Farm Bureau President calls situation 'scary'
By Chuck Raasch St. Louis Post-Dispatch, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Tue, 03/06/2018 - 10:15am
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Living in Colorado, for many, means spending a lot of time worrying about how to make the rent or the mortgage — or whether they’ll ever be able to buy a home. RELATED: Candidates across the ballot are talking about the cost of housing. But will the issue sway votes? Housing costs have been on a long and sometimes sharp climb throughout the state.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareMany adults can identify with the challenges of trying to focus on work tasks when they haven’t had breakfast or skipped lunch. Lisle Reed, the coordinator with Whole Child Initiatives at Adams 12 Five Star Schools, wants people to imagine the same situation but for children with growing bodies and developing brains. “They can enter a classroom with everything they need.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareFranklin Ramirez felt duped. When he moved to Denver a little more than a year ago, he was told monthly rent at his two-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment in the downtown Civic Lofts building cost $2,355. Then came the monthly fees. Ramirez pays nearly $25 a month for “valet trash,” in which someone collects garbage outside the apartment doors of the 14-story, 176-unit building and walks it to the dumpster.
More | Talk | Read It Later | SharePatricia Dore had multiple concerns on her mind when she pored over her lengthy Denver ballot for the Nov. 5 election. Public safety was high on the list, and fiscal responsibility factored into her decision-making, too. RELATED: Where to find housing — from tax proposals to rising prices — on your Colorado ballot But housing also shaped her thinking — even though she’s an 81-year-old retiree who has lived in the same southeast Denver home for five decades. “It just blows my mind, the cost of housing,” Dore said after depositing her ballot in the drop box outside the Cook Park Recreation Center last week.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareEditor’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. So we asked them, and all Denver Post readers, to share their mini-reviews with you. Have any to offer?
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareJared Bednar spent most of his hockey career trading punches with some of the meanest, toughest players in whatever league he was playing in. Avs coach Jared Bednar poses with his first pronghorn antelope, shot in Colorado in 2022. (Photo courtesy of Jared Bednar) But how many of those brawlers can also say they’ve plunged a knife into a wild hog’s heart? Bednar, when he is not a Stanley Cup-winning coach of the Colorado Avalanche, is a man of the woods.
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