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Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Gov. Polis signs bill creating Front Range Passenger Rail District — but new line is far from a sure thing - The Denver Post

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Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signed off Wednesday on the creation of a new taxing district to coordinate the creation of a Front Range passenger railway up and down the Interstate 25 corridor.

But don’t make any travel plans yet. The state may have a powerful likely partner in Amtrak, but the first trains won’t be ready to roll for at least a couple years.

And the regional rail line faces potential political and cost hurdles.

The new Front Range Passenger Rail District, created by Senate Bill 238, will take shape early next year. It will cover all or parts of 13 counties near I-25 between the Wyoming and New Mexico state lines, including all of metro Denver.

The district and its appointed board will begin formalizing plans for the first stretches of the railway. It’s likely to include a route north of Denver that goes through Boulder, with the district potentially coordinating with the Regional Transportation District to share costs between the railway and RTD’s unfinished northwest line.

Money will be scarce at first, however, since the district will need to seek approval from voters within its boundaries to collect any new sales tax.

But Polis’ signing of the legislation into law Wednesday afternoon, in a ceremony outside the Pueblo Union Depot in southern Colorado, marked a big milestone.

“A dedicated railroad connecting communities from New Mexico to Colorado to Wyoming isn’t just great for our environment but, as our history shows, it will spur innovation and move people, ideas and businesses,” Polis, a Democrat said in a statement provided by his office. “I’ve long supported Front Range Rail and am thrilled my administration is beginning to deliver on this promise.”

The district’s large board, which must begin meeting by mid-May next year, will include 17 voting members:

  • Six appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state Senate. One must live in an area that was promised rail service by RTD’s FasTracks plan but has not yet received it.
  • 10 appointed by regional transportation planning organizations for metro Denver; the Colorado Springs area; Pueblo; the northern Front Range, including parts of Larimer and Weld counties; and an organization representing Huerfano and Las Animas counties. These appointees also are subject to Senate confirmation.
  • One appointed by the executive director of the Colorado Department of Transportation.
  • Several non-voting advisory members will represent the freight railroads, Amtrak and other organizations.

In supporting the railway, Amtrak envisions three round trips per day between Fort Collins and Pueblo along existing freight railroads, with one of them traveling farther north to Cheyenne, Wyoming. All would stop at Denver’s Union Station.

Amtrak’s long-range expansion plans across the country would benefit from President Joe Biden’s now-$1 trillion infrastructure package, but its executives say its involvement in Colorado doesn’t hinge on that bill.

So far, it’s unclear how much of the costs would be covered by Amtrak, which is likely to operate the line, and how much by state money or a district sales tax. The new law requires a detailed services development plan, an operating plan and attempts to seek federal funding before the district can ask voters to approve a tax.

A recent state report estimated that initial Front Range service could cost as little as $2 billion. Costs for a full build-out, along dedicated double-track between Fort Collins and Pueblo, could soar to $14 billion. There’s also been discussion about linking the line farther south to Trinidad, which is along Amtrak’s Southwest Chief line.

Most but not all Republicans in the legislature opposed the bill over objections that include the potential railway’s costs and concerns about the potential use of eminent domain to acquire property. Commissioners in El Paso and Douglas counties also opposed the bill.

The new district will replace the Southwest Chief & Front Range Passenger Rail Commission, which for years has studied the potential for a north-south rail line.

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Lipsey Middle School 4th 9 weeks honor roll - Daily Leader - Dailyleader

Lipsey Middle School

Fifth grade

All As

Matt Adams, Ava Kate Bairfield, Zariel Bracey, Drew Calcote, Paris Calloway, Gracie Coleman, Kayden Dahl, Miles Dampeer, Jasmine Eddy, Lillian Gould, Lleyton Goza, Tanner Hardy, Collin Holmes, Ben Jackson, Eleanor Johnson, Ke’niyah Jones, Mallory Kelly, Piper Laird, Brooklyn Lee, Cayden Lee, Kagen Lopez, Journee McCall, Georgia McCullough, Matthew Melton, Ladell Nelson, Stanton Newman, Landon Newman, Niyalee Oliver, Leiyla Pace, Trystan Prather, Aniyah Sanders, Kylie Sanders, Lael Sanders, Holden Scott, Will Simmons, Brooks Smith, Hampton Smith, Mary Claire Sones, Annie Stewart, Paiso Stewart, Devion Thomas, Ivy Thomas, Anthony Watkins, William Whittington, Brooke Williams.

As and Bs

Tucker Beeson, Jaylon Benjamin, Emily Bland, Kaiden Bledsoe, Maeleigh Bowman, Billy Brown, Joey Byrd, Erica Copeland, Aliyah Culver, Arion Daughtry, Peyton Dillon, Mason Eady, Tylashia Fields, Olivia Hackney, Ja’kobe Harris, Laina Hart, Tylon Henderson, Jeremiah Henning, Dakota Hester, Caden Hodges, Jason Houck, Acadia Jett, Anthony Johnson, Brianna Jones, Trever Lee, Mercedes Legree, Brooklyn Lenoir, Jumariuntae Lenoir, Tate Lofton, Zy’keanna London, Angel Lyons, Darien Mackabee, Gabriella McLeod, Riley Murray, Xavier Newson, Bella Pace, Diya Patel, Tucker Rains, Zaylee Reed, Jeffrey Short, Anthony Simmons, Mallorie Smith, Lucy Spicer, Parker Staeden, Jordan Stewart, Kennadi Thrasher, Mitchell Ryan Thurman, Jenna Beth Townsend, Paris Varnado, Marcus Villes, Brielle Walker, Ja’Vonte Washington, Jordyn Washington, Mackenzie Weiss, Talon Welch, Taliyah Wilcher, Braeden Williams, Ty’kayla Williams, Avery Wilson, Jaziya Wilson

Sixth grade

All As

Parker Anglin, Kenslie Bairfield, Carson Becker, Ayden Belcher, James Belk, Tyndale Boerner, Braxton Bradley, Freddye Bridges, Messiah Briggs, Baylor Brister, Lilly Cupit, Sophie Cupit, Aerin Eubanks, Trayson Fells, Amelia Furr, Molly Giles, Camryn Greer, R. J. Henderson, Ian Iles, Isaac Iles, Isabella Iles, Rivers Jordan, Mary Katherine Kellum, Elijah Kilpatrick, Jessa Kimble, Coleman Knott, Cohen Leggett, Ja’kya London, Kerrington Magee, Abby Slay, Lynsie Small, A’Semiyon Smith, Eliza Smith, Joy Smith, Prentiss Smith, Hanna Thibodeaux, Asa Thomas, Addisyn Tucker, Amory Walker, Anna Reid Whittington, Lucy Williams, Karr Wolfe

