegal marijuana grows. One of the bills would limit medical patients to grow only 16 plants – down from the current number of 99 – in an effort to further hamper illegal grows.
Local jurisdictions are allowed under state law to establish grow limits for recreational users, but the state law has capped the limit at six.
But large-scale growers have to have special licenses and oversight and are required to sell their product inside the state.
The 16 people indicted in relation to the raids are as follows:
- Rudy Saenz, 62
- Michael Stonehouse, 53
- Ted Stonehouse, 51
- Tilden Lazaro, 26
- Raciel Martinez, 52
- John Cathey, 63
- Vincent Castillo, 33
- William “Todd” Garner, 58
- Jerram Cathey, 27
- John Mason Cathey, 27
- Myisha Evans, 38
- Vernon Watts, 46
- Jason Jones, 46
- Amy Jones, 28
- John Ramsay, 45
- Jibaro Smith, 45
The 18th Judicial District Attorney’s Office says Jibaro Smith is the one outstanding suspect.
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