Saturday, December 15, 2012

Colorado Springs pilot among two dead in Texas plane crash

Font ResizeColorado NewsAssociated PressAssociated PressPosted: 12/15/2012 11:19:15 AM MSTDecember 15, 2012 6:19 PM GMTUpdated: 12/15/2012 11:19:16 AM MST

A Colorado Springs pilot and another man were killed in the crash of a small plane in Amarillo, Texas. Authorities say the plane plummeted into a field shortly after takeoff.

The crash happened Friday night during high winds in the Texas Panhandle. The Texas Department of Public Safety said the plane went down 20 miles from the Amarillo airport where pilot Kelly O'Neal had stopped to pick up 79-year-old passenger Robert O'Neal.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

Authorities said the pilot was from Colorado Springs. Robert O'Neal was from Amarillo.



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Juvenile male shot and killed in southwest Denver

Font Resizelocal newsThe Denver Postdenverpost.comPosted: 12/15/2012 11:39:03 AM MSTDecember 15, 2012 7:21 PM GMTUpdated: 12/15/2012 12:21:34 PM MST

Denver police are investigating after a juvenile male was shot and killed in southwest Denver Saturday morning.

Around 3:50 a.m., officers were called to the 5200 block of West Bates Avenue on a report of a shooting, according to a news release from the Denver Police Department.

Officers found a juvenile male with what appeared to be multiple gunshot wounds. The victim was taken to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead a short time later.

The name and age of the victim have not been released.

Investigators are seeking information about a white vehicle that was seen driving away from the area before officers arrived.

Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 720-913-7867.



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Smoked salmon recalled after Listeria detected in samples

Font ResizeColorado NewsAssociated PressAssociated PressPosted: 12/15/2012 11:00:54 AM MSTDecember 15, 2012 7:25 PM GMTUpdated: 12/15/2012 12:25:35 PM MST

SEATTLE — Ocean Beauty Seafoods has announced a precautionary recall of two cold-smoked salmon products because of possible Listeria contamination. The products were distributed in 12 states, including Colorado.

The products are the 3-ounce Nathan's Brand Cold Smoked Atlantic Salmon and the 4-ounce Lascco Cold Smoked Nova Atlantic Salmon. The products were distributed to retailers and distribution centers in Washington, Oregon, California, Arizona, Texas, Colorado, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Jersey and New York.

The Lascco salmon has a universal product code, or UPC, of 0 72840 01751 7. The Nathan's salmon has a UPC of 0 73030 80368 2. The products are vacuum-packed in a plastic pouch on a foil board. The pack code 285 is printed on the back panel.

No illnesses have been reported.

Ocean Beauty says internal testing by the company revealed the presence of Listeria in samples of the specific packages noted above.



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Noxious weed blamed in deaths of 19 wild horses in prison facility

Font ResizeLocal NewsAssociated PressAssociated PressPosted: 12/15/2012 10:49:18 AM MSTDecember 15, 2012 7:25 PM GMTUpdated: 12/15/2012 12:25:46 PM MST

CANON CITY — Federal officials say a noxious weed likely caused the deaths of 19 horses at the Canon City Wild Horse Inmate Program facility, where Colorado inmates train select mustangs.

Bureau of Land Management spokeswoman Lauren Gapinski says preliminary lab results indicate the ingestion of whorled milkweed, a highly toxic plant, is suspected to have caused the deaths. The weed was in the hay fed to the horses.

The Pueblo Chieftain reports the BLM began investigating after 11 horses died Dec. 3 and another eight died the following day. Some of the horses died on their own while others were euthanized.

Nine horses that showed illness have recovered or are recovering quickly.



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Police ID victim, suspect in Friday's hotel murder-attempted suicide

Font ResizeLocal NewsBy Jason Pohl
The Denver Postdenverpost.comPosted: 12/15/2012 12:30:03 PM MSTDecember 15, 2012 7:57 PM GMTUpdated: 12/15/2012 12:57:30 PM MST

Police have identified the victim and suspect in Friday night's apparent murder-attempted suicide in Westminster that left a female hotel employee dead and a man gravely wounded.

Police were called to Savannah Suites at 120th Avenue and Mariposa Street around 7 p.m. on a report of gunshots. When officers arrived on scene, they found front desk clerk Antida Archuleta, 20, dead, Westminster police spokeswoman Cheri Spottke said.

The alleged shooter, Seth Wilkinson, 20, was also found with a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He survived his injuries, but his condition remains unknown, according to a Saturday news release.

Both parties were from Brighton, and it is believed the victim and shooter knew each other and had some sort of prior relationship.

At the time of the shooting, parts of the hotel were cordoned off. People staying at the hotel were allowed into their rooms through alternate entrances.

Investigators continue to actively work on the case, and no additional details were immediately available.

Jason Pohl: 303-954-1729, jpohl

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Pitkin County agrees to back federal-private land swap at Mt. Sopris

Font ResizeColorado NewsAspen Daily Newsdenverpost.comPosted: 12/15/2012 02:05:21 PM MSTDecember 15, 2012 9:13 PM GMTUpdated: 12/15/2012 02:13:05 PM MST

ASPEN — Pitkin County has reached an agreement to support the long-discussed, controversial midvalley land swap proposed by the Wexner family, it was announced on Friday.

