Good Luck, Chuck: Denver Zoo Swaps Elephants With Houston for Mating Purposes
Zookeepers will help teach an Asian bull elephant named Chuck the “cues and routines” of natural breeding before he leaves.
Zookeepers will help teach an Asian bull elephant named Chuck the “cues and routines” of natural breeding before he leaves.
West African migrants aren’t used to eating leafy greens, mushrooms and other common American vegetables, so volunteers taught them how.
“If they could just get it at their local doctor’s office, it would make a lot more sense.”
Mayor Mike Johnston said he planned to offer housing when the encampment was at forty people, but it grew too fast.
Affordable housing advocates believe the end of certain assistance vouchers are a glaring problem for the city’s plans to house another 1,000 people.
“We think we finally cracked the code on how to help people.”
The city has no housing for the 140 people at the encampment, but residents are worried about their neighborhood’s safety.
The school is hosting an unveiling of the new cannabis hospitality program, dubbed the Green Frontier Conference, on April 17.
Governor Jared Polis, Senator John Hickenlooper, Mayor Mike Johnston and Mayor Mike Coffman don’t want to lose anything in translation.
Migrants from Colombia and Venezuela aren’t used to spicy food, which accounts for a lot of donations to Denver shelters, but they’re thankful to get it.
Denver’s largest nonprofit for transgender and nonbinary homeless individuals parted ways with its CEO before opening the city’s newest micro-community.
One of them was closed on Monday, and then another on Wednesday.
“It is a way in which we can really combat some employment failures at a federal level here.”
Elitch Gardens asked the city to remove an encampment of about fifty migrants outside park gates before if opens in April.
The Quaker church’s shelter closes at the end of the month, leaving 29 migrants with nowhere to go – but the pastor is calling towns that need workers and students.
The head of the U.S. Department of Intergovernmental Affairs and the husband of Vice President Kamala Harris made bold promises during a visit to Denver.
The city’s first newcomer director says her job is to shift the city away from emergency response and to be “a good steward of taxpayer dollars.”
The funding would be allocated if the pace of migrants arriving in Denver increases, but the city isn’t required to spend the money if extra rooms aren’t needed.
Beatrice Carranza is trying to bring THC gummies with Mexican flavors like chamoy and tamarindo to Denver, but not without headaches.
“We don’t have jobs, so it’ll help for a few days when the snow falls, and to get money to support ourselves.”
The last of the bellmen and doormen at the iconic hotel will be laid off on March 15, without severance.
It’s a far cry from the ten sites Mayor Johnston promised in August as the city utilizes hotel partnerships to house homeless individuals.