Author Archives | Regan Foster

Creatives celebrate communications, ring in spring

Nice day for a wild wedding

By Noelle Redmond

CSU Pueblo media communication students attended the matrimony of Austin Belore and The Today, held in the Buell Communications Center TV studio. The location and the scenery were all designed to welcome home The Today, and bring her comfort on her wedding day.

After years of what-if’s and maybe’s between the courting couple, the unconventional day conventionally came.

Natashia Gebre-Zion was spotted officiating the event, flanked by maid of honor Brianna Sammons, the groom’s best man Kyra Inay and flower bro John Boren. Kimmy Reinhardt, The Today’s social media manager, served as the romantic events wedding planner and decorator. Reinhardt’s team also consisted of Ryan Jones as videographer and Sammons as the photographer.

The bride was clad in her godmother, Regan Foster’s, champagne-colored veil and the groom in a red-and-black flannel shirt; there wasn’t a dry eye present in the room. Foster performed the honors of giving away The Today, and emotions exceedingly escalated. 

And on with the ceremony they went. Vows were verified, as the two poured their hearts into every word, drawing the guests in with a magnetic pull.

In the calling of any objections, Dara Shepherd made herself known with a vigorous declaration of protest in the TV studio. With the objection at hand, the two soon-to-be-weds continued on, declaring their love and making it official. Their bond is now fully finalized for future editions.

With the wedding ended and the lovers formally secured together, the wedding party and guests retired to a reception at ThunderZone. The bride was abandoned at the altar.

It is said that, “Newspapers are the world’s mirrors.” 

May The Today reflect her and Belore’s love, etched into the pages with ink and rose colored hues; memorializing more moments magically with the momentous stories they shape together, as a team.

Oh, and happy April Fool’s Day. 

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Photo essay: Fundraising kicks into OverDrive

Photos by Jay Ramos

Faculty, staff, administration, students and members of the public gathered at Massari Arena March 15 to celebrate a philanthropic mission that geared into OverDrive.

Drive, a Campaign for CSU Pueblo, which university President Dr. Timothy Mottet announced at the start of this academic year, had set an ambitious goal of raising $100 million by 2028. With nearly $95 million already pledged by March 1, the partners in the campaign — the CSU Pueblo Foundation, the Colorado State University System and the university itself — kicked the capital campaign into OverDrive.

That set the new sites at $135 million by 2028.

Today multimedia journalist Jay Ramos was on-hand for the kickoff event. We are proud to present OverDrive, as captured by his lens.

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University celebrates the launch of Center for Integrated Health and Human Inquiry 

If you go
“No One Hears You Unless You Scream”
A theatrical presentation by the Colorado Arts and and Artists Associates and Art Academy at Pueblo County High School
When: 4:30 to 6 p.m. Friday
Where: Hoag Hall
For info, click here
“A Healing Art? The Intersection of Creative Writing, Personal Trauma and Social Justice”
An interactive presentation by Prof. Jonathan Alexander
When: 3:30 to 5 p.m. Monday
Where: GCB, Room 213

The Center for Integrated Health and Human Inquiry (CIHHI) at Colorado State University Pueblo is slated to kick off its launch through interdisciplinary programming and campus wide-initiatives.

Dorothy Heedt, senior lecturer in the Department of English and World Languages called the center a “collaborative hub that promotes innovative, interdisciplinary experiences and scientific inquiry.” Heedt is a co-director of the center.  

In a statement, she said the center is designed to promote human health and knowledge, while fostering collaborative learning spaces, “to support the growth and integration of nursing and health sciences, social sciences, and humanities through clinical practice, education, and research.”

In honor of the launch, the faculty-led and operated CIHHI Visioning Committee will host campus initiatives. Those include: 

  • A theatrical presentation called “No One Hears You Unless You Scream.” The presentation by the Colorado Arts and Artists Associates and Art Academy at Pueblo County High School, is a take on suicide prevention, exploring the threats and pressures youths face every day. It is scheduled for 4:30 to 6 p.m. Friday. 
  • An interactive presentation by Prof. Jonathan Alexander called “A Healing Art? The Intersection of Creative Writing, Personal Trauma and Social Justice.” He  provides both personal and scholarly perspectives on the intersection of creative writing, emotional trauma, and possibly writing our way toward social justice. The event is slated for 3:30 p.m., and will wrap at 5 p.m. 