As and Bs

Amir Al-Rai, Emma Allen, Laila Allen, Nicolas Bland, Kaden Bordelon, Ann-Claire Brabham, Jaydan Bradley, Ka’Rianna Brown, Seth Butler, Donterrious Chase, Morgan Childress, Gavin Collins, Sha’niya Crockett, Caylin Crossley, Eliza Dominquez-Gaytan, Marco Dunnigan, Kylie Ferguson, Derwin Fields, Ian Fulps, Braden Gatlin, Jackson Greer, Dex’treyonna Harris, Brittany Hebert, Madelyn Henning, Henley Jackson, Nia Jackson, Cameron Johnson, Jordan Jones, Lilly Jones, Tyranesha Jones, Mark Jordan, Travis London, Kylee Lopez, Maddox Mason, Molly Mason, R’javien McCall, Ky’lasia McClendon, Brandi McDavid, Rylee McKee, Debreeco Mitchell, Lucas Nations, John Tucker Pace, Eli Peagler, Alyssa Posey, A. J. Querns, Nyla Richardson, Wyatt Roberts, Christopher Sanders, Dezavion Smith, Kaylee Smith, Anna Leigh Spray, Ayden Tillman, Philip Tobias, Erica Vitervo-Hernandez, Ismael Vitervo-Hernandez, Cooper Wallace, Grasyn Wheat, Kendalie White, Kenvarsit’e Williams

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‘It smells so bad’, Murfreesboro residents oppose plans to expand Middle Point Landfill - WKRN News 2

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Front Range rail: Colorado governor signs bill into law - The Colorado Sun

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Colorado on Wednesday took its most significant step yet toward building a Front Range passenger train system as Gov. Jared Polis signed into law a bill creating a special taxation district for the proposed rail line.

Senate Bill 238 also forms a board tasked with getting the new train on track. The 17-member panel, six of whom will be appointed by the governor, will have the ability to enact a new sales tax of up to 8 cents on every $10 purchase to pay for the train. 

TODAY’S UNDERWRITER

“A dedicated railroad connecting communities from New Mexico to Colorado to Wyoming isn’t just great for our environment but, as our history shows, it will spur innovation and move people, ideas and businesses,” said Polis, who signed the measure at the Pueblo Union Depot, a former passenger rail station.

The governor said the train will “derail this economic crisis” and help Colorado “recover faster.”

Front Range passenger rail has been a lofty, yearslong goal for Polis and others. But a recent financial commitment to the project by Amtrak, paired with Democrats’ emphasis on ways to drive down vehicle emissions and eliminate traffic, has brought the pie-in-the-sky idea into the realm of reality. 

Funding has been the main hurdle for the proposal, and Senate Bill 238 gets the project chugging toward the billions of dollars needed in startup costs. A congressional infrastructure plan, should it pass, could also infuse money needed for the train.

RTD’s University of Colorado A-Line train at Denver’s Union Station on Friday, Dec. 21, 2018. (Jesse Paul, The Colorado Sun)

“We do not have the money right now,” said state Rep. Matt Gray, a Broomfield Democrat who was a prime sponsor of Senate Bill 238. “Just because 238 is passing doesn’t mean that Front Range rail is coming.”

But Gray said 238 opens the door to federal partnerships that can make the funding mechanisms possible. 

The Front Range train district’s board will have to be appointed by April 1, 2022.

BNSF and Union Pacific, Colorado’s two major freight rail carriers, and Amtrak can each appoint a nonvoting member of the board.The Regional Transportation District’s board can appoint one nonvoting member, too, as can the Interstate 70 Coalition.

The taxation district runs along Interstate 25 from Wyoming to New Mexico, and includes all of Denver, Jefferson, Broomfield and Douglas counties and parts of Larimer, Weld, Boulder, Adams, Arapahoe, El Paso, Pueblo, Huerfano and Las Animas counties.

The narrowly drawn district appears aimed at including areas of the state that are more friendly to tax increases. 

A map of where the Front Range passenger rail taxation district will be. (Handout)

The tax question can be sent to voters only after the board has published a proposed service development and operation plan, including a detailed financing arrangement. The board must also first adopt a resolution that it has made every reasonable effort to secure federal funding for the project. 

The tax would be in addition to existing transportation taxes paid by people in the Front Range passenger rail district, such as those levied by the Regional Transportation District. 

This news first appeared in The Unaffiliated. Subscribe here to get the twice-weekly political newsletter from The Colorado Sun.

Some Boulder County residents have been incensed by the idea of the Front Range train proposal moving forward before they get the Denver-Longmont train promised by RTD that has been long delayed by the agency because of a lack of funding. 

Senate Bill 238 makes possible, and the existing Southwest Chief & Front Range Passenger Rail Commission has called for, the Front Range train route to travel along the route that RTD was planning for its commuter train. The idea is that the two projects can be combined, allowing transportation officials to hit two trains with one stone.

“This is going to transform Colorado,” said Sal Pace, a former state lawmaker and Pueblo County commissioner who has been one of the most vocal proponents of the Front Range rail proposal. 

The Colorado House voted 40-25 to pass Senate Bill 238. The measure cleared the Senate by a 25-9 vote.

The Colorado Sun has no paywall, meaning readers do not have to pay to access stories. We believe vital information needs to be seen by the people impacted, whether it’s a public health crisis, investigative reporting or keeping lawmakers accountable.

This reporting depends on support from readers like you. For just $5/month, you can invest in an informed community.

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Governor to sign bills helping coal workers, creating Front Range Rail District - coloradopolitics.com

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Gov. Jared Polis on Wednesday  is set to sign into law bills that aim to support workers and communities reliant on jobs in coal mines and factories and bring a Front Range rail project one step closer to reality.

After attending a ribbon-cutting ceremony in Manitou Springs earlier in the day, Polis will stop at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers office in Pueblo to put his signature on House Bill 1290.

