Despite claims of change and housing, Denver begins clearing encampments

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:00:56 GMT

Despite claims of change and housing, Denver begins clearing encampments DENVER (KDVR) — In July, Denver Mayor Mike Johnston declared a citywide homelessness emergency and a big goal: house a thousand people by the end of the year.The city put a spotlight on clearing out the encampment at Eighth Avenue and Logan Street near the Governor's Residence at Boettcher Mansion last week. The mayor announced dozens of people would be housed and the Salvation Army gave a tour of a new shelter. United flight catches fire on takeoff from Denver International Airport On Wednesday, FOX31 learned that other​ homeless encampments are getting cleaned up but aren't​ getting that same kind of publicity.At a town hall meeting last week, the mayor said he was not going to approach the problem like others before him. On Wednesday, the city cleared out a homeless camp on 16th and Sherman streets, and now some said it's just more of the same."This sweep was something that was not something that resulted in any kind of housing opportunity offered, hotel stay, anything like tha...

WWII photographer honored for 100 years of service to country, community

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:00:56 GMT

WWII photographer honored for 100 years of service to country, community BROOMFIELD, Colo. (KDVR) – A century of service. That’s what a Broomfield veteran has brought to his community and his country. Later this month, Bill Stremel will celebrate his 100th birthday.He’s crammed a lot into a century. Stremel served in the Army Air Corps in World War II as a photographer. He entered France 10 days after D-Day and captured some of the most brutal days of the war on film.“We took pictures of the damage that they thought they had caused,” Stremel told FOX31. Historic D-Day plane salvaged from the rubble heap After the war, he put down the camera and picked up the Bible. Following in his father’s footsteps, he spent decades as a Lutheran minister.“I’ve always wanted to help people,” Stremel said.He’s still working. Just a couple of weeks ago, he officiated the wedding of his granddaughter at Red Rocks. He’s married off generations of relatives.“I’m the pastor for the family,” Stremel joked.All that time in the clergy taught him an important life lesson.“Lear...

Policing the world: Michael Froman on limits to US power

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:00:56 GMT

Policing the world: Michael Froman on limits to US power Listen on Spotify Apple Music Google Play EN_Google_Podcasts_Badge Created with Sketch. Acast The crisis in the U.S. House of Representatives is resonating far beyond Washington, not least in Ukraine, where the durability of America’s commitment to the war effort has been thrown into doubt after future funding was omitted from its recent stopgap funding deal.Can Ukraine and its allies in Europe go it alone without agreement on...

Exorcising King Leopold’s ghost: Brussels takes on its colonial monuments

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:00:56 GMT

Exorcising King Leopold’s ghost: Brussels takes on its colonial monuments This article is part of POLITICO’s Global Policy Lab: Living Cities, a collaborative journalism project exploring the future of cities. Sign up here.BRUSSELS — The Black Lives Matter movement forced Brussels to confront Belgium’s brutal colonial past. But the city’s architecture keeps that fraught legacy squarely in the present. With eight months until the next election, the Brussels regional government is wrestling with a series of proposals designed to put some of the city’s most controversial monuments in historical context — or eliminate them altogether. While the ideas being floated are relatively modest, they have already elicited pushback from those who accuse the city of planning to erase history.Brussels is run through with monuments to Leopold II, the Belgian king who ran the Congo as his personal fiefdom in the late 19th and early 20th century, and to the country’s later period as a colonial power. A walk around the city will reveal dozens of monuments to ...

Europe’s monumental challenge: How do you solve a problem like Hitler?

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:00:56 GMT

Europe’s monumental challenge: How do you solve a problem like Hitler? Europe’s monumental challenge: How do you solve a problem like Hitler?Berlin worked to eliminate the monuments of Hitler’s Third Reich. Rome remains full of reminders of Il Duce.Aitor Hernández-MoralesAleksandra StanglewiczThis article is part of POLITICO’s Global Policy Lab: Living Cities, a collaborative journalism project exploring the future of cities. Sign up here.BERLIN — Within the warehouse of a 450-year-old citadel in a suburb of Berlin, an oversized bust sits in the dark, waiting to be restored.The giant marble head has seen better days — its skin is scuffed, its ears are chipped and its nose is missing — but even in this run-down state, its severe hairstyle and Charlie Chaplin mustache ensure it’s instantly recognizable. It’s a monumental portrait of Adolf Hitler — and it’s remarkably rare.“Unlike other dictators, Hitler didn’t want to create a traditional cult of personality around his person, at least not with statues,” sa...