The first event will take place just a week after the passing of CIHHI Visionary Committee member and Clinical Education Coordinator of Athletic Training, Marie Pickerill.

Heedt called Pickerill: “integral to the CIHHI Visioning Committee from its inception in 2020. 

“We are still reeling and in shock at the news of her sudden death, we are also already feeling the tremendous loss,” she continued. “Our hearts go out to [Pickerill’s] family and all those who knew and worked with her.”

— Today staff reports

See related content: Fundraising kicks into OverDrive

 

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Narf! Voice actors Rob Paulsen and Maurice LaMarche talk theater, career paths, and 25 years of Pinky and The Brain.

By Brenden Vigil

Both Maurice LaMarche and Rob Paulsen have been a part of most generations of cartoon lovers’ lives. As the voices of “The Animaniacs” The Brain (LaMarche) and Pinky (Paulsen), among many others, the duo has been entertaining kids of all ages for decades. 

It may be no surprise that their proudest moments came when they won Daytime Emmy Awards (LaMarche claimed the 2011 and 2012 awards for his work in “Futurama” and Paulsen the 1996, 1997 and 1999 prizes for his turns in “Animaniacs”). These were big moments for both of their families and what an honor it was to have both won multiple Emmy awards.  

Paulsen has voiced more than 250 animated characters from 1987, starting as Donatello from “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,” and still voice acting in the present for characters like Pinky and Yakko Warner from “The Animaniacs.”  

LaMarche is a Canadian American voice actor, comedian and impressionist.  Some of the voices he is well known for are Brain, Calculon, Kif Kroker and Lrrr from “Futurama,” and Yosemite Sam in Cartoon Network’s “The Looney Tunes Show.”  

When given the opportunity to ask a few questions to both, here’s what they had to say. The following transcript has been edited for style and length. 

The new generation is being generated. Now instead of it being kids and their dads, we are getting like three generations of an audience.
— Rob Paulsen

Vigil: How have you seen the audience change from past generations to now?”  
Paulsen: In the case of Pinky and The Brain it’s just gotten bigger.
LaMarche: What’s happening is, the new generation is being generated. Now instead of it being kids and their dads, we are getting like three generations of an audience. Now we just have to not die for another 50 years, and we will see kids, dads, grandads and great grandads.
Paulsen: Because we have been able to redo this show, 25 years after the first batch. We have an exponentially larger fan base. That’s the main difference.  

Vigil: For each of you, what was the most difficult character to play through your careers?
Paulsen: Difficult? You mean like, physically? The most difficult to play for me is a character I do called Mark Chang, who is a secondary character from “Fairly Odd Parents.” He’s like this crazy surfer that’s always balls out, and I can do it for about an hour and then I’m done.
LaMarche: I love playing him in terms of comedy that came with the character because he was so in trouble. That’s because I was in trouble, and that was Yosemite Sam. Yosemite Sam is a voice you can not do without hurting yourself if you want to do it right. But I had to walk away from that part because I had other work at that time:  I was the voice of Lexus for seven years. My voice has become strained and so I had to make the decision to walk away from the character.

Vigil: At a university level, what would you recommend for students that want to get more into voice acting as a career?
Paulsen: It’s about acting. Period.
LaMarche: Voice acting is just acting without the hair liner and makeup, you know, and memorization. Like radio actors in the ’40s, you just work off the script, but you have to be able to inhabit a character, and you have to be able to know what the character wants and go for that within a scene.
Paulsen: Improv is huge. Stand up, music, stage. Lean into the theater department as much as you can and you never know, voice acting is a new ambition.
LaMarche: When we were starting out neither of us thought this was even something we could approach. I was a comic, a stand-up comic hoping to be an on-camera actor. I had heard there was this fascinating business called voice acting, but little by little with Frank Welker’s help — and I knew him through my friend Howie Mandel — he started talking me up around town. Then I started getting auditions.

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Opinion: Good intentions

By Cassime Joseph

This year, CSU Pueblo celebrated Black History Month with an online opening presentation that had the very best of intentions. The Center for International Programs and Inclusive Excellence put together this event, titled “Brown Bag Dialogue – Black Health and Wellness with Ami Maureen Bajah-Onyejekwe,” on Feb. 10. Additionally, Joe Neguse, Colorado’s first Black U.S. representative, delivered the keynote address at 5 p.m. Friday in the Occhiato Student Center Ballroom.