The state stimulus legislation from House Majority Leader Daneya Esgar, D-Pueblo, Rep. Perry Will, R-New Castle, Senate Majority Leader Steve Fenberg, D-Boulder, and Sen. Bob Rankin, R-Carbondale, puts $15 million toward a 2019 “just transition” plan devised to assist communities and workers whose coal-related industries and jobs "are subject to significant economic transition."

But House Bill 1314, sponsored by then-Speaker of the House KC Becker, D-Boulder, said the plan would be funded with gifts, grants and donations. Programs funded with gifts, grants and donations generally see little if any money.

HB 1290 follows up on that bill by putting $8 million toward goals developed by an advisory committee made up of lawmakers, public officials, representatives of coal communities, labor unions and utilities that drafted the state’s Just Transition Action Plan.

The bill sends the other $7 million to the Department of Labor and Employment for a workforce assistance program designed to directly help coal workers with apprenticeship programs, financial planning, tuition reimbursement, job search assistance and on-the-job training, among other things.

House advances $15 million in funding for coal worker transition plan

While in Pueblo, Polis is also set to add his signature to Senate Bill 238, a measure that moves the long-time goal of a passenger rail line running up and down the Front Range one step closer to reality.

Under the bill from Esgar, Senate President Leroy Garcia, D-Pueblo, Sen. Rachel Zenzinger, D-Arvada, and Rep. Matt Gray, D-Broomfield, the state will set up a special district charged with "planning, designing, developing, financing, constructing, operating, and maintaining" a passenger rail line from New Mexico to the Wyoming border with stops up the Front Range.

The special district is set to be overseen by a board made of up appointees made by Polis as well as each of the transportation planning organizations along the line, along with non-voting appointees from Denver's Regional Transportation District and potentially representatives of BNSF Railway, Union Pacific Railroad, Amtrak, and communities in Wyoming and New Mexico, who will be designated by the governors of those states.

Garcia introduces bill to create Front Range Rail District

The bill gives the board the authority to ask voters in the newly created district to raise sales taxes up to .8% in order to finance the project, though lawmakers anticipate funding from the federal government as well.

The introduction of the bill in April coincided with promising news from Amtrak, which listed service from Pueblo to Cheyenne, in its 15-year plan. Meanwhile, lawmakers in Washington from both sides of the aisle and the Biden administration have coalesced around a $1.2 trillion infrastructure package, which is set to include $66 billion for rail projects such as Colorado's.

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Playing in front of home crowd a big deal to Best Virginia - The Dominion Post

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MORGANTOWN — Alex Ruoff’s initial reaction to joining Best Virginia for a summer run in The Basketball Tournament (TBT)

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Wife charged after threatening to ram husband through restaurant front - The Citizen.com

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A Fayetteville woman on June 28 was charged with simple assault-family violence after saying she would use her vehicle to run her estranged husband through the front of a local restaurant.

Fayetteville Police on June 28 at approximately 9:36 a.m. were dispatched to a restaurant on Fayette Place regarding a disturbance. The Fayette County E-911 Center reported that a caller said a female at the business threatened to strike her husband with her vehicle, according to Fayetteville Police Department spokesperson Ann Marie Burdett.

Burdett said police arrived on the scene and observed a female and vehicle matching the description provided by the caller. Police made contact with the female subject and asked her to step away from her car.

The female subject was identified as Cleo Childress Haygood, 47, of Fayetteville, the estranged wife of the complainant.

“The complainant reported to the police, and the subject confirmed, that she said if her husband stepped in front of her car, she would drive her car right through the business, and if he were standing on the front porch, she would floor it and run him through the business,” said Burdett.

Witness statements were obtained, and Haygood was placed under arrest for simple assault/assault – family violence, Burdett noted.

Burdett said Haygood was transported to the Fayette County Jail but was not accepted into the facility for medical reasons. Fayette County paramedics responded to evaluate.

Haygood was transported to the hospital for evaluation and was told to turn herself into the Fayette County Jail once she is released from medical treatment and feeling better, Burdett said.

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How Andrew Yang Went from Front-Runner to Fourth Place - The New York Times

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For months, Andrew Yang seemed like he was exactly what New York City was looking for in a mayor.

He was relentlessly positive at a time when the city, still locked down during the pandemic, was somber. While other candidates were stuck in a loop of online mayoral forums, he seized attention by holding in-person events, capitalizing on his star power as a 2020 presidential candidate.

He leapt to the top of polls, drawing the affection of wealthy donors and envy from the race’s more established candidates. But as the race’s sudden front-runner, Mr. Yang began to draw more scrutiny from the news media and his rivals, and bit by bit, he lost ground.

Eric Adams was the first to pass him, and others would follow. By primary night, Mr. Yang was the first candidate to concede, far back in fourth place.

His collapse was a result of an accumulation of factors: self-inflicted wounds, a perception that he was out of his depth, and the city’s changing environment.

The pall that had fallen over New York had started to lift: Mr. Yang had campaigned on reopening the city, but the city had reopened without him. And now New Yorkers seemed far more worried about crime, an ideal scenario for Mr. Adams, a former police captain and the current Brooklyn borough president.

Mr. Yang tried to change his message and tone, but the shift was too late and seemed to alienate some of his core followers.

In the early stages of the mayoral campaign, Mr. Yang held far more in-person events than his rivals.
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In interviews with campaign staffers and surrogates, supporters and opponents, the diagnoses of Mr. Yang’s electoral maladies span the spectrum: He fumbled once it became clear that celebrity alone could not carry the day; he did not try hard enough to reach Black and Latino voters. His campaign was too media-driven, yet he never fully relinquished his Twitter account to more responsible hands. He failed to master the city’s intricacies, and did not turn on-the-ground energy into votes.

“When you’re out in the streets and in the communities, and people are literally shouting at him, ‘I’m going to vote for you,’ what’s the step two?” asked Grace Meng, a congresswoman from Queens who endorsed Mr. Yang. “Step-one level of excitement isn’t enough.”

In the initial stages of his campaign, it seemed like Mr. Yang was everywhere. While the rest of the field held virtual forums and fund-raisers, he was on the streets, touring Flushing, Queens, and Brownsville in Brooklyn, and visiting Hwa Yuan, a 54-year-old Chinatown restaurant struggling to survive the pandemic. He sat for interviews with Wolf Blitzer and “The View,” and won big-name endorsements from Representative Ritchie Torres of the Bronx, and Martin Luther King III.

