Q & A with Colorado Senator Michael Bennet

COVID-19 and Education

We took a look at how COVID-19 has disrupted our education system, how schools are meeting student needs, and what’s being put in place to address gaps in resources. Featuring Phil Qualman, superintendent of Eagle County Schools, and Jay Hamric, Director of Teaching & Learning for Steamboat Springs School District.

An update on COVID-19 & what’s happening now

COVID-19: How to Navigate Unemployment (Video)

Laid off and not sure what to do next? View our informational webinar featuring unemployment and career development experts. Learn how to apply for unemployment benefits, how the CARES Act has changed those benefits, and what you can do now to prepare to re-enter the workforce.

COVID-19: How to Navigate Unemployment

Laid off and not sure what to do next? View our informational webinar featuring unemployment and career development experts. Learn how to apply for unemployment benefits, how the CARES Act has changed those benefits, and what you can do now to prepare to re-enter the workforce.

Q&A: Mental Health and Covid-19

This week’s live webinar features mental health professionals and advocates to talk about some of the issues surrounding mental health in the current conditions. Our panelists are: Dr. Matt Wong, a clinical psychologist in South Lake Tahoe, Calif.; Deanna Rhodes, executive director of CONNECT Summit County in Park City, Utah; and Phebe Bell, Director of Behavioral Health for the Nevada County Health Department in Grass Valley, Calif.

Q&A: COVID-19 and the Economy

This week’s live webinar focuses on common questions about COVID-19 and its impact on the economy. Our panelists are Martin Shields, professor and Director of the Regional Economics Institute at Colorado State University, and Kat Papenbrock, Rural Opportunity Representative for Western Colorado with the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade.

Coronavirus Webinar, March 19, 2020

Swift Communications newspapers across the Mountain West partnered to host a webinar answering commonly asked questions about coronavirus on Thursday, March 19 at 2 p.m. Mountain Time/1 p.m. Pacific Time.

The webinar featured Glen Mays, chair and a professor in the Department of Health Systems, Management and Policy in the Colorado School of Public Health at University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.

Coronavirus Webinar

Swift Communications newspapers across the Mountain West partnered to host a webinar answering commonly asked questions about coronavirus on Thursday, March 19 at 2 p.m. Mountain Time/1 p.m. Pacific Time. The webinar featured Glen Mays, chair and a professor in the Department of Health Systems, Management and Policy in the Colorado School of Public Health at University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.

Get a Clue: Moffat County theater presents beloved murder mystery as spring play

Was it Mrs. White with the revolver in the conservatory?

Colonel Mustard with the lead pipe in the kitchen?

With six suspects, just as many weapons and still more rooms in a sprawling mansion, the possibilities are plentiful in the most renowned murder mystery, and the invitation is open for audiences to see the beloved whodunnit at Moffat County High School.

The MCHS drama department stages the spring play “Clue” this week with performances at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, March 12, Friday, March 13 and Saturday, March 14, as well as a 1:30 p.m Saturday matinee.
Admission is $7 per person.

The show takes its inspiration from the Hasbro board game of the same name and the 1985 film upon which it was based — which was notably released in theaters with several different endings — with an evening at an elaborate estate suddenly taking a turn for the worse when the host (Everett Jacobsen) is suddenly killed.

“Everyone knows the board game, but not everybody necessarily knows the drama of it,” said director Grace Pomeleo. “I picked it because I thought it would be so fun for those kids to get into those characters because they’re such different, quirky characters than they’ve ever played before.”

Each of the six guests for the night is more suspicious than the last — Professor Plum (Nevaeh Allen), Miss Scarlet (Alyssa Rodriguez), Colonel Mustard (Chase Davis), Mrs. White (Maria Sanchez Silva), Mr. Green (Logan Malley) and Mrs. Peacock (Courtney Smith) — while blunt instruments like a wrench, lead pipe and candlestick, as well as a revolver, a knife and a length of rope in arm’s reach make any explanation possible.

