ALS fundraiser smashes fundraising goal, uplifts spirits and brings the community together

Marina Garcia

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – ALS United Rocky Mountain hosted a walk to raise money and awareness, while celebrating the power of solidarity.

ALS is a neurodegenerative disease that can affect anyone, at any age, and is mostly at random.

It’s a scary diagnosis that has no cure, but Saturday, August 16, people living with ALS and their loved ones gathered at America the Beautiful Park and showed that with a little hope, you can still have a future.

“They usually want you to plan the funeral, and that’s about it. That doesn’t work for me. I feel we have to get involved and really support others,” says Kellie Hazlett, who has ALS. “There’s a lot of us that are sticking around for a long, long time. A lot of us are reversing and getting better, which is a struggle, but they’re doing it all the time.”

Kellie and others with ALS say they’re able to do that with support — which is why all the money raised goes directly to families providing in-home equipment, wheelchairs, special utensils and more. 

Supplies to make living conditions more comfortable allow patients to focus on their friendships, which they say gives them the strength to fight.

“I have so many people here with me today that have helped me in this journey,” says Theresa Feuerbach, who has ALS.

With gratitude and smiling faces, the walk exceeded its goal of $20,000 but if you are interested in donating, you can learn more here.

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Court records detail Cog Railway assault, 66-year-old male in critical condition

Michael Logerwell

MANITOU SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – On Aug. 16th, police say an employee of the Pikes Peak Cog Railway was beaten in the parking lot, located at 515 Ruxton Avenue, sending them to the hospital in critical condition.

The Manitou Springs Police Department (MSPD) has arrested Randy Blevins, who has been charged with second-degree assault. Police say he has since posted bond.

Mugshot of Randy Blevins provided by the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office

Police say the 66-year-old male victim remains in critical condition.

Court Affidavit

According to the affidavit, police say Blevins told them he and his wife had finished the incline Saturday morning and were walking through the parking lot of the Cog Railway to get to a gift shop.

Blevins told police that he and his wife were told not to walk through the parking lot by an employee, and after they continued, they were approached by another employee, a 66-year-old man.

The couple told police that the 66-year-old employee grabbed Blevins by the shirt and punched him twice in the head. Belvins said he hit the employee back once, telling police that on a scale of 1-10, with one being the least amount of force, he used a 10.

According to court records, two witnesses say the opposite occurred.

Both witnesses told police that they saw employees telling the couple that they were trespassing and that police were going to be called.

They say that the employee grabbed Blevins by the shirt to move him off the property, but that Blevins “clocked” him in the face and then punched him two more times while he was on the ground.

Both witnesses said that the employee never hit Blevins in the face, according to arrest documents.

ADDITIONAL REPORTING: Cog Railway employee in critical condition; locals concerned

Image provided by the Manitou Springs Police Department.

MSPD continues to ask that anyone who witnessed the incident, has information, or possesses video footage contact El Paso County Dispatch at 719-390-5555.

Police remind others that information should be provided directly to dispatch and not sent in on social media platforms, to ensure timely follow-up and accurate documentation.

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The Rampart football team is always ready to play

Rob Namnoum

“We’re ready to play dude,” says Rampart tailback, Brayden Werth.

Rob Royer’s Dudes are always ready to play, “We’re blessed with the kids. We have and we don’t worry about the ones that we don’t,” says Rampart head coach Rob Royer.

What they have. Our players who really love playing football, they know this is the Demarion Simpson’s first year at Rampart and he noticed day one his teammates deep desire to succeed, “I came to practice The first day I could tell that everyone was a lot more serious Coming here was like a big culture change. It’s a lot different. I mean, all these guys want to win. They’re not going is going to mess around at practice. They take everything seriously. Everybody wants to play football. Everyone wants to compete at that next level,” says Simpson.

And they don’t just compete on the football field, “Competing for the highest grade on a chem test. We’re competing to be the valedictorian  like we want these kids to compete, and they’ve really embraced that. They’ve done a phenomenal job,” says Royer.

