Missouri Botanical Garden hosting educational events for Indigenous Peoples' Day

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:23:44 GMT

Missouri Botanical Garden hosting educational events for Indigenous Peoples' Day ST. LOUIS - The Missouri Botanical Garden is hosting a series of educational opportunities on Indigenous Peoples' Day.That's Monday, October 9. There will be a documentary screening and hands-on native plant activities.   This Missouri town’s water is testing above the limits for radium Additional events, including more storytelling sessions and film screenings, are planned for November, which is Native American Heritage Month.

Best of Missouri Market starting today in south St. Louis City

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:23:44 GMT

Best of Missouri Market starting today in south St. Louis City ST. LOUIS - The rain didn't stop the set-up Thursday for the Best of Missouri Market.It's happening at the Missouri Botanical Garden this weekend. Visitors will find more than 120 of the region's best vendors of handcrafted items, locally produced food, and much more at this fall festival. First-of-its-kind tech in Missouri debuts at Ameristar St. Charles It runs Friday and Sunday from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Tickets run $16 for adults. Also note that the 'Tram Tour' will not be running during the festival.We will have an interview with a preview of this weekend's event on FOX 2 News at 8.

Officer Blake Snyder Memorial Workout today

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:23:44 GMT

Officer Blake Snyder Memorial Workout today ST. LOUIS -  An area business is hosting a BackStoppers fundraiser on Friday.It's in memory of fallen St. Louis County Officer Blake Snyder, killed in the line of duty in 2016. The supplement company 'First Phorm,' is hosting its sixth annual Blake Snyder Memorial Workout. This Missouri town’s water is testing above the limits for radium It's from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the First Phorm headquarters on Fenton Logistics Park Boulevard. There's a minimum donation of ten dollars.All the money goes to BackStoppers.

Cedar Hill man dies after motorcycle crash in Jefferson County

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:23:44 GMT

Cedar Hill man dies after motorcycle crash in Jefferson County JEFFERSON COUNTY, Mo. - A Cedar Hill man died in a crash in Jefferson County around 5:00 p.m. Thursday.45-year-old Charles White died when his motorcycle hit a car entering Dulin Creek Road at the top of a hill. He lost control and hit a utility pole. First-of-its-kind tech in Missouri debuts at Ameristar St. Charles The other driver was not hurt.

I-76 west closed north of Commerce City due to crash

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:23:44 GMT

I-76 west closed north of Commerce City due to crash Interstate 76 westbound is closed north of Commerce City due to a crash.The closure was reported at East 74th Avenue by the Colorado Department of Transportation at 6:26 p.m. on Twitter.#I76 westbound: Road closed due to a crash at CO 224/70th Avenue; East 74th Avenue. https://t.co/wKhK6L8nWf— Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) (@ColoradoDOT) October 6, 2023CDOT advised drivers to expect delays in the area. There is no expected reopening time yet.Related ArticlesCrime and Public Safety | Colo. 93 in Arvada reopened after “serious injury” crash Crime and Public Safety | Woman hit, killed in early Tuesday crash near Aurora middle school Crime and Public Safety | 44th, Harlan in Wheat Ridge reopened after crash Crime and Public Safety | I-25 reopened in Walsenburg after crash Crime and Public Safety | Several downtown RTD rail lines to be interrupted by mainentance starting next week ...

Evolve and Pfizer cutting workers in Denver and Boulder

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:23:44 GMT

Evolve and Pfizer cutting workers in Denver and Boulder Denver-based Evolve is letting go of another 175 workers just four months after it dismissed 164 workers in response to a big drop-off in the vacation home rental market.The company, which describes itself as the “fastest-growing vacation rental hospitality company in North America,” manages properties on behalf of 30,000 owners and has hosted 10 million guests, according to its website.September’s job reduction, representing about a fifth of the staff, is part of a larger transition called Evolve 3.0 that Brian Egan, co-founder and CEO, described in a letter to employees last month.Egan said as he was scrutinizing how resources at the company were allocated — “every dollar and every hour, both payroll and non-payroll, all of it” — he realized he had to go beyond the millions of dollars in non-payroll savings and reduce the headcount.“The hard truth is that while we have a talented, hard-working and passionate team, and the vast majori...