The Feb. 10 event was meant to build community and share in dialogue related to the national 2022 Black History Month theme, “Black Health Wellness.” The event was facilitated by Ami Maureen Bajah-Onyejekwe, RN, MSN, the nursing simulation coordinator of the School of Nursing. The event promoted good health behaviors such as eating right, exercising and good mental health, and acknowledged the legacy of Black scholars and medical practitioners in Western medicine. 

This was all great content and beneficial to the African American community, and I appreciate the efforts.

Unfortunately, the event missed its mark in the naming itself.  “Brown Bag,” which is a common name for many of these “lunch and learn”-type lecture series here at CSU Pueblo, has historically been a colorist and discriminatory term for African-American people.

The word actually traces back to the “Brown Paper Bag Test,” which was used to judge African Americans’ skin color. The color of the paper bag was the symbol of how “black” an African American should be: If your skin tone was darker than the bag, you were not allowed access to an organization – and the benefits it provided – or you may even get kicked out altogether. 

In a 2014 blog post, Dr. David Pilgrim, curator of the Jim Crow Museum at Ferris State University, cited a case in the late 1960s when a party at Yale University included the posting of a brown paper bag on the door. Anyone whose skin was darker than the bag was denied entrance. 

Imagine,” Pilgrim wrote, “These were students at one of the nation’s flagship universities. They were African Americans at an institution with relatively few students of color. While there, they were scrutinized, doubted and marginalized. And, yet, a fraction of the group decided to practice their own brand of bigotry-deny entry (friendship) to any black person darker than a standard brown paper bag. Why exclude their darker brothers? Because they, meaning those with lighter skin, not only had a fetish for white skin and Eurocentric features, but they had internalized the racist notion that light skin is a marker of intellectual, cultural, social and personal superiority-over and above darker people.”

** See related: Proposed system would bring innovative partnerships to critical conversation **

Pilgrim also cited research by Audrey Elisa Kerr, a professor of African American literature, documenting how the brown paper bag test was used at Black fraternities, sororities, social groups and even African American churches throughout the 20th century.

Additionally “Brown paper bag” is used for more significant class issues and colorism within the African American community. So using this kind of tone-deaf language while celebrating Black History Month is off-mark.

It’s not like this concern is new. 

In July 2020, Oakland, California,-based recruiting and hiring consultant OnGig.com reported that companies like Amazon, Twitter and Apple were starting to ban the “brown bag” terminology out of concerns about racism (https://blog.ongig.com/diversity-and-inclusion/brown-paper-bag-test/). The companies were banning “brown bag” language even when describing a “brown bag session,” a phrase often used to describe a “lunch and learn” session, the blog post reported. 

And as far back as 2013, government workers in Seattle were advised that the term “brown bag” was potentially offensive, multiple agencies reported.

CSU Pueblo did have the best of intentions in celebrating Black History month and also took time to incorporate this year’s theme, but missed its mark with the tone-deaf language. 

However, with CSU Pueblo President Dr. Timothy Mottet’s leadership and the formation of the new diversity and inclusion committees, hopefully, there will be a change for the better. 

Cassime Joseph is a student of media communication and a veteran of the U.S. Army. 

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‘Wolves dominate at home in first track meet of the season

Big air country

By Justin Jenks

The CSU Pueblo men and women’s track teams have started their outdoor season. After coming off of a great indoor season, the student athletes continued their dominant performances on home turf and track at the Thunderbowl. 

CSU Pueblo’s big men, Justin Jenks and Nathaniel Miller, have started the outdoor season the same way they started indoor. Jenks opened up with a shot toss of 19.18m to rank him first in the nation for D2. Right behind him is teammate Miller, with a throw of 19.08m. 





The men’s mid-distance runners also bolstered some imp

ressive statistics. Reece Sherman-Newell ran the 800m in a time of 1:46.59 to put him at the top of the rankings for D2. Behind him is his teammate, Kaleb Tipton, who opened up his outdoor season with a massive PR of 1:50.84. Tipton is currently ranked 6th in the nation. 

