Showing posts with label Break. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Break. Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2014

Abused and Exploited Temp Workers May Finally Get a Break



CA bill would hold companies legally responsible for wage and safety violations of subcontractors and temp agencies.








California could become one of the first states in the nation to hold companies legally responsible for wage and safety violations by their subcontractors and temp agencies if a bill proposed Friday becomes law.


The bill tackles the longstanding complaint of labor leaders that companies can often shirk responsibility for the abuse of workers by hiring them through agencies or contracting with smaller firms.


A ProPublica investigation last year found that temp workers face high rates of wage violations and on-the-job injuries, but rarely have recourse against the brand-name companies whose products they move, pack or assemble. Typically, only the agencies or subcontractors that directly employ workers face fines when something goes wrong, even when fulfilling contracts with larger firms that indirectly control or influence the work conditions.


Unions and other worker advocates say the bill would protect temps and subcontracted workers, such as building janitors, by holding the companies at the top of the supply chain accountable.


“Current law is simply insufficient to protect workers’ rights in the shadows of the subcontracted economy,” Caitlin Vega of the California Labor Federation said in a letter supporting the bill. “This simple rule will incentivize the use of responsible contractors, rather than a race to the bottom.”


California is at least the second state this year to take up bills to protect temporary and subcontracted workers. Earlier this month, a New Hampshire legislator introduced a bill to curb the practice of charging workers fees to be taken in temp agency vans to work for unknown companies. That bill would limit such fees and require agencies to tell workers in writing their wage, the name of the company, the location of the job and the workers’ compensation insurance carrier in case of injury.


At least 10 states currently have laws that regulate temp and day labor agencies in some way. Massachusetts, Illinois, New Jersey and Texas, for example, require them to register with the state. Florida and Georgia limit or prohibit fees they can charge for transportation to and from a worksite.


But California would be one of the first to take on the companies that contract with temp agencies to supplement their workforce.


The bill, sponsored by Assemblyman Roger Hernandez, would make companies that contract for labor — for example, a warehouse, farm owner or hotel — liable if one of their subcontractors fails to pay employees their wages, provide workers’ compensation insurance or submit unemployment taxes to the state.


Such a law is likely to face steep challenges from the business community. At a labor and employment committee hearing on March 12, Jennifer Barrera of the California Chamber of Commerce said the state already had enough laws to deal with bad actors. Small businesses turn to staffing agencies to avoid the headaches that come with complying with various employment regulations, she said. A new law, she said, would only further burden them.


“They don’t want to violate the law,” she said. “But they just don’t know what to do or how to meet those obligations as we continue to increase the mandates on them.”


But Mark Schacht, deputy director of the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation, a farmworker rights group, argued that unless businesses at the top of the supply chain are liable for violations that occur on their property, they have no incentive to ensure safe and fair conditions.


Schacht pointed to California’s mixed experience regulating farm labor. The state has required farm labor contractors to be licensed for 63 years. Yet abuses continue, he said, because growers can simply claim ignorance and swap one contractor for another. Proving the grower bears responsibility could require years in court and expensive legal fees, he said.


With a strong liability law, Schacht said, “the grower knows if he doesn’t deal with a reputable contractor, he’s going to be liable. He knows that if he doesn’t supervise the contractor in the field, he’s going to be liable.”


“What will happen,” he said, “is that the bad contractors will be unable to secure contracts.”


A recent dispute in Massachusetts underscores the problem. Temp workers packaging goods destined for Dunkin’ Donuts and Subway say the temp agency failed to pay them overtime. When they complained, supervisors told them the agency didn’t have the funds for overtime because the packaging company didn’t pay them enough, according to the worker rights group, the Massachusetts Coalition for Occupational Safety and Health.


At the California hearing, Assemblyman Hernandez and various witnesses repeatedly cited stories written by ProPublica last year in arguing for better protections for temp workers.


The stories documented the growth of so-called “temp towns,” where workers can’t find jobs without going through temp agencies, and the abuses of immigrant labor brokers, who work with temp agencies to supply workers to brand-name companies. The investigation found that temp agencies consistently rank among the worst large industries for the rate of wage and hour violations.