Mr. Yang, who declined to be interviewed for this article, vowed to deliver $2,000 a year in guaranteed cash to the city’s 500,000 poorest New Yorkers. It was far from the universal basic income plan that drove his presidential campaign, and he never clearly explained how he would pay for it, but it still forced some of his rivals to respond with cash relief plans of their own.

James Estrin/The New York Times

He had to quarantine when a campaign staffer got Covid, and then isolate again when he got it himself. He suffered through a kidney stone. But little seemed like it could stop him, not even a series of gaffes.

He suggested that New York should put a casino on Governors Island, a green respite in the harbor where casinos are illegal. He released a video of a local “bodega” that seemed to suggest to social media critics that he did not know what a bodega was. He incited the left when he suggested he would crack down on street vendors — many of them undocumented workers with few other options at their disposal.

Mr. Yang, 46, also withstood ridicule after telling The New York Times how he spent much of the pandemic in his second home upstate. He noted the challenges of fulfilling his obligations as a CNN commentator from his apartment in Manhattan, explaining, “Can you imagine trying to have two kids on virtual school in a two-bedroom apartment, and then trying to do work yourself?” Many New Yorkers had no trouble imagining that at all.

“I think we took a lot of cannons for a long time, some of it justifiable,” said Chris Coffey, one of Mr. Yang’s two campaign managers, who was speaking by phone from Governors Island, where the Yang campaign was having a postelection picnic whose location was intentionally ironic (and where there were in fact cannons). “It’s hard to know what causes the ship to eventually take on water. I still think most of it is the race just changed.”

Sara Naomi Lewkowicz for The New York Times

Two weeks in particular stood out to campaign supporters as the turning point in Mr. Yang’s fortunes. On May 10, Mr. Yang sent out a tweet that was drafted by a Jewish adviser, and vetted by Mr. Coffey. At the time, the Israeli army and Hamas were exchanging fire, a dramatic ratcheting up of tensions that killed civilians on both sides, but particularly Palestinians.

“I’m standing with the people of Israel who are coming under bombardment attacks, and condemn the Hamas terrorists,” Mr. Yang said. “The people of NYC will always stand with our brothers and sisters in Israel who face down terrorism and persevere.”

Nothing about the tweet was out of step with how New York politicians typically talk about Israel. The city is home to the largest Jewish population outside of Israel, and Mr. Adams had made a similar statement. But Mr. Yang has nearly two million Twitter followers, and his tweet drew attention from all sides.

Mr. Yang received unwanted praise from Senator Ted Cruz of Texas and Stephen Miller, the Trump adviser, and unwanted condemnation from Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, who said that Mr. Yang’s remarks, followed by his plan to attend a Muslim event in Queens, were “utterly shameful.”

The episode led the campaign to tighten its process for reviewing urgent policy tweets, Mr. Coffey said, requiring that all of them get approval from both him and Sasha Neha Ahuja, Mr. Yang’s other campaign manager.

On May 19, Mr. Yang demonstrated ignorance about the debt load of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, whose subway and bus system he had proposed to take over from the state. The next day, he failed to understand a question about a controversial law that protected police disciplinary records; hours earlier, he had proposed creating homeless shelters for victims of domestic violence, even though New York City has operated such shelters for years.

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In retrospect, rival campaign aides said that Mr. Yang erred from the beginning by not expressing more humility and a hunger to learn the New York City political ropes from those who know them.

Peter Brown, the chief strategist for Kathryn Garcia’s campaign, said he disagreed with the Yang campaign’s decision to release internal polling that at times conjured a sense of the near-inevitability of victory. Instead, Mr. Brown suggested that it would have been wiser to release a memo minimizing expectations, portraying Mr. Yang as an overachieving underdog who was going to have to work hard.

Micah Lasher, the campaign manager for the city comptroller, Scott M. Stringer, made a similar point, and harkened back to Hillary Clinton’s run for the Senate.

“Hillary Clinton came in 2000 and demonstrated a surprising humility and interest in learning, and there was a version of that that Yang could have done,” Mr. Lasher said. “Instead, they did the opposite: ‘We’re here, we are big, we are going to win.’ That was the beginning and end of their game plan.”

By the end of the campaign, Mr. Yang’s camp had shifted yet again — the preternaturally upbeat Mr. Yang turned negative.

Andrew Seng for The New York Times

After he spent months publicly asking Ms. Garcia to serve as his deputy in City Hall, her poll numbers rose and he started attacking her record as sanitation commissioner. He routinely suggested Mr. Adams lacked a moral compass. And he futilely tried to outflank Mr. Adams on crime.

“Yes, mentally ill people have rights, but you know who else have rights? We do: the people and families of the city,” Mr. Yang said at the final debate. “We have the right to walk the street and not fear for our safety because a mentally ill person is going to lash out at us.”

Mr. Yang was speaking from some personal experience. As an Asian American man, he was a member of a community that had been victim to a spike in hate crimes, some of them committed by New Yorkers with histories of mental illness.

Polls had found that economic recovery and moving beyond Covid were no longer top of mind for voters, and Mr. Yang was diverging from his original message.

“Our core issues faded not just from first to second, but to third,” said Eric Soufer, a senior adviser to the Yang campaign. “You can’t keep running a campaign based on the same thing, when the fundamentals change like that.”

But some campaign staff members acknowledged that they became disillusioned by some of Mr. Yang’s shift in positions, and how they did not comport with the man who promised to be the anti-poverty mayor, who vowed to institute guaranteed income for poor New Yorkers and help establish a public bank.

Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times

“At the end, there wasn’t a clear, cogent argument of what he stood for that resonated,” said Ron Kim, a Queens assemblyman who endorsed Mr. Yang. “If I could go back, I would have encouraged him to stick with what he was known for, which was being an innovator, a person who can deliver out-of-the-box thinking on solutions for economic growth and jobs.”

In the race’s last stages, Mr. Yang threw his support to Ms. Garcia, encouraging his supporters to rank her second. Though they campaigned together, she did not ask the same of her supporters; she said she had hoped to piggyback on Mr. Yang’s popularity in certain sectors of the city.

Mr. Yang did perform well with heavily Asian communities in Queens like Elmhurst and Flushing, as well as in heavily Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods in Brooklyn, like Borough Park. He did not do nearly as well in Manhattan, his home borough, where he garnered 10 percent of the in-person vote; Ms. Garcia captured the most votes in that borough.

