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Rep. Mike Coffman says he’s voting ‘no’ on the revived American Health Care Act
DENVER – U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman will vote against passing the American Health Care Act on to the Senate when the House of Representatives votes on the revived bill aimed at replacing Obamacare on Thursday.
“At this time, I cannot support the AHCA with the MacArthur amendment because I’m concerned that a small percentage of those with preexisting conditions may still not be protected,” Coffman said in a statement. Continue reading
Project Unsolved: Decades later, search continues for suspect in CU student Sid Wells’ 1983 murder
One of the most high-profile murders in Colorado’s history remains unsolved after nearly 34 years, but police and prosecutors know who their suspect is and have an active warrant for his arrest.
The only problem is no one has seen Thayne Smika – or called him by that name, at least – since 1986. Continue reading
Immigrant living in Denver church ventures to, from Jefferson County court safely
GOLDEN, Colo. – An undocumented woman who has spent the past five months living in sanctuary at a Denver-area church made it through a court appearance in Jefferson County Wednesday without being picked up by federal immigration agents.
Ingrid Encalada Latorre made the court appearance to try and fight a plea deal she made after an arrest for using false documents while working at a nursing home in 2010. A prayer service was held at the courthouse ahead of the hearing.
Prayer vigil happening now at JeffCo Court supporting Ingrid Encalada – immigrant in court seeking sanctuary from deportation @DenverChannel pic.twitter.com/b0Tyo53GlZ
— Dominick Lee (@DomDenverPhotog) May 3, 2017
She has been in sanctuary at the Mountain View Friends Meeting since late November, when she was again scheduled for deportation and removal. She first entered the U.S. in 2000 to live with her aunt, who is a U.S. citizen, and to pursue an education, according to her lawyer.
Latorre, a mother to two boys, aged 8 and 17 months, who are U.S. citizens, said in court that she left sanctuary at the church Wednesday to fight her plea deal and stay with her family. The native of Peru is trying to get the felony she pleaded guilty to reduced to a misdemeanor to help her immigration case.
She has already completed 4.5 years of probation, paid nearly $9,000 in back taxes and spent more than $30,000 fighting her deportation order, according to her lawyer.
“I am so relieved to have this first hearing behind me and to be back safely with my family,” she said after the court hearing. “I hope Immigration and Customs Enforcement will consider my stay of deportation request and allow me to return home with my two boys while I await further hearings.”
Latorre requested a deportation stay Nov. 24 with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) but still hasn’t received one.
Her attorneys and supporters say she got bad legal advice when she was first arrested and advised to enter a plea deal.
“Ingrid only became aware of the impact of the poor legal advice she received when, in the spring of 2016, an immigration judge explained the decision to deny her cancellation of removal as being driven by the plea decision. She immediately sought a second legal opinion, but everything was happening too fast to immediately halt her deportation” stated Jennifer Piper of the American Friends Service Committee. “We encourage Immigration to review the recent stay submitted by Joseph Law Firm and consider allowing her to return home while the court determines whether to reopen her case or not.”
Latorre is one of several undocumented immigrants in the Denver area who have sought sanctuary at area churches, and her story is among several recently involving federal immigration agents’ crackdown on people living in the U.S. illegally.
Despite concerns over pre-existing conditions, Rep. Mike Coffman leaning yes on AHCA as vote looms
DENVER – U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman is leaning toward voting for a revived Republican plan to replace Obamacare, but says he wants to see more protection for pre-existing conditions or he’ll vote against sending the bill to the Senate.
President Donald Trump and several other House Republicans have again been trying to shore up votes this week in their ongoing effort to replace the Affordable Care Act.
Wednesday morning, those efforts grew further legs when Republican House members Fred Upton and Billy Long said they had flipped from “no” to “yes” on their plans to vote for the bill after the president accepted an amendment to the bill from Upton the Michigan Republican says will allay concerns over pre-existing condition coverage.
The bill would add $8 billion over five years to fund high-risk pools, according to multiple news outlets who had seen the amendment, which would be added to $130 billion already written into the bill.
The addition of the extra money still may be short of the money needed, according to some Republicans, who say high-risk pools would actually need between $150 and $200 billion.