Werth adds, “Every year we’ve seen a progressive growth like  a better culture, and it’s just been really exciting to grow with all the other seniors this year, too. So I’m proud to be part of it.”

The Rams believe there’s something special brewing, “I think we’re a little doubted. I think we’re also going to write that off pretty quick. So everyone here  has kind of that that small person syndrome. We all know we’re better than what people give us credit for and that’s again, that’s what makes us good,” says Werth.

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Fatal crash causes delays on I-25 Northbound just north of Monument

Michael Logerwell

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) – UPDATE at 4:15: Colorado State Patrol says one person is dead and another is fighting for their life after a two-vehicle crash on I-25.

State Patrol says the crash happened a quarter after noon at mile marker 165 in the northbound lanes of I-25, just north of Palmer Lake.

Details on the crash are limited, but the State Patrol said a Honda Accord and a GMC Yukon were involved. The crash caused one of the vehicles to roll multiple times.

One of the vehicle’s drivers was pronounced dead at the scene, and a passenger was taken to a hospital by helicopter in a flight for life situation.

The other driver and passenger(s) only suffered minor injuries that were treated at the scene.

According to COTrip, drivers on that stretch of I-25 are still seeing heavy delays. Slower speeds are advised, and only the right northbound lane is closed at this time.

Original Report:

I-25 heading up to Denver has turned into a parking lot. The Colorado Department of Transportation says a crash caused parts of the highway to shut down.

The crash happened between Exit 163: County Line Road and Exit 167: Greenland at mile marker 164.

KRDO13 is working to learn more about this crash and will provide updates.

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Video shows boy’s rescue by good Samaritan at Lake Pueblo

Celeste Springer

LAKE PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) – What could have been a tragedy at Lake Pueblo turned into a life saved, thanks to the quick actions of one man who dove in to rescue a young boy swept into deep water.

RELATED: Why do so many keep drowning in Lake Pueblo?

Witnesses shared video with KRDO13 as a bystander, Joseph Chacon, carried a boy back to shore after strong winds began to carry him far out from safety on Thursday.

Joseph Chacon says he was fishing with a friend when he noticed a little boy drifting hundreds of yards from shore. Moments later, he heard the boy scream for help.

“Once he jumped off the floatie, he screamed, ‘Help.’ And that’s when I decided to just grab the lifejacket and head in there, because I didn’t see anybody else going yet. So I just went in myself,” Taccone told KRDO13.

Thankfully, the boy was wearing a lifejacket. Chacon and his friend Howie Chappell say another man, presumably his dad, tried to go out to save him, but was not wearing a lifejacket and struggled to reach the boy.

Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) said they are aware of the video; however, at the time of the event, no one called it in to them.

They want to remind people of the importance of calling 911 or *CSP immediately if you ever see something similar. The phone call could mean the difference between life or death.

“Additionally, we encourage everyone to use the buddy system and recreate with a friend, and to always watch the weather conditions closely before heading out on the lake,” said Joe Stadterman, park manager. They encourage everyone to wear a lifejacket while swimming.

There are also lifejacket loaner stations at Lake Pueblo State Park. CPW noted that the boy in the video appeared to be wearing a loaner jacket based on the design on the back. The jacket could have helped prevent the situation from escalating even more.

CPW wants to remind everyone of the following “Know Before You Go” tips (pictured below), which are posted on signs near the boat ramps:

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THE MILITARY FAMILY: Milspouse creates own business, invites others to join in creative collaboration

Heather Skold

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — The whir of the table saw and smell of freshly-cut wood is evidence of Brittany McNeal’s creativity at work. 

Different kinds of wood are stacked against her garage wall, like soldiers at the ready for their next assignment. 

It took McNeal trying a few careers as the wife of her Lt. Col husband moving from address to address, but now, no matter where the Army takes her and her family, she has found a home here in her garage. 