A ProPublica analysis of workers’ compensation claims showed that temps face a significantly greater risk of getting injured on the job than permanent employees, particularly when it comes to severe injuries such as amputations.


During the hearing, some workers testified that they are often put in unsafe situations and don’t get paid their full wages on time. They explained that many workers don’t complain because they’re uncertain who their employer actually is or fear that the temp agency will stop sending them to jobs.


 Gladys Hernandez (Photo courtesy of The California Channel)

Gladys Hernandez, who was a temporary housekeeper at a DoubleTree hotel in Santa Monica, Calif., told committee members that to clean her quota of rooms each day, she sometimes had to go downstairs, clock out and then finish the rooms off the clock.


A spokeswoman for Hilton Worldwide, which owns the DoubleTree brand, said that because the hotel was a franchise, Hilton “has no ability or authority to influence or dictate any labor related issues at that property.” The franchise owner, The Procaccianti Group, did not return calls or emails seeking a response.


Hernandez said that in February, she and several coworkers complained to DoubleTree management.


“The next day,” she testified, “I was told not to come back.”


 

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Abused and Exploited Temp Workers May Finally Get a Break

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Amnesty Advocates Fearful High-Tech Lobby Will Break Away, Push Solely for Increase in Visas

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Amnesty Advocates Fearful High-Tech Lobby Will Break Away, Push Solely for Increase in Visas

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Seattle police break promise to return drones to manufacturer

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Seattle police break promise to return drones to manufacturer

Monday, March 24, 2014

Report: Key Mortgage Tax Break Just Helps the Wealthy


(Newser) – The tax code is rife with home ownership incentives that are both popular with voters and staunchly defended by lawmakers. But it turns out the breaks mostly just help rich people buy pricier houses, according to a new report from the right-leaning R Street Institute. They “don’t encourage homeownership in any meaningful way,” the study’s author tells the Wall Street Journal. “People just end up buying larger homes.” He estimates that in Washington, DC, the subsides have increased the average home size by 1,400 square feet.


What’s more, the tax breaks are mainly going to the wealthy; homeowners with incomes above $ 100,000 are four times as likely to claim the benefit as those earning less, because low earners rarely itemize their deductions. It’s the kind of report that can anger the right and the left alike. Matt Welch at Reason calls the tax breaks an “upper class entitlement,” while Hamilton Nolan at Gawker calls it a “grotesque policy outcome.” Barack Obama has repeatedly called for making the benefit available only to those making less than $ 200,000 a year.




Politics from Newser



Report: Key Mortgage Tax Break Just Helps the Wealthy

Thursday, March 20, 2014

US Lawmakers Fight Russia on Twitter: "I Guess This Means My Spring Break in Siberia Is Off"

US Lawmakers Fight Russia on Twitter: "I Guess This Means My Spring Break in Siberia Is Off"
http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Motherjones/mojoblog/~4/4ixxP0kTLhk


On Thursday, shortly after President Obama expanded sanctions against Russia for its role in the Ukraine crisis, the Russian Foreign Ministry released its own list of nine US officials and lawmakers who will be targeted by sanctions. The list includes three White House aides—deputy national security advisors Ben Rhodes and Caroline Atkinson, and senior advisor Dan Pfeiffer—as well as six US lawmakers: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)​, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.)​, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio)​, Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.)​, Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.)​, and Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.)​.


Many of the Sanctioned 9, none of whom will be allowed to visit the Russian Federation or attend Valdimir Putin’s birthday party (assuming it is held in the Russian Federation), took to Twitter to win the morning show their strength and solidarity.


Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.)​





Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)



Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.)​



Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.)





Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.)





Brendan Buck, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), to senior White House advisor Dan Pfeiffer



“What did you do during the war, daddy?”


“Twitter, mostly.”