“There were some tensions within the team where people would say, ‘Well, you can’t out-cop the cop,’” Mr. Yang said in an episode of his podcast that aired Monday.

“For me,” he added, “both common sense and the numbers indicated that crime was going to be the number one issue.”

And despite being the self-described ideas candidate, Mr. Yang did not have enough of them to entice voters.

“As the person who was getting most of the attention, the race became a referendum on him,” said Stu Loeser, who advised the campaign of Ray McGuire, the former Citigroup executive. “And he proved himself to be a callow, unsubstantial, often dimwitted person.”

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Shogun, a front end e-commerce page builder, nabs $67.5M as retailers look for alternatives to marketplaces - TechCrunch

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E-commerce marketplaces continue to play a major role in how consumers buy goods online and how retailers show off and sell goods to those consumers, accounting globally for 47% of all e-commerce sales. But today, one of the startups that has built technology to help retailers build and run more direct relationships — by way of zippy websites of their own — is announcing a big round of growth funding, a sign that the marketplace model is not for everyone, and that those catering to those retailers are finding traction.

Shogun — a platform to help e-commerce businesses of all sizes built on platforms like Shopify, Magento and BigCommerce easily design and run their own responsive storefronts — has raised $67.5 million. This Series C values Shogun at $575 million, a “nice markup” on its previous valuation, said Finbarr Taylor, the company’s co-founder and CEO, in an interview.

He added that the capital will be used both to continue building out its two main products — Page Builder, a drag-and-drop page builder for Shopify merchants; and Shogun Frontend, an end-to-end headless commerce solution — as well as business development, and to build out new tech, specifically in areas like first-party data and personalization.

“We want to help companies build a destination where they can control the experience,” he said, comparing it to the physical world and the difference between Nike shoes sold at the brand’s own store versus at a big retailer like Walmart. “In a Nike store you can design an experience. In Walmart you cannot.”

Led by Insight Partners — a new investor in the startup — it also included Initialized Capital, Accel and VMG Partners. Accel led Shogun’s previous round — a $35 million Series B — announced less than a year ago, in October 2020. The startup has now raised $114.5 million.

The hike in valuation, and the rapid succession of its fundraises, are two signs of how Shogun has been doing in the last eight months — a time when e-commerce has continued to perform strongly in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. Another is the company’s actual growth based on the idea of making front-end tools that used to be cost-prohibitive into something affordable for even the smallest merchant.

One of the selling points for Shogun up to now has been that pages and sites built on its platform run fast: a very key detail in the world of e-commerce where shopping cart abandonment is rife and often hinges on how long people have to wait for something to load.

Page Builder — the mass-market, drag-and-drop site builder for those creating sites on top of Shopify — is now used by around 20,000 business, Taylor said, ranging from small startups through to Fortune 500 companies, with customers including brands like K-Swiss, Leesa, Rumpl, BeardBrand, MVMT and Fila. He said that merchants collectively are seeing GMV (gross merchandise value, or total amount sold) in the “billions of dollars” through their sites.

(For a point of reference, Shogun told me it had 15,000 customers back in October; growing 5,000 in the last eight months is the same amount of growth as last year.)

Shogun’s newer product, Frontend, designed for mid-market to enterprise customers and positioned as a “headless” solution aimed more at web designers and others building more customized experiences, now has hundreds of customers and grew . “Apple’s site is beautiful, but it cost millions to make,” Taylor said. “We want anyone to be able to build those exceptional e-commerce experiences.” Frontend has grown 10x in the last year, Taylor said.

GMV across all of Shogun’s business grew by 255% in the last two years.

The rise of services like Shogun’s underscores a swing we have seen among e-commerce companies that are looking for a more autonomy and control in how they engage with customers. Sites like Amazon have long been seen as a way to tap into a large population of shoppers, as well as solid fulfillment and shipping infrastructure to store, package, distribute and deliver products.

There has even been a sharp rise in “roll-up” plays like Thrasio to help consolidate merchants on these platforms to leverage even better economies of scale on details like marketing, customer analytics and manufacturing, which marketplaces like Amazon do not (yet?) handle.

But none of that still replaces the ability to set your own destiny.

Now, the rise of services like Shopify, BigCommerce and Spryker (also backed by Insight Partners) to help manage the backend; Stripe, PayPal and others to manage payments; and others like ShipBob to manage the logistics, have made it increasingly less difficult to build and run your own online experience. That takes on a stronger priority as your business grows, but even for smaller merchants, the idea of controlling your own customer experience is a compelling one.

Services like Shogun (and others like fit into that latter trend, such as Squarespace or Wix but also others like Duda), which give merchants the tools to build their own e-commerce experiences as they would like them to look, are the front ends for that strategy. Opting to take the “headless” commerce approach, apparently, is an increasing trend.

And that individualism is also where Shogun plans to double down and build more tools for its users, Taylor said.

“It’s all about direct relationships with customers,” he said, pointing out that newer changes in privacy regulation and cookies going away mean retailers can no longer rely on third-party platforms as they used to. “It’s about first party relationships. The future is way more personalized shopping online.”

That vision is also what interested investors.

“Our investment in Shogun underscores the market’s desire to see headless commerce become merchant-focused,” said Matt Gatto, managing director at Insight Ventures, in a statement. “More brands want to be able to build headless progressive web apps in a low-code environment. Those on the forefront of e-commerce want to enable web teams to build truly unique, memorable shopping experiences. Shogun is well positioned to make flexible frontends accessible to brands in a whole new way, and we’re excited to be a partner in this journey.”

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Manistee Middle High School announces second semester honor roll - Manistee News Advocate

MANISTEE — Manistee Middle High School announced the names of the students who were named to the second semester honor roll.

An asterisk indicates all As.

Sixth-grade students to make the honor roll were Abigail Belt*, Haley Cabot*, Gregory Carlson*, Oliver Cudney, Daniel Edgington, Caleb Eilers, Morgan Erway*, Ean Guenthardt, Madison Jewett, Avalyn Johnson, Campbell Kieffer*, Abigail Kolk*, Paelynne Kolk, April Konen*, Mackenna McLeod, Makena Miller*, Emma Monroe*, Kayleigh Moore*, James Murray, Dayvion Neal, Matthew Nickleson*, William Noteware, Andrew O’Donnell*, Harlie Onstott, Wyatt Protasiewicz*, Zoey Riley, Taylor Schafer*, Nikki Shedd*, Callie Shively*, Lauryn Smith*, Bella Sorenson, Aurora Szokola*, Sophia Szpliet*, Noah Vasquez, Lilith Vela, Katelyn Verdi and Audrey Wagner.