“My husband has just accepted the fact that I’m in the garage.  This is really my domain now!” she laughs.  “I absolutely love being in here and creating.  It was a lot of late nights, but I kept thinking, ‘You can do this.  You can make this.”

McNeal founded Lonnie Eli & Co., named after the couple’s two sons, and makes collapsible carts that are custom-built for her clients.  

The carts could be used for charcuterie, flowers, custom jewelry displays, drinks, or a visual anchor for parties.

“As a prior event planner, I like a ‘moment’ at the event,” says McNeal. 

But McNeal’s vision didn’t just stop at crafting her own passion. 

Through multiple moves in the military, she knows firsthand the value of community.  That’s why she also created HERPlace, a networking event that will bring together other female creators and entrepreneurs, as well as veterans and military members. 

“I know what that’s like to go somewhere new and have to reinvent yourself and find your clients. You need a community.  That is the number one thing that saved me.”

HERPlace is “about building a table where every woman belongs,” according to McNeal.  The event is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 13, from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Meanwhile Block, near the Switchbacks Stadium in downtown Colorado Springs.

You can get tickets here.

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A guide to the 2025 Colorado State Fair

Abby Smith

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) — The 2025 Colorado State Fair officially begins Aug. 22 through Sept.1 with carnival rides, concerts, and all of your deep-fried favorites.

Colorado State Fair map of fairgrounds – Courtesy: Colorado State Fair

The information below has been provided by the fair to plan your visit:

Address:

1001 Beulah Ave. Pueblo, CO 81004

Fair Hours:

Monday – Thursday: 3 p.m. – 11 p.m.

Friday – Sunday: 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.

Labor Day: 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.

Carnival Hours:

Monday-Thursday: 3 p.m. – 11:00 p.m. or laterFriday-Sunday: 11 a.m. – 11:00 p.m. or laterLabor Day: 11 a.m.-11:00 p.m. or later

Ticket Prices:

Adult Gate Admission: $15

Kids (ages 5-12): $7

Children 4 and under are free (when accompanied by an adult)

Please note, when arriving to the fairgrounds without tickets, visit Gate 3 (Mesa Ave.), Gate 5 (Prairie Ave.), and Gate 9 (Beulah Ave.) to purchase fair admission.

The remaining gates are service only or require credentials and do not sell admission tickets. 

Buy tickets here.

Carnival Prices:

($2 fee for wristbands and cards purchased on site)

Unlimited Ride Band*: $34 through August 21, $42 starting August 22

Megapass*: $162 through August 21, $202 starting August 22

Individual Credit: $1

*Some specialty rides not included (height & weight restrictions may apply)

Parking Information: CASH ONLY

Public parking is available in the Colorado State Fair South Lot, south of the fairgrounds between Mesa and Northern Avenues.

$5 Monday-Thursday

$10 Friday-Sunday

Parking is also available in the Hangar Lot at 905 S. Prairie Ave.  Enter heading south on Prairie Ave between Small and Tulane Avenues.

Parking Price: $15

Pueblo Transit Shuttle:

The shuttle will run from the city’s Main Street Parking Garage (110 S. Main St in downtown Pueblo) to the State Fair Gate 5 on Prairie Ave. Shuttles will run every 15 to 30 minutes. The shuttle and parking in the garage is FREE. 

Monday-Thursday: 3-11 p.m.Friday-Sunday: 11 a.m.-11 p.m.Labor Day: 11 a.m. -11 p.m.

Hanicap Access:

Handicap parking and access to the fairgrounds are available from designated areas along Beulah & Arroyo Avenues.

Make a reservation or find more information here.

Individuals are welcome to bring their own electric mobility scooter, stroller, wagon, or wheelchair onto the fairgrounds.

Bikes, skateboards, skates, hoverboards, and electric scooters not for mobility assistance will not be allowed on the fairgrounds.

The fair will be hosting many free concerts with gate admission featuring a variety of artists. You can find the complete schedule here.

For a list of deals and discounts, including information on free kids’ day or senior day, click here.

If you are a vendor or interested in sponsoring or volunteering, you can get involved here.

