Wednesday, September 21, 2022

New Cookbook Delivers Recipes for Anti-Aging from Around the World

Chef and author Grace O has traveled the world in search of delicious, good-for-you foods. Her passion for discovering food treasures from the Blue Zones and elsewhere, where people live longer, healthier lives, is the driving force behind her new cookbook, Anti-Aging Dishes from Around the WorldIn her third cookbook, Grace O, founder of the ground-breaking healthy food website, FoodTrients.com, delivers all the hallmarks of her two previous award-winning cookbooks, and more.
 
In addition to 250 easy-to-make recipes using everyday favorites, exotic ingredients, and superfoods from around the world, Anti-Aging Dishes from Around the World includes healthy resources, guides, and tips for improving your lifespan and health-span. Grace’s global approach to her age-fighting recipes is to ramp up the flavor profiles of each dish to entice food lovers everywhere.
 
“My life has been devoted to my two passions – great food and wellness,” Grace says.  “I have traveled the world in search of foods that can help us age better, and I love discovering food treasures from the Blue Zones and places beyond, where people live longer, healthier lives. This is the driving force behind FoodTrients.com and this new cookbook.”
 
In Anti-Aging Dishes from Around the World, Grace takes classic recipes and gives them international twists with a few simple steps, creating very interesting meals. Grace uses superfoods and spice profiles from all over the world, including Africa, Asia, South America, the South Pacific, Europe, the Middle East, and the U.S.

WalletHub: Denver Is 2022’s 10th Best Coffee City in America

Source: WalletHub
With National Coffee Day around the corner and coffee consumption up 14% since January 2021, the personal-finance website WalletHub today released its report on 2022's Best Coffee Cities in America, as well as accompanying videos and expert commentary. Alongside that report, WalletHub also released its list of top coffee deals and discounts offered by retailers during the holiday.

To determine the best local coffee scenes in America, WalletHub compared the 100 largest cities across 12 key indicators of a strong coffee culture. The data set ranges from coffee shops, coffee houses and cafés per capita to the average price per pack of coffee.

The Coffee Scene in Denver (1=Best, 50=Avg.):
  • 25th – Avg. Price per Pack of Coffee
  • 18th – Avg. Spending on Coffee per Household
  • 29th – % of Adults Who Reported Drinking “Ready-to-Drink” Coffee in the Past Six Months
  • 28th – Coffee Shops, Coffee Houses & Cafés Per Capita
  • 20th – Coffee & Tea Manufacturers per Capita
  • 47th – % of Households that Own Coffee Makers

Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Are You Gay With Something To Say? Bloggers Wanted to Write About Denver's Gay Community

Are you a new or experienced writer or blogger? Do you want to be? Or maybe you're just some gay guy with something to say? Well, what better forum for you than MileHighGayGuy?

MileHighGayGuy is looking for regular and guest bloggers to write about local news and events, do music and movie reviews, or write opinion or feature pieces from a gay perspective.

These are unpaid positions but offer the opportunity to be published in Colorado's Best Gay Blog (2010, 2011, 2012 OUTstanding Awards, Denver 2012 #WebAwards), expand your audience and gain valuable experience. There's also swag available in the form of free movie and concert tickets, music, books and other cool stuff.

If interested, shoot an email over to Drew Wilson at drew@milehighgayguy.com. And if you've got column or story ideas to pitch, this is the place to do it.

It Gets Better Project Partners with Rock the Vote & DoSomething, Releases Educational Election Content Series


On National Voter Registration Day today, the It Gets Better Project is announcing the release of the new digital content series #ElectionSzn which aims to educate and offer voting resources for young LGBTQ+ people. As the world’s largest storytelling effort to uplift LGBTQ+ youth, the non-profit has produced a series of short videos which premiered on September 12 and will be released weekly through Election Day 2022 (November 8).

With an estimated 8.3 million eligible new voters who have turned 18 since the 2020 general election, the purpose of #ElectionSzn is to encourage eligible LGBTQ+ young people to register to vote and inform young future voters about the process of voting. These bite-sized videos will highlight a diverse cast of young LGBTQ+ content creators and activists sharing the reasons they are voting and the issues that matter most to them this election cycle.