Seventh-grade students to earn honor roll status included Marlee Alexander*, Brandon Banicki*, Brandon Brindle, Macaela Bruce*, Nolan Dalke*, Madeline Dawson, Alayna Edmondson*, Jorren Edmondson*, Kylee Elgie, Avamae Fett*, Lindsey Gardner, Sophie Govea, Nevaeh Grandstaff, Owen Heintzelman*, Magdalena Herberger*, James Jados, Miles Joseph, Evelyn Koller, Gracie Kramer, Jacob Lee, Bradley Mead, Aaron Milliman, Brianna Nickleson, Owen Polcyn, Gracie Pruyne*, Jaylyn Randall, Anuksunamoon Saffron, Olivia Salmon*, Maxwell Scharp*, Chase Schmidt, Gabrielle Senters*, Keegan Shannon, Joseph Sian, Landin Sowa, Jasmine Stronach, Keira Tompkins*, Danielle Vasquez, Valerie Wagner, Madalyn Wayward*, Kaden Worch, Braylen Zimmerman.

Eighth-graders on the honor roll were Chase Adams*, Kane Black, Landon Blank*, Cadence Brown, Avery Cook, Amel Ghennewa, Juan Gonzales*, Trevor Haag*, Oliver Holtgren, Sarah Huber*, Hanna Konen*, Kaylee Loper, Sylis Patterson*, Macy Peterson, Aubrey Rischel, Mason Robinson*, Brooke Rozga*, Isabella Sagala*, Kathryn Somsel*, Reese Superczynski-Shively, Addison Vansickle and Gabriel Weber.

Freshmen named to the honor roll included Duncan Alexander, Annika Arendt*, Joey Banicki, Peyton Bond, Mollie Brown, Colin Edmondson, Jaret Edmondson*, Jayna Edmondson, Laura Eix, Tristan Gras*, Austen Halcome, Evan Holden, Nicholas Hornkohl, Heyden Howes*, Hewitt Howes, Brooke Jankwietz, Nicklaus Judkins, Alec Lampen, Taysia Lucas*, Elisabeth McCarthy*, Josselyn McGowan, Andrew Mendians, Kennedy Miles, Allan Mueller, John O’Donnell*, Cecilia Postma*, Gavin Rhodea*, Jacob Scharp*, Luke Senters*, Luke Smith*, Zoey Smith*, William Somsel*, Braydon Sorenson*, Kennedy Stoudt, Gannon Thomas, Avery Vaas*, Kendal Waligorski, Vincent Wang*, Nora Winter* and Gavin Yeager*.

Sophomores on the honor roll were Trevor Adamczak*, William Babcock, Mariah Bialik, Maya Bradley*, Gabriel Calkins, Logan Edmondson, Carson Eskridge, Matthew Gardner, Anna Herberger*, Jeffrey Huber*, Ashtyn Janis*, Allison Kelley*, Andrew McGaffigan*, Lauren Mezeske, Lola Piper, Tyler Protasiewicz, Abigail Robinson*, Melusine Schiltz, Benjamin Schlaff*, Lillian Schmutzler, Brandon Sullivan, Conner Sutter, Connolly Thuemmel, Matthew Tuka*, Maygan Vasquez*, Kyle Wojcik, Jarod Wright*, Mitchell Ziehm and Lacey Zimmerman.

Juniors to earn honor roll status were Gabriel Bednarczyk, Lauren Bell*, Brooklyn Berg, Raegan Codden, Sara Danison*, Kasey Eckhardt*, Nathan Eix*, Nayleigh Gauthier, Arian Gilbert, Courtney Haag*, Kayla Hughes, Alyssa Jackoviak*, Cole Jacobs, Isabell Kamaloski, Amanda Kelley*, Mackenzie King, Luke Kooy*, Robert Laurain, Trevor Mikula*, Gerald Peterson, Kyle Pierce*, Solana Postma*, Aiden Prince*, Alexander Ridolfi, Calli Ronning, Evan Scarlata, Allie Thomas*, Kylar Thomas*, Seth Thompson*, Benjamin Viol, Shelby White, Addy Witkowski* and Kenton Zatarga*.

Seniors named to the honor roll were Gracey Anderson, Griffen Antal, Matthew Blevins*, James Bruce*, Flaminia Ciotti*, Hope Erlandson*, Keelan Eskridge, Francesco Flumini*, Takwa Ghennewa, Harrison Harland, Luke Herberger, Jack Holtgren, Olivia Holtgren, Sine Jakobsen*, Kari Jans, Anderson Johns, Dylan Johnson, Teagan Johnson*, David Klein*, Casey LaPoint, David LaPoint, Zachary Lee, Sydney Linke, Emily McGaffigan, Taylor Murray, Brynn O’Donnell, Denise Omeonga, Haylee Pepera, Cheyenne Renner, Lily Sagala, Drew Schlaff, Grant Schlaff, Eric Smith, Olivia Smith, Emily Steinberg, Reanna Sutter, Marco Venturato*, Alexandria Washburn, Nicholas Weaver and Hannah Winter.

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West Virginia middle schools receiving music education grants - West Virginia MetroNews

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Eight West Virginia middle schools will be receiving grants from a nationwide music education effort to support local music programs.

The Save the Music Foundation is providing the schools with grants worth an average of $40,000, which can be used for musical instruments, equipment and program management:

— Kasson Elementary/Middle School in Barbour County.
— Huntington East Middle School in Cabell County.
— Meadow Bridge PK-6 in Fayette County.
— Hannan Junior/Senior High School in Mason County.
— Pike View Middle School in Mercer County.
— Lenore PK-8 in Mingo County.
— Buffalo Middle School in Wayne County.
— Herndon Consolidated Elementary/Middle School in Wyoming County.

“We should be so proud with what we’re doing in West Virginia, especially what we’re doing with the arts and music,” Gov. Jim Justice said Tuesday. “We should be so proud. Today is just another day of amazing accomplishment.”

The Save the Music Foundation has provided matching grants to West Virginia band programs since 2010, and the partnership has resulted in $4.8 million going to 120 schools in all 55 counties.