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‘Seeing a little pink backpack and my heart just sank’: 6-year-old girl hit by car near Rockrimmon Boulevard

Celeste Springer

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — The Colorado Springs Police Department (CSPD) says that a young girl was hit by a car on Friday morning.

According to police, a call came in at 8:05 a.m. near Red Hill Circle and Rockrimmon Boulevard. Police say they were on scene by 8:15 a.m.

Initial reports to dispatch said the girl was 6 years old. Police say that the car involved stayed on scene, and the child was transported to the hospital. The child’s condition is unknown at this time; however, according to CSPD’s call screen, the child was conscious at the time of transport. Law enforcement on scene says that she was taken to a local hospital, but later had to be taken to another hospital for further treatment.

One neighbor said he came home just 5 minutes after the accident happened.

“I just got done dropping my son off at school and pulled up and noticed a vehicle had pulled in front of my house pretty fast, doors open. I came out to, like, a frantic scene. The little girl was lying in the road. Her mom was here, and I think she was walking with two other children at the time, so, it was a pretty chaotic scene,” explained Chris Taylor, “We were praying and people, you know, we’re trying not to get in the way because, like I said, the mother was there, and she was very upset. Her little brother was very upset. So we were just all trying to console people around and let the paramedics do their job.”

Taylor says that as a parent, the driving in the area concerns him.

“I see kids walking up and down the street a lot. I’ve been living in this neighborhood for a couple years now, and, right here in this section is pretty scary. There’s a blind corner, and people speed a lot, and there’s a lot of foot traffic up here. Not only students, but, families walking their dogs or just people exercising or biking. And so a lot of speeding and just illegal activity as far as road laws go,” shared neighbor Chris Taylor.

He said there should be more crosswalks along Rockrimmon Boulevard to Vindicator Dr. Another child was hit at that intersection in 2024 when walking to school.

KRDO13 raised neighbors’ safety concerns with the city.

First and foremost, we want to express our heartfelt sympathy to the family affected by this tragic incident. Our thoughts are with them during this difficult time. We understand that crosswalk placement is deeply connected to how safe people feel moving around our city.

The City follows established guidance on when and where to add crosswalks, with the goal of protecting both pedestrians and drivers. Crosswalks are most effective when placed at intersections with a stop sign, signal, or another form of traffic control. In some cases, we also install them to connect trail networks or provide direct access to important community spaces such as parks, schools, or other public amenities. If we install a crosswalk we add additional treatments such as signage, pedestrian islands or flashing lights to alerts drivers. Our criteria also takes into account traffic speeds, traffic volumes and the number of lanes a pedestrian must cross.

In 2022, Traffic Engineering completed a citywide intersection study. Based on that data, this intersection was not identified as a safety concern. We know safety is a shared responsibility, and we encourage everyone, whether walking or driving, to be alert, patient, and mindful of one another.

-Todd Frisbie, City Traffic Engineer

Another neighbor tells KRDO13 they got home just after the accident.

“It was really shocking to come in, you know, just driving around the corner and suddenly see my tiny little cul-de-sac roped off with all the tape and immediately looking across and seeing a little pink backpack and a water bottle, and my heart just sank immediately. You know, lots of kids travel across our cul-de-sac for school every morning, every afternoon,” said neighbor Ruble Henderson.

He said his heart breaks for the family of the little girl.

“My heart immediately went out to the family, of course, the little kid, but their family, I mean, I immediately have a sense of, oh, my goodness, this is a heavy day for her family. For her parents. So my mind initially went to obviously her and then, her parents, and then obviously, you know, my heart broke for the driver, too. I mean, I couldn’t imagine that, you know, that person feels good about this situation, which there was no indication that they did, you know, they looked pretty, pretty distraught,” said Henderson.

He also tells KRDO13 that he shares some similar safety concerns in the area.

“It’s a really busy street. It’s one of the main veins in this whole west side. So yeah, it’s certainly scary. People are regularly driving 60 plus miles an hour. You know, it’s a 35-mile-per-hour speed zone,” explained Henderson.