To further amplify #ElectionSzn and provide election resources and information to young voters, the It Gets Better Project is collaborating with a number of voting and youth-focused organizations, including Rock the Vote, DoSomething and GLSEN. The series will be promoted on the It Gets Better Project’s TikTok and Instagram channels and on itgetsbetter.org. The series is also accompanied by an effort to register new voters. Eligible voters can now register at itgetsbetter.org.

“LGBTQ+ youth care deeply about a wide range of issues facing this country, and we want to equip them with resources and information that can help them get involved in the process,” said Ross von Metzke, Director of Communications and PR for the It Gets Better Project. “Whether it’s registering to vote, getting out to the polls or, for LGBTQ+ people who are not yet 18, identifying other ways they can get involved, we are deeply grateful to the organizations that are working with us to educate and empower LGBTQ+ youth ahead of the midterm election.”

“Voting is important to me because my voice plays a role in selecting my representatives at all levels of government,” said Rowen Elsmore, who streams on Twitch as ms_huffle and contributed to the campaign. “So much of our society can be better than it is now, regardless of a person's identity. Voting is the small thing I can do to play my part in making that happen.”

Futurity: The Aurora Fox is building a machine that creates peace and wants you there when they flip the switch!

The Aurora Fox has announced casting for the Colorado regional premiere of brand-new 
folk musical “Futurity” with music by César Alvarez and the Lisps, book and Lyrics by César Alvarez and story development and additional text by Molly Rice.

Futurity is a new musical that helps us imagine a different future for ourselves; and asks the question – what could we invent to stop violence? In a raucous, bold, and utterly unique way, Futurity sees its characters invent a machine of peace as it tries to stop the Civil War. Does it work? Find out while going on the most beautiful of rides.

“This musical is shifting the way we see musical theatre,” says Murray, who is hard at work in rehearsals for her last show before she leaves town. “I love that more and more musicals are engaging the actors as musicians, which is harder to cast, direct, music direct and choreograph – but the payoff is incredible. I am feeling pretty lucky to have Angela and Patrick as my collaborators on this piece – they are true innovators. And this cast is a complete delight. And
the music... I can’t stop singing it I love it so much!”

Murray also highlights that she picked the show very intentionally for this time in our world. “This show asks a big question – is there a way to create peace using science and art? This is not a love story between Julian and Ada during the Civil War, but rather a union of two minds who desperately want to change the world – out of a sense of purpose as well as for a basic reason – Julian wants to live. He wants all his fellow soldiers to live too, so the machine has to work.”

So, make your way to the Fox – watch as they build a giant machine for peace. And when it is turned on, hope along with them that it will work.

THE STORY OF FILM: A NEW GENERATION

 

A decade after The Story of Film: An Odyssey, an expansive and influential inquiry into the state of moviemaking in the 20th century, filmmaker Mark Cousins returns with an epic and hopeful tale of cinematic innovation from around the globe. In The Story of Film: A New Generation, Cousins turns his sharp, meticulously honed gaze on world cinema from 2010 to 2021, using a surprising range of works—including FrozenThe Babadook, and Cemetery of Splendour—as launchpads to explore recurring themes and emerging motifs, from the evolution of film language, to technology’s role in moviemaking today, to shifting identities in 21st-century world cinema. 

Touching on everything from Parasite and The Farewell to Black Panther and Lover’s Rock, Cousins seeks out films, filmmakers and communities under-represented in traditional film histories, with a particular emphasis on Asian and Middle Eastern works, as well as boundary-pushing documentaries and films that see gender in new ways. And as the recent pandemic recedes, Cousins ponders what comes next in the streaming age: how have we changed as cinephiles, and how moviegoing will continue to transform in the digital century, to our collective joy and wonder. 