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Creating Middle-Class Jobs Can Pave the Way to a More Prosperous Indonesia, Says World Bank - World Bank Group

 

JAKARTA, June 30, 2021 — , according to a new World Bank report, ‘Pathways to Middle-Class Jobs in Indonesia,’ launched today. According to the report, middle-class jobs are high-quality jobs that allow an average Indonesian family to afford a middle-class life.     

From 2009 to 2019, Indonesia created an average of 2.4 million new jobs each year. In 2019, the unemployment rate reached its lowest level in two decades, falling to 5.2 percent. Job creation at this scale has contributed to the country’s economic growth and lifted many Indonesians out of poverty while reducing their vulnerability. While 49 percent of the population was classified as poor or vulnerable to falling into poverty in 1990, by 2018 this had dropped to 30 percent. However,

“Creating better-quality jobs with higher productivity and better pay is among the top priorities of the government’s policy agenda as it is a way for the nation to step up the ladder of prosperity. In order to achieve a just and prosperous Indonesia in 2045, the Government had issued Law 11/2020 on Job Creation as structural reforms to create a more robust and sustainable economic structure to accelerate investment and job creation. It has now become even more important to assist the country and its people to not only recover from the economic fallout due to the pandemic but also build forward better,” said Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs, Airlangga Hartarto.

The importance of creating middle-class jobs is particularly crucial given that the tailwind of favorable demography will wane over the coming decade as the share of the population not of working age relative to the economically active population will start to increase. 

.  By 2019, there were 129 million Indonesians who were out of poverty and vulnerability but needed the economic security to join the middle-class.  This is equivalent to almost half of Indonesian population aspiring to join the middle-class, a number that has been increasing in the last two decades. From around 85 million of Indonesia’s income earners, only 15.4 percent earn a middle-class income. Further, only seven percent out of the 49 million wage employees earn a middle-class income, enjoy full social benefits, and hold an indefinite-term employment contract.

“For Indonesia to achieve its aspiration to become a high-income country, there is a need to create an enabling environment in which middle-class jobs can grow and thrive. The government recognizes this and is taking steps to that end,” said Satu Kahkonen, World Bank Country Director for Indonesia and Timor-Leste.

The report recommends three policy reforms for Indonesia to create middle-class jobs. The first recommendation is to accelerate across-the-board productivity growth through effective implementation of policies that unlock new firm entry and growth to create competition and innovation.       

Second, direct investment promotion strategies at sectors that are likely to create middle-class jobs, such as the manufacturing sector. Complementary support, including labor market information system and unemployment insurance to finance job search and relocation, could further help workers transition towards middle-class jobs.

The third recommendation is to facilitate learning and training across the workforce and provide tailored support to special groups, in particular women and youth. Legislative changes would also be needed to allow work-life balance and support the increased participation and success of women in the labor market.

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Home/Front: Marla Ruzicka Invents A Role For Herself At War : Rough Translation - NPR

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In this April 7, 2002 photo, Marla Ruzicka leads a demonstration calling for U.S. compensation to victims of the recent military campaign in Afghanistan, outside of the U.S. Embassy in Kabul. SUZANNE PLUNKETT/ASSOCIATED PRESS

SUZANNE PLUNKETT/ASSOCIATED PRESS

What do we owe innocent civilians who are killed or injured in war? This is one of the thorniest ethical questions that any military faces, but it was not abstract for anti-war activist Marla Ruzicka.

Marla arrived in Afghanistan soon after 9/11 with the goal of stopping the war by telling the stories of civilian victims. At first, few of the soldiers, diplomats, journalists or aid workers knew what to make of her. Sure, Marla threw great parties, but she was totally out of her depth. Or so it seemed.


Listen to Rough Translation wherever you get your podcasts, including NPR One, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Pocket Casts, Spotify, and RSS.

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U.S. Navy veteran Terry Phillips has tree made into eagle, bear art - Massillon Independent

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Company upgrades to Front.com, and this is how it celebrated - Domain Name Wire

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Here’s a great way to show off a killer domain upgrade.

A picture of a cake that says frontapp.com

Let’s cut out the ‘app’.

Front, a customer communications platform, just upgraded its domain name with the acquisition of Front.com. It’s a big improvement over its original domain FrontApp.com. To celebrate, the company took a slice out of a cake:

That’s a clever way to celebrate.

FIS, previously known as Fidelity National Information Services, sold the domain name. It acquired the domain when it bought Sungard in 2015. Sungard had an asset trading solution called Front Arena. The domain hasn’t been used in recent years.

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In SAP, music concerts in the front yard – Park Bugle - Park Bugle

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By Sarah CR Clark

As it turns out, Kim and Paul Durkee’s front yard makes for a great outdoor concert venue.

Beneath the sparkly lights strung between white oaks, music groups like GB Leighton, Swingin’ on a Star and Jeff Ray and the Stakes have recently performed for a steady crowd of 130 neighbors (give or take 20) gathered on Grantham Street.

“There is nothing better than live music, especially during Covid,” Kim Durkee said. “I know it helped me survive it and so many others have said the same. It has been a breath of fresh air for so many and it is such a family affair; kids running around, people dancing and enjoying themselves.”

The Durkees, who are great lovers of live music, have hosted 10 Front Lawn Concerts with four this past fall and six in the spring of this year. (They also host a music festival at their cabin each summer; this year’s will include seven bands over two days.)

The local musicians set up their own sound systems and get tips from spectators that average about $1,000 a concert.

“Most say they have never gotten paid so much money,” Kim Durkee said. “We have a very generous neighborhood.”

Neighbor Amy Cram Helwich and her family have attended all 10 Front Lawn Concerts. Helwich said she especially appreciates the community connection the concerts offered during the pandemic-time of physical distancing.

Helwich said the audiences included “a small pack of girls, safely running up and down the blocked street, occasionally begging for cookies that Kim and other neighbors baked, enjoying the freedom of being kids. As parents, we were able to breathe for a moment, to release the tension of balancing school and work at home and enjoy visiting with friends while listening to the music.”

Another neighbor told the Durkees the Front Lawn Concerts have been “magical evenings.”

Kim agreed, noting, “We love them. And the bands love them. For so many of them it’s the first time they’ve played together for a year and a half. And the neighbors love them. It’s a win, win, win.”

