Podcasts about denver school board

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Best podcasts about denver school board

Latest podcast episodes about denver school board

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast
The Jimmy Sengenberger Show 11.17.23

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2023 42:14


Jimmy welcomes Sam Burns - Chief Strategist at Mill Street Research to the show to talk inflation and how Biden claims we'll all be feeling good about our financial situations, and then recaps the Denver School Board meeting yesterday where Tay Anderson claimed accomplishments in his "victory/exit speech" See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show
The Jimmy Sengenberger Show 11.18.2023 hr 2

Jimmy Sengenberger Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2023 38:20


Tay Anderson is finally off the Denver School Board. Jimmy was there at the last meeting and breaks it all down! Listeners react.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast
The Jimmy Sengenberger Show 11.18.2023 hr 2

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2023 38:20


Tay Anderson is finally off the Denver School Board. Jimmy was there at the last meeting and breaks it all down! Listeners react.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

tay anderson denver school board
Jimmy Sengenberger Show
The Jimmy Sengenberger Show 11.17.23

Jimmy Sengenberger Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2023 42:14


Jimmy welcomes Sam Burns - Chief Strategist at Mill Street Research to the show to talk inflation and how Biden claims we'll all be feeling good about our financial situations, and then recaps the Denver School Board meeting yesterday where Tay Anderson claimed accomplishments in his "victory/exit speech" See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast
The Jimmy Sengenberger Show 11.13.23

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2023 41:51


Jimmy addresses the Denver School Board's request to give themselves a raise, and Tay Anderson's request for them to cover his (additional) legal fees... and some Colorado Democrat Socialists got mad at Jimmy for mentioning them factually in an article See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show
The Jimmy Sengenberger Show 11.13.23

Jimmy Sengenberger Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2023 41:51


Jimmy addresses the Denver School Board's request to give themselves a raise, and Tay Anderson's request for them to cover his (additional) legal fees... and some Colorado Democrat Socialists got mad at Jimmy for mentioning them factually in an article See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast
Jimmy Sengenberger Show October 21, 2023 Hour 1

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2023 37:44


Another Saturday with your ears listening to the greatest bumper music known to man. Jimmy gets into the nitty gritty right from the start, no holding back. Who's more dysfunctional; the House GOP, the Denver School Board or the Colorado GOP? Talk about dumpster fires that need to be extinguished. Jim Jordan didn't get the votes because... well that's a solid question. If we want to move forward in this world, a speaker that represents all that this nation wants to be is absolutely vital. Joining us in this hour is Brian Macaulay (candidate for Littleton School Board) presents his agenda. Smaller classes equals bigger success; plain and simple. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jimmy Sengenberger Show
Jimmy Sengenberger Show October 21, 2023 Hour 1

Jimmy Sengenberger Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2023 37:44


Another Saturday with your ears listening to the greatest bumper music known to man. Jimmy gets into the nitty gritty right from the start, no holding back. Who's more dysfunctional; the House GOP, the Denver School Board or the Colorado GOP? Talk about dumpster fires that need to be extinguished. Jim Jordan didn't get the votes because... well that's a solid question. If we want to move forward in this world, a speaker that represents all that this nation wants to be is absolutely vital. Joining us in this hour is Brian Macaulay (candidate for Littleton School Board) presents his agenda. Smaller classes equals bigger success; plain and simple. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast
Jimmy Sengenberger Show October 7, 2023 Hour 2

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2023 38:06


Denver School Board member Charmaine Lindsay drops by the studio to talk to Jimmy. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show
Jimmy Sengenberger Show October 7, 2023 Hour 2

Jimmy Sengenberger Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2023 38:06


Denver School Board member Charmaine Lindsay drops by the studio to talk to Jimmy. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The George Show Podcast
Brauchler 6-13-23 6am

The George Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2023 41:57


The Denver Nuggets are NBA Champions.  George reflects on the 47 years it has taken for the team to win it all.  He talks about his superstitions for this Finals and the reaction of his youngest son.  Then he talks about what the win means for the city and examines a current Denver School Board member now running for the Colorado state legislature.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

City Cast Denver
Jor'Dell Richardson Bodycam Footage, Politicians Can Block You, and Your New Brunch Spot

City Cast Denver

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2023 32:29


It's Tuesday and we're breaking down all the local stories that matter. First, the Aurora Police Department released bodycam footage of the killing of 14-year-old Jor'Dell Richardson, but questions still remain as to what happened. Also, Denver School Board director Auon'tai Anderson announced that he won't be running for re-election; instead, he'll be running for House District 8, where Democratic representative Leslie Herod is term-limited. Speaking of politicians, a new Colorado law says your elected officials can block you from their personal accounts on social media if they want to — but legal or not, the ACLU still thinks it's a free speech issue. Plus, producer Paul Karolyi tells host Bree Davies about a new brunch spot in LoHi that he's excited about, which comes from Denver celeb chef (who beat Bobby Flay!), Carrie Baird.  We mentioned the GoFundMe for Jor'Dell Richardson's family, as well as a community gathering and memorial for Jor'Dell on the steps of the capitol.  For even more news from around the city, subscribe to our morning newsletter Hey Denver by texting “Denver” to 66866 Follow us on Twitter: @citycastdenver Or Instagram: @citycastdenver Chat with other listeners on Reddit: r/CityCastDenver Text or leave us a voicemail with your name and neighborhood, and you might hear it on the show: (720) 500-5418‬ Looking to advertise on City Cast Denver? Check out our options for podcast and newsletter ads at citycast.fm/advertise Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show
Jimmy Sengenberger Show June 3, 2023 Hour 2

Jimmy Sengenberger Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2023 38:00


Jimmy welcomes Kwame Spearman during this hour. He is an at-large candidate for Denver School Board to unseat Tay Anderson.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast
Jimmy Sengenberger Show June 3, 2023 Hour 2

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2023 38:00


Jimmy welcomes Kwame Spearman during this hour. He is an at-large candidate for Denver School Board to unseat Tay Anderson.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The George Show Podcast
Brauchler 6-1-23 6am

The George Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2023 41:50


No SRO's in Denver Public School grade 6 to 12?  George talks about the historic game 1 of the NBA Finals and then discusses why the Denver School Board is considering appointing Community Resource Officers instead of School Resource Officers in some schools, plus they get to make the choice not the individual schools. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jimmy Sengenberger Show
Jimmy Sengenberger Show 5-27-2023 Hr2

Jimmy Sengenberger Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2023 39:22


Paul Ballenger, first-time candidate and at-large contender for Denver School Board against Tay Anderson, joined Jimmy in-studio for his first interview.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast
Jimmy Sengenberger Show 5-27-2023 Hr2

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2023 39:22


Paul Ballenger, first-time candidate and at-large contender for Denver School Board against Tay Anderson, joined Jimmy in-studio for his first interview.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The George Show Podcast
Brauchler 5-2-23 9am