Political Mojo | Mother Jones




Read more about US Lawmakers Fight Russia on Twitter: "I Guess This Means My Spring Break in Siberia Is Off" and other interesting subjects concerning The Edge at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Spring break vacation to China – Michelle, Mama, Daughters

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Spring break vacation to China – Michelle, Mama, Daughters

China"s Yellow River bombed to break ice

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China"s Yellow River bombed to break ice

Saturday, February 22, 2014

NYC"s 30% Tax Break Lures "The Tonight Show" Home


“The Tonight Show” made its return to New York City with a splashy opening sequence showcasing Grand Central Terminal, the Chrysler Building, Lincoln Center and Jimmy Fallon’s glamorous new studio at Rockefeller Center — a fitting tribute to the place that helped foot the bill.


An unconventional 30 percent tax credit aimed at luring “Tonight” away from California after four decades is reportedly saving NBC more than $ 20 million a year.


The network said that while the show relocated to New York for creative reasons the move wouldn’t have been possible without the tax credit.


New York’s mayor believes the show’s relocation was a triumph with wide-ranging benefits.


“Bringing ‘The Tonight Show’ back to our city means we’re bringing more than a hundred jobs to hard-working New Yorkers, and giving travelers another great reason to visit,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.


Others are less certain of the show’s benefit — or the need to use a tax incentive to lure it back.


“We’re going to change our tax policy — in the heaviest-taxed city and state in the country — to get another late night show in Manhattan?” asked E.J. McMahon, head of The Empire Center for Public Policy, a non-partisan think tank. “Even the money that they bring is a rounding error in the New York City economy.”


“Other industries don’t get 30 percent credit,” he continued. “It’s because it’s a glamorous industry.”


The tax incentives were inserted into the state budget by Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administration in early 2013 as NBC was debating dropping the show’s then-host, Jay Leno, for Fallon and potentially leaving Los Angeles to return to New York, where the show started in 1954.


The language of the 30 percent annual tax credit was remarkably specific: It would only benefit a show that had filmed at least five years in another state before moving to New York (check), spends at least $ 30 million in production costs (check) and films in front of a studio audience of at least 200 people (check). In other words: “The Tonight Show.”


Cuomo’s team has downplayed the idea that the credit was specifically for “Tonight,” though Kenneth Adams, commissioner of the New York State Department of Economic Development, said this week that changed were made to “attract these long-running, high-budget productions to New York State.”


While NBC did not release financial stats for the new “Tonight” production, The Hollywood Reporter estimated the 30-percent credit would yield the network an annual savings of $ 22 million, based on the show’s recent annual production budget of more than $ 75 million.


An NBC spokesman said the network anticipates creating nearly 250 new staff jobs and then another 300 or so “indirect jobs” — such as tour guides — and hundreds more part-time jobs. The show’s arrival is just the latest in a filmmaking boom in New York City that dramatically increased under de Blasio’s predecessor, Michael Bloomberg. Twenty-nine TV shows in the 2013-14 season have filmed in the city as well as dozens of movies and several late night talk shows, including those hosted by David Letterman, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert.


All told, the television and movie industry created $ 8.2 billion in direct wages in New York state last year, trailing only California’s $ 17 billion. The growing industry in New York has been helped by a tax incentive program, which is capped at $ 420 million for all productions filming statewide. By comparison, California’s is $ 100 million, Florida’s is $ 119 million and Louisiana’s is $ 229 million.


“The tax incentives game is played by a lot of states and some have used it more than others,” said Sam Craig, director of the Entertainment, Media and Technology program at New York University. “But it’s not just that: New York City has made it much easier to shoot films here by making it easier to get permits and block off streets.”


Craig said the return of an iconic show such as “Tonight” has a “psychic impact that’s hard to quantify” that is good for civic pride as well as a more tangible one.


“Even if the tax credit saves NBC $ 20 million, the show’s production costs are still pumping, in one way or another, $ 50 million into the economy,” said Craig, who couldn’t recall another show-specific tax break.


The show’s pride in returning home has been obvious. Fallon, a New York native, made it clear he wanted to stay. The show’s producer, Lorne Michaels, told The New York Times last week that “it simply never came up that we would move to Los Angeles.” And during its premiere episode, the show placed U2 on the roof of Manhattan’s GE Building to showcase the city’s skyline as well as the band’s music.