Moderate and ultra-conservative Republicans, as well as Democrats, have voiced concern over the reinstatement of high-risk pools for pre-existing condition coverage under the AHCA – something Obamacare eliminated.
Last week, Coffman and his team said that the AHCA and MacArthur amendment that was added in recent weeks contained coverage for all pre-existing conditions, something House Speaker Paul Ryan reiterated, as did the president himself.
But some of the writers of Obamacare, as well as some in the health care and retirement industries, have said that even with the MacArthur amendment, people with pre-existing conditions could face not being able to afford coverage because companies and states would make it too expensive.
And though multiple requests for clarification on whether Coffman’s stance was made after the Upton amendment was introduced or before, it appears Coffman is close to supporting the measure as he said he would in March, despite ongoing pledges to protect Coloradans with pre-existing conditions.
“The current bill has a lot of strong elements – giving the states more flexibility is sound public policy…But we need to tighten some protections for those with preexisting conditions,” Coffman said in a back-and-forth statement Wednesday.
While saying there needed to be better protections for people with pre-existing conditions, he said that critics of the AHCA were being “totally disingenuous” about the reality of the bill’s language on them.
“I worry that, under the current language, a small percentage of those with preexisting conditions may not be adequately protected,” he said.
But the biggest sign that he was leaning toward a “yes” vote came with the final on-the-fence portion of Coffman’s statement:
“If House Leadership will work to tighten protections for those with preexisting conditions, I’m a yes on sending this bill to the Senate for further consideration. If not, I’m a no, and we’ll go back to the drawing board.”
Ken Buck, a Colorado Republican who is a member of the conservative Freedom Caucus, will support the bill, according to several whip counts, and other Freedom Caucus members who had been on the fence were moving toward supporting the bill Wednesday, according to reports.
Trump praised Buck for his support of the measure in late March.
Scott Tipton is “leaning yes,” according to a whip count from HuffPost’s Matt Fuller. He has also promised to protect people with pre-existing conditions under the AHCA.
But AARP, the Kaiser Family Foundation and several other national and state organizations have said the AHCA is bad for Americans, particularly those with pre-existing conditions. AARP called the Upton amendment to add $8 billion over five years a “giveaway to insurance companies” and said it “won’t help the majority of those with preexisting conditions.”
And the American Cancer Society, American Heart Association, American Diabetes Association and American Lung Association, among others, all came out Wednesday in opposition to the AHCA as it stands — even with the MacArthur and Upton amendments.
“This bill, including the MacArthur and Upton Amendments, would undermine that vital safeguard [protecting against higher charges for pre-existing conditions],” their combined statement said. “The various patches offered by lawmakers — including high-risk pools and financial assistance with premiums — do not in any way offer the same level of protection provided in current law.”
BREAKING: New statement from American Cancer Society, Heart Assn, Diabetes Assn, Lung Assn., etc. opposing MacArthur & Upton amendment. pic.twitter.com/20xkEaKxdu
— Jesse Ferguson (@JesseFFerguson) May 3, 2017
The American Medical Association on Wednesday also said the changes to the AHCA do not adequately cover people with pre-existing conditions.
“None of the legislative tweaks under consideration changes the serious harm to patients and the health care delivery system if AHCA passes,” said AMA President Andrew W. Gurman, M.D. “High-risk pools are not a new idea. Prior to the enactment of the Affordable Care Act, 35 states operated high-risk pools, and they were not a panacea for Americans with pre-existing medical conditions. The history of high-risk pools demonstrates that Americans with pre-existing conditions will be stuck in second-class health care coverage – if they are able to obtain coverage at all.”
Colorado’s past with high-risk pools
Colorado has experience with high-risk pools, as it had them from 1990 until 2014, when they were eliminated with the implementation of Connect for Health Colorado, the state health exchange operating under Obamacare.
Colorado was one of 35 states that offered high-risk pools, which are plans that cover people who can’t typically get health insurance – many of them because of their pre-existing conditions.
The state covers much of the funds for the pools through various fees, but insurance companies can raise prices so that state coverage won’t cover care beyond premiums. Federal subsidies also contributed to Colorado’s high-risk pools when they were in place under CoverColorado, the state high-risk pool program.