Kelley Robinson to Serve as President of the Human Rights Campaign

Today, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) and Human Rights Campaign Foundation (HRCF) announced that Kelley Robinson (she/her) — a widely respected leader in the progressive movement — will become the organization’s ninth president and the first Black, Queer woman to lead the organization. Robinson comes to HRC after serving as the Executive Director of the Planned Parenthood Action Fund (PPAF), where she led the organization and its 18 million supporters in its efforts to ensure all people have access to healthcare as a human right. Her first official day as president of HRC will be November 28.

Robinson started her career as a community organizer for Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign in Missouri and has spent more than 15 years on the frontlines of the progressive movement and the fight for equality. Developing and leading campaigns and programs that have secured major electoral and legislative wins federally and in states, Robinson has cultivated a reputation as a champion for inclusion, a fierce optimist, a battle-tested organizer, and a changemaker whose career has centered around the fight for bodily autonomy and racial and gender equity, with a focus on lifting up marginalized communities and building political power. During her time at the helm of PPAF, Robinson has led the largest electoral programs in the organization’s history, helped to quadruple the annual budget, and expanded membership and engagement, increasing the number of supporters from 6.5 million in 2012 to over 18 million today.

“I’m honored and ready to lead HRC — and our more than three million member-advocates — as we continue working to achieve equality and liberation for all Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer people,” said Kelley Robinson, HRC’s incoming president. “This is a pivotal moment in our movement for equality for LGBTQ+ people. We, particularly our trans and BIPOC communities, are quite literally in the fight for our lives and facing unprecedented threats that seek to destroy us. The overturning of Roe v. Wade reminds us we are just one Supreme Court decision away from losing fundamental freedoms including the freedom to marry, voting rights, and privacy. We are facing a generational opportunity to rise to these challenges and create real, sustainable change. I believe that working together this change is possible right now.  This next chapter of the Human Rights Campaign is about getting to freedom and liberation without any exceptions — and today I am making a promise and commitment to carry this work forward.”

Monday, September 19, 2022

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The Human Rights Campaign and One Colorado Hosted Campaign Kick Off Event to Mobilize Voters for Pro-Equality Candidates in 2022 Midterm Elections

On Sunday, the Human Rights Campaign and One Colorado – leading national and local LGBTQ+ organizations – hosted a campaign kick-off event to mobilize voters for pro-equality candidates in the 2022 midterm elections this November.

 

The event included remarks from U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, and local nonprofit leaders and activists about extremist politicians’ escalated attacked on LGBTQ+ people and how Coloradans can support pro-equality, pro-choice, and pro-democracy candidates up and down the ballot.

 

HRC’s election program will mobilize 1.5 million “Equality Voters” in Colorado for whom LGBTQ+ equality is a make-or-break issue through volunteer canvassing, phone banking, voter registration drives, among other efforts. HRC’s strategy will be fueled in part by a highly energized grassroots network that includes volunteers across the state. HRC endorsed Sen. Michael Bennet and Attorney General Phil Weiser earlier this year.

 

Please view a recording of the remarks and photos from the event. Remarks came from:

 

U.S. Senator Michael Bennet:

“There is a lot at stake this year on the ballot. There are obviously candidates at stake but what is really at stake is our democracy. Our country’s history has always been a battle between the highest ideals on the one hand that we wrote down in the pages of the Constitution – words that the Attorney General knows well – and the worst impulses in human history… We cannot let the Supreme Court be the last word on a woman’s right to choose, we must make sure that we elect pro-equality majorities in the House and Senate – both here and in Washington, DC – and we’ve got to make sure that we’re constantly on the side of those higher ideals.”

 

Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser:

“In the Dobbs decision, Justice Clarence Thomas said the quiet words out loud. This Supreme Court is ready to overturn marriage equality, which means marriage equality is on the ballot... Everyone deserves to be protected. Everyone is worthy of equal treatment under the law. We in Colorado have made a transition that we must continue to be vigilant about – from the ‘hate state’ to the first state to elect an openly gay person as its governor. We can do that again this year when we fight for equality on the ballot.”