The family has agreed to conserve additional land and fund trails for the county, in exchange for the commissioners' support of a proposal to privatize more than 1,200 acres of federal land on the flanks of Mount Sopris adjacent to the Wexner family's Two Shoes Ranch property. The county had withheld support for the federal land swap, while negotiating in closed-door meetings with the Wexners' representatives over the last two years.

The federal swap proposal is currently being evaluated by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The Wexners are offering the feds the 557-acre Sutey Ranch, north of Carbondale and adjacent to the Red Hill Recreation Area, in exchange for the Sopris acreage. The BLM also would get a 112-acre parcel along Prince Creek Road allowing mountain bikers access to "the Crown" recreation area. Abigail and Leslie Wexner, owner of Limited Brands, also are offering $1.1 million to the BLM to help manage the properties.

http://www.aspendailynews.com/section/home/155972



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Medical marijuana dispensaries ask court to keep them in business

Font ResizeCops and CourtsLongmont Times-Calldenverpost.comPosted: 12/15/2012 02:52:18 PM MSTDecember 15, 2012 10:10 PM GMTUpdated: 12/15/2012 03:10:58 PM MST

Dacono's three medical marijuana dispensaries are suing to stay open.

On Friday, a lawyer for Dacono Meds, MaryJane's Medicinal and Green Medicals (formerly The Green Door) asked the Weld County District Court to block the city's ban of marijuana-related businesses. Without legal protection, all three will have to leave town after Dec. 31.

The Dacono City Council passed the ban in June by a 4-2 vote, but a petition drive by the dispensaries put the ban on the ballot. That means Dacono residents will vote in 2013 on whether the ban lives or dies. But the petition couldn't change the dispensaries' deadline, and an attempt to extend the drop-dead date until after the special election failed on a 4-3 City Council vote.

http://www.timescall.com/news/longmont-local-news/ci_22196455/dacono-dispensaries-ask-court-block-medical-marijuana-ban



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Insurance Industry Is Taking Climate Change Seriously

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Tweet Posted on Dec 15, 2012 StockMonkeys.com (CC BY 2.0)

Now that it’s paying an average of $50 billion a year in weather- and climate-related losses, the insurance industry has become a believer in global warming.

A new study of 1,148 mitigation and adaptation programs in 51 countries—activities that cost a total of $2 trillion—shows that insurance companies have become strong supporters of reducing carbon emissions and minimizing the risks posed by extreme weather.

“Climate change stands as a stress test for insurance, the world’s largest industry with U.S. $4.6 trillion in revenues, 7% of the global economy,” writes Evan Mills, a scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at UC Berkeley. Mills’ study found that property damage and business disruption claims have been doubling every decade since the 1980s.

—Posted by Alexander Reed Kelly.

Los Angeles Times:

Superstorm Sandy, which ravaged the Eastern Seaboard, is just one recent example of the kinds of increasing liability posed by severe weather events in a changing climate, Evans said.

Insurance industry representatives from the United States, Europe and Asia have been working with scientists on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change since the 1990s to better understand their exposure to risks associated with rising global temperatures, Evans said.

Members of the industry have taken a lead role in raising public awareness of global warming, supporting climate research, and mounting efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by making their own operations more energy efficient, and through their investments in managing a $25 trillion portfolio, he said.

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Red States Surrender Health Care Oversight to Federal Government

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A/V Booth * NEW! * ‘Left, Right & Center:’ School Shooting, Susan Rice Withdraws, and More Mike Huckabee Blames Connecticut Shooting on Separation of Church and State Economist Baker Echoes Paul Krugman: There Is No Fiscal Cliff NASA Announces World Won’t End Dec. 21, 2012
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Tweet Posted on Dec 15, 2012 Tobyotter (CC BY 2.0)

By failing to submit their Obamacare plans before the deadline, several Republican-dominated states handed control of their health insurance programs to the federal government by default.

Friday was the deadline for states to submit plans to operate their own insurance exchanges for residents not receiving coverage through their employers or a private company. The federal government will run all or part of the programs for as many as 32 states. It will operate them entirely for at least 24 states.

The Obama administration and Congress have until October 2013 to set up a scheme for individual enrollments, with coverage set to begin in January 2014.

—Posted by Alexander Reed Kelly.

Richard Adams at The Guardian:

As of deadline day, states fall into three categories. There are those, such as California, New York and the District of Columbia, that have agreed to run their state exchanges, and will receive federal funding. Then there are those, such as West Virginia and Illinois, that are in a halfway house of partnership with the federal government, whether by accident or design, and will run parts of their exchange.

And then there are those states that have rejected setting up exchanges – such as Texas and South Dakota – and so will instead submit to federal control, although they have a later deadline of 15 February 2015 if they want to adopt the partnership with the government option.

In truth there is a fourth category: Florida, always the outlier. The Sunshine State has simply dragged its feet – first hoping the legal challenge it spearheaded and then the 2012 presidential election would kill off the Affordable Care Act. Since the election it has had no time to refine a blueprint.

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