In 2009, the Colorado Legislative Council found there were around 9,200 people in the state covered through CoverColorado. The plans carried premium caps at 150 percent of standard rates and deductibles of between $1,000 and $5,000, with lifetime deductibles capped at $1 million.
But it found that high health care costs meant that premiums weren’t covering the full cost, despite close to 30 percent of low-income recipients receiving discounts on their premiums.
By the end of 2011, however, the number of Coloradans covered under high-risk pools was close to 14,000 – the sixth-most populous high-risk pool in the country. That accounted for 3.5 percent of the non-group market enrollment that year in the state.
Though many states’ high-risk pools excluded coverage for pre-existing condition for people otherwise eligible for coverage for between 6 and 12 months, Colorado was one of two states that only excluded coverage for the first three months.
And before the ACA effectively eliminated high-risk pools by forcing insurers to exempt pre-existing conditions when considering coverage, the list of pre-existing conditions that would not be covered in Colorado was extensive.
This was Anthem’s medical condition rejection list pre-Obamacare in Colorado:
The Congressional Budget Office has yet to score the revised AHCA, but said in its original analysis that 24 million fewer people would be insured in the next decade than would have been under Obamacare. It also said that the AHCA would have devastating effects on Medicaid across the country.
Colorado’s Medicaid program could suffer losses topping $10 billion, according to analysis.
The Colorado Consumer Health Initiative blasted the revised AHCA Wednesday.
“Coloradans have experience with high-risk pools from before the Affordable Care Act, and it doesn’t work,” said the organization’s spokesman, Adam Fox, saying Coffman has “flipflopped” on his stance to protect Coloradans with pre-existing conditions.
“An additional $8 billion doesn’t magically make high-risk pools work, and Coffman, as a fiscal conservative, should know better than to throw money at a failed idea,” Fox continued. “This isn’t what people in America or Colorado want. It is time for the GOP to drop this crazed fixation on repeal — and move on.”
Late Wednesday, Ryan said the full House would vote on the AHCA on Thursday.
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2 suspects arrested by FBI agents in Chicago in connection to Denver liquor store murder
DENVER – Two people suspected of being connected to an April 21 strip mall shooting in Denver that left one man dead were arrested by Federal Bureau of Investigation agents on April 26 in Chicago, and are in the process of being extradited back to Denver.
Shawntez Kinney, 22, died in the shooting, which happened outside of the Evans Discount Liquor store on West Evans Avenue just after 9 p.m. on April 21. He had a young child. Continue reading
Undocumented Aurora man detained at work released from ICE hold, will get to see daughter graduate
AURORA, Colo. – Arturo Hernandez-Garcia, the undocumented man who was detained at work last week by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, was released from federal immigration custody late Tuesday and granted a reprieve to go to his daughter’s graduation, according to his lawyer.
Hernandez-Garcia was the first person in Colorado to seek sanctuary from deportation when he did so for nine months in 2014 and 2015 while he faced deportation. Continue reading
Investigators dig at new site in Pueblo for clues in Kelsie Schelling’s disappearance
PUEBLO, Colo. – Investigators continued their search for evidence related to the disappearance of Kelsie Schelling Monday in the Pueblo area, when they used several backhoes to dig in an area close to where Schelling’s ex-boyfriend used to live.
Monday’s search came less than two weeks after investigators with the Pueblo Police Department and Colorado Bureau of Investigation dug up the backyard of a Pueblo home where Schelling’s ex-boyfriend, Donthe Lucas, used to live with his grandmother.
Detectives said they recovered evidence in that search, but have not specified exactly what. Monday’s search appeared to focus on a low-lying cropping of trees in an area about a mile west of the home investigators searched two weeks ago.
A Pueblo police spokesperson told Denver7 crews started digging at 8 a.m. and will work throughout the day, and possibly into Tuesday.
The police spokesperson said close to 12 people were working at the site Monday, and that police had received permission to search the land from its owner and developer.
Police have so far on Monday not said if they have found anything new in their latest search, and did not say what led crews to that area Monday.
Lucas has long been a person of interest in Schelling’s February 2013 disappearance. Schelling, 21, was eight weeks pregnant when she disappeared, and Lucas was the father of the child.