 

Brandi Hardy, Associate Regional Campaign Director at the Human Rights Campaign:

“We’re here today because every family, every child, and every Coloradan deserves the same protections as everyone else – to live their lives with safety, dignity, privacy, and free from discrimination. We deserve leaders who will fight for all of us. I know many of you share my pride in being a Coloradan and living in a state that has many protections for LGBTQ+ people. But we also know that our fight for equality is far from over. Today, the rights of millions of Americans across the country are being held hostage by an extremist minority of anti-equality judges and politicians who are stripping away the rights of LGBTQ+ people, women, and people of color — attacking our families, our right to vote, and our right to make decisions about our own bodies…We refuse to sit by and the majority of Americans will send a strong message by showing up at the ballot box this November.”

 

Matthew Bell, Political, Organizing, and Field Manger at One Colorado:

“With so much at stake this year, we continue to advocate for equality for the LGBTQ+ community. We’re encouraging our supporters to vote with pride in the November 8 election.”

 

HRC’s Commitment to Colorado

 

Equality Voters, including the 1.5 million in Colorado, are a voting bloc of demographically and geographically diverse Americans who are united by the advancement of LGBTQ+ equality. Equality Voters are younger, more racially diverse, and more female than the general electorate, they recognize and trust the HRC brand, and they are more likely to identify with issue-specific organizations than candidates or political parties.

 

Across the country, HRC PAC works every day to elect pro-equality leaders who support policies that will support the rights and lives of LGBTQ+ people. During the 2020 election cycle, HRC staff on the ground recruited 5,800 individual volunteers nationwide who completed 28,500 hours of voter contact in more than 2,650 volunteer events. HRC engaged in robust digital and online GOTV efforts, including sending over 2.7 million person-to-person text messages, a massive increase from 2018 when approximately 500,000 texts were sent. HRC sent over 2.5 million mail pieces, had over 930,000 phone conversations with voters, and engaged more than 200,000 voters through HRC’s voter dashboard at hrc.org/vote.

Cheers to another successful year for Colorado Mountain Winefest

The Colorado Association for Viticulture & Enology (CAVE), is pleased to announce the success of the 31st Annual Colorado Mountain Winefest presented by Fisher's Liquor Barn! The festival took place Saturday, September 17th at Riverbend Park in Palisade, CO. Mountain Winefest is the premier event in the Grand Valley, with 2022 marking the 7th year that the festival was a sold-out event. 


This year, the Festival in the Park welcomed over 5,000 attendees from across the globe. Guests traveled from over 40 states and 7 countries to enjoy sips from over 40 Colorado Wineries, Cideries, and Meaderies as well as live music, artisan vendors, educational seminars, chef demonstrations, and more. 

Wine lovers throughout the state also enjoyed a wide range of wine-themed events during Colorado Wine Week. Colorado Wine Week took place from September 11-18, 2022 and was a celebration of the state's wine, wine producers, grape growers, and vineyards. On Sunday, September 11th, Governor Polis issued a proclamation that Colorado Wine Week be officially recognized throughout the state. Colorado Wine Week featured over 25 events that were hosted by participating wineries, restaurants, and small businesses across the Western Slope and the Front Range. 

"We are thrilled by the outcome of this year's festival and by the official recognition of Colorado Wine Week by Governor Polis," said CAVE Executive Director, Cassidee Shull. "It truly shows the value of our state's wine industry and agritourism and shows what a fantastic job our wineries and grape growers are doing."

Colorado Mountain Winefest is the state’s largest wine festival and is also the primary fundraiser for CAVE. All event proceeds go towards its annual VinCO Conference & Trade Show, which takes place each January in Grand Junction, CO. VinCO is focused on improving winemaking and grape growing in Colorado by bringing together top experts in enology, viticulture, and business. 

The 32nd Annual Colorado Mountain Winefest will take place in Palisade, CO on September 16, 2023. Tickets will be available for purchase later this fall. Colorado Wine Week will take place September 10-17, 2023.

For more information about Colorado Mountain Winefest and Colorado Wine Week, please visit www.ColoradoWinefest.com.