The George Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 42:10


Charmaine Lindsay from the Denver School Board and Civil Rights Activist Alvertis Simmons sticks around to continue the discussion from last hour.  Jimmy Sengenberger fills in for George and discuss some of the challenges facing the board and the DPS system. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show
Brauchler 5-2-23 9am

Jimmy Sengenberger Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 42:10


Charmaine Lindsay from the Denver School Board and Civil Rights Activist Alvertis Simmons sticks around to continue the discussion from last hour.  Jimmy Sengenberger fills in for George and discuss some of the challenges facing the board and the DPS system.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast
Brauchler 5-2-23 9am

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 42:10


Charmaine Lindsay from the Denver School Board and Civil Rights Activist Alvertis Simmons sticks around to continue the discussion from last hour.  Jimmy Sengenberger fills in for George and discuss some of the challenges facing the board and the DPS system.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show
Brauchler 4-10-23 8am

Jimmy Sengenberger Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 40:16


Trying to hold back the crazy, Jimmy Sengenberger fills in for George and speaks with Colorado lawmaker Matt Soper about some of the more "interesting" plans of the Democrat led legislature.  Then he talks about the Denver School Board and how many kids are on Daily Search Protocols in H.S. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The George Show Podcast
Brauchler 4-10-23 8am

The George Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 40:16


Trying to hold back the crazy, Jimmy Sengenberger fills in for George and speaks with Colorado lawmaker Matt Soper about some of the more "interesting" plans of the Democrat led legislature.  Then he talks about the Denver School Board and how many kids are on Daily Search Protocols in H.S. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The Ross Kaminsky Show
4-10-23 - *FULL SHOW* Abortion Pills, Intel Leaks, and Booting Denver School Board

The Ross Kaminsky Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 113:35


Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast
Brauchler 4-10-23 8am

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 40:16


Trying to hold back the crazy, Jimmy Sengenberger fills in for George and speaks with Colorado lawmaker Matt Soper about some of the more "interesting" plans of the Democrat led legislature.  Then he talks about the Denver School Board and how many kids are on Daily Search Protocols in H.S. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Ranchlands Podcast
#17 - Lucia Guzman

Ranchlands Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2023 71:48


Senator Lucía Guzmán is a lifelong leader and public servant. Born and raised in Texas by immigrant parents, Lucía has led an inspirational life. She studied theology and became an ordained minister, served for many years on the Denver School Board, and served as a Colorado State Senator from 2010 through 2019. In this episode, Lucía discusses her parents' move from Mexico to the United States, her upbringing in Katy, Texas, and the important role that school played in her life. We discuss her calling into the ministry, and how her faith built a solid foundation for her life in politics. She also explains some of the lessons learned from serving in elected positions, the importance of having respect for those you may disagree with, and why it is critical that we find a way to bridge the rural-urban divide.

The Ross Kaminsky Show
3-27-23 - *FULL SHOW* Denver School Board Horrors; So Much For Local Control

The Ross Kaminsky Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 110:41


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The George Show Podcast
Brauchler 3-27-23 6am

The George Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 43:23


Should you be able to sue a School Board or a School IF you can demonstrate their policies made the school less safe and something bad happened (school shooting)?  Jon Caldera fills in for George and talks about the Denver School Board putting School Resource Officers back in schools.  Jon asks the question - if it is okay to sue gun manufactures for mass shootings, should you also be able to sue a school board or the school if your child is injured or killed in a school shooting?  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Situation with Michael Brown
3 25 23 The Weekend Hour 1. Gas Stations. East High School Shooting. Safety Protocols.

The Situation with Michael Brown

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2023 39:18


Lousville, Colorado wants to limit the number of gas stations in its city. All in the name of climate change. Let's think about how stupid that is. East High School in Denver has a school shooting and Michael learns for the first time about "safety protocols" that allow an expelled student, convicted of a firearm crime, to still attend school. And the Denver School Board reverses its policy on no Denver Police Department officers in their schoos - after administrators are shot, but not a student.

The George Show Podcast
Brauchler 3-24-23 9am

The George Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2023 42:43


Why does it take a tragedy for Liberals to learn a lesson?  Jon Caldera fills in for George and talks about the Denver School Board reversing their policy on School Resource Officers.  After the shooting at East high School this week, the liberal board realized that an armed officer might be some help in situations like the one that happened at East.  Jon and callers discuss the Board's misguided moral compass, along with other possible solutions to school violence.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The George Show Podcast
Brauchler 3-23-23 9am

The George Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2023 42:46


You Reap What You Sow.  Has Denver's politics contributed to the recent East High School shooting?  Jon Caldera takes the final hour of today's show and asks callers if the shooting is in part a result of Liberal polices by the Denver School Board and other elected officials.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The Craig Silverman Show
Episode 132 - Kelly Brough wants to be Denver Mayor

The Craig Silverman Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2023 98:19


Rundown -    "Kelly's Story" YouTube Clip - 05:11   Troubadour Dave Gunders - 11:17   "Just Try Me" by Dave Gunders - 23:45   Kelly Brough - 29:47   Listen to this fun and interesting interview with Denver mayoral candidate Kelly Brough. She was Chief of Staff under John Hickenlooper and the head of Denver's Career Service Authority before that. Now, she's running to be Denver's 46th mayor.   Brough pronounces her last name like the word “rough” and in this interview, she demonstrates she's fun, more than rough enough and ready for the rigors of the mayoral campaign. Brough has decades of Denver experience and says she's ready for the chief executive job if she wins it. Brough believes in public service based on her upbringing and character.   Hear this former head of the Denver Chamber of Commerce explain the confusing campaign and debate rules in this spring 2023 election. If elected, Brough promises to get rough with the Denver School Board that is failing to deliver for the students in the Mile High City. We discuss crime, homelessness and how to revitalize downtown Denver.   As president and CEO of the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce, Kelly Brough was focused on jobs. The wait times for permitting in Denver comes under criticism from the candidate who explains her plans to immediately do better.   Brough was he first female snow plow driver at Stapleton International Airport and the first female CEO of the Denver Metro Chamber. Born and raised in small Montana towns, she's been in Denver since 1986. Her opening YouTube video contains tragedies and accomplishments. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lbp53VjQLe4   A widowed mother of two grown daughters, Brough realizes, if elected, she's entering a challenge-filled time. Rapid technological changes will profoundly affect working people and the way big cities work. Denver is at an inflection point and needs great leadership.   Kelly Brough considers open artificial intelligence and its free availability online. Campaign platforms, position papers and speeches can be created instantaneously online through utilization of accumulated written wisdom through 2021. The implications are considered.   Show Troubadour Dave Gunders had his beloved black lab Riley, age 14, finally pass away this week. We pay tribute to the life of Riley with fond reminiscences and a special YouTube page. This week's original Dave Gunders' song is Just Try Me which suits the trying times we face when our pets pass on. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yFTI7YX65c   Troubadour Dave Gunders is also a highly accomplished Denver remodeler and home renovator and he decries the Denver permitting process and its ridiculous delays. Businesses and the city of Denver are losing money unnecessarily.   Working and living in Denver needs to improve for the good of Colorado and its inhabitants. Kelly Brough agrees. She loves and owns a black lab too. All major Denver mayoral candidates flow through these fact-filled podcast interviews. Enjoy and evaluate.

