Census Bureau estimates 1 in 3 Texans speak a language other than English at home
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 12:48:01 GMT
Editor's Note: The above video shows where the population grew the most in Texas in 2022.AUSTIN (KXAN) — A third of Texans speak a language other than English at home, according to new estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau.The agency released the latest data from its American Community Survey (ACS) Thursday. The new five-year ACS estimates summarize data from 2018 to 2022.The ACS shows of the 27.3 million people aged five or older living in Texas, 17.7 million speak English at home — 64.9% of all Texans.About 28.5% speak Spanish at home — almost 7.8 million people — and about 6.6% speak another language at home.English is spoken at home by a majority of people in 222 of Texas' 254 counties, including 38 counties in which more than 90% of the population aged five and above speak English.Newton County, along the Louisiana border northeast of Beaumont, has the highest share of English speakers, with 98.4% of people only speaking English at home. Population estimates show which areas ...NYSP: Averill Park man had over 19K images of child pornography
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 12:48:01 GMT
AVERILL PARK, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- An Averill Park man was arrested on Monday, December 4, for possessing over 19,000 images consistent with child pornography, according to New York State Police. Thomas Jackson, 30, faces multiple charges. Get the latest news, weather, sports and more delivered right to your inbox! New York State Police say an investigation into Jackson started after they received a tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Police say Jackson possessed over 19,000 images consistent with child sexual exploitation, in which the images were promoted. Charges:Promoting a sexual performance by a childPossessing a sexual performance by a childPossessing an obscene sexual performance by a child Eric Hawkins to remain Albany Police Chief Jackson was arrested at his Averill Park home and was taken to Brunswick State Police for processing. He was arraigned at the Sand Lake Town Court and was remanded to the Rensselaer County Correctional Facility inste...Budweiser's 'Taste of Home' starting today for service members
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 12:48:01 GMT
ST. LOUIS - The holiday season is about getting together with family and friends, but that's not possible for many service members. So, Budweiser wants to help them get a taste of home.Starting Monday, anyone age 21 and up can visit Budweiser's social media channels and nominate a service member they'd like to gift a Budweiser to. The nominator will then receive a link they can share with the service member for a free six-pack of Budweiser. Mama June says daughter Anna ‘Chickadee’ Cardwell has died at 29 For every nomination, Budweiser will donate one dollar to 'Folds of Honor,' a non-profit that provides scholarships to families of fallen or disabled military and first responders.Taylor Swift hype, Red Rocks hailstorm, and Drake’s big diss: The year in Denver concerts
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 12:48:01 GMT
The year 2023 was marked by big shows — and even bigger ticket prices.Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran and Denver DJ-producer Illenium likely set records at Empower Field at Mile High, from the most tickets sold for a weekend run (Swift), to the biggest, venue-based concert in Denver history (Sheeran) and the biggest-ever show from a Colorado artist (Illenium).As state and federal legislators again failed to pass meaningful legislation protecting consumers from outrageous ticketing fees, prices soared. A nosebleed seat to one of Swift’s shows at Empower Field may have cost less than $50 if you were lucky enough to get one during the disastrous Ticketmaster pre-sale. But thousands were forced to buy them on the secondary market for prices ranging from $500 to $10,000 per seat.The Wall Street Journal found that the average price of a concert had doubled in the past five years, increasing from $125 in 2019 to $252 in 2023. The story was the same with re-sellers such as SeatGeek, wh...East Colfax primed for change with bus rapid transit and design standards
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 12:48:01 GMT
Denver city leaders on Monday will vote on new rules that could dictate how East Colfax Avenue looks and functions for decades. But whether those rules, already in place on other busy streets, are a poor fit for the thoroughfare remains a point of debate.If approved by the City Council, the package of proposed zoning changes will govern future development for hundreds of properties between Sherman and Yosemite streets with an eye toward ensuring ample shopfronts and more space for sidewalk users along Colfax.The measure comes before the council as the city’s Department of Transportation and Infrastructure marches toward a final design for the long-anticipated East Colfax Avenue Bus Rapid Transit network. Crews are expected to begin construction on the first segment of that project — which will install dedicated lanes and more than two dozen loading platforms to accommodate a network of high-frequency, fast-loading buses — next year.While BRT will change the face of...Denver-based paleontologist broke new ground with advanced understanding of dinosaur behavior
