Hundreds show out for Western Street Breakfast in downtown Colorado Springs

Bradley Davis

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – Hundreds gathered on Pikes Peak Avenue in the early hours of Wednesday morning to grab a plate and enjoy the annual Western Street breakfast and Range Riders Peak Ride.

The breakfast started at 5:30 a.m. to kick off the rodeo season and get people excited for the “Pikes Peak or Bust Rodeo” coming up on July 8. For just $5, participants got a wooden entry token good for a full breakfast plate with pancakes, eggs and sausage. Two Blackhawk helicopters made a flyover for downtown onlookers just after 7 a.m. A live band entertained with popular cover songs before the Range Riders took off on horseback for their week-long Peak Ride at 8 a.m.

The Range Riders and their 160 horses started the peak ride with a lap around the downtown area of Colorado Springs, treating residents to a horseback parade.

Fort Carson soldiers and Air Force Airmen cooked and served breakfast. The Range Riders will donate all the entry money to military families in the local community.

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Weeklong pothole repair ‘blitz’ starts Monday in Pueblo

Abby Smith

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) — The City of Pueblo Department of Public Works asked for input from city residents for a pothole filling effort that starts Monday and continues through Friday.

A city release issued last week described the upcoming effort as a pothole “blitz.”

KRDO 13’s The Road Warrior followed a crew that worked on the west side of the Steel City.

“I think it’s doing a good thing for our city, you know?” said Joseph Trujillo, a crew supervisor. “Just trying to get these roads fixed for people, so that they have a better-quality road to drive on. At the end of the day, that’s what we’re here for.”

Trujillo’s crew worked on a block of 10th Street, west of downtown, responding to a business owner’s tip about numerous potholes there.

“My granddaughter was pulling out here, and she got a flat tire in one of the potholes,” said Reggie Garcia, owner of the LATCON contracting firm. “Really bad, one of the deep ones over there. I do have a business here, and we have a lot of clients who come in. It does look bad. But I was surprised the crew came this soon.”

Several residents expressed the same sentiment to The Road Warrior.

City officials say that the pothole blitz doesn’t include the largest potholes because they require more work and are better fixed using hot mix asphalt; those potholes will be addressed later this summer.

Officials will provide a summary of potholes filled at the end of the blitz.

Trujillo said that the potholes should hold for several years, depending on moisture and freeze-thaw cycles.

“But the rest of the street continues to crumble around those potholes,” he said. “It will need to be repaved.”

The city encourages residents to submit suggestions and requests to the Department of Public Works by emailing pubworks@pueblo.us

“We’re asking residents to let us know where their biggest pain spots are throughout the city,” said Acting Director of Public Works Chuck Roy. “The City has done our street assessment for major arterial roads, and we have long-term plans for paving, sealing, patchwork, and other needs. What we’re seeking is for our residents to let us know about the potholes that affect their everyday drive in their neighborhood that isn’t scheduled for major road maintenance.”

According to the city, these requests do not include parking lots or streets outside of city limits, including Colorado state highways or roads.

Andrew Hayes — the city’s former public works director, who recently moved to the city’s economic development office — provided more details a day after the release was issued.

“For the first time, because of wet spring weather that produced more potholes, we’re going to have five crews out there,” he explained. “We’re going to patch potholes with cold mix. It doesn’t last as long as with hot mix, but we want to get those holes filled as soon as possible.”

Hayes added that the city is acquiring hot mix asphalt equipment that allows crews to patch potholes in warm or cold weather.

“Normally, we’re limited by the availability of hot mix asphalt in the winter, and that hinders our ability to make those higher-quality repairs,” he said.

In a story earlier this spring, KRDO 13’s The Road Warrior reported that Pueblo has a street staff of 25 people, with only two assigned to pothole repairs.

That same report revealed that many residents believe potholes are worse than ever this year, while city officials disagree.

A memorable happening during the first few months of The Road Warrior coverage was when a woman — in the dark, wearing a bathrobe on a windy morning — appeared during a live report to show what she described as $1,300 in pothole damage to her car.

The city requests that citizens provide as much specific information as possible about pothole locations.

For a look at the Roadway Asset Services (RAS) assessment in 2022, go to https://www.pueblo.us/2895/Road-Condition-Assessment-Summary.