Tenor Eric Ferring Releases No Choice But Love: Songs of the LGBTQ+ Community

On Friday, November 18, 2022, American tenor Eric Ferringknown internationally for being “powerful and direct… while conveying a range of conflicting emotions with distinction and subtlety” (BachTrack), releases No Choice but Love: Songs of the LGBTQ+ Community with pianist Madeline Slettedahl on Lexicon ClassicsThe two-CD length album seeks to highlight diverse LGBTQIA+ voices and perspectives, through revelatory performances of important songs by some of today’s leading composers, including the world premiere recording of Ben Moore’s Love Remained in a new version for tenor, and the commissioned title work, No Choice but LoveManuel de Falla’s Preludios and Oración de las madres que tienen a sus hijos en brazosJake Heggie’s Friendly Persuasions; Poulenc’s Tel jour, telle nuit; Ethel Smyth’s On the RoadJennifer Higdon’s Lilacs; the world premiere recordings of Willie Alexander III’s Sure On This Shining Night and Mari Esabel Valverde’s To digte af Tove DitlevsenBenjamin Britten’s Canticle I; and Ricky Ian Gordon’s Prayer and Joy. Ferring performs a recital of these works at his alma mater, Drake University, as part of their acclaimed Jordan Concert Series on October 14, 2022.

Ferring expresses, “As members of that community, Madeline and I wanted to pay homage to the beautiful, difficult history of the LGBT+ community within the classical music world by featuring the many talented living and passed LGBT+ composers. We believe that music is a means of expression, an alternative lens through which to interpret reality, and a healing force. We know that we must use our voices to be advocates for those whose voices are ignored or can’t be heard. We as artists must utilize our gifts to be catalysts for change, empowering our networks, and inspiring them to do what they never thought possible.”

The album opens with Ben Moore’s (b. 1960) song cycle, Love Remained (2011). The first song includes selections from a 2010 speech by Fort Worth city councilman Joel Burns, in which he came out publicly to his community, followed by Moore’s interpretation of the love Randy Robert Potts had as a child for his late gay uncle, Ronald Roberts, son of American television evangelist Oral Roberts. For the third song, baritone Michael Kelly, the cycle’s dedicatee and first performer, contributed a poem about coming out to his brother. Ben Moore’s final song excerpts Harvey Milk’s now-legendary 1978 “Hope Speech” to create a piece with an anthemic quality. Moore says, “Milk was like the Martin Luther King of the gay-rights movement. I wanted something to honor him, juxtaposed with the passion of the speech.”     

Spanish composer Manuel de Falla (1876-1946) was a closeted gay man, who exiled himself to Argentina in 1939. “His two songs on this album express sentiments common to parents everywhere, hoping to create a more universal dialogue between parents and their children,” says Roger Pines in the liner notes. In Preludios (1900), Falla sets a mother-daughter dialogue by Antonio de Trueba. Oración de la madres que tienen sus hijos en brazos (Prayer of the mothers who hold their sons in their arms) (1914) is described by Pines as “deceptively soothing, given the desperation of the mother imploring Jesus not to let her son become a soldier.”

Jake Heggie’s Friendly Persuasions: Homage to Poulenc (2008) uses texts by Gene Scheer, highlighting friendships between Poulenc and four close friends. Pines says, “The first song presents a dialogue based on correspondence between Poulenc and harpsichordist Wanda Landowska, as she impatiently awaits the new concerto he’s writing for her. Her urging that he explore his true feelings in his music leads Poulenc to confess his longing for ‘Richard’ (presumably painter Richard Chanlaire, Poulenc’s lover in the late 1920s).” The second song tells the story of when Poulenc’s recital partner, baritone Pierre Bernac, disliked a holiday song he had written, so he threw it into the fire. Heggie next shares the story of Raymonde Linossier, a young woman to whom Poulenc proposed marriage but died at only 32. The fourth and concluding song finds Poulenc “at home during wartime, playing his own songs for Surrealist poet Paul Eluard, whose friendship Poulenc considered true brotherly love,” says Pines. 

