Person struck by Metro bus Sunday night

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:04:51 GMT

Person struck by Metro bus Sunday night EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. - One person was struck by a Metro bus Sunday night.That was on South 14th Street in East St. Louis. We're working to get more information about the extent of injuries to the person who was h it. Top Story: Quadruple shooting leaves 2 dead in Hyde Park FOX 2 will update this story with more information as it becomes available.

Overnight fire in north St. Louis

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:04:51 GMT

Overnight fire in north St. Louis ST. LOUIS - A fire overnight destroyed a vacant house on Romaine Place Near Hamilton Avenue.It's in the Hamilton Heights neighborhood of north St. Louis. The fire started just after 11:30 p.m. The building collapsed inside. Trending: 8 killed in Texas mall shooting, gunman also dead No one was injured, and investigators are still looking for the cause.FOX 2 will update this story with more information as it becomes available.

For sale: $3 million custom Colorado homes that starred in reality TV show

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:04:51 GMT

For sale: $3 million custom Colorado homes that starred in reality TV show Fans of reality television can soon own a piece of HGTV history when Colorado homes from one of the network’s most popular shows hit the market this month.In fall 2022, HGTV came to Berthoud to film season four of “Rock the Block.” The show pits four two-person teams against one another to finish building out identical homes on the same cul-de-sac and whichever team adds the most appraised value wins.RELATED: Why is HGTV filming so many shows in Colorado?HGTV’s “Rock the Block” brings stars from its other shows together for a home renovation competition unlike any other. Designers Anthony Elle and Michel Smith Boyd (right) were dubbed winners of season four. (Provided by HGTV)Each dwelling is more than 5,000 square feet and started with a $1.9 million price tag. After six weeks, during which designers added their own unique styles to floor plans, aesthetics and amenities, the prices now range from $3.15 million to $3.45 million.Designers Michel Smith Boyd and Antho...

16th Street Mall Thai food cart opens brick-and-mortar space in Broomfield

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:04:51 GMT

16th Street Mall Thai food cart opens brick-and-mortar space in Broomfield Jaepop Pagdee wishes his mom could see him now.This week, he opened Liang’s Thai Food’s first brick-and-mortar restaurant at 155 Nickel St. in Broomfield.“We used to have an old metal food cart on the 16th Street Mall, and now we have two locations,” Pagdee said. “I get a little emotional when I think about how far we’ve come.”His mom, Liang, first started the business as a food cart on 16th Street Mall in 2007, and gained attention, and long lines, over the years. But Liang passed away eight months ago.DENVER, CO – MARCH 8: Cook Chanakun Peckpiboon, left, and Jaepop Pagdee, owner of LiangÕs Thai Food, make orders during a busy lunch hour on the 16th street mall on March 8, 2022 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)Pagdee, who took over five years ago, moved the business from a food cart to a kiosk next to the 16th Street Mall’s Target last year, and he was forced to take some of his mom’s dishes off...

No more free test kits, less data: What the end of the COVID public health emergency means in Colorado

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:04:51 GMT

No more free test kits, less data: What the end of the COVID public health emergency means in Colorado Starting this week, at-home tests for COVID-19 will no longer be free, but other changes from the end of the federal government’s public health emergency won’t be as obvious.The public health emergency, declared in January 2020, will lapse Thursday, but many people may not notice a difference. Despite the association between the public health emergency and measures like mask mandates in many people’s minds, nearly all anti-COVID precautions already have been lifted. The end of continuous Medicaid coverage during the pandemic also is no longer linked to the end of the public health emergency, and the state has already started determining who still qualifies.There will be some changes, however. A rule requiring insurance companies to cover eight at-home tests monthly for each member will end, though Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program will cover tests through September 2024. Emergency regulations allowing the Centers for Disease Control and Pre...

Democrats tie in renters to property tax, TABOR refund proposal

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:04:51 GMT

Democrats tie in renters to property tax, TABOR refund proposal As sounds from Cinco de Mayo celebrations echoed across the street from the Colorado Capitol this past weekend, Democrats in the state legislature pushed along a slate of bills that could nudge Colorado tax policy in a more progressive direction, advocates said.A policy unveiled Saturday would again return taxes collected over the limit set by the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, or TABOR, evenly across all eligible Coloradans next year; an amendment attached to a sister bill Sunday would set aside money specifically for rental assistance — if a decade-long change to property tax rates goes into effect.In the background is Monday night’s looming constitutional deadline for lawmakers to finish their work. The tight timeline brought the Senate into session on a Sunday for the first time in more than 80 years, according to a Republican staffer.The policies so far weathered criticism from the GOP — a super minority in the state House of Representatives and near super minorit...