The women’s mid-distance also had outstanding performances. Yasmine Hernandez opened up with an 800m time of 2:07.60 to give her the top spot in D2. Helen Braybrook was not far off of Hernandez with a time of 2:10.42. That time puts Braybrook at fifth in the nation. 

Leading the women’s throwers is Jenna McKinley. She started her outdoor season with a shot throw of 14.28m, landing her with a fifth-in-the-nation rank. McKinley also managed to achieve a new personal best in the discus with a throw of 42.24m.

 **See related: NCAA policy opens sponsorship doors for student athletes **

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The female-powered ‘Dream Team’ of Pueblo

By Cassime Joseph

Posada of Pueblo  

Providing housing and supportive services that empower homeless individuals and families in Pueblo County is Posada’s core mission, and they have lived up to it since 1987. 

With more than 100 units acquired for affordable and emergency housing for the homeless population, and youth transitional housing for the homeless between the ages of 18-24, this local nonprofit team has been working hard to address this significant problem. Posada has acquired property such as the former Sunset Hotel and redeveloped it into a single-occupancy unit for the senior population. Posada is also working on a new affordable housing project it recently purchased.

“We have … one of the lowest vacancies of the state, and to be able to provide housing  in our community is a huge success,” said Veronica Gold, Posada housing stability manager and a guest on the Revelation REV 89’s “T-Wolf Talk.”

According to KOAA Channel 5 News, in 2019 the Pueblo homeless census showed at least 300 people sleeping on streets – and this was before the pandemic. The number may be even higher, due to the difficulty of transportation of homeless people and the accuracy of the count. With this census, nonprofit organizations like Posada are able to take immediate action to help the city tackle this challenging problem. 

“During COVID … there was no emergency COVID shelter for the homeless population, so Posada stepped up. There was a need and Posada fulfilled the need,”  Gold said.

To listen to the T-Wolf Talk podcast “Women of Posada,” click here.

Elko Family Emergency Shelter is the only shelter in the city that keeps families together in one facility. Families get to stay for two months and get assistance with food and clothing. The people at this location will have counselors assist in their journey to become more independent. Families may apply as long as they are employed and follow the program’s guidelines.

“We continue to be the voice for those who do not have one or people [whose voices] are not heard,” Gold said. 

There is more to Posada and the small-but-mighty crew that powers it. This organization also has support services such as housing counseling, life skills, education and employment assistance, legal services, referral to local agencies and affordable housing. 

The organization pays special attention to our homeless veteran population as well. According to Veronica Gold, Posada provided housing for 16 homeless veterans at the Monterey Apartments and at 16 newly renovated units at Hudson Avenue and Fourth Street. They also guide disabled veterans to find resources such as a veteran service officer who will help with benefits claims for their disability and education.  

Pueblo County designated Posada with the Community Housing Development Organization (CHDO) title almost 30 years ago. Through this designation, the organization was able to create strategic housing development plans to address housing needs in the Pueblo community. According to posadapueblo.org, since 1997, Posada has completed 117 new construction and rehabilitation projects. Posada is unique because it has two housing programs, Rapid Re-Housing, and Permanent Housing.

Rapid Re-Housing addresses homeless families, homeless veterans or homeless  individuals in need of adequate time to get established. Residents have three months to get their feet on the ground and must show proof of engaging employment to qualify. Posada will assist with rent, medical, food and transportation expenses for up to a year. There will be a case manager who will monitor the families or individuals along their journey to independence. 

The Permanent Housing program focuses more on getting and stabilizing housing for the homeless community of Pueblo. This program aims to sustain affordable housing for the low-income and homeless populations. This program is more for families with children; in some instances, families were able to purchase their own homes.

For the youths of the Pueblo community, Posada has a service where homeless individuals from the age of 18-24 can get assistance. 

None of this critical work would be possible without a dedicated team that works for others’ benefits.  

“We all wear many hats and we all work many hours each day, sometimes the work can be selfless and thankless.”
Katie Schilling, Posada leasing and property manager 

 

The women of Posada 

“We are a staff of 11 women and we are small-but-mighty,” Katie Schilling, Posada’s leasing and property manager told “T-Wolf Talk” host Cidonia Ponce. “We all wear many hats and we all work many hours each day, sometimes the work can be selfless and thankless.” 

