Crash on I-90, Thruway eastbound after Exit 24 slows traffic

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:06:08 GMT

Crash on I-90, Thruway eastbound after Exit 24 slows traffic ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- According to 511NY, a crash on I-90, NYS Thruway eastbound after exit 24 in Albany has significantly slowed traffic. Drivers in the area should expect delays. Check out NEWS10's traffic tracker. You can plan your route and see traffic delays in real-time!Information regarding the crash is limited at this time. Stick with News10 as more information becomes available regarding the crash.

4-way stop coming to intersection of Woodin Road and Stone Quarry Road

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:06:08 GMT

4-way stop coming to intersection of Woodin Road and Stone Quarry Road HALFMOON, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- Starting the week of June 20, the intersection of Woodin Road and Stone Quarry Road in Halfmoon will become a four-way stop intersection. According to the Town of Halfmoon Highway Department, the new traffic pattern is expected to improve the efficiency of the intersection for all drivers. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! The town and Highway Halfmoon Superintendent Bill Bryans did a thoughtful and careful review of the stop and decided a four-way stop would improve the safety of all motorists. Drivers are asked to drive safely and follow the new traffic rules when approaching and entering the intersection. The Town of Halfmoon Highway Department will look to alert drivers of the upcoming change. GasBuddy: Average Albany prices unchanged in last week “We are making this change to enhance the safety and quality of life for our Halfmoon residents and motorists," said Halfmoon Highway Superintenden...

Opinion: Mike Johnston’s first test as Denver mayor: housing, homelessness and Denver’s living room

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:06:08 GMT

Opinion: Mike Johnston’s first test as Denver mayor: housing, homelessness and Denver’s living room Mike Johnston ran a hard race to become Denver’s new mayor, but now just across the finish line, the real work begins.For example, how does the new mayor handle the decision to close the public seating in Union Station to anyone who hasn’t made a purchase? Known as “Denver’s living room”, something is being lost when a taxpayer-funded building’s seating area is suddenly closed to the non-paying public, a rule that had been in place but seldom enforced. However, Union Station, where Johnston held his election night victory party, was never intended to serve as a daytime shelter for the unhoused. Denver has been unfairly vilified post-pandemic for these kinds of problems – the same problems that plague cities like Grand Junction, towns like Gunnison, and suburbs like Aurora. Johnston will have to address expensive housing, growing crime rates, especially among teens, homeless encampments, and empty office space abandoned in favor of work-from-home arrangements.But if Denver, und...

For two Colorado counties that haven’t “de-Bruced,” the fiscal alarm is growing louder

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:06:08 GMT

For two Colorado counties that haven’t “de-Bruced,” the fiscal alarm is growing louder Arapahoe County just fired a fiscal warning shot across the bow.In a little-noticed news release issued this month, Colorado’s third-largest county painted a dire picture of “critical services at risk” for its 655,000 residents “without modernizing finances.”A further read shows that what Arapahoe County is in fact doing is teeing up a request for “additional funding” — i.e. a tax hike or permission from voters to keep millions of dollars beyond what the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, or TABOR, allows. It is, in large part, an acknowledgment by the county that fundamental changes to the way it raises revenue are needed if basic governmental functions are to continue at current levels.“The county has always prized fiscal conservatism and keeping a tight belt,” Commissioner Jessica Campbell-Swanson said minutes after addressing a crowd of hundreds at the Arapahoe County Fairgrounds last week during the State of the County a...

Brewery teams with restaurateur Bryan Dayton on Englewood taproom

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:06:08 GMT

Brewery teams with restaurateur Bryan Dayton on Englewood taproom Boulder’s Sanitas Brewing Co. is celebrating a decade in the beer business with a soon-to-open location in the Denver suburbs.The new taproom, Sanitas’ second, is located at 200. W. Belleview Ave. in Englewood where craft beer drinkers will find a 4,700-square-foot taproom with more than 15 beers on tap, including experimental recipes brewed on the 3.5-barrel pilot system onsite, plus a 2,500-square-foot patio.The grand opening is slated for Friday, June 23, through Sunday, June 25. To celebrate, Sanitas will release a new hazy IPA called Cheers from Englewood that’s “packed with peach, apricot and sweet melon flavor notes,” according to the brewery.Sanitas Brewing Co. is celebrating the opening with a new hazy IPA, called Cheers from Englewood. (Provided by Sanitas Brewing Co.)Part of co-founder and CEO Michael Memsic’s vision is to be a destination morning, noon and night, which is why the brewery includes an outpost for the local Atlas Coffee, its fourth on the Front Range....