“We’re at the world famous ‘Top of the Rock’ atop Rockefeller Center, 70 stories above the city,” Fallon roared as the band kicked in. “I couldn’t think of a better way to show off our beautiful city.”


© Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – America



NYC"s 30% Tax Break Lures "The Tonight Show" Home

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Syria peace talks in Geneva break off, no new date set





A second round of peace talks between Syria‘s warring sides broke off Saturday without making any progress and without a date being set for a third round, United Nations mediator Lakhdar Brahimi said.


“I think it is better that every side goes back and reflects on their responsibility, [and on whether] they want this process to continue or not,” Lakhdar Brahimi told reporters in Geneva, according to the Agence France-Presse.


The Syrian government, meanwhile, accused Israel and the United States of undermining the talks and blamed the opposition’s refusal to settle the issue of “terrorism” for the deadlock.


The Algerian-born diplomat said an agreement to evacuate people from the besieged city of Homs had raised hopes that weren’t satisfied at the Geneva talks involving opposition groups and representatives of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.


The head of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) also stressed the meager results so far, saying the Homs evacuation did not herald any wider improvement in humanitarian access to Syria’s civil war zones, where the United Nations says it cannot reach up to 3 million people in need.


“I am very very sorry and I apologize to the Syrian people that their hopes which were very very high here, that something will happen here,” Brahimi told journalists after the talks, according to Reuters.


“I think that the little that has been achieved in Homs gave them even more hope that maybe this is the beginning of coming out of this horrible crisis they are in.”


Death toll at 140,000, opposition says


The pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says the 3-year-old conflict has killed more than 140,000 people — more than 7,000 of them children.


The London-based Observatory added the period since the “Geneva 2″ peace talks for Syria began last month had been the bloodiest of the conflict.


The rebels come mainly from Syria’s majority Sunni Muslims and have been joined by radical Sunni groups such as Al Qaeda and other foreign militants.


Shia Muslim Iran and the powerful Lebanese Shia movement Hezbollah have thrown their weight behind Assad, who is from Syria’s minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shia Islam, and whose family has dominated Syria for 44 years.


Thousands of people fled a rebel-held western Syrian town, Yabroud, on Friday after it was bombed and shelled in an operation that has stirred fears of a major assault by ground troops, the UN said.


Al-Manar television, run by Lebanon‘s Hezbollah, said the Syrian army had advanced in the Yabroud area, seizing control of the town’s main road and a nearby border crossing that it said was used for smuggling


Agenda for next talks, whenever they are


Brahimi said the points to be discussed at the next Geneva round include violence and terrorism, a transitional governing body, national institutions and national reconciliation.


However, he added, the Syrian government wants to first deal with the issue of combating terrorism — the word it uses to described armed opposition to Assad’s rule — and has refused to deal with any other points until that’s resolved.


US President Barack Obama said on Friday he was considering new ways to pressure Assad but did not expect the conflict to be resolved any time soon.


However, Obama told reporters in California that “there are going to be some immediate steps that we have to take to help the humanitarian assistance there.”


With Agence France-Presse and Reuters.


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/syria/140215/syria-peace-talks-break-no-new-date-set




GlobalPost – Home



Syria peace talks in Geneva break off, no new date set

Saturday, January 4, 2014

On winter break? Five movies to awaken your inner activist

Do you have a little extra time this holiday season free from classes, exams and Xmas overtime? With the chilly weather this time of year it’s tempting to stay indoors and have a movie marathon with a warm cup of cocoa. Here is a list of thought-provoking, socially, politically and environmentally conscious films put together by our friends at Food and Water Watch for your viewing pleasure.  


1. Gasland and Gasland 2: In this Oscar-nominated documentary, Director Josh Fox takes viewers on a cross-country journey to discover the hard, shocking truths behind the fracking boom that has swept across the United States. You’ll be inspired to join up with activists opposing fracking to make a real difference!



2. 180 ° South: Part adventure story, part commentary on the contrast between consumerism and ecological conservation. 180 ° South is a beautifully shot documentary that will inspire your inner activist’s spirit. The film documents one curious man’s journey from California to the southernmost tip of South America – Patagonia – and provides insight into what it means to protect our most precious natural resources in an era of overconsumption.