Evictions surge in Denver as council members, advocates call for aid

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:23:44 GMT

Evictions surge in Denver as council members, advocates call for aid Deborah Self couldn’t stand the sound of her ringtone any longer. She silenced it last week, easing the dread of yet another call from a Coloradan on the verge of eviction. She didn’t need the shrill notification to do her job. Someone in need is always on the other line. Her phone rarely leaves her ear.Self, a housing navigator at Colorado Housing Connects, works from home answering some 50 calls a day to help people search for affordable housing, rental assistance, or tenant and landlord mediation. The organization has seen a nearly 60% spike in calls from the same time last year.“There’s a whole range of emotions when people call,” Self said. “A lot of people are crying. There are occasionally people who are angry and they direct it toward us, but it’s nothing to do with us. I’m pretty good at de-escalating. I try to calm them down and see what we can do to help.”The increase in calls comes amid a broader surge in displacement and evictions in Denver and across the state. For two...

Now at MCA Denver: Cowboys like you’ve never seen them before

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:23:44 GMT

Now at MCA Denver: Cowboys like you’ve never seen them before In the large-scale artwork “Set Ups,” Stephanie Syjuco contrasts an intricate, menacing print with a verdant landscape and faded imagery of the American West.“The green backdrop and screen is a nod toward that cinematic construction of cowboys,” said Syjuco, who was born in the Philippines and raised in the U.S., where she internalized decades of cowboy imagery in movies and TV shows. “When MCA Denver approved it I was like, ‘yes!’ It’s very specific to this region and the mythology of the cowboy, and it’s related to work I was already doing on landscape panting and how it’s come to influence narratives of westword progress.”Syjuco’s is one of dozens of pieces commissioned by the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver for its new “Cowboy” exhibition. Works that invoke German American painter Albert Bierstadt’s epic landscapes sit next to visual interrogations of Manifest Destiny, asking us to recons...

Send in the clowns with evocative, dreamlike show from Theatre Artibus

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:23:44 GMT

Send in the clowns with evocative, dreamlike show from Theatre Artibus The first thing you’ll likely notice upon entering the Savoy Denver’s performance space is that Theatre Artibus has placed risers and seats lengthwise, so that the audience sits on two sides of its latest work, “The Pâstisserie.” In addition to creating an intimate proximity to the patrons, the setup in the one-time ballroom affords this evocative, laugh-outright, dreamlike show a zany flow.Gertie (Meghan Frank) and Doris (Tiffany Ogburn) welcome soldier Fred Whipple (Buba Basishvili) to their strange factory in “Pastisserie.” (Michael Ensminger, provided by Theatre Artibus)And flow it does, with its trio of players — Tiffany Ogburn, Buba Basishvili and Meghan Frank — sending laboratory desks and chairs skating across the floor with choreographed flair. Or unfurling a red carpet for a factory boss referred to as “The Founder.”  Or fight-chasing in slow motion across the theater’s expanse to the audience’s hearty guffaws.“The Pâstisserie” explores memory and its adjacent and ac...

Colorado’s COVID hospitalizations are rising again following summer dip

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:23:44 GMT

Colorado’s COVID hospitalizations are rising again following summer dip Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitalizations are rising again, but it’s not clear if they’ll stay at roughly this level or continue to increase as the weather gets colder.Hospitalizations have been slowly increasing since early August, but jumped more noticeably in the last two weeks, from 131 people hospitalized for the virus in Colorado on Sept. 19 to 195 on Monday — the highest total since mid-March.The number of people admitted to hospitals for the virus has held relatively steady, though, averaging about 40 per day, said Beth Carlton, associate professor of environmental and occupational health at the Colorado School of Public Health. That’s higher than over the summer, but nowhere close to the peaks set in 2020 and 2021, when hundreds of people were hospitalized each day, she said.It’s possible the number of severe COVID-19 cases will continue to hover around this level through early December, which was when Colorado saw peaks in previous years, Car...