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 12:48:01 GMT
Before Dr. Martin Gaudin Lockley set his sights on studying the footprints of dinosaurs, the scientific field known as paleoichnology attracted little notice or respect. The tall, talkative, Denver-based paleontologist who died of cancer on Nov. 25 at age 73 is largely credited with changing that by tracking fossilized dinosaur walkways on nearly every continent.Martin Lockley in the ’80s, wearing his love for fossils on his sleeve. (Courtesy of the Lockley family)For more than 40 years, Lockley identified and mapped Jurassic and Cretaceous period tracksites in Colorado and everywhere they’ve been found. His insights substantially increased knowledge about dinosaur activities including courtship, parenting, migration and herding behaviors.“I’ve asked other leading paleoichnologists about Martin’s influence and there’s no debate that he stood alone,” said Friends of Dinosaur Ridge (FODR) executive director Jeff Lamontagne. “As one colleague put it, Martin was...On heels of well-received energy plan, Tri-State faces lawsuit by Durango cooperative
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 12:48:01 GMT
A Durango-based electric cooperative that has vocally criticized the practices of Tri-State Generation and Transmission has filed a lawsuit accusing the utility of being “sneaky and underhanded.” The La Plata Electric Association is seeking to end its contract with the power supplier or be compensated for damages it says it has suffered.The lawsuit accuses Tri-State, a wholesale power provider, of breach of contract. The electric cooperative is among Colorado rural electric associations that have explored leaving Tri-State due to disputes over rates, the push for more renewable energy and the desire to generate more of their energy locally.The La Plata Electric Association and Brighton-based United Power, Tri-State’s largest member, have gone to the Colorado Public Utilities Commission and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to get what they view as fair terms for ending their contracts. LPEA said in its lawsuit, filed in La Plata County District Court, that T...From “ass clowns” to bigfoot: The 10 most popular Colorado outdoor recreation stories of 2023
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 12:48:01 GMT
Coloradans (and Colorado visitors) love to get outdoors, whether it’s to ski and stargaze, camp and hike — or to drive onto dirt roads until they get stuck and have to be rescued.And The Denver Post’s readers love to dig into those stories. This year, as always, skiing was one of the top topics of discussion, especially Epic Pass sales and a resort ranking. But hiking and camping were also big, especially when it came to Rocky Mountain National Park.We also had an unusual sighting, literally, in our top 10. But we’ll let you see that for yourself. Here are our 10 most-read outdoor recreation stories of the year, with the number-one story at the end.Bad drivers in the backcountry are a big problemThe sheriff in San Miguel County called a group of people who slid off Black Bear Pass in their truck “ass clowns,” which is funny. But the problem is real: More and more people, who lack skills or experience or proper maps, are driving on backcountry road...A classic Colorado pizza joint holds on against stiff competition
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 12:48:01 GMT
Travel guides, transplants (and even this publication) have plenty of thoughts about Colorado’s best pizza places. I’m a transplant, too, and have fallen in love over the years with local favorites ranging from Beau Jo’s honeyed crust to Cart-Driver’s wood-fired pie.Related: 11 of the best pizza joints in and around DenverBut having arrived here 23 years ago from Dayton, Ohio — a city that’s no slouch when it comes to pizza — I’ve become dependent on a Denver shop that feels positively old-school compared to the new class of local pie-slingers.If your holidays include pizza — and why wouldn’t they? — East Colfax Avenue’s Enzo’s End is ready to bring the joy. (John Wenzel)Since 1996, Enzo’s End Pizzeria has been a comforting anchor on the semi-gentrified stretch of East Colfax Avenue between Colorado Boulevard and York Street, where pedestrian traffic is fairly constant. Its red, thatched shingles and...Decades-old rule pushes mentally ill Coloradans out of hospitals too soon. Legislators may finally change it.
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 12:48:01 GMT
Barbara Vassis keeps a spreadsheet to track her daughter’s years-long journey through Colorado’s patchwork mental health system.The sheet goes back 11 years, a third of Erin’s life. There are holes in the narrative: Her daughter is schizophrenic bipolar, Vassis said, and she’s moved around different parts of the country. Still, even incomplete, Vassis’ growing tracker provides a glimpse at the revolving doors that Erin and hundreds of other Coloradans are stuck in every year.From April 2021 to April 2022, for instance, Erin spent 106 days bouncing between emergency rooms, detox facilities, hospital beds, homeless shelters and crisis centers. During that time, she never spent more than two weeks at a time in one hospital, Vassis said. Instead, she repeatedly was discharged within a fortnight, still unstable, thanks to a decades-old Medicaid rule that often forces the early discharge of low-income, mentally ill patients.Vassis looks at the spreadsheet aga...Latest news
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