COVID Updates
NEW MASK RULE FROM JEFFERSON COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH:
Jefferson County Public Health has amended its local mask order (PHO 20-008) to require masks when in indoor public spaces when 6 ft. distancing cannot be maintained from non-household members. Masks are no longer required in outdoor public spaces in Jeffco. Please see the press release for more information: https://www.jeffco.us/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=1532
Appointments to Get the COVID Vaccine
State of Colorado’s Find Out Where You Can Get Vaccinated page | Lutheran Medical Center | JCPH Clinic in Arvada (70+ only) | www.vaccinespotter.org/CO/
EVERYONE IS ELIGIBLE TO GET THE VACCINE
Jefferson County Public Health’s COVID-19 Vaccine Call Center: 303-239-7000 | State Hotline to answer questions, including location of vaccine providers: 1-877-268-2926. It is staffed 24 hours a day
Golden Testing Sites
Mines COVID Testing | Jeffco Fairgrounds COVID Testing
Jefferson County Case Summary:
Cases in Jeffco – Fri: 40,751 | Mon: 41,071 (+320)
Deaths in Jeffco – Fri: 779 | Mon: 780 (+1)
Currently Hospitalized in Jeffco – Fri: 18 | Mon: 22 (+4)
Recovered – Fri: 38,774 | Mon: 39,062 (+288)
Known Cases in Golden – Thurs: 1646 | Mon: 1689 (+43)
More Public Health References
School of Mines COVID-19 case page. | Sign up for exposure notifications | CDC | Colorado | Jefferson County | City of Golden
Virtual Events
8:45AM Silver Sneakers Classic
10:15AM Toddler Time with the Library
1PM Zoom into Watercolor with Janet Nunn
6-7PM Recursos Digitales
10AM and 1PM Hexie Ladies @ Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum
6PM Let’s Talk – Science Fiction
6:30PM City Council Meeting
As I’ve mentioned before, the “Consent Agenda” in a City Council meeting includes items that staff considers uncontroversial. They’ll be approved all at once a councilor requests that an item be pulled out for discussion. The Consent Matters include
– $1,275,100 contract for water and wastewater line replacements
– $271,977.83 to begin building a fiber ring
– Vacating a utility easement in Gateway Village (near Origin Red Rocks Hotel)
– Continuing the agreement with Golden High Country Archers to license the archery range at Tony Grampsas Park
– Applying for a grant from gambling revenues
– Approving a budget amendment
Tonight’s Proclamations include Arbor Day, National Public Health Week, National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week, National Crime Victim’s Rights Week, and National Volunteer Week.
Public Works will update council on changes to the City’s Right of Way Permit Program.
Public Works will also ask Council to contribute some funding to Coors plan to bring Kinney Run above ground. They suggest a range from $644,850.88 to $741,408.88 to purchase various qualities of railing to go along the new waterway, which will run parallel to Ford St.
They will consider two Intergovernmental Agreements with the Colorado School of Mines
The City Manager will provide an update on the City’s responses to the COVID-19 epidemic.
Finally, they will adjourn to an executive session (no public, no camera or microphones) to discuss negotiating positions relative to some property near the Coors office building.
See the meeting packet to learn more about any of tonight’s topics.
Real Life Events
4PM Prime Tuesdays at the Buffalo Rose (till they run out)
10 oz Angus beef, gouda mashed potatoes, green beans – $20
MUSIC:
5:30PM Todd Scheaffer w/Chris Thompson at Coda Brewing
Golden History Moment
88 Years Ago
Golden was beyond excited in April of 1933. Prohibition was over and Coors was about to start shipping beer again. To many Golden families, this meant the worst of the Depression was over too.
The April 6, 1933 Colorado Transcript reported that at one minute after midnight on Friday April 7th, a “train of 21 refrigerator cars, loaded to capacity with Coors’ real beer…will pull out of the yards at Coors’ Golden brewery. Simultaneously with the departure of the train, more than 100 trucks piled high with the eagerly-awaited beverage will leave Coors’ brewery for Denver and other points.”
The brewery was already employing 125 men and working three shifts. The bottling plant was running 24 hours a day.
The same edition of the paper announced that local farmers would be planting barley, as Coors would need plenty of it and would pay cash.
Happy days were here again!
Many thanks to the Golden History Museum for providing the online cache of historic Transcripts, and to the Golden Transcript for documenting our history since 1866!