Colorado Politics

The Pueblo Chieftain: Trail discussion shouldn’t be bagged

Just call Pueblo City Manager Sam Azad “Dr. No.”

At a work session last week, Councilman Ray Aguilera offered a creative suggestion for how the city could attack the problem of trashy alleys. Aguilera pitched the idea of picking two or three alleys each week, more or less at random, then having code enforcement workers and people sentenced to community service go out and tidy them up.

Azad’s response was to dismiss the idea out of hand. “The current ordinance puts the burden of cleaning alleys to the property owners, not all of the taxpayers of this community,” he said.

Read more at The Pueblo Chieftain.

Tags

PREV

PREVIOUS

The Colorado Springs Gazette: Smart new Colorado bill would create more nurses

The Pikes Peak region needs at least 1,345 more nurses, as nursing tops the area’s labor-shortage chart. House Bill 1086 would quickly address the problem. Though seldom explained by journalists and politicians, the crisis of soaring costs and inadequate access to health care relates to a growing shortage of medical providers and increasing demand on […]

NEXT

NEXT UP

Republican Justin Everett tops straw poll at Colorado Christian University state treasurer forum

Republican state Rep. Justin Everett handily won a straw poll conducted Monday night after a bipartisan forum for state treasurer candidates at Colorado Christian University in Lakewood. The three-term lawmaker from Littleton, nicknamed “Justin Neverett” and “Dr. No” for his penchant to vote against legislation, led the 10 candidates on the ballot with 34.9 percent […]


Welcome Back.

Streak: 9 days i

Stories you've missed since your last login:

Stories you've saved for later:

Recommended stories based on your interests:

Edit my interests