Final piece of former Loveland outlet mall sold as redevelopment gets underway

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:06:08 GMT

Final piece of former Loveland outlet mall sold as redevelopment gets underway The company that is redeveloping the Outlets at Loveland, an all-but-vacant prime piece of real estate along Interstate 25, has closed on the last piece of the property for $12.3 million.The real estate services firm CBRE said Wednesday that Schuman Companies’ purchase completes the company’s acquisition of the outlet mall at the intersection of I-25 and U.S. 34.Schuman Companies, a real estate investment firm in Windsor, paid $15 million for the north parcel of the roughly 36-acre mall in a deal that closed late last year. The south parcel, about 146,100 square feet, is the final piece of the renamed Loveland Yards.More than 10 tenants have bought or leased suites on the north side of the property, filling 138,700 square feet, or 71% of the available space, according to CBRE.“The velocity of tenant commitments at Loveland Yards is proof of concept for Schuman Companies’ vision to create a marketplace catering to Northern Colorado business owners,” CBRE Vice Presid...

10 of the loveliest easy to moderate hikes in Colorado

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:06:08 GMT

10 of the loveliest easy to moderate hikes in Colorado Hiking is a quintessential part of summer in Colorado for many residents and visitors. If you love to summit fourteeners, consider tackling the extremely difficult Longs Peak since this year is the 150th anniversary of intrepid traveler Isabella Bird’s 1873 ascent. She’s largely responsible for making Estes Park a must-see mountain destination.But if bagging the state’s highest summits isn’t your thing, there are hundreds of other trails worth your efforts. Here are 10 easy to moderately strenuous hikes from an avid hiker who’s always on the hunt for lesser-traveled trails. I’m also sharing what I believe are the best hikes without crowds in Colorado’s four national parks and two popular trails that are hitting big milestones this year.There are more than 15 miles of trails to hike and ride at Red Mountain Open Space north of Fort Collins. (Photo by Jennifer Broome/Special to The Denver Post)Red Mountain Open SpaceWellingtonRating: Easy loop connecting several trailsTime: 2 hoursJus...

Some Colorado 14ers will remain closed to the public unless a new coalition can change the law

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:06:08 GMT

Some Colorado 14ers will remain closed to the public unless a new coalition can change the law Colorado’s mountains are beckoning as fourteener hiking season approaches, but five of the state’s 58 towering 14,000-foot peaks will continue to be off limits this summer due to liability concerns from private landowners who control access to those peaks.Recreation advocates tried to resolve the issues through legislative action in March while Colorado lawmakers were in session. But their efforts were unsuccessful.Now a growing alliance of prominent nonprofits is mobilizing to raise the issue again next year, seeking a revision to the Colorado Recreational Use Statute (CRUS). The Fix CRUS Coalition, founded in April, includes the Colorado Fourteeners Initiative, the Colorado Mountain Club, the Boulder Climbing Community, the Access Fund, The Nature Conservancy, the Trust for Public Land, the American Alpine Club, the Outdoor Alliance, People for Bikes and American Whitewater.They contend the issue is much bigger than access to Colorado’s iconic fourteeners. Mounta...

The Book Club: “Demon Copperhead,” “Small World” and other short reviews by readers, staff | Opinion

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:06:08 GMT

The Book Club: “Demon Copperhead,” “Small World” and other short reviews by readers, staff | Opinion Editor’s note: The opinions of the smart, well-read women in my Denver book club mean a lot, and often determine what the rest of us choose to pile onto our bedside tables. Sure, you could read advertising blurbs on Amazon, but wouldn’t you be more likely to believe a neighbor with no skin in the game over a corporation being fed words by publishers? So in this new series, we are sharing these mini-reviews with you. Have any to offer? Email [email protected].“The Odyssey of Phillis Wheatley,” by David Waldstreicher (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)“The Odyssey of Phillis Wheatley,” by David Waldstreicher (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)Part biography and part literary analysis, this book focuses on the life, times and writing of Phillis Wheatley, who is considered the first African-American author to publish a book of poetry. Wheatley was born in West Africa around 1750, kidnapped and sold into slavery. Her owners in Boston taught her to read and wri...

Colorado prisons must reform use of restraints on mentally ill inmates under new law

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:06:08 GMT

Colorado prisons must reform use of restraints on mentally ill inmates under new law Colorado’s prisons must reform their use of metal restraints on mentally ill inmates in the coming four years under a new bill signed into law Tuesday regulating a practice that one lawmaker likened to torture.The bill — HB23-1013 — requires the state Department of Corrections to conform with the “gold standard” regulations of the National Commission on Correctional Health Care on the use of restraints. That would institute regulations in Colorado that either don’t exist or are looser than national benchmarks: Critics had accused the department of chaining inmates to beds for hours at a time, with little medical oversight and unclear guidelines for initiating or ending seclusion.There were 219 “restraint events” involving inmates in five Colorado prisons between 2020 and 2022, according to a state fiscal analysis of the bill. One former inmate told the Denver Post in October that he was chained at the wrists and ankles for 20 consecuti...