While there are no more Front Lawn Concerts scheduled for the immediate future, bands are already hoping to be booked on Grantham again.

“We said this was our last one, but we’ll probably do some more in the fall,” Paul Durkee hinted.

Sarah CR Clark lives in St. Anthony Park and is a regular freelance writer for the Bugle.

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8 Front Range Bars and Restaurants Offering an Element of Escapism - 5280 | The Denver Magazine

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Eat and Drink

From a dive bar with a boat inside to tiki-themed hangouts, here's where you can get away without leaving the Denver area.

 •  

Wow, 2020 felt like quite the decade—so we don’t blame you if you need a getaway. Luckily there are plenty of bars and restaurants in the Denver area to aid your escape until your post-vaccination vacation: A dive bar with a boat in it, an unsuspecting warehouse that leads to a peaceful Japanese garden, and bars with rum drinks strong enough to whisk you away to a tropical island vacation. 

Here are eight of our favorite transportive spots located in our own backyard.

Set among a grove of trees, the outdoor space at Forest Room 5 goes all in (and then some) on nature. A babbling brook bisects this woodsy oasis, which is outfitted with national recreation signs, tree trunks serving as seats, fire pits, wildlife murals, and a rustic-looking general store stocked with vintage games, books, and knick knacks. “It’s camping in the forest, but in the middle of the city,” our server tells us, but the bar also has a historic mining town vibe. The only bear sightings are the gummy toppings on the campy cocktails. And bills come tucked in a book, often a field guide. My favorite wild animal sighting, admittedly,was Doug, a fluffy six-month Corgi at the next picnic table over. 2532 15th St.

The best seat in the house is the 21-foot ski boat anchored in the center of the bar. The Dive Inn is a dive bar, yes, but with a scuba diving theme you’ll pick up on throughout and that’s influenced by owner Jason Tietjen’s own scuba background. Cornhole can be found on the South Broadway-facing patio, and in between matches try your hand at the claw machine inside stocked with White Claws. 1380 S. Broadway

Oktoberfest was a bust in 2020. To make up for it, head to Rhein Haus where you can order a homemade pretzel the size of your face and wash it down with one of the many lagers on tap. Before sinking your teeth into a brat, enjoy an intermission playing bocce ball at the courts located in this luxe-yet-warm, Bavarian-themed space. The design is a key part of the overall experience, says co-owner Rich Fox, with statement pieces thoughtfully sourced from European markets: chandeliers commanding attention upstairs from Austria; the downstairs fireplace and antler sconces from Germany; and the refurbished upstairs fireplace from France. You’ll forget you’re in the U.S.; and you’ll definitely not recognize this madeover space as a former Old Chicago. 1415 Market St. 

If you’re a Midwesterner (especially of the Wisconsin variety), you know Friday nights are for fish fries and a well-made Old Fashioned. James Wieimann, co-owner of Wally’s Wisconsin Tavern, wanted to pay homage to the classic Wisconsin lake tavern and his dad, Wally Weimann. The influence starts with cheese curds and a classic Korbel brandy Old Fashioned that remind me of being in a Door County, Wisconsin, supper club. Plenty Wisconsin beers are on the menu, too, from High Life to Horny Goat Brewing. There’s also a wooden map of the United States, where visitors are encouraged to hammer a nail into their hometown. Of note: Wally’s and Rhein Haus are adjoining outposts. Count it as a two-for-one escapism experience. 1417 Market St.  

The tropical concoctions at Adrift taste like the islands the Beach Boys sing about. If it’s been a while since you’ve vacationed to this “beach on Broadway,” you’ll find some new menu additions like the Dirty Dan, a piña colada with mezcal plot twist. Executive chef Tyler Critchfield has created shareable boards inspired by different parts of the world. Take for instance the Caribbean Jerk Chicken Board, featuring grilled jerk chicken thighs, plantain hash, Peri Peri slaw, coconut cardamom, pineapple salsa and Jasmine rice. 218 S. Broadway

Have you ever sipped sake while indulging in a hearty bowl of slow-simmered ramen in the serene gardens off of Colfax? Domo is a Denver hideaway serving countryside Japanese dishes, including sushi, udon and soba noodles. You won’t find accurtments on the table here because the chef prepares dishes with special spices and sauces that shouldn’t be masked with soy sauce. Domo doesn’t take reservations, and it’s worth the wait to get a spot in the lush, traditional Japanese garden dotted with ponds and Buddha statues. 1365 Osage St.

In a word, the vibe at Ghost Donkey is celebratory. The deep mezcal list (there’s 65 of them, plus 25 some tequilas) transport youspecifically your tastebudsto the land of agave. While the Oaxaca fabrics do solidify the excursion, the canopy of twinkling lights feels on brand with Vegas, where there’s a Ghost Donkey hidden in the hip Cosmopolitan hotel on the strip. But you may also pick up on the bar’s New York City origins, where it gained a cult following, and the infinity mirrors and the life-size, taxidermy donkey draped in flowers make the place feel fantastical. So really Ghost Donkey feels like it’s anywhere and everywhere—but for the sake of pointing you in the right direction, the Denver outpost is across from Union Station near the light rail tracks. 1750 Wewatta Street, Suite 140

When it comes to drinkware, ceramic conch shells will always trump Collins glasses. And that’s exactly what you get when you order the “Rock Out with Your Conch Out” tequila cocktail from Jungle. The island-themed bar with some not-so-subtly sexy cocktail names has a beautifully illustrated menu. Jungle is just off Pearl Street; yet feels a world away (even in Boulder, which already is a fantasyland). We listened to live jazz, snacked on plantain fritters, and imbibed with frozen cocktails on a sweltering night. With floral wallpaper, neon lights illuminating the bar, lush plants in every nook, Moroccan tiles, and rattan decor, Jungle could easily win Most Beautiful Bar in Boulder. 2018 10th St., Boulder

For a Mad Hatter-inspired meal or nightcap, descend down the steps at this unique Colorado Springs restaurant and bar and stumble into the Rabbit Hole. Inspired by the pages of Alice in Wonderland, this storybook spot has elaborate murals that are a nod to the Lewis Carroll classic. The theme continues through the menu, with salads listed as “rabbit food” and a Mad Hatter Manhattan and Queen of Hearts Bloody Mary. Reservations are highly encouraged. 101 N. Tejon St., Colorado Springs

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