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What it is like to compete in the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb

Rob Namnoum

It’s quite the climb to the summit of Pikes Peak. When you arrive at the top– that’s when the drivers realize only a select few from around the world can accomplish such a feat, “Oh my gosh. I’d see this race when I was a little kid and I would just see these kings, these gods. I never even thought I would ever, ever be associated or be able to compete here. And now that I’m here, it’s feel like a tiny little molecule,” says Lew Bouchier.

“The first time you raced up Pikes Peak,  what were your initial thoughts?” KRDO13 asked Bouchier.

“Just not die. It was very intimidating, you know, It was like, whoa, if I miss this corner, I’m done,” Gregoire Blachon.

The majestic views of Pikes Peak are awe-inspiring, and to compete against the best the world has to offer is attractive to most drivers.

“This is like being at the Olympics. I cannot believe that I can be possibly included in any of this. It’s literally every single person here, in every single one of these cars.  Just absolute amazing talent. And you think you’re alone in it and then you get here and  they understand,” says Bouchier.

It’s that understanding that makes the Hill Climb so endearing and the reason why everyone helps one another out.

“There’s a little community up there so you can go to the next guy and be like,  Oh, we forgot this. Oh, we have two of them. Borrow it or whatever. Everybody’s friends are competing, but it’s friendly for the most part,” says Evan Bond, a pit crew member for Lew Bouchier.

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Improvement project delayed by underground spring resumes on Dublin Boulevard in northeast Colorado Springs

Scott Harrison

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — The closure of a third of a mile of a busy Colorado Springs street is in effect after being delayed by city officials a month ago.

It means that the closure will now affect the start of the fall semester for a nearby charter school in District 49.

Officials revealed that the delay was caused by addressing an underground spring, similar to one that had been an issue in the area for most of last year.

Crews began placing concrete barriers and signs Monday night on Dublin between Fieler Drive and Mustang Rim Drive, as well as at the intersection of Dublin and Peterson Road.

The closures are required for a $15 million improvement project on Dublin between Fieler and Marksheffel Road that KRDO 13’s The Road Warrior first reported on last fall.

Officials had hoped to end the closures before classes resumed at the Pioneer Technology and Arts Academy, but the delay means that traffic patterns to and from the school will temporarily change when classes resume.

City officials said that more information about those traffic patterns will be released later.

“Then you have an adjustment with (Vista) High School,” said Kent Mathews, a neighbor. “There’s a ton of traffic that comes this way off Dublin, to make the right-hand turn to get to Vista. So, there’s school traffic in both directions that’s just going to be massive and an utter headache. But it needs to be done.”

Improving the drainage of the groundwater that contributes to spring formation is one of the project’s objectives; crews used a network of French drains to resolve the previous spring that caused splashing and ice hazards to traffic.

Drainage upgrades include more storm sewer pipes, inlets, and water quality structures.

Crews will also widen Dublin from two to four lanes and build a center median between Fieler and Marksheffel to match the alignment on both ends of that segment.

Another project benefit is building wider sidewalks and improving connections to the nearby trail along Sand Creek; that pleases Steven Foster, who rode his bike along the closure on Tuesday.

“I was hoping they’d get it done sooner, but it’s something that’s been needed for years,” he said. “It’s taken them long enough. It’ll be nice to have bicycle lanes and sidewalks through here. Overall, it’ll be great having this.”

City officials said that the three-month closure will allow crews to finish the project sooner.

At one point, The Road Warrior saw several vehicles drive through the closure — including a speeding pickup truck that nearly struck some of the concrete barriers.

That led police to post patrol cars at each end of the closure.

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Local businesses form group to raise money for Alzheimer’s through pickleball

Bradley Davis

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – Three local caregiving businesses are partnering to host a pickleball open play on Saturday to raise money for the local chapter of the Walk to End Alzheimer’s organization.

The group calls itself the ABC Community Partners. It’s a partnership between Able Care Mobile Therapy, Bristol Hospice and Cornerstone Caregiving. Each group said they work extensively with people who suffer from Alzheimer’s.

The open play is Saturday from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. at the indoor Peak Pickleball courts at the Chapel Hills Mall. It’s $35 to learn with a pickleball pro and $50 to guarantee a court for 2 hours of free play.