Schelling vanished on Feb. 4, 2013. She had her first doctor’s visit and had seen a sonogram of her baby earlier that day.
After the trip to the doctor and a shift at work, the Denver woman drove two hours south to Pueblo to meet up with Lucas, and has never been seen since.
Lucas was found to have parked her car at an area Walmart the day after she disappeared, and an unidentified man picked it up and eventually dropped it off again at the St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center. Police recovered the vehicle Feb. 7.
Schelling was never seen in surveillance video at either location.
Investigators discovered through text messages that Schelling and Lucas had talked to one another once she had reached Pueblo, but the messages stopped shortly after she got there.
Schelling’s mother, Laura Saxton, told Denver7 in an exclusive interview after the search two weeks ago that she was encouraged by the new leads and that evidence had been found.
Schelling’s family continues to offer a $50,000 reward for information leading investigators to their daughter or to the arrest and conviction or someone in her disappearance.
Pueblo police say the investigation into the case remains ongoing and that they are looking for tips related to the case. To submit anonymous tips in the case, contact Pueblo Crime Stoppers at 542-STOP or go to their website. You can also contact the Colorado Bureau of Investigation at 303-239-4300.
Medical marijuana safe from federal crackdown through September, according to near-final budget
DENVER – Colorado’s medical marijuana is safe from a federal crackdown through at least September, after lawmakers worked a rider into the bipartisan budget deal to protect states with medical marijuana programs.
The section of the budget deal pertaining to medical marijuana (pages 230-231) says that the Department of Justice may not use any budgetary funds “to prevent any of [a list of states, districts and territories] from implementing their own laws that authorize the use, distribution, possession, or cultivation of medical marijuana.” Continue reading
C-470 expansion project gets $109M in federal loan money
DENVER – The project that will widen C-470 and add express lanes on the highway between I-25 and Wadsworth Boulevard has been approved for $109 million in federal money.
Construction on the C-470 expansion got underway last fall in Douglas County. The project is aimed at alleviating traffic congestion in one of Denver’s highest-trafficked areas.
It will add one express toll lane in both the eastbound and southbound lanes from I-25 to Kipling, another toll express lane on the westbound side from I-25 to Lucent, and another on the eastbound side from Broadway to I-25.
Altogether, the additional lanes will double the width of the highway in some places.
CDOT has estimated that the 100,000 drivers who currently use the 12.6-mile stretch between I-25 and Wadsworth will increase to close to 150,000 drivers by 2035.
It says it expects the additional express lanes to cut travel times by about 18 minutes during peak evening commute hours.
In November, CDOT had already identified $110 million in state and federal funding for the project, and said loans that will be repaid by toll revenues generated by the new lanes would supplement the rest of the construction.
Sen. Cory Gardner touted his work on the loan that will give the project the addition $109 million, which came via the Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act – something Gardner and other members of Congress fought to keep intact in 2015.
“This is great news for Colorado,” the Republican senator said. “Our region is in significant need of repairs and new investments to our roads, and this funding is exactly why I fought back at attempts to cut the TIFIA program two years ago.”
“Thanks to the efforts of Senator Gardner and others in the Congressional Delegation, we understand the Committee on Credit and Finance met this week and we are looking forward to a positive outcome to finance this deserving project, ” said Shailen Bhatt, CDOT Executive Director. “The C-470 Express Lanes project is part of CDOT’s vision to improve mobility and reduce congestion in this critical corridor.”
CDOT says it expects the project to be completed by Spring 2019. The project had faced some opposition, including a lawsuit, ahead of construction.
CDOT saw quite the increase in usage of its express toll lanes last year.
Amid calls for review of Colo. wells following explosion, agencies caution against rush to judgment
DENVER – Officials continue to urge people not to jump conclusions as to why a Colorado oil and gas operator shut in 3,000 of its wells following a home explosion in Firestone that killed two men.
The Frederick-Firestone Fire Protection District on Friday said it wouldn’t release any further information about the April 17 explosion until it has determined the final cause and origin. Brothers-in-law Mark Martinez and Joey Irwin died in the explosion, which occurred while the two were installing a hot water heater at the home. Continue reading