In the quiet halls of Posada is a team of 11 women. Their positions in Posada are crucial to making the organization grow. With hard work and dedication, this self-described “dream team,” from executive director to case manager, models what care and understanding is needed to help the homeless population.      

 When there was no emergency shelter for the homeless population during COVID-19, they strategized a plan to shelter the COVID positive patients until they could not spread the virus.

The captain of the team is Executive Director Kim Bowman. She started at Posada as a volunteer in October 1991 and worked her way up as a staffer. In 2018 she stepped into what she called the “world’s largest shoes” when she accepted the leadership role. Bowman is the glue that holds the organization together. Her goal is to work on long-term housing for families, veterans, and individuals. 

LaTanya Yarbrough is the supportive services and Elko case manager for the Elko Family Emergency Shelter. Yarbrough works closely with individuals during intake and program management for the shelter. She also works with homeless veterans, to make sure that they apply for necessary benefits for housing, depending on their dependence status. 

Yarborough also coordinates the annual Homeless Memorial, the community picnic which happens every year at the end of June for the homeless community to enjoy a July Fourth BBQ. Posada joins other organizations such as VFW and American Legion for the Homeless Veterans Stand-Down, an event that goes on every year to help homeless veterans with winter clothes and toiletries, among others. 

This self-proclaimed “dream team” has a few CSU Pueblo alumni. Gold graduated in August 2014 with a bachelor’s in social work and also interned with Posada. When she started her internship, she was also homeless. Knowing first-hand the homeless crisis in the Pueblo community, she made it a personal mission to dictate her service to helping the homeless community. She administers the Rapid Housing and Permanent Supportive housing programs. These programs help the homeless learn valuable tools for renting a home being independent while maintaining the home. 

Gold currently represents Posada and Pueblo as members of the Balance of State Continuum of Care Governing Board, which was established in 2000 in order to assist rural communities in applying for Continuum of Care funding from the U.S. government. 

Gold and Katie Schilling were invited to speak with members of the CSU media team about Women’s History Month and the work they did in Posada. 

Schilling is a mass communications graduate at CSU Pueblo. After college, she moved to Denver and quickly came back to her native home of Pueblo when she heard Posada had an opening for a leasing and property manager. She interacts with the tenants in the Posada programs. As a Pueblo native, Schilling understands the homeless crisis within the Pueblo community. 

Working with the youth is Charlotte Bieber. She is originally from South Africa and moved to the Pueblo community in 2002. As the grant manager and the youth program director, she uses her knowledge to help the Pueblo youth get out of the streets and teach them skills to become independent. She worked for nonprofits such as Nature and Raptor Center of Pueblo, the Pueblo City-County Library District and the Sierra Club – Sangre de Cristo Group. 

Laura McGowan is the self-proclaimed accountant of the team, even though she does much more to make the organization function. McGowan joined the team in February 2015 to oversee the financial aspect of the organization. Another CSU Pueblo alumni, she brings 20 years of accounting experience and makes sure Posada sticks to the laws and regulations when it comes to funding.

 “ It is the whole team that keeps the big machine of Posada moving,” Schilling said.

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East of town, mustard gas is converted to a more environmentally friendly form

Behind the scenes at Bechtel

By: Hailee Langowski 

In an unassuming building east of town, near the Pueblo Municipal Airport, expansive equipment is helping in a mission to decontaminate and destroy World War II-era chemical weapons safely. Inside this training facility, would-be employees learn to work the hugely sensitive robots responsible for decommissioning mustard gas stored near town since the 1950s.

The US Army stockpiled chemical weapons at various locations during and after World War II, although they were never used. In 1985, the United States Congress chose to make outdated weapons a safe part of history. 

Company Bechtel has a leading team now removing the chemicals from the weapons and fulfilling national obligations under the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), according to a contract with the Program Executive Office – Assembled Chemical Weapons Alternatives (ACWA). 

The CWC is an international treaty outlawing chemical weapons production, storage and utilization. It is under the command of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, which was established in the Netherlands. The United States was one of 192 countries that have signed the CWC. Participating countries must remove all chemical weapons. 

As part of a global treaty, the United States destroyed its accumulated chemical weapons stockpile in Colorado and Kentucky. A recent Fox21 News article titled, “Final campaign to destroy ‘problematic munitions’ begins at Pueblo Chemical Depot” explained that the final 10% of around 30,000 tons of chemical weapons are held at these facilities nationwide. 