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Tech inspection for the Pikes Peak Hill Climb means more to one driver

Rob Namnoum

Ernie Ramirez will compete in the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb for the first time on Sunday. Ramirez put many hours into getting his car ready for the Hill Climb so when his car passed inspection he became emotional.

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U.S. Northern Command enforces additional security measures ‘based on world events’

Celeste Springer

WASHINGTON (KRDO) — U.S. Northern Command says that they have directed military installations across the continental United States and Alaska to enforce additional security measures due to “world events.”

That being said, U.S. Northern Command says that they are not aware of any specific threats to installations.

Employees and visitors to military installations should expect to see more security measures and possibly face longer wait times to get on base.

Meanwhile, the Air Force Academy (USAFA) has also announced changes to their own security protocol. On Saturday, the academy announced that all visitors must use the south gate entrance. Visitors who try to use the north gate will be redirected to the south gate, officials said. General visitors not sponsored by an organization are not authorized to visit, the USAFA said.

Department of Defense (DOD) ID cardholders are encouraged to use the north gate to enter. The Santa Fe Trail is closed to all personnel for the portion that crosses the Air Force Academy installation.

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Rockfall mitigation closes section of US 24 eastbound out of Cascade, causing reroute

Celeste Springer

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — The Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) says that a section of eastbound US 24 will close throughout Monday due to rockfall mitigation.

According to CDOT, the closure runs from Rampart Terr Road (near Cascade-Chipita Park) to US 24 Business (through Manitou Springs).

CDOT says eastbound traffic is being routed to a single lane, moving head-to-head with westbound US 24.

Map courtesy of CDOT

CDOT says the closure is running from 9 a.m. on Monday, June 16, to 3 p.m. that same day.

Expect delays if heading that direction as cars are following a different traffic pattern than usual.

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Humane Society sends out urgent need for new animal foster homes in Pueblo

Bradley Davis

PUEBLO, Colo. (KRDO) – The Humane Society of the Pikes Peak Region (HSPPR) said it has an urgent need for new animal foster homes in Pueblo as it faces an influx of animals in need of around-the-clock care.

The non-profit said it has over 1,400 animals in its care across its shelters in Pueblo and Colorado Springs. It said an increasing number of the animals coming into the Pueblo shelter are kittens and puppies who need bottle care or animals recovering from injuries. HSPPR said its staff struggles to keep up with the needs of these animals without the help of foster homes.

There are a few requirements to become an animal foster family. You have to be 18 years or older with a reliable form of transportation. If you have your own pets, they must be up to date on their vaccinations. You’ll have to schedule a home visit with HSPPR and have permission from your landlord if you are renting.

You can start the process of becoming an animal foster family here.

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Manitou Springs held Monday morning ceremony to officially open new parking lot

Scott Harrison

MANITOU SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — The opening of a new parking lot normally isn’t accompanied by fanfare and celebration.

Except in Manitou Springs, a tourist town where parking is always in high demand and short supply.

That began changing Monday, when town officials held a 7 a.m. ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new Dillon Mobility Hub.

The hub is a 91-space parking lot on the site of the former Dillon Motel, one of Manitou’s original hotels that opened in 1947 but closed a few years ago.

Officials spent $1.5 million to acquire the property east of the US 24/Maitou Avenue interchange. and convert it into a parking lot.

Manitou’s parking revenue from other lots and meters financed the project.

By establishing the new lot near the east entrance of town, officials hope to reduce traffic congestion in the downtown area and on neighborhood streets by drivers seeking parking.

Ben Schmidt, the town’s new public services director, said that the new lot is an option for people who want to spend the day shopping downtown, or for visitors to the Cog Railway and the Manitou Incline.

The two remaining motel buildings will be part of the new hub.

“They’ll be targeted to open in the fall of 2025 with full restrooms, and our parking and mobility offices for staff,” Schmidt said.

Officials are planning a second phase for the hub once they acquire the necessary funding.

“The second phase build-out is going to have mobility hubs for the Mountain Metro Transit bus systems,” Schmidt explained. It will look very similar to what we have here, but it will also have some great amenities like bike lockers.”

Several Park-n-Ride bikes are available at the hub as another transportation option.

The original Dillon Motel sign still stands.

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