Francis Poulenc (1899–1963) was a prolific composer, and although he was troubled by life as a gay man, “he remained a central figure in the world of gay writers, composers, and theatrical figures “who galvanized the Parisian cultural scene.” (Pines) Poulenc’s nine-song cycle, Tel jour, telle nuit (1937), emerged directly from the true story of him destroying the song manuscript when Bernac didn’t like it, and then whispered the words, “Tel jour telle nuit” (“As the day, so the night”). Poulenc used nine poems by Paul Eluard, largely inspired by Eluard’s second wife. 

Pines says, “Dame Ethel Smyth (1858–1944) triumphed over prevailing skepticism – not to say scorn – regarding female composers. Smyth produced much-admired songs, operas, chamber music, and large-scale orchestral works. The fervency of her commitment to music was matched by the passion of her romantic attachments to numerous other women, and also by her dedication to women’s suffrage, which led on one occasion to her arrest and two months in prison. Ethel Carnie Holdsworth, a zealous feminist and anti-Fascist activist, contributed the text for Smyth’s On the Road (1913).”

Jennifer Higdon (b. 1962) is one of today’s most successful American composers and a member of the LGBTQ community. She took the text of Lilacs (2014) from Walt Whitman’s “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d,” which published in 1865, shortly after Abraham Lincoln’s assassination, and mourns the president without actually mentioning his name. 

Willie Lee Alexander III’s (b. 1992) music is inspired by his experience as a gay African-Mexican-American man. As co-composer and consultant, Alexander recently worked on two new operas presented by Kanye West in collaboration with The Sunday Service Collective and co-created the music for Kim Kardashian’s Skims fashion show for 2020 New York Fashion Week. Pines shares, “The ten lines of text in Sure on This Shining Night (2021) present a portion of James Agee’s eleven-verse poem, ‘Description of Elysium’ (1934)... Alexander imagines ‘an older man walking through the woods at night and remembering the life he’s lived – both the hardest points and the triumphant ones.’”

Works by Mexican-American transgender composer Mari Esabel Valverde (b. 1987) is a multilingual singer and music educator, as well as a frequent speaker on social-justice issues. To Digte af Tove Ditlevsen (2010) sets two poems by the distinguished Danish writer who – after an exceedingly turbulent life affected by drugs, alcohol, four failed marriages, and troubled mental health – died by suicide at age 58 in 1976. Valverde calls these poems “brutally honest.” 

Benjamin Britten’s (1913–1976) five deeply spiritual Canticles celebrate the expressive possibilities in the singing of tenor Peter Pears, Britten’s life partner. Of Canticle I featured on this album, Pines says, “Although the work’s homosexual content has been the subject of debate, it does ultimately seem as close as anything in Britten’s oeuvre to a public declaration of his love for Pears.”

Ricky Ian Gordon (b. 1956) noted in an interview for The Journal of Singing that “poetry is the deepest way I order my universe…when I set poems to music, it’s almost like I’m healing a rift in myself.” Written for soprano Harolyn Blackwell, Gordon’s ten-song cycle Genius Child (1993) uses texts by Langston Hughes to exhibit a vast range of emotion.

Ferring and Slettedahl close the double album with its title track, No Choice but Love, which Ferring commissioned from Ben Moore in 2021. Ferring sent the composer a poem by a fellow tenor and close friend, Jamaican-American Terrence Chin-Loy. Pines describes, “Immediately attracted to the poem, Moore first did an oral reading for Chin-Loy to confirm that his own interpretation connected completely with the poet’s intention. Moore saw that Chin-Loy was strongly rebuking ‘everything that is designed to beat down gay people, and the feeling that LGBTQ+ love is somehow unnatural. Like every other gay person I’ve ever met, I was given negative messages when I was young. It’s a process to fully accept yourself and see that what we are is natural. Nor is it a choice – it’s based in love.’” Moore worked to give the song “a cosmic feel” and says, “the speaker reflects on the people who came before and made our current freedoms possible. ‘We have no choice but love’ – Terrence celebrates that this hugely positive truth is how the world is meant to be.’” 

