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Letters: Aurora’s response to the migrant crisis is what residents want

Venezuelans, who did not want to be identified, try to make money by cleaning windshields of drivers at stoplights at Colorado Blvd and Colfax avenue on Jan. 30, 2024. Venezuelan migrants are looking for ways to make money while in limbo seeking asylum and work visas. On a good day, a group of Venezuelan migrants at work cleaning windshields at busy Denver intersections for 12 hours might make around $70 -- splitting the money between 10 or more people. Despite the low payoff, that work has become a common sight across the city in recent months: Men and women standing on road medians or sidewalks, squeegees and bottles of cleaning liquid in hand, offering quick window washes while drivers wait for a green light. At the intersection of Speer Boulevard and Zuni Street on Tuesday evening, several migrants said drivers have mostly treated them with kindness, kicking in a few bucks here and there. Sometimes, they’ve received angry responses, along with aggression from some business owners and police officers, as their presence has prompted concerns -- as well as efforts by Denver police to warn about safety risks and potential violations of local laws. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)
Venezuelans, who did not want to be identified, try to make money by cleaning windshields of drivers at stoplights at Colorado Blvd and Colfax avenue on Jan. 30, 2024. Venezuelan migrants are looking for ways to make money while in limbo seeking asylum and work visas. On a good day, a group of Venezuelan migrants at work cleaning windshields at busy Denver intersections for 12 hours might make around $70 — splitting the money between 10 or more people. Despite the low payoff, that work has become a common sight across the city in recent months: Men and women standing on road medians or sidewalks, squeegees and bottles of cleaning liquid in hand, offering quick window washes while drivers wait for a green light. At the intersection of Speer Boulevard and Zuni Street on Tuesday evening, several migrants said drivers have mostly treated them with kindness, kicking in a few bucks here and there. Sometimes, they’ve received angry responses, along with aggression from some business owners and police officers, as their presence has prompted concerns — as well as efforts by Denver police to warn about safety risks and potential violations of local laws. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)
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Maybe city council is bowing to it’s constituents

Re: “Colorado Springs, Aurora bend their knee to Texas’ Abbott,” March 2 editorial

You accused the Aurora City Council of bowing to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. It is possible that they were instead listening to their constituents, as elected leaders are supposed to do.

Possibly, Aurora’s voters value the flower beds in their city parks. They may enjoy having convenient access to their local DMV. They may even believe that having rec centers open to entertain their youth — especially with summer approaching — may distract those young people from less wholesome activities. As a Denver resident and taxpayer, I wish our own city council would be more like Aurora’s.

While I would like to help people who feel forced to leave their homes for a better life, I also believe it is important to take care of our own residents first. If there is not enough money to do everything a city would like to do, such as maintain the quality of life that attracted us to Denver in the first place, the voters should come first.

Also, you may have exaggerated somewhat the number of undocumented immigrants living in Aurora. It is hard to believe that a city with a population of just under 400,000 would have “hundreds of thousands” of immigrants without legal status.

The Aurora City Council may be responding to its voters, as elected officials should.

Patricia Bridges, Denver

Micromanaging restaurant menus

Re: “Proposed ban targets soda, sugary drinks in kids’ meals,” March 7 news story

Denver City Councilwoman Serena Gonzales-Guitterez wants to ban certain drinks from appearing on the menu with kid’s meals in restaurants because she needs help instilling healthy dietary habits in her three children? Seriously? She is their mother; that should be all she needs.

I, for one, am tired of the Denver City Council, along with seemingly every other politician from either side, trying to micromanage our lives. We as a city, along with a state and a nation, are facing very serious problems, and this is what our city council is focused on. Either the serious problems are blown way out of proportion or our city leaders are simply too inept to deal with them.

David Forsyth, Denver

U.S. must get out of donkey slaughter business

Re: “Africa struggling to protect donkeys from Chinese trade,” Feb. 25 news story

The report highlights a sinister commerce that slays millions of the long-eared equines worldwide. China’s voracious appetite for ejiao (donkey hide gel) has depleted its national population. Smugglers steal donkeys from poor farmers in developing countries, wrecking their livelihoods. Donkeys are butchered in horrific conditions, many skinned alive.

Gone without mention: the U.S. is now the third largest consumer of ejiao, according to the , and a major supplier for this slippery trade. Some owners, unwilling to care for elder donkeys, sell them to “kill buyers.” Wild donkeys (called burros) grazing Western public lands are protected by the 1971 Wild Horse Act. Yet the Bureau of Land Management rounds up thousands from their designated habitats, using artificial population quotas that hold wild equid numbers to genetically unsustainable levels. As legitimate adoption demand wanes, many captives enter the slaughter pipeline in Mexico and Canada.

The recently reintroduced in Congress, would prohibit the sale and purchase of ejiao products. The would ban the export of horses and donkeys for slaughter abroad. Both are needed to stem this gruesome trade, along with reforms to federal land management agencies to preserve a vital natural resource before it disappears from the West.

Charlotte Roe, Berthoud

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