On the hunt for the missing statues of Francisco Franco

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:00:56 GMT

On the hunt for the missing statues of Francisco Franco OPTICSOn the hunt for the missing statues of Francisco FrancoBanished from public spaces, the dictator’s discarded monuments lie scattered in government buildings across Spain.Photos by Julia Schulz-DornburgThis article is part of POLITICO’s Global Policy Lab: Living Cities, a collaborative journalism project exploring the future of cities. Sign up here.Julia Schulz-Dornburg first became intrigued by Spain’s disappearing monuments after she oversaw an exhibition in Barcelona that included a decapitated stone statue of former Spanish dictator Francisco Franco.That it was missing its head didn’t save the statue from becoming a target of instant ire: Dozens of people pelted it with eggs and tomatoes, spray-painted it with leftist symbols and draped it with Catalan separatist flags. The guards on hand couldn’t prevent the protesters from toppling the dictator within days of his reappearance.Struck by the intense reaction, Schulz-Dornburg, a German architect, started wonderin...

EU cash is being increasingly misused, auditors warn

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:00:56 GMT

EU cash is being increasingly misused, auditors warn The race to spend EU funds before they expire means there’s been a rise in countries misspending the money, the bloc’s financial watchdog said on Thursday. Investigations into €196 billion in funds paid out from the EU budget in 2022 found there were irregularities connected to 4.2 percent, according to the European Court of Auditors. That’s up from 3 percent a year earlier. Countries can claim payments under the previous budget cycle until the end of this year while money under the bloc’s post-pandemic recovery fund must be spent by 2026.“The administrations within the member states will be under much more pressure to spend the money quickly,” ECA President Tony Murphy told POLITICO. “The issue this time is that there’s so much more money around to be spent within a short period of time.” He said this “increases the risk of either errors, or suboptimal projects, or, at the worst end of it, it means fraud as well.”Auditors a...

Casstevens: Congress mulls putting heavier trucks on roads

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:00:56 GMT

Casstevens: Congress mulls putting heavier trucks on roads New products come to the market regularly, and consumers have come to expect significant testing and safeguards, especially for products that can affect public safety.This is why law enforcement nationwide is concerned with legislation under consideration in Congress that would allow bigger trucks on our roads. Some bills would dramatically increase the allowable weight of semi-trailer trucks that have already been approved by the House Transportation & Infrastructure Committee. And there continues to be talk of allowing even longer double-trailer trucks.One proposal would create a 10-year “pilot project” allowing 91,000-pound trucks — five and a half tons heavier than today’s limits. The goal: to see how many of these trucks are involved in crashes and to report the number of injuries and deaths. The usual years of data analysis and testing? Not for these 91,000-pound behemoths. The goal is to skip the typical due diligence and put them on roads immediately across America. Moto...

Kramer: Tim Wakefield a champ on and off the field

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:00:56 GMT

Kramer: Tim Wakefield a champ on and off the field In a famous “Seinfeld” episode, George Costanza bought someone a salad and fretted to make sure everyone knew of his act of charity.It is not unusual for those who confer a benefit or provide a charitable act to prefer and even seek recognition for their good deed.Then there are those who are the perpetual givers – and stay below the radar screen. Their satisfaction comes from within and as long as those in need receive needed help and support, these providers are satisfied.Tim Wakefield would never have made it as an character on “Seinfeld.” He would have bought the salad, dressing and even the croutons and given it to the hungry recipient then slipped out the side door. And then, more than likely, he would have checked the next day to see if the dressing was the right kind.Too many athletes receive hero worship regardless of whether they donate any spare time for those less fortunate. Then there are those that as a function of their celebrity, assist others...

Editorial: If you’re not a migrant in Mass., don’t expect a room

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:00:56 GMT

Editorial: If you’re not a migrant in Mass., don’t expect a room Canceling the hotel reservations of would-be Bay State visitors to make room for migrants not only upended the plans of military veterans, service academy graduates and families planning to watch the big Army-Navy game at Gillette Stadium Dec. 9, it sent a powerful message to potential tourists: you are not a priority.Given that domestic visitor spending hit $22 billion in Massachusetts last year, you’d think the state would try to avoid alienating travelers.But no, thanks to the unholy brew of Joe Biden’s border fiasco, our right to shelter status, and the state handing out drivers licenses to folks regardless of immigration status, migrants are drawn to the Bay State.And there’s no end in sight.As the Herald reported, a travel agent who handles hotel rooms for military families said at least 70 of his rooms at three hotels were “taken back” by the hotel management company because the state recently contracted to put newly arrived migrants there.If you were an out...