Heartland POD
High Country - Government and Politics News from the American West - 12.7.2022

Heartland POD

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 16:43


Song playsIntro by hostWelcome to High Country - politics in the American West. My name is Sean Diller; regular listeners might know me from Heartland Pod's Talking Politics, every Monday.Go to heartlandpod.com for information on all our political podcasts, and a link to support our work on Patreon. Sign up as an Official PODhead for just $5 per month to access all our premium podcast segments and political writing. To join the conversation on Twitter, find us at THE Heartland POD. Alright! Let's get into it: NEVADA CURRENT:Tribes in six states awarded $73MM in new high-speed internet grants.Three Nevada tribes will receive $11.6 million for high-speed internet, in the latest round of “internet for all” grants, federal officials announced Wednesday.The funding will directly connect more than 800 homes on tribal lands in Nevada to high-speed internet, improving access to education, jobs, and healthcare on tribal lands.Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo said“The Biden administration is committed to fostering meaningful partnerships with Tribal Nations, which have been vital to our goal of connecting everyone in America, with affordable, reliable, high-speed Internet service,” So far, about $1.6 billion has been awarded to 121 tribal nations with funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that passed last year. Those funds have connected more than 3,100 unserved Native American households that previously had no connectivity to high-speed Internet, as well as businesses and community institutions.These awards are part of a series of commitments the Biden administration announced Wednesday to strengthen nation-to-nation engagement between the federal government and Tribal Nations.The Walker River Paiute Tribe in Mineral County will receive more than $6 million to install fiber internet directly to more than 400 households, 22 community institutions, and 10 tribal businesses. The Duckwater Shoshone Tribe in Nye County is set to receive more than $3 million to install fiber internet to nearly 80 homes and 11 tribal institutions. The Fallon Paiute Shoshone Tribe in Churchill County will be awarded nearly $2 million to directly connect more than 300 households.Nevada Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, who has pushed for more broadband funding on tribal lands, praised the announcement Wednesday.“Throughout my time in the Senate, I've worked to make sure Tribes in Nevada have access to critical broadband,” she said. “I made sure these funds would get to Tribes in Nevada in a timely and efficient fashion, and I'm committed to helping Nevadans in every community access the critical educational, business, health care, and cultural resources that the internet provides.”Additionally, the national Affordable Connectivity Program - ACP - provides a discount of $30 per month toward Internet service for eligible households, and up to $75 per month for households on qualifying tribal lands. You're eligible for the benefit If you currently receive SNAP benefits, are on Medicaid, or earn less than 200% of the federal poverty line. That's about $27K for a single person household, or $55K for a family of four.To Apply, visit AffordableConnectivity.govCOLORADO SUN: Colorado Democrats ready to move on gun safety laws.A host of changes to Colorado's gun laws, from a ban on assault weapons to tweaks to the existing red flag law, are already being considered by Democrats at the state Capitol in response to the shooting last month at an LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs. “Pretty much everything is on the table,” according to Senate President Steve Fenberg, a Boulder Democrat. “The question now is: What is the highest priority?”Democrats will return to the Colorado Capitol in early January with expanded majorities in both the House and Senate, and facing pressure to act after the state's latest mass shooting. Five people were killed and more than a dozen others wounded in a Nov. 19 attack on Club Q, allegedly carried out by a 22-year-old shooter armed with a semi-automatic, AR-15-style rifle.“Tay” Anderson, a Denver School board member, posted on Twitter that Democrats should immediately use their majority at the Capitol to pass an assault weapons ban.Saying “If folks refuse to act, vote them out,”Senate President Fenberg, who said gun control conversations were underway even before the Club Q shootings, said a ban on assault weapons is certainly a possibility. The challenge is figuring out how to write the law - how to define what an assault weapon is, what should happen to weapons already in the possession of Colorado residents, and how to address people traveling through Colorado to neighboring states where the weapons are permitted. It's more likely that Democrats pursue other changes to Colorado's gun laws first, such as raising the minimum age to purchase a rifle or shotgun to 21 from 18. The minimum age to purchase handguns in Colorado is already 21. Sen. Tom Sullivan, a Centennial Democrat, is working on changing the minimum age to purchase a gun. He initially wanted to raise the age only for so-called assault weapons, but thinks a broader change would be easier. “That will save us having to come up with a definition of what assault weapons are,” said Sullivan, whose son, Alex, was murdered in the 2012 Aurora theater shooting. “And that seems to be the consensus that we're hearing from the rest of the Democratic caucus.”There are also discussions about enacting a waiting period that looks like those passed in California and Hawaii, which have 10- and 14-day waiting periods, respectively. Illinois has a 72-hour waiting period after purchases a firearm, before they can access it.Colorado already requires universal background checks on all gun purchases, and has laws limiting gun magazines to 15 rounds, and requiring the safe storage of firearms. People whose guns are lost or stolen must make a report with law enforcement, as well, and there is a statute temporarily barring people convicted of certain violent misdemeanors from purchasing firearms.Colorado counties and municipalities are also now allowed to enact gun regulations that are more stringent than the state's policies after the legislature in 2021 repealed a preemption law.When it comes to Colorado's red flag law, a 2019 policy that lets judges order the temporary seizure of firearms from people deemed a significant risk to themselves or others - legislators might expand the list of who can petition a judge to initiate a red flag proceeding. Right now, law enforcement and family members are effectively the only groups allowed to petition a judge to order a seizure. Gov. Jared Polis has expressed support for adding district attorneys to the list, and others have suggested the attorney general's office, and teachers should be allowed to request seizures as well. The Colorado legislature reconvenes on Jan. 9.COLORADO NEWSLINE:  $35 insulin price cap coming to Medicare in January.A recent U.S. Department of Health and Human Services report showed drug companies increased prices for several drugs by more than 500% since 2016. But starting next month, a $35 cap on insulin prices will go into effect for millions of Medicare recipients. The lower pricing is one of the first of several policy measures Americans will see under the Inflation Reduction Act, passed without a single Republican vote and signed into law in August.The insulin cap benefits Medicare Part D recipients, who also no longer have to meet a deductible on their insulin. A $35 cap on insulin pumps for Medicare Part B recipients goes into effect July 1, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Medicare patients spent $1 billion on insulin in 2020, and an estimated 16.5% of people with diabetes rationed their insulin in the past year, which can be extremely harmful to their health or even fatal.According to an analysis of the impact of the Inflation Reduction Act from the Center for American Progress, an elderly middle class couple could save as much as $2,400 per year on insulin.ARIZONA MIRROR: AZ SOS Katie Hobbs recommends criminal prosecutions for Cochise County supervisors who refused to certify their election results. Hobbs wrote to Attorney General Mark Brnovich and Cochise County Attorney Brian McIntyre, that without repercussions, the decision of supervisors Tom Crosby and Peggy Judd not to certify their results could encourage future violations, further eroding election integrity in the state, and stomping on the will of Arizona voters. “Supervisors Crosby and Judd's actions not only demonstrate a complete disregard for the law but also