The Pueblo Chemical Agent-Destruction Pilot Plant (PCAPP) is a government facility designed to safely and efficiently destroy the chemical weapons stockpile housed at the US Army Pueblo Chemical Depot near the Pueblo airport. 

Chemical weapons stocks were destroyed in Colorado for the first time in March 2015 and then again in June 2019 in Kentucky. Both sites are on target to finish by the CWC treaty’s September 30, 2023 deadline. 

According to the Program Executive Office’s ACWA website, the Pueblo Chemical Depot has more than 2,600 tons of mustard toxins stored in mortar shells, constituting 155mm, 105mm and 4.2-inch projectiles. 

The Pueblo community worked with ACWA to select a safe technology for destroying the chemical weapons stored in the depot: neutralization followed by biotreatment. The PCAPP was created to eliminate the stockpile safely, and it became live on September 7, 2016.  

Once the chemical weapons have been removed, the plant will be shut down in an environmentally responsible manner. Unlike previous demilitarization facilities, the Pueblo Depot deconstructs armament using a safe robotic technique.

Todd Ailes is the project manager for the Bechtel Pueblo Team, the systems contractor that built, systemized and now operates the PCAPP Main Plant and PCAPP Static Detonation Chamber. He mentioned that even after the work wraps, there will still be plenty of job opportunities for new employees across all disciplines, as the facility must be decommissioned. According to U.S. legislation, the stockpile destruction must be completed by 2023. 

“We decided that we don’t want incinerators; instead, we want neutralization.”
— Walton Levi, government site project manager

An inside look

On March 11, PCAPP Training Facility staff offered a rare inside peek at the inner workings of this training center. The facility tour, led by Maintenance Training Leader Kent Ladd, explained the neutralization process of mustard gas agents in mortar rounds.

A defensive combat weapon, mustard gas was a blistering chemical that hampered the enemy’s capacity to respond and deterred further military action. The original goal of the chemical mustard gas, according to Ladd, was to keep the opponents as far away as possible.

According to “Germans Introduce Poison Gas” on History.com, Germany manufactured a massive quantity of chemical projectiles that contaminated WWI battlefields. The chemical weapons caused skin, eye and lung blisters, hindering hundreds of individuals in 1917. Treaties signed in the 1970s and 1980s abolished many nuclear, physical and chemical weapons.

Walton Levi, the government site project manager and Ailes spoke with me. 

According to Levi, there were many depots across the United States shortly after Pearl Harbor in 1942, including rural regions like Pueblo. The Pueblo Chemical Depot began as a standard ammunition depot that maintained wheeled army vehicles and housed supplied ammunition used in World War II missiles from the 1950s through the 1960s. Many WWII-era depots closed in 1988, and the Pueblo chemical storage facility began phasing out mortar weapons around 2002. 

The mustard agent was developed in the 1940s at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal near Denver. Mustard gas was weaponized in the 1950s. Levi explains that it was downloaded into projectiles and mortar rounds that might be used for hostile intent. 

The destruction of chemical weapons began after several depots around the United States closed; initially, the mustard agents would be burnt, but Levi adds that the local community desired more environmentally friendly solutions. 

“We decided that we don’t want incinerators; instead, we want neutralization,” Levi said, following the city and residents’ wishes. 

To counteract the mustard agent, water was chosen as the soluble solution. It was critical to learn how water is used to neutralize mustard and how to recover and reuse it without causing substantial environmental damage to Pueblo. An industrial wastewater treatment facility retrieves most of the water consumed. 

Levi outlined the neutralization procedure and technology, which postponed the removal of hazardous agents until 2000. Robots that complete the neutralizing process have made incredible progress. 

Ailes mentioned that engineering and design are all about the environment. 

“The ‘bugs,’ or bacteria, that facilitate the neutralization process are found in the environment,” he said.

The bacteria are wastewater treatment microbes from the Pueblo City facility. The waste in biomass is eaten by various strains of microorganisms in the treatment system. They’re self-replicating bacteria that can survive on their own. 

Playing it safe 

Chemical weapons had to be eliminated while safeguarding the environment and the neighborhood. Ailes highlighted how the Pueblo community viewed the chemical depot’s work. 