“Their characters have grown so much since we started. They really had to delve into them to make them different from each other because they’re all shady personalities, and that makes the audience wonder who did it,” Pomeleo said.

It’s the house butler who must solve the case before disaster strikes again, with Kasen Tansey portraying Wadsworth, the sharp servant who puts his sleuthing skills to the test.

“He’s described as the driving force behind the show,” Tansey said. “He basically introduces all of the guests and exposes all of their secrets, and he kind of pushes things along and narrates what’s going on.”

Onstage essentially the whole show, Tansey said the role can be a challenge.

“The toughest part is there’s a lot of lines. It’s a very wordy show, so you’ve got to make sure you don’t confuse the backstories,” he said.

Still, the MCHS sophomore feels amply prepared.

“It’s my fifth production and my third year. I started doing high school theater in eighth-grade,” he said. “I feel like I can just pick up a role and go with it. The cast has worked really well together under our director, and everybody’s worked really hard to pull together this amazing show. I think it’ll be fantastic.”

Pomeleo said that since she’s been the MCHS drama and vocal teacher, she’s followed a similar pattern each school year with a bright and fun musical — such as the recent “The Wizard of Oz” and 2018’s “Cinderella” — in the fall, before a heavier drama in the spring, most recently “The Giver” and “The Outsiders.”

Moffat County High School Spring Play — “Clue” Cast and Crew

Director — Grace Pomeleo

Director’s Assistant — Rebecca Cruz

Stage Manager — Jessica Womble 

Set Extraordinaire — Melinda Hall 

WadsworthKasen Tansey

YvetteTayla Siminoe

Miss ScarletAlyssa Rodriguez

Mrs. PeacockCourtney Smith

Mrs. WhiteMaria Sanchez Silva

Colonel MustardChase Davis

Professor PlumNevaeh Allen

Mr. GreenLogan Malley

Mr. Boddy — Everett Jacobsen

Cook — Avalon Bays

Motorist — Millie Fritz

Singing Telegram Girl — Kimber Eike

AgentSamantha Bade

CopKendra Eike

Extras/Detectives/Reporters — Juliet Hall, Tasmine Gleisner, Kaia Gunderson, Sami Jacobsen, Anna Jaynes, Arianna Crain

Crew — Isabelle Herod, Patrick Vest, Zoey Cochran, Connie LePlatt, RJ Calara, Alyssa Duncan, Dru Copeland

Techs — Josh Gumber, Hailey Collins, MaKala Herndon, Daniel Caddy, Celeste Valenzuela, Forrest Siminoe, Athan Smith, Jacob Jeffcoat, Sabastian Hershiser

Despite featuring homicide, “Clue” breaks that tradition.

“While it is kind of a dark subject matter, it is still a comedy, so it’s meant to be taken in a light-hearted way,” Pomeleo said.

The show will also have an interactive element; as a fundraiser, organizers will allow the crowd to vote via donation on which character they believe is the culprit before the answer is revealed. Though votes won’t affect the storyline, those who pick correctly will be part of a prize drawing.

Among the seniors involved with the show is Courtney Smith, and Mrs. Peacock, a holier-than-thou senator’s wife, is the type of part she said fits her well despite being far friendlier in real life.

“One big thing is how I interact with everyone. Onstage there are certain people she associates with, so I kind of have a tendency to associate more with Colonel Mustard or Miss Scarlet sometimes,” she said. “I kind of add my own personality to her too, like when I get really skittish.”

Smith counts the play as her 15th in 10 years. Besides working on each MCHS theatrical production of the past four years, either in the spotlight or with the stage crew, she performed in multiple shows with outlets such as Missoula Children’s Theatre.

Though she’s unsure if drama is something she’ll pursue past graduation, Smith noted that everyday life has its own theatrical elements, such as job interviews, which are tantamount to auditions.

“I’ve been really working on my skills as an actress, and I feel like I’ve really come a long way since I started when I was 8,” she said. “I feel like not only have I grown as an actress but as a person, like learning how to work with others, and it’s all been such a great experience.”