jeopardize Arizona's democracy,” she wrote. “Had a court not intervened, the failure of these two Supervisors to uphold their duty would have disenfranchised thousands of Cochise County voters. This blatant act of defying Arizona's election laws risks establishing a dangerous precedent that we must discourage.” Crosby and Judd threw the Arizona state certification process into disarray last month, when they delayed their official canvassing of the midterm election results in Cochise County, citing bogus claims that electronic tabulators didn't meet required standards. It was only after a court ordered them to complete their statutorily mandated duties that they did so on Dec. 1, days after the Nov. 28 deadline. Their actions put the official statewide canvass in jeopardy, as Hobbs must meet a Dec. 5 deadline to certify the results. She can only push that deadline as far as Dec. 8. If she decided to go ahead with the process without the results from Cochise County, a heavily Republican region, more than 47,000 voters could have seen their ballots ignored and a number of races would have flipped in favor of Democratic candidates. The responsibilities of county supervisors are clearly laid out in state law and the state's Election Procedures Manual, Hobbs said, and they are non-negotiable. And, Crosby and Judd were given ample notification of the consequences.“Supervisors Crosby and Judd knew they had a statutory requirement to canvass the election by November 28, but instead chose to act in violation of the law, putting false election narratives ahead of Cochise County's voters,” Hobbs wrote. Hobbs, who was elected governor in the election, wrote that the two Republicans violated several state laws, with penalties ranging from a class 3 misdemeanor to a class 6 felony. If Crosby and Judd were convicted of a felony, their right to vote would be revoked. They also stand to lose their elected office: State law deems an elected office vacant if the officeholder is convicted of a felony or any “offense involving a violation of the person's official duties”. This is the second call for an investigation into the Supervisors possibly criminal acts - Earlier this week, former Attorney General Terry Goddard and Maricopa County Attorney Richard Romley wrote to outgoing AG Brnovich requesting he hold Crosby and Judd accountable.It's likely that Attorney General-elect Kris Mayes will make the final decision on whether to prosecute, once she takes office in January. In a statement, she said she agrees with the request from Hobbs' office to begin an investigation, and said that it is through that process that a decision on what further response, if any, is appropriate.COURTHOUSE NEWS SERVICE: Didn't we do this aJustices signal support for web designer who won't help gay couples with weddingsThe conservative majority appeared ready to answer a question the high court dodged four years ago: Must creative businesses put aside their religious beliefs to accommodate the beliefs of protected groups? WASHINGTON (CN) — A six-year crusade came to a head at the Supreme Court on Monday, pitting Colorado's nondiscrimination law against a Christian website designer who refuses to create wedding websites for same-sex couples. It was unsurprising that the narrow question at the center of the case perplexed many of the justices, since the high court passed up on answering it only four years ago. In Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, the court ruled in favor of a cakemaker refusing his services to a same-sex couple, but declined to expand the ruling much beyond the case in front of them. Lorie Smith's case brings that topic to a head. Stating that her Christian beliefs confine marriage only to heterosexual couples, Smith argues that Colorado's anti-discrimination laws - protecting LGBTQ+ Coloradans as well as others -  violate her free speech rights. Smith's attorney argued that “Colorado is declaring her speech a public accommodation, and insists that she create and speak messages that violate her conscience.” After two and a half hours of arguments, the conservative majority appeared inclined to agree.The liberal wing of the court expressed concern that a ruling for Smith could snowball into a free speech loophole allowing discrimination. Justice Sonia Sotomayor questioned where the court would draw the line, on what kind of discrimination would be permitted - noting that the same arguments could be made for interracial marriage or even for excluding people with disabilities. The hypothetical-heavy arguments included almost every culture-wars issue on the books including discrimination on race, religion, sexual orientation and political preference. These scenarios conveyed a worry by some justices about how far even a narrow ruling in the case could extend. Colorado Solicitor General Eric Olson said Smith's request for a free-speech exemption clause to the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act would equate to a “license to discriminate.” “The free speech protection the company seeks here is sweeping, because it would apply not just to sincerely held religious beliefs as in this case, but also to all sorts of racist, sexist and bigoted views,” Olson said. “This rule would allow another web design company to say no to interracial couples, an ad agency could refuse to run ads for women-led businesses, and a tech consulting company could refuse to serve the web designer here, because it disagreed with her views on marriage. Where exactly to draw the line between free speech and anti-discrimination laws eluded many of the justices. This was partly because Smith brought the justices a preenforcement suit - she filed her suit against the state of Colorado before any same-sex couple actually requested her services. This creates difficulties for the justices in deciding a ruling. Justice Elena Kagan said the reason for the multitude of hypotheticals during oral argument was due to the lack of facts in the case - which make the justices' ruling all the more difficult. Kagan said “It really depends on the facts, and on what exactly Ms. Smith is being asked or compelled to do.”I could definitely be wrong, but as far as I can tell, the actual free speech claim isn't really justiciable without a real action from the state against the business owner. Seems like it's not ripe, as they say.But the court, in its infinite power, could rule on whether the 1st Amendment Free Speech clause of the Constitution provides an out for companies looking to discriminate against certain customers. You might be thinking, doesn't the U.S. Constitution protect all Americans from discrimination based on sex? It does - but that protection only applies to discriminatory actions by the state. So the state can't deny you a marriage license because of your sex or your partner's sex. The state can't deny you employment or throw you in jail, either - anymore.Here, it's a business that wants the right to turn away same-sex couples, and the state is looking to enforce a state anti-discrimination law - which may or may not conflict with the business owner's protected free speech.It's not a slam dunk that the conservative Supreme Court will rule for the anti-gay web designer, though. No small number of right-wing attorneys have made their entire careers using anti-discrimination laws on behalf of white people, to unravel protections for marginalized groups. If college admissions boards, for example, decide that admitting too many white students is not the ‘statement' they want to make - the ruling against the gay couple might undermine its own rulings on affirmative action practices.The Supreme Court has a highly interesting - and highly secretive - process of passing opinions back and forth to each other. Picking apart each other's arguments, and putting their heads together before the actual ruling comes out. We won't get much of a picture into that, but you can bet this year's Supreme Court clerks are going to be busy. CONCERT PICK OF THE WEEK: Allman Family Revival - featuring Duane Betts, Cody and Luther Dickinson, Samantha Fish, Jimmy Hall, Maggie Rose, Larry McCray, Orbi Orbison, Donovan Frankenreiter, and the River Kittens. And whether you go to the concert or not - Check out the River Kittens. St. Louis' homegrown duo of Soulful, Harmonious, Folk music. They're awesome.Upcoming shows in Nashville, St. Louis, Denver, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, and the tour closes out at the Fillmore in San Francisco next Saturday Dec 17th.Welp, that's it for me! From Denver I'm Sean Diller. Original reporting for the stories in today's show comes from Courthouse News Service, Colorado Sun, Nevada Current, Arizona Mirror, Colorado Newsline, and Denver's Westword.Thank you for listening! See you next time.