Overall, he said it appears to be a tragic accident.

“You blink once at the wrong moment, and these things can happen. So it’s just heartbreaking, really,” said Henderson.

The man stayed on scene and was issued a citation. KRDO13 asked police what charges the man was facing, but CSPD said they could not share the charges as of Friday afternoon.

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The School Buzz: D-60 elementary school debuts new innovation lab next week

Josh Helmuth

Risley International Academy of Innovation will start the new school year with some serious new “rizz.”

The D-60 elementary school will cut the ribbon on a federally funded new innovation lab next week when students start the fall semester. Staff says it’s where project-based learning will come to life.

Creative design? Students can make professional posters and t-shirts.

Computers and video games? Students will program and code.

Travel? Students will have access to virtual reality.

Drew Hirshon works at the school. He says this lab will be a jump-start toward so many careers.

“We’re incorporating some engineering pathways for them, robotics, designing and modeling, there are some opportunities for app creation, so the cyber security side. I mean really giving students gateways to different career paths at the middle school level. So when they do get to high school they’ve been exposed. They’re ready,” he said.

Is there something or someone remarkable at your school? Tell Josh all about it: SchoolBuzz@KRDO.com.

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D-49 charter school in Colorado Springs area receives safety benefits from summer repaving project by El Paso County

Scott Harrison

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — The Rocky Mountain Classical Academy, finishing its second week back to school, has a new crosswalk and other safety upgrades provided by a summer resurfacing project on the street in front of the school.

Crews repaved a mile of Antelope Ridge Drive — just west of Marksheffel Road, on the eastern border of Colorado Springs — between North Carefree Circle and Barnes Road.

A county spokesman said that workers patched potholes and sealed pavement cracks before applying a slurry-seal treatment to smooth the road, as well as modifying pavement striping and installing school zone lights.

Traffic at the start and end of the school day, however, still backs up along the two-lane road leading to the District 49 school.

Some parents told KRDO 13’s The Road Warrior that they have mixed feelings about whether the upgrades have made a significant difference in pedestrian safety and traffic flow.

“The traffic is worse than it ever was,” said Janella Prather, who lives in the neighborhood east of the school. “Parents who drop their kids off are completely inconsiderate. If I had known this would be turned into a school zone, I wouldn’t have bought a house here. And we were given no notification about this.”

Tom Vaupel, a homeowner on Lost Pony Place in a residential area a block south of the school, said that the project hasn’t solved the longstanding problem of traffic congestion caused by parents dropping off and picking up their kids to avoid congestion in front of the school.

“It’s been an issue since I moved here in 2016,” he explained. “We have people blocking driveways, parking in front of fire hydrants and stop signs, even parking their cars to walk to the school. There have been quite a few confrontations because of it. I wish the school would do something about it.”

The Road Warrior has reached out to the school administration for comment and is awaiting a response.

The paving project included several pull-over areas near the front of the school — for quick and convenient student pickup and drop-off — but some parents said that either they’re not used enough, or there aren’t enough of them to make a difference.

“If people actually use the school zone the way that they’re supposed to, we wouldn’t have this problem,” said Holly Dumyahn, who drives her kids to and from school. “We just saw somebody do a U-turn in the school zone. People are always in a hurry. They should leave earlier. I leave 20 minutes early, and I only live ten minutes away. People should be more patient.”

Another neighbor, Anthony Carrera, wants a stronger law enforcement presence.

“To combat speeding and illegal U-turns,” he said. “We also need a crosswalk at the intersection of Antelope Ridge and Lost Pony because that’s where most of the kids and parents cross the street to go to the school.”

Mike Rossi, who drives his child to school, describes the safety improvements as positive.

“I think (the county) did a really good job, although they may have to modify it a little bit,” he said. “But right now, I think it’s really good.”

It’s possible that with school only in its second week back in session, drivers and neighbors may simply need more time to adjust to the changes.

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