3. Thank You For Smoking: Need a laugh? This brilliant satire provides a funny, yet grotesque image of what it’s like to lobby the government in support of a product that harms millions of people. Protagonist Nick Naylor is a lobbyist for the tobacco industry in Thank You For Smoking, but it’s not hard to imagine what people do to promote fracking and factory farms on the Hill. Would laugh if you didn’t have to cry. So realistic.



4. Soylent Green:“What is the secret of Soylent Green?” This science fiction classic takes place in a dystopian future where, due to pollution and the consolidation of wealth, poverty is high and resources are restricted. When a new food supplement called Soylent Green becomes available, people start disappearing. It’s up to one detective to find the connection between the new food and the growing body count. And when you figure out the secret of Soylent Green, your perception of our ever-weakening food system will never be the same. Sci-fi? Sounds pretty possible to me.



5. Idiocracy: When a U.S. Army librarian wakes up 500 years in the future, he finds that public water has been replaced with an energy drink called “Brawndo.” It’s in water fountains and crop irrigation systems, and the government can’t do anything about it. Why? Because the Food and Drug Administration has been purchased by the Brawndo Corporation. Would be timely if energy drinks were called Nestle—don’t you think?



Please add any favorites that didn’t make the list in the comments. Pop some popcorn and enjoy!




Daily Kos



On winter break? Five movies to awaken your inner activist

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Obamacare Website Could Force Applicants To Break The Law

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Obamacare Website Could Force Applicants To Break The Law

CRP on Break Until Jan. 2


If you’re a reporter on deadline, please email us as usual at press@crp.org. We will be checking sporadically. If you don’t get a quick response, try calling Viveca Novak at 202-253-9629.



OpenSecrets Blog



CRP on Break Until Jan. 2

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Jesse Ventura: Break the Two Party Dictatorship | Interview with Jesse Ventura

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Jesse Ventura: Break the Two Party Dictatorship | Interview with Jesse Ventura

Thursday, December 12, 2013

[10] Jesse Ventura: Break the Two Party Dictatorship, Impunity for American War Crimes

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[10] Jesse Ventura: Break the Two Party Dictatorship, Impunity for American War Crimes

Monday, November 4, 2013

...And Markets Break Again

UPDATE: 10 minutes later – *BATS EXCHANGES REVOKE SELF-HELP AGAINST NYSE EXCHANGES


It’s Monday morning and stock “markets” are open for trading… well some of them…


  • *BATS EXCHANGES DECLARE SELF-HELP AGAINST NYSE

  • *NYSE AND NYSE MKT REVIEWING TRADES MARKED AS SOLD

Of course, as CNBC once said, we are all getting used to this now (and stocks are going higher) – so it doesn’t matter.


 


From BATS:



 


and from NYSE:







    





Zero Hedge



...And Markets Break Again

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Did Kevin Henry Just Break The "Sell VIX" Button?

Did Kevin Henry Just Break The "Sell VIX" Button?
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/aa5a7__20131030_VIX1.jpg


While we have already heard this morning of numerous Nasdaq options markets prices being crossed, the latest SNAFU involves nothing less than that ultimate lever of market performance – the VIX – which just flash-smashed:


  • *VIX EARLIER SURGED TO 21.26 IN SINGLE TRADE THAT WAS ERASED

  • *VIX SURGES TO 15.27 BEFORE IMMEDIATELY DROPPING TO 14.17

It would appear that fist-stomping the "Sell VIX" button too many times on the Fed"s Bloomberg terminal keyboard temporarily exposed reality. Or did the Fed realse its statement prematurely once again?