A plan to pay farmers to use less of the Colorado River comes up dry

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:04:51 GMT

A plan to pay farmers to use less of the Colorado River comes up dry One way to save massive amounts of water from the drying Colorado River — state and federal officials had hoped — was to effectively buy water this year from farmers and ranchers with a $125 million conservation program.But very few are taking the offer. Or those willing to sell were turned away.“It’s a comical mess,” Shaun Chapoose, chairman of northeast Utah’s Ute Indian Tribe, said. “They ain’t fixing nothing.”Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming, which make up the river’s upper basin, launched the System Conservation Pilot Program late last year, offering money to farmers and others willing to forgo their water use this year, restarting a water-saving initiative that ran just a few years ago.This time around, though, the program is slated to spend twice as much to save a fifth less water, Colorado River officials say.Between the four states, 88 applications came in offering to save some water, Chuck Cullom, executive director of the Upper Colorado River Commission, said. The c...

Marshall fire survivors bump up against limits of local philanthropy to help rebuild their lives amid scarce federal resources

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:04:51 GMT

Marshall fire survivors bump up against limits of local philanthropy to help rebuild their lives amid scarce federal resources This story was co-published with Boulder Reporting Lab, a nonprofit newsroom serving Boulder County. Susan Windisch was mid-divorce when the Marshall fire took her Louisville home. Her insurance payout was split between her and her ex-husband, as was the money from the sale of their burned lot. She’s now living in a rental without enough to rebuild, looking “farther and farther” from her community to find something more permanent she can afford.“I’m faced with a really horrible housing market,” said Windisch, a professor at the University of Colorado Boulder. Her struggle with lupus lets her only work part-time. So she sought financial help from the Community Foundation Boulder County, which administers the Boulder County Wildfire Fund.Windisch said she was told “if you’re not rebuilding, there’s nothing we can do,” a response that puzzled her, especially because the foundation has raised more than $43 million to help fire victims, and still has about half left.“I would definitely q...

Contemporary Native American photographers tell their story their way at the Denver Art Museum

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:04:51 GMT

Contemporary Native American photographers tell their story their way at the Denver Art Museum The exhibition “Speaking with Light” is a provocative group show featuring landmark images captured by more than 30 contemporary Indigenous photographers. It’s an exhaustive and surprising collection of photos that documents important shifts in the art form over the past four decades.But the show is also, and perhaps more interestingly, about the power of art-making itself — about the ability of artists to make objects that take command of the social narrative, that rewrite stories from their own perspective, and that offer up different endings.The show aims “to shift power dynamics and bring attention to misrepresentations,” as the exhibition materials explain. These pictures of Indigenous people made by Indigenous people stand in opposition to centuries of imagery, created and distributed by outsiders, that confuse the truth about Native American history.Organized by Will Wilson and John Rohrbach, the show acknowledges that the term “Indigenous” can be troublesome. Before th...

A gorgeous Colorado canyon will be raftable for the first time since 2019 thanks to heavy snowpack

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:04:51 GMT

A gorgeous Colorado canyon will be raftable for the first time since 2019 thanks to heavy snowpack The Dolores River in southwestern Colorado can be one of the best rafting destinations in the country when it has enough water. It offers gorgeous scenery in the high desert of the Colorado Plateau and history dating back to the ancient Anasazi, who used it as a highway to and from Mesa Verde not far to the south.There are many years when the Dolores is not runnable for commercial rafting outfitters because of insufficient water, though. When they can operate there, as they will this year thanks to Colorado’s abundant mountain snowfall this past winter, rafters and outfitters rejoice. The last time the Dolores could support rafting was in 2019.“We go three, four, five years regularly without having water,” said Alex Mickel, president and founder of Durango-based Mild to Wild Rafting & Jeep Tours. “It’s an amazing canyon. It’s incredibly beautiful. It’s unique southwest Colorado. You have a spectacular transition from the mountain landscape to a desert lan...