“That is most likely how our workforce sees it: we are eliminating [chemical weapons] for a bigger purpose of keeping the community safe. We don’t need this [weapon system], so let’s safely destroy these ammunitions.”

There are pictures and information about chemical weaponry neutralization on the Pueblo Chemical Depot and Bechtel websites. On YouTube, there are multiple videos explaining the robotic process and the Pueblo Chemical Depot milestones throughout the years of chemical weapon destruction. Unfortunately, the PCAPP Training Facility is not available for public viewing. 

The chemical weapons disarmament mission’s final phase began on February 19. Three army units will help destroy significant military equipment, such as mustard-agent-laced mortar rounds. 

The Betchel website reports the Pueblo Chemical-Agent Disposal Pilot Plant has destroyed over 80% of the mustard agent stored by early 2022. Over 2,100 tons of agents have been eliminated and removed from the United States Army’s inventory. 

Workers removed about 300,000 155mm projectiles on September 5, 2020, according to the Fox21 News article, bringing the first arsenal disposal operation to a close. Since the 105mm operation started on Dec. 11, 2020, about 275,000 projectiles have been neutralized. 

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Breaking: South, Central prepare to tip off in final-four action

Lady T-Wolves fall to Lubbock in first round of NCAA playoffs

Today staff reports

The CSU Pueblo women’s basketball team fell to Lubbock Christian, 57-65, Friday in the first round of the NCAA Division II championships, hosted by West Texas A&M. The loss brings an end to the team’s record-setting 23-9 season.

The sixth-seed ‘Wolves bested No. 3-seed Lubbock Christian at the tipoff, but failed to maintain the momentum to the final buzzer.

Under the guidance of Head Coach Tommie Johnson, the squad dominated the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference this season, concluding conference play with a runner-up showing March 5 in Golden. The Thunderwolves’ strong season helped propel the squad to its first NCAA bid since 2018.

In addition, junior forward Alisha Davis wast one of two RMAC players tapped Thursday for the D2CCA First Team All-Region.

In other playoff news, the South and Central boys’ basketball squads tip off this afternoon for the Final Four of the Colorado High School Activities Association (CHSAA) 4A championship. No. 2 South takes on No. 6 Frederick at 4 p.m. at Ball Arena in Denver; while fifth-ranked Central will challenge No. 1 Lewis-Palmer at 5:30 p.m.

Our news partners at Rev 89.5, led by Station Manager and  Today Sports Editor Brandon Samora, will be calling the games live at 89.5 FM or rev89.radio. This is a developing story; check back to csupueblotoday.com for updates.

** Related content: No 1 South dominates No. 4 Central to remain undefeated ** 

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Opinion: Good luck, cheer and dance, from one of your own

This is not your basic ‘cheer or dance’ team

By TaJohn Mitchell

The CSU Pueblo cheer and dance team will be competing at USA (United Spirit Association) Nationals Feb. 26 and 27. Unfortunately, the 2021 nationals were canceled due to COVID-19; however, that just left both teams hungry for more. 

This time around, a lot of pressure is being put upon the students, who are learning different choreography, jumps, tumbling, etc. Cheer and dance are very hard, but that does not define who these great athletes are. 

As a former athlete, I can say that cheerleaders do more than just stand on the sideline and try to pump up a crowd that never really pays much attention. The work starts in the summer to put together a 2 to 3 minute routine, just to compete for two days straight, getting ranked from first to eighth place. 

So, no, this is not your basic “cheer or dance” team. These are student-athletes who work hard at practice – as hard as any athletes out there; who love their team like family; who frequently get injured, but continue to keep pushing through; and most of all, who leave everything on the mat. 

At the end of the day, the cheerleaders know how much they put into the effort, and how hard they worked as a team. Sportsmanship is all that matters. 

This is their time to shine and come back home with another trophy. As a university family, let’s wish them the best of luck, a safe flight to and back and no injuries upon return. What we used to say before we head out from practice: 1, 2, 3 WOLFPACK! AWWOOOOOOO!

TaJohn Mitchell is a junior majoring in media communication with an emphasis in multimedia journalism. He was a member of the cheer and dance squad, and he portrayed Wolfie during the 2021 football season.











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