The Heartland POD
High Country - Government and Politics News from the American West - 12.7.2022

The Heartland POD

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 16:43


Song playsIntro by hostWelcome to High Country - politics in the American West. My name is Sean Diller; regular listeners might know me from Heartland Pod's Talking Politics, every Monday.Go to heartlandpod.com for information on all our political podcasts, and a link to support our work on Patreon. Sign up as an Official PODhead for just $5 per month to access all our premium podcast segments and political writing. To join the conversation on Twitter, find us at THE Heartland POD. Alright! Let's get into it: NEVADA CURRENT:Tribes in six states awarded $73MM in new high-speed internet grants.Three Nevada tribes will receive $11.6 million for high-speed internet, in the latest round of “internet for all” grants, federal officials announced Wednesday.The funding will directly connect more than 800 homes on tribal lands in Nevada to high-speed internet, improving access to education, jobs, and healthcare on tribal lands.Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo said“The Biden administration is committed to fostering meaningful partnerships with Tribal Nations, which have been vital to our goal of connecting everyone in America, with affordable, reliable, high-speed Internet service,” So far, about $1.6 billion has been awarded to 121 tribal nations with funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that passed last year. Those funds have connected more than 3,100 unserved Native American households that previously had no connectivity to high-speed Internet, as well as businesses and community institutions.These awards are part of a series of commitments the Biden administration announced Wednesday to strengthen nation-to-nation engagement between the federal government and Tribal Nations.The Walker River Paiute Tribe in Mineral County will receive more than $6 million to install fiber internet directly to more than 400 households, 22 community institutions, and 10 tribal businesses. The Duckwater Shoshone Tribe in Nye County is set to receive more than $3 million to install fiber internet to nearly 80 homes and 11 tribal institutions. The Fallon Paiute Shoshone Tribe in Churchill County will be awarded nearly $2 million to directly connect more than 300 households.Nevada Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, who has pushed for more broadband funding on tribal lands, praised the announcement Wednesday.“Throughout my time in the Senate, I've worked to make sure Tribes in Nevada have access to critical broadband,” she said. “I made sure these funds would get to Tribes in Nevada in a timely and efficient fashion, and I'm committed to helping Nevadans in every community access the critical educational, business, health care, and cultural resources that the internet provides.”Additionally, the national Affordable Connectivity Program - ACP - provides a discount of $30 per month toward Internet service for eligible households, and up to $75 per month for households on qualifying tribal lands. You're eligible for the benefit If you currently receive SNAP benefits, are on Medicaid, or earn less than 200% of the federal poverty line. That's about $27K for a single person household, or $55K for a family of four.To Apply, visit AffordableConnectivity.govCOLORADO SUN: Colorado Democrats ready to move on gun safety laws.A host of changes to Colorado's gun laws, from a ban on assault weapons to tweaks to the existing red flag law, are already being considered by Democrats at the state Capitol in response to the shooting last month at an LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs. “Pretty much everything is on the table,” according to Senate President Steve Fenberg, a Boulder Democrat. “The question now is: What is the highest priority?”Democrats will return to the Colorado Capitol in early January with expanded majorities in both the House and Senate, and facing pressure to act after the state's latest mass shooting. Five people were killed and more than a dozen others wounded in a Nov. 19 attack on Club Q, allegedly carried out by a 22-year-old shooter armed with a semi-automatic, AR-15-style rifle.“Tay” Anderson, a Denver School board member, posted on Twitter that Democrats should immediately use their majority at the Capitol to pass an assault weapons ban.Saying “If folks refuse to act, vote them out,”Senate President Fenberg, who said gun control conversations were underway even before the Club Q shootings, said a ban on assault weapons is certainly a possibility. The challenge is figuring out how to write the law - how to define what an assault weapon is, what should happen to weapons already in the possession of Colorado residents, and how to address people traveling through Colorado to neighboring states where the weapons are permitted. It's more likely that Democrats pursue other changes to Colorado's gun laws first, such as raising the minimum age to purchase a rifle or shotgun to 21 from 18. The minimum age to purchase handguns in Colorado is already 21. Sen. Tom Sullivan, a Centennial Democrat, is working on changing the minimum age to purchase a gun. He initially wanted to raise the age only for so-called assault weapons, but thinks a broader change would be easier. “That will save us having to come up with a definition of what assault weapons are,” said Sullivan, whose son, Alex, was murdered in the 2012 Aurora theater shooting. “And that seems to be the consensus that we're hearing from the rest of the Democratic caucus.”There are also discussions about enacting a waiting period that looks like those passed in California and Hawaii, which have 10- and 14-day waiting periods, respectively. Illinois has a 72-hour waiting period after purchases a firearm, before they can access it.Colorado already requires universal background checks on all gun purchases, and has laws limiting gun magazines to 15 rounds, and requiring the safe storage of firearms. People whose guns are lost or stolen must make a report with law enforcement, as well, and there is a statute temporarily barring people convicted of certain violent misdemeanors from purchasing firearms.Colorado counties and municipalities are also now allowed to enact gun regulations that are more stringent than the state's policies after the legislature in 2021 repealed a preemption law.When it comes to Colorado's red flag law, a 2019 policy that lets judges order the temporary seizure of firearms from people deemed a significant risk to themselves or others - legislators might expand the list of who can petition a judge to initiate a red flag proceeding. Right now, law enforcement and family members are effectively the only groups allowed to petition a judge to order a seizure. Gov. Jared Polis has expressed support for adding district attorneys to the list, and others have suggested the attorney general's office, and teachers should be allowed to request seizures as well. The Colorado legislature reconvenes on Jan. 9.COLORADO NEWSLINE:  $35 insulin price cap coming to Medicare in January.A recent U.S. Department of Health and Human Services report showed drug companies increased prices for several drugs by more than 500% since 2016. But starting next month, a $35 cap on insulin prices will go into effect for millions of Medicare recipients. The lower pricing is one of the first of several policy measures Americans will see under the Inflation Reduction Act, passed without a single Republican vote and signed into law in August.The insulin cap benefits Medicare Part D recipients, who also no longer have to meet a deductible on their insulin. A $35 cap on insulin pumps for Medicare Part B recipients goes into effect July 1, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Medicare patients spent $1 billion on insulin in 2020, and an estimated 16.5% of people with diabetes rationed their insulin in the past year, which can be extremely harmful to their health or even fatal.According to an analysis of the impact of the Inflation Reduction Act from the Center for American Progress, an elderly middle class couple could save as much as $2,400 per year on insulin.ARIZONA MIRROR: AZ SOS Katie Hobbs recommends criminal prosecutions for Cochise County supervisors who refused to certify their election results. Hobbs wrote to Attorney General Mark Brnovich and Cochise County Attorney Brian McIntyre, that without repercussions, the decision of supervisors Tom Crosby and Peggy Judd not to certify their results could encourage future violations, further eroding election integrity in the state, and stomping on the will of Arizona voters. “Supervisors Crosby and Judd's actions not only demonstrate a complete disregard for the law but