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SEE SHELTERS

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SEE HEALTH

SEE HEALTH

Pallet shelters at Aurora Safe Outdoor Space help provide temporary housing and resources to homeless people. COURTESY OF SALVATION ARMY

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SHELTERS

might participate, what the services would be in conjunction with the housing and what requirements would be in place for people participating in the program.

The current winter shelter network only serves women and children, while also requiring them to travel to a new church each week that they use the shelter network. Last year, the winter network helped fi ve households.

Douglas County Commissioner Abe Laydon was enthusiastic about the idea, noting the community has asked the county to partner with faith-based organizations on the shelter program.

“The winter shelter network has had a lot of great success in this area,” Laydon told the audience at the meeting. “This is very early and nothing has been decided, it’s really just a response to your comments to work with the faith-based community and I think that’s going to go well.”

However, public commenters at the meeting were less supportive of the plan, voicing concerns about crime and drugs. Commenters also raised many questions about what kind of services would be available in conjunction with the housing, such as mental health care or substance abuse treatment.

“We certainly don’t want to be attracting homeless people to Castle Rock and certainly not to The Meadows, where I live and many children play,” one man said. “Is any of (the funding) available for the increased need for hiring and equipping fi rst responders, as increased issues and crime will come with this initiative?”

Polhemus reiterated that the plan would spread the shelters out, which he said would address a lot of the concerns.

“I think there’s a misunderstanding that The Rock is going to have a homeless community there and we absolutely are not and we do not want to have that because that creates the problem of bringing people in, but if we can have one, I think we can get them back on their feet,” he said.

No decisions were made about the shelter network, though the initiative indicated it would begin looking for a facilitator to head the work. The next meeting for the Douglas Couny Homeless Initiative is Oct. 13.

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Who is eligible?

BY JOHN DALEY AND OBED MANUEL COLORADO PUBLIC RADIO

Updated COVID-19 boosters are being rolled out at pharmacies and clinics in Colorado. Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment offi cials expect the updated boosters to become more widely available in the state.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended that people who are eligible for these boosters get their shots. The news comes just ahead of the fall, when cases could surge.

Deaths, hospitalizations and positive cases have spiked every fall since the pandemic began in 2020, according to state health department data. And the omicron variant fueled a massive spike in cases earlier this year.

Now, with omicron’s subvariants — BA.4 and BA.5 — expected to drive infections in the fall and winter, state offi cials say they hope Coloradans will take advantage of the added protection these boosters offer.

“It’s particularly important for people that have only had two or three doses of the vaccine,” said Gov. Jared Polis on Wednesday, adding that “if you’re medically vulnerable, it’s particularly important. He spoke as he got his shot of the vaccine in front of a state vaccine bus at Ball Arena in downtown Denver.

“This is just another very easy step that you can take to protect yourself,” he said. Polis noted that the pandemic has claimed about 13,600 Colorado lives and that COVID-19 “has a much lower hospitalization rate and an extremely low death rate, if you are fully vaccinated.”

About 150 people had signed up Wednesday to get their vaccine shots at the Ball Arena site. “There’s still a lot of demand,” said the governor.

Josh Phillips, a resident of Highlands Ranch, came to the site for his shot, his fi fth, since he’d already had the original series, plus two previous boosters.

“It is just, you know, trying to protect myself and my family as much as possible,” he said, noting he was fl ying to Pennsylvania soon. “I’m actually traveling next week. So I think it’s important, especially in a congested place, like the airport, to be as protected as possible. And the rest of my family will be doing this as well, as soon as we can.”

“I just thought it would be a good idea, you know, considering that we’re about to enter fl u season and all,” said Fred Bernal, a Denver resident who also got his omicron booster shot. He said he did catch the coronavirus last November, right before he got a booster. “It probably would’ve been a lot more serious had I not received my vaccine,” he said.

Bernal brought his in-laws to get their shots. That included his mother-in-law, Anita Easton, who was in town from Oregon and needed no encouragement to get her booster.

“I’m absolutely convinced, but I’m a biologist, so I know why it’s good for you and why you should do it,” she said.

What’s the difference between the original booster and the updated booster?

Diana Herrero, deputy director of the Division of Disease Control and Public Health Response for CDPHE, said the updated COVID boosters contain a spike protein that offers specifi c protection to the omicron strain that caused a huge wave in cases at the beginning of 2022.

They also offer protection against the omicron subvariants that are currently the dominant strains in Colorado and the U.S.

The booster shots millions of Coloradans received since last fall were not specifi cally formulated to protect against omicron, she added.

“Much like viruses evolve over time, our vaccines really need to do the same thing to keep up with the strains that are circulating,” Herrero said. “We think these will be really effective at preventing the worst outcomes of severe disease, hospitalization and death.”

Who is eligible for the updated booster?

In order to get an updated booster you must: • Be at least 12 years old to get the updated Pfi zer-BioNTech booster or 18 years or older for the updated Moderna booster • Have completed the primary series of Pfi zer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson or Novavax • And be at least two months out from the last dose you received.

What about kids younger than 12?

The CDC said in a press release last week that it “expects to recommend updated COVID-19 boosters for other pediatric groups” in the coming weeks.

We will update this article as more updates become available.

Where can I get an appointment to get the updated booster?

CDPHE’s website lists several links to view availability of the updated booster at providers around the state. You can fi nd those links by clicking here.

Those offering the shots include many primary care offi ces, community health centers, pharmacies, and community vaccination sites.

A Moderna COVID-19 vaccine vial is held by Lincoln Community Hospital registered nurse Deanne Kahler of Hugo as she prepares to administer COVID-19 vaccinations to patients at the hospital in Hugo on Wednesday, Feb. 24 2021.

PHOTO BY ANDY COLWELL / SPECIAL TO THE COLORADO SUN

This story is from CPR News, a nonprofi t news source. Used by permission. For more, and to support Colorado Public Radio, visit cpr.org.

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