MAP's State of Democracy Series: Spotlight on Florida

With the midterm primary season coming to a close and focus shifting to the November general election, Movement Advancement Project (MAP) is kicking off its State of Democracy Spotlight Series which will profile a different state each week.

This series will provide an overview of the current voting landscape, key issues that are coming up in that state, and why it matters for the overall state of democracy in this country. These spotlights will outline policies that will impact what voting may look like in a number of battleground states and will provide overviews of how voting and election laws have changed since the 2020 election, for better or for worse.

▸▸ How Florida Compares to Other States on Voting and Election Policies

Florida ranks 31st in the nation in our Democracy Tally for its voting, election, and democracy policies. The Democracy Maps track 45 laws and policies for each state, which inform this tally.

Despite the rhetoric of leaders in the state, Florida actually ranks in the Democracy Map’s highest category for election security with a number of important protections.

Two of the categories where Florida ranks among the lowest nationwide are its election independence & integrity policies and its policies for voting in person.

Ensuring that every eligible voter is able to vote is of course a core tenet of free and fair elections in a democracy. That starts with voter registration — and automatic voter registration is a policy to ensure this. Twenty-two states have some form of automatic voter registration, including Georgia, Michigan, and West Virginia. In fact, automatic voter registration helps increase voter turnout while also improving election security. (See our full report on automatic voter registration.)
 

▸▸ False Narratives of Voter Fraud Led to Politically Motivated Prosecutions in Florida

The heightened climate around supposed voter fraud has resulted in politically motivated prosecutions of voters. In 2018, Florida voters passed Amendment 4, an initiative that was intended to restore voting rights to people with prior felony convictions.

Following the initiative’s passage, state lawmakers interfered with its implementation by enacting complex administrative requirements for rights restoration which resulted in widespread confusion and lack of a clear process. (Florida is one of 11 states that requires additional action to restore voting rights to someone with a prior felony conviction.)

Since then, several people who thought their voting rights had been restored and who were told by local elections officials that they were eligible to vote have been charged with crimes for trying to vote. They now face penalties of up to five years in prison.

These prosecutions appear to have been politically motivated and originated from the state’s newly created Office of Election Crimes and were erroneously touted by the governor in a press conference as supposed proof of voter fraud.
 

▸▸ Voting, Especially Mail Voting, in Florida Has Become More Difficult Since 2020

Under the guise of addressing voter fraud, Florida has passed multiple laws restricting mail voting. Among these restrictions are severe limits on ballot drop boxes, harsh criminal penalties for assisting with ballot return, and strict requirements for identification related to mail voting.

Ballot drop boxes, despite being a popular and secure option utilized by many voters in the 2020 election, have become a target of election conspiracies.

Florida politicians seized upon these false narratives to implement severe limits on drop boxes which require they be located inside election offices and only available during early voting hours. Similar restrictions in Georgia led to a substantial decline in the use of drop boxes in 2021. (See our policy brief on the battle over ballot drop boxes for more information.)

The state legislature also implemented new ID requirements for mail voting; voters are now required to provide a driver’s license or social security number to request a vote by mail ballot. Voters who do not have this information in their voter registration file may be unable to vote by mail. Democrats in the state have said these new requirements will disproportionately impact voters of color who are less likely to have this information on file.

Finally, harsh new limits on ballot collection, and resulting felony criminal penalties, have imposed a chilling effect on get out the vote efforts, according to advocates. The state now restricts ballot collection limits to possessing no more than two ballots, and violating the law is a felony.

▸▸ Bottom Line: Florida in the 2022 Midterm Elections

As has been the case for the past two decades, Florida will continue to be under the spotlight in terms of elections. The governor and legislature have continued to push false narratives of election fraud and use these false narratives as a justification to enact new restrictions on voting. This is despite the fact that Florida already has strong election security laws. The new laws enacted in Florida since the 2020 election do nothing to actually improve election security, but rather suppress votes and weaken the independence and integrity of the state’s democracy.

Follow @DemocracyMaps on Twitter and Medium

Mothé - photobooth

 

Mothé shares the video for their new single, photobooth. Filmed on location in Los Angeles, the clip was directed by Derek Rathbun. 