also jeopardize Arizona's democracy,” she wrote. “Had a court not intervened, the failure of these two Supervisors to uphold their duty would have disenfranchised thousands of Cochise County voters. This blatant act of defying Arizona's election laws risks establishing a dangerous precedent that we must discourage.” Crosby and Judd threw the Arizona state certification process into disarray last month, when they delayed their official canvassing of the midterm election results in Cochise County, citing bogus claims that electronic tabulators didn't meet required standards. It was only after a court ordered them to complete their statutorily mandated duties that they did so on Dec. 1, days after the Nov. 28 deadline. Their actions put the official statewide canvass in jeopardy, as Hobbs must meet a Dec. 5 deadline to certify the results. She can only push that deadline as far as Dec. 8. If she decided to go ahead with the process without the results from Cochise County, a heavily Republican region, more than 47,000 voters could have seen their ballots ignored and a number of races would have flipped in favor of Democratic candidates. The responsibilities of county supervisors are clearly laid out in state law and the state's Election Procedures Manual, Hobbs said, and they are non-negotiable. And, Crosby and Judd were given ample notification of the consequences.“Supervisors Crosby and Judd knew they had a statutory requirement to canvass the election by November 28, but instead chose to act in violation of the law, putting false election narratives ahead of Cochise County's voters,” Hobbs wrote. Hobbs, who was elected governor in the election, wrote that the two Republicans violated several state laws, with penalties ranging from a class 3 misdemeanor to a class 6 felony. If Crosby and Judd were convicted of a felony, their right to vote would be revoked. They also stand to lose their elected office: State law deems an elected office vacant if the officeholder is convicted of a felony or any “offense involving a violation of the person's official duties”. This is the second call for an investigation into the Supervisors possibly criminal acts - Earlier this week, former Attorney General Terry Goddard and Maricopa County Attorney Richard Romley wrote to outgoing AG Brnovich requesting he hold Crosby and Judd accountable.It's likely that Attorney General-elect Kris Mayes will make the final decision on whether to prosecute, once she takes office in January. In a statement, she said she agrees with the request from Hobbs' office to begin an investigation, and said that it is through that process that a decision on what further response, if any, is appropriate.COURTHOUSE NEWS SERVICE: Didn't we do this aJustices signal support for web designer who won't help gay couples with weddingsThe conservative majority appeared ready to answer a question the high court dodged four years ago: Must creative businesses put aside their religious beliefs to accommodate the beliefs of protected groups? WASHINGTON (CN) — A six-year crusade came to a head at the Supreme Court on Monday, pitting Colorado's nondiscrimination law against a Christian website designer who refuses to create wedding websites for same-sex couples. It was unsurprising that the narrow question at the center of the case perplexed many of the justices, since the high court passed up on answering it only four years ago. In Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, the court ruled in favor of a cakemaker refusing his services to a same-sex couple, but declined to expand the ruling much beyond the case in front of them. Lorie Smith's case brings that topic to a head. Stating that her Christian beliefs confine marriage only to heterosexual couples, Smith argues that Colorado's anti-discrimination laws - protecting LGBTQ+ Coloradans as well as others -  violate her free speech rights. Smith's attorney argued that “Colorado is declaring her speech a public accommodation, and insists that she create and speak messages that violate her conscience.” After two and a half hours of arguments, the conservative majority appeared inclined to agree.The liberal wing of the court expressed concern that a ruling for Smith could snowball into a free speech loophole allowing discrimination. Justice Sonia Sotomayor questioned where the court would draw the line, on what kind of discrimination would be permitted - noting that the same arguments could be made for interracial marriage or even for excluding people with disabilities. The hypothetical-heavy arguments included almost every culture-wars issue on the books including discrimination on race, religion, sexual orientation and political preference. These scenarios conveyed a worry by some justices about how far even a narrow ruling in the case could extend. Colorado Solicitor General Eric Olson said Smith's request for a free-speech exemption clause to the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act would equate to a “license to discriminate.” “The free speech protection the company seeks here is sweeping, because it would apply not just to sincerely held religious beliefs as in this case, but also to all sorts of racist, sexist and bigoted views,” Olson said. “This rule would allow another web design company to say no to interracial couples, an ad agency could refuse to run ads for women-led businesses, and a tech consulting company could refuse to serve the web designer here, because it disagreed with her views on marriage. Where exactly to draw the line between free speech and anti-discrimination laws eluded many of the justices. This was partly because Smith brought the justices a preenforcement suit - she filed her suit against the state of Colorado before any same-sex couple actually requested her services. This creates difficulties for the justices in deciding a ruling. Justice Elena Kagan said the reason for the multitude of hypotheticals during oral argument was due to the lack of facts in the case - which make the justices' ruling all the more difficult. Kagan said “It really depends on the facts, and on what exactly Ms. Smith is being asked or compelled to do.”I could definitely be wrong, but as far as I can tell, the actual free speech claim isn't really justiciable without a real action from the state against the business owner. Seems like it's not ripe, as they say.But the court, in its infinite power, could rule on whether the 1st Amendment Free Speech clause of the Constitution provides an out for companies looking to discriminate against certain customers. You might be thinking, doesn't the U.S. Constitution protect all Americans from discrimination based on sex? It does - but that protection only applies to discriminatory actions by the state. So the state can't deny you a marriage license because of your sex or your partner's sex. The state can't deny you employment or throw you in jail, either - anymore.Here, it's a business that wants the right to turn away same-sex couples, and the state is looking to enforce a state anti-discrimination law - which may or may not conflict with the business owner's protected free speech.It's not a slam dunk that the conservative Supreme Court will rule for the anti-gay web designer, though. No small number of right-wing attorneys have made their entire careers using anti-discrimination laws on behalf of white people, to unravel protections for marginalized groups. If college admissions boards, for example, decide that admitting too many white students is not the ‘statement' they want to make - the ruling against the gay couple might undermine its own rulings on affirmative action practices.The Supreme Court has a highly interesting - and highly secretive - process of passing opinions back and forth to each other. Picking apart each other's arguments, and putting their heads together before the actual ruling comes out. We won't get much of a picture into that, but you can bet this year's Supreme Court clerks are going to be busy. CONCERT PICK OF THE WEEK: Allman Family Revival - featuring Duane Betts, Cody and Luther Dickinson, Samantha Fish, Jimmy Hall, Maggie Rose, Larry McCray, Orbi Orbison, Donovan Frankenreiter, and the River Kittens. And whether you go to the concert or not - Check out the River Kittens. St. Louis' homegrown duo of Soulful, Harmonious, Folk music. They're awesome.Upcoming shows in Nashville, St. Louis, Denver, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, and the tour closes out at the Fillmore in San Francisco next Saturday Dec 17th.Welp, that's it for me! From Denver I'm Sean Diller. Original reporting for the stories in today's show comes from Courthouse News Service, Colorado Sun, Nevada Current, Arizona Mirror, Colorado Newsline, and Denver's Westword.Thank you for listening! See you next time.