 


 

 






    








Zero Hedge




Read more about Did Kevin Henry Just Break The "Sell VIX" Button? and other interesting subjects concerning Commentary at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Lawmakers hope Senate leaders can break fiscal impasse as deadline looms



Lawmakers hope Senate leaders can break fiscal impasse as deadline looms

Friday, October 11, 2013

Obama and Republicans struggle to break fiscal deadlock


Saturday, September 14, 2013

Please Break The Law.com The NSA is a false choice


The NSA is a false choice.
Video Rating: 0 / 5



Please Break The Law.com The NSA is a false choice

Colorado Gets Brief Break From Flood Warnings; Rain Is Forecast





Samantha Kinzig of Longmont, Colo., and her daughter Isabel, 5, took a close look at a damaged bridge in Longmont Friday. Heavy rains that fueled widespread flooding in numerous Colorado towns have eased, but forecasters predict more on Saturday and Sunday.



Marc Piscotty/Getty Images

Samantha Kinzig of Longmont, Colo., and her daughter Isabel, 5, took a close look at a damaged bridge in Longmont Friday. Heavy rains that fueled widespread flooding in numerous Colorado towns have eased, but forecasters predict more on Saturday and Sunday.



Samantha Kinzig of Longmont, Colo., and her daughter Isabel, 5, took a close look at a damaged bridge in Longmont Friday. Heavy rains that fueled widespread flooding in numerous Colorado towns have eased, but forecasters predict more on Saturday and Sunday.


Marc Piscotty/Getty Images



The rains that brought severe flooding to parts of northern and central Colorado have eased, allowing people a chance to regroup before more rain comes, possibly as soon as Saturday afternoon. Thousands of residents have been displaced by the flooding, from Fort Collins in the north to Colorado Springs in the south, since waters hit dangerous levels Wednesday.


The floods have been blamed for four deaths, as the Two-Way reported Friday.


First responders are using the break to find people stranded by the waters — including one driver who told local KUSA News TV that he survived being trapped under water by finding a bubble of air in his car. The man says he remained there for about two hours before help arrived.


The National Weather Service has issued a flash flood watch from noon Saturday to late Sunday in northeast and north central Colorado.


From NPR member station KUNC, Nathan Heffel filed this report for our Newscast unit:



“Flooding continues over a wide section of northern Colorado from the Rocky Mountain foothills to towns on the western region of the eastern plains. Officials in Boulder County, one of the hardest hit, says scores of people in mountainous areas remain without water, electricity, or proper sewage facilities.


“Ben Pennymon with the Boulder Office of Emergency Management says residents need to understand this will be an ongoing event.


“Continue to be vigilant. The roads are, in a lot of places, are still impassable. So just — it’s not over yet,” Pennymon says. ‘We’re not in the clear, especially with the rain that is anticipated for this afternoon.’


“A Type 2 federal management team has been put in place to help oversee search and rescue and recovery operations in the County. Hundreds remain unaccounted for.”




Flash floods have complicated rescue efforts, after coursing rivers of water crumbled roads and filled them with debris. High water has forced the closure of parts of I-25 from the Wyoming border to Fort Collins, according to state transportation officials. That closure was still in effect early Saturday.


The U.S. Department of Transportation has released $ 5 million in emergency relief funds to aid with recovery efforts, Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper said Friday night. The governor declared a disaster emergency in 14 counties earlier in the day.


In a letter detailing how to help victims recover, Hickenlooper calls the event


Here’s what residents were saying Friday, as reported by Colorado Public Radio:


“A lot of people were up two nights in a row trying to fight the water,” said Sasha Fernandez.


“It’s just kind of been non-stop,” Boulder resident Nick Carter said. “Mostly non-stop adrenaline trying to battle the water as it comes and try to redirect it from around the house.
“There was cascading over some rocks in the front. There was just giant rapids like God’s wrath.”


“It literally took about an hour and half before I could see my ground,” said Mike Robins, who lives in a second story apartment above a self storage facility he manages on Arapahoe Avenue and 55th St.
“Whitewater rapids rushed down through our entire facility. It was like a water park. You could have gone inner tubing down into the back and ended up in the railroad tracks.”


“It’s just a really different feeling this morning,” Red Cross shelter worker Andra Coberly said Friday.
“I think everyone was in shock a little bit yesterday, and today the reality is really setting in.”


The National Weather Service is predicting drier and warmer weather to persist next week, beginning Monday.




News



Colorado Gets Brief Break From Flood Warnings; Rain Is Forecast