Experience the Magic of Dance at Marjorie Park

MOA is pleased to present David Taylor's Zikr Dance Ensemble at Marjorie Park on October 6th for a very special premiere performance of "Portals." This production is a new visionary work that explores the hidden realms of dance ritual throughout world history and features stunning new sets, costumes and visual effects.

Have a picnic and make a night of it! Bites from Tula's Tapas and beverages will be available.

Friday, September 16, 2022

EPA announces $121 million in historic federal funding to Colorado for clean watersheds and drinking water

Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) awarded $121 million in Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding to Colorado for water infrastructure improvements.

President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) allocates more than $50 billion to EPA toward repairing the nation’s essential water infrastructure, which helps communities access clean, safe and reliable drinking water, increase resilience, collect and treat wastewater to protect public health, clean up pollution and safeguard vital waterways. The grant marks the first significant distribution of water infrastructure funds thanks to the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. State allocations were previously announced.  

 “All communities need access to clean, reliable, safe water,” said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. “Thanks to President Biden’s leadership and the resources from the historic Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, we are repairing aging water infrastructure, replacing lead service lines, cleaning up contaminants, and making our communities more resilient in the face of floods and climate impacts.”

“President Biden has been clear—we cannot leave any community behind as we rebuild America’s infrastructure with the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law,” said White House Infrastructure Coordinator Mitch Landrieu.  “Because of his Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, nearly half of the additional SRF funding will now be grants or forgivable loans, making accessing these critical water resources easier for small, rural and disadvantaged communities.”

“This Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding will support unprecedented investments in wastewater treatment and drinking water infrastructure Colorado’s communities,” said EPA Regional Administrator KC Becker. These projects will create jobs and modernize and extend the water systems that keep our rivers clean and our water safe to drink in every corner of the state.”

 

“The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law is providing critical investments to increase Coloradans’ access to clean drinking water and upgrade water infrastructure in communities that have historically been overlooked,” said U.S. Senator Michael Bennet. “Everyone deserves access to clean, safe drinking water and I am glad to see this additional funding coming to the state.”

“The benefits from our Bipartisan Infrastructure Law keep flowing! Everyone deserves clean water and this funding will make critical upgrades to Colorado’s water systems,” said U.S. Senator John Hickenlooper.

 

“This is a big win for our community,” said Congresswoman Diana DeGette. “These grants will help fund significant improvement to help ensure everyone in our community has access to the safe, clean drinking water they need.”

“During a time of historic drought in Colorado and across the west, the money from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law is crucial in improving our water infrastructure,” said Congressman Ed Perlmutter. “This investment will provide significant benefits to communities across our state and improve access to one of our most critical natural resources.”

 

“Every American should have access to clean, potable water,” said Congressman Jason Crow. “This critical investment will both modernize our water infrastructure and protect vital waterways in Colorado. I’m proud to have helped deliver this funding with my vote for the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.”

"CDPHE is leveraging our strong community partnerships to ensure that this funding will protect Colorado's precious waterways and provide access to clean water for decades to come," said Nicole Rowan, Director of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment Water Quality Control Division.

EPA’s SRFs are part of President Biden’s Justice40 initiative, which aims to deliver at least 40% of the benefits from certain federal programs flow to underserved communities. Furthermore, nearly half the funding available through the SRFs thanks to the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law must be grants or principal forgiveness loans that remove barriers to investing in essential water infrastructure in underserved communities across rural America and in urban centers.

Funding announced today represents FY22 awards for states that have submitted and obtained EPA’s approval of their plans for use of the funding. Capitalization grants will continue to be awarded, on a rolling state-by-state basis, as more states receive approval throughout FY22; states will also receive awards over the course of the next four years. As grants are awarded, the state SRF programs can begin to distribute the funds as grants and loans to communities across their state.

 

The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law presents the largest ever funding opportunity for investing in water infrastructure. Find out more about Bipartisan Infrastructure Law programs and other programs that help communities manage their water at www.epa.gov/infrastructure.