The George Show Podcast
Brauchler 8-22-22 9am

The George Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 40:00


We start hour with weekend host Jimmy Sengenberger.  He share how Denver School Board members, Anderson and Esserman are acting like heroes.  Then we welcome Michael Allen, DA for the 4th Judicial District, to talk about last hour's guest whose sister was gunned down by gang members and the DA wants to send the killers to "kiddie jail".  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jimmy Sengenberger Show
Jimmy Sengenberger Show - June 18, 2022 - HR 1

Jimmy Sengenberger Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2022 38:00


Jimmy pulls clips from Tay Anderson, emphasizing how he is at the center of the drama at DPS. This ties along with Jimmy's latest Denver Gazette article, "Will the Denver School Board ever grow up?", which encapsulates the discussion.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast
Jimmy Sengenberger Show - June 18, 2022 - HR 1

Jimmy Sengenberger Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2022 38:00


Jimmy pulls clips from Tay Anderson, emphasizing how he is at the center of the drama at DPS. This ties along with Jimmy's latest Denver Gazette article, "Will the Denver School Board ever grow up?", which encapsulates the discussion. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

dps tay anderson denver school board denver gazette
Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles December 1 5am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2021 42:07


 What is going on?  Tay Anderson was voted Vice President of the Denver School Board, the Denver Post is apologizing for Lauren Bobert, Chris Cumo has been suspended, and more.  Peter and callers discuss these topics and more.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles December 1 7am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2021 47:14


The leaders of the Colorado Republican party are back.  Kristi Burton Brown and Pricilla Rahn talk with Peter about the recording of Heidi Gahnal and more.  Then weekend host Jimmy Sengenberger joins Peter to discuss how Tay Anderson has been elevated to Vice President of the Denver School Board.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

vice president tay anderson peter boyles denver school board
That's SO EDVOLUTIONARY: A Podcast for K-2 Teachers

This week on That's SO EDVOLUTIONARY, Ali and Annie ask the candidates about how our money is supporting our values and priorities as a district, and what they would want to do differently if elected to the Denver School Board.  This week candidates are in alphabetical order by first name: Sign up for a FREE T.E.A.C.H. Hub account where you can access all the resources we share each week! Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Tik Tok Visit our TPT Store Visit our website If you're enjoying the podcast, please rate and leave a review! It helps other people find us. :)

Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles October 22 6am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2021 46:49


Weekend host Jimmy Sengenberger joins Peter to talk about how $$ is passed around the the Denver School Board political circles.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

peter boyles denver school board
That's SO EDVOLUTIONARY: A Podcast for K-2 Teachers

This week on That's SO EDVOLUTIONARY, Ali and Annie share their interviews with the 2021 Denver School Board candidates on their top 3-5 priorities they'd like to see in the next Denver Strategic Plan.   The candidates appear as follows (in alphabetical order this week):At-Large Candidates:- Marla Benevides (20:50)- Scott Esserman (21:17)- Vernon Jones Jr. (28:22)- Jane Shirley (33:23)- Nicky Yollick (42:45)District 3 Candidates:- Dr. Mike DeGuire (45:15)*Dr. Carrie Olson is also running, but was not available for this podcast. District 4 Candidates:- Gene Fashaw (50:52)- Michelle Quattlebaum (52:44)*Dr. Jose Silva and Andrea Mosbey-Jones are also listed as running for District 4 but were not available for this episode. Show notes:  We conducted 40 minute interviews with every candidate.  Some candidates will have longer or shorter answers each week depending on how they alotted time to each question.   Sign up for a FREE T.E.A.C.H. Hub account where you can access all the resources we share each week! Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Tik Tok Visit our TPT Store Visit our website If you're enjoying the podcast, please rate and leave a review! It helps other people find us. :)

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Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles September 22 7am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 44:42


Aurora City Council hopeful Steve Sundberg joins the show, then Peter and callers return to the issue of Tay Anderson being allowed to continue serving on the Denver School Board.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

tay anderson peter boyles denver school board
The Steffan Tubbs Show Podcast
The Steffan Tubbs Show - September 17, 2021 - HR 4

The Steffan Tubbs Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2021 41:26


Guest "Flag Cape Jackass Boy", Jay Reitman, from Denver in Decay, joins us to discuss his role in the film. More on pen-throwing, past-living, tantrum-throwing ragazzo grasso, Tay Anderson, and his little meeting with the Denver School Board. Mr. Anderson is objectively a complete idiot. Our Homestretch Film Review of the Week: Clash of the Titans (2̶0̶1̶0̶) (1981). If our listeners have any suggestions for future films, let us know!   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles September 16 7am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2021 46:20


Denver School Board member Tay Anderson was found to not have sexually assaulted several students/women but they did find that he flirted and tried to initiate relationships with students along with intimidating witnesses.  So why is it being reported that Tay did nothing wrong? weekend host jimmy Sengenberger joins Peter to discuss the findings and the following cover up of the important issues.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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American Education FM
EP 184 - Denver school board update, jabbing minors in K12 schools, university jab policies and more.

American Education FM

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2021 53:36


Stolen History site and films on YouTube.  Site: https://stolenhistory.net Films: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2pvixwNLWFX7gICGaX_DJQ PDF of Jab effects: https://docdro.id/OfCF9XK    

The Steffan Tubbs Show Podcast
The Steffan Tubbs Show - July 14, 2021 - HR 4

The Steffan Tubbs Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2021 39:49


The Denver School Board. Tay Anderson. Disgusting.  Calls on the topic.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The Steffan Tubbs Show Podcast
The Steffan Tubbs Show - July 14, 2021 - HR 1

The Steffan Tubbs Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2021 41:18


Tay Anderson announces his return to the Denver School Board. Guest Jimmy Sengenberger from The Jimmy Sengenberger Show calls in to discuss. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The Troubleshooter
(6-9-21) Real CBD That Works, Talking bout Tay, and Inventions

The Troubleshooter

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2021 132:55


Tom and the team started the show with the owner of Real CBD That Works in studio answering questions, continued with comments about Tay Anderson of the Denver School Board, and finished giving advice to an inventor.

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Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles June 8 7am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2021 42:40


Should Illegals Vote?  The Republican Gov. of Vermont thinks so.  New Hampshire lawmaker Mark Person joins Peter to talk about the insanity of the neighboring state, then we welcome weekend host Jimmy Sengenberger returns to discuss the latest developments in the sexual assault investigation into Denver School Board member Tay Anderson.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles June 3 8am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2021 43:46


Get to know your candidates - Aurora City Council candidate Danielle Jurinski joins the show to outline her ideas for Aurora.  Then weekend host Jimmy Sengenberger returns with a development in the sexual assault allegations against Denver School Board member Tay Anderson. https://www.danielleforaurora.com/about https://jimmyatthecrossroads.com/exclusive-statement-by-coloado-attorney-general-phil-weiser-re-tay-anderson-allegations-coag-offices-statement-re-undocumented-victims-who-report-crimes     See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

tay anderson peter boyles denver school board
Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles June 2 7am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 43:24


Weekend host Jimmy Sengenberger returns to dissect the latest developments in the allegations of sexual abuse against Denver School Board member Tay Anderson.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

tay anderson peter boyles denver school board
The Daily Sun-Up
Colorado Sun Daily Sun-Up: Importance of independent voters in Lauren Boebert's district; Nikola Tesla in Colorado Springs

The Daily Sun-Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 12:05


Good Morning, Colorado, you’re listening to the Daily Sun-Up with the Colorado Sun. It’s Tuesday June 1st.    Today - Unlike elsewhere in the state, independent voters are highly influential in Lauren Boebert’s district. So what does this mean for the 2022 election?   But before we begin, let’s go back in time with some Colorado history adapted from historian Derek R Everett’s book “Colorado Day by Day”:   Today, we take you back to June 1st, 1899 when renowned Scientist and inventor Nikola Tesla commenced a journal of experiments in electricity. It was a months-long project he conducted in Colorado Springs. At one point his experiment blew out the entire city’s power generators. Tesla is known for his contributions to the design of the modern alternating current electricity supply system.   Now, our feature story.   No one was more surprised than the pundits when upstart conservative politician Lauren Boebert beat five-term Republican Congressman Scott Tipton in the GOP primary a year ago -- and then again when she handily beat Democrat Diane Mitsch Bush in the general election in November. The Colorado Sun and newspapers in the third CD looked at voter registration and turnout data and learned that unlike elsewhere in the state, registered independent voters are highly influential in the sprawling district. Politics reporter Jesse Paul explains how independents came to dominate the discourse and the role they’ll play in the 2022 election.   To read more about independent voters in the 3rd Congressional District, go to coloradosun.com.   And Before we go, here are a few stories that you should know about today:   Some businesses in busy tourist destinations were headed into the busy first real weekend of summer short of workers. They say it has to do with a shortage of available housing in mountain communities, where homes that used to rent to seasonal workers have been purchased by work-from-anywhere people fleeing cities. There are also problems with wages that have not kept pace with the cost of living in Colorado. Some employers are getting creative, raising hourly rates and offering signing and retention bonuses.   https://coloradosun.com/2021/05/29/seasonal-hiring-restaurants-resorts-jobs/   Online education was a punt after the pandemic shut down in-school learning last spring. But experts say fully remote instruction, or some form of it, is likely here to stay because it works well for some students. Jeffco Public Schools, for example, is rolling out a new remote learning program, and has hired 33 teachers and has another 16 positions to fill in the K-12 program. One quarter of JeffCo’s 80,000 students enrolled in fully online learning last year.   https://coloradosun.com/2021/05/31/colorado-education-schools-students-remote-learning-coronavirus/   A Denver School Board member accused of sexual misconduct will step away from his board duties until an investigation is complete. Tay Anderson denies the allegations, but says removing himself from his school board work for now is the best thing for his family. He is accused of multiple instances of sexual assault, unwanted touching and other inappropriate behavior.   https://coloradosun.com/2021/05/30/tay-anderson-sexual-misconduct-step-down/ For more information on all of these stories, visit our website, www.coloradosun.com. And don’t forget to tune in again tomorrow.   The Colorado Sun is non-partisan and completely independent. We're always dedicated to telling the in-depth stories we need today more than ever. And The Sun is supported by readers and listeners like you.   Right now, you can head to ColoradoSun.com and become a member. Starting at $5 per month for a basic membership and if you bump it up to $20 per month, you’ll get access to our exclusive politics and outdoors newsletters. Thanks for starting your morning with us and don’t forget to tune in again tomorrow. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Situation with Michael Brown
Denver School Board member Tay Anderson's sexual assault allegations

The Situation with Michael Brown

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 34:40


Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles June 1 5am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 41:12


Denver School Board member Tay Anderson is accused of numerous acts of rape and sexual assault.  Peter examine the allegations and how the local media is treating these explosive charges.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles June 1 7am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 44:33


Direct from his hospital bed, Afternoon host Steffan Tubbs joins the show to talk about his journey with COVID-19.  Then weekend host Jimmy Sengenberger joins Peter to discuss his writing on the allegations of sexual abuse and assault against Denver School Board member Tay Anderson.   https://www.westword.com/news/denver-radio-star-steffan-tubbs-on-covid-19-hospitalization-11983371 https://www.coloradopolitics.com/opinion/sengenberger-tay-anderson-must-resign-now/article_006b8e7e-c291-11eb-a35a-2f8816be16d7.html   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles June 1 8am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 44:26


A Denver School Board member is under investigation for sexual assault, a KNUS host with COVID, the best Colorado athlete you have never heard of, and more with Westword writer Michael Roberts. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The Steffan Tubbs Show Podcast
Aaron LaPedis Guest Hosts The Steffan Tubbs Show - January 1, 2021 - Hr 2

The Steffan Tubbs Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2021 42:40


Aaron has discussion on saving money, the Denver School Board, and Open Lines! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The Steffan Tubbs Show Podcast
The Steffan Tubbs Show 11.23.20 Hr 3

The Steffan Tubbs Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2020 43:09


Mayor Hancock and Federico Pena deliver a harsh letter to Tay-Tay & The Denver School Board and Steffan takes listener calls regarding the election legal fight.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Peter Boyles Show Podcast
PeterBoyles July 30 8am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2020 45:24


Brother Jeff joins the show to talk about the incident at Civic Center Park Wednesday involving a Denver School Board member. Then Peter and Brother Jeff take callsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Peter Boyles Show Podcast
PeterBoyles July 30 6am

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2020 44:04


Afternoon Host Steffan Tubbs joins the show to talk about what he saw yesterday at Civic Center Park. What went on when a member of the Denver School Board claims he was pushed by Denver Police?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Peter Boyles Show Podcast
All-Gender Bathrooms In DPS - Jan 27, 2020 - Hr 3

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2020 41:58


Taking your calls on the resolution my Denver School Board to provide all-gender bathrooms in DPS.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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