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New housing project, Falcon Ridge debuts

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Falcon Ridge Apartments are near the Talons Pointe Apartments ." alt="Located on Soaring Circle, Falcon Ridge Apartments are near the Talons Pointe Apartments ." style="border: 0px;" /> Located on Soaring Circle, Falcon Ridge Apartments are near the Talons Pointe Apartments . ( Scott A. Rowan / Estes Park Trail-Gazette ) Correction Falcon Ridge Apartments provide one-, two- and three- bedroom apartments for local families." alt="The Falcon Ridge Apartments provide one-, two- and three- bedroom apartments for local families." style="border: 0px;" /> The Falcon Ridge Apartments provide one-, two- and three- bedroom apartments for local families. ( Scott A. Rowan / Estes Park Trail-Gazette )             In a story that was published in the Trail-Gazette on Wednesday, July 20, it was incorrectly reported that the Estes Park Town Board will ...

New Haven candidates clash on housing, immigration

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Paul Bass | New Haven Independent Democrat Marcus Paca, left, and incumbent Mayor Toni Harp . Marcus Paca promised that if he becomes mayor, he will fight gentrification, while Mayor Toni Harp argued that the burst of market-rate housing in town doesn’t constitute gentrification. Harp promised to continue New Haven’s “sanctuary city” policies even if President Trump withholds federal grants , while Paca promised to take a closer look at the issue first to avoid losing needed dollars . Those differences between the two Democratic mayoral candidates emerged Sunday afternoon at their first debate, held before a full house in the sanctuary of Varick Memorial AME Zion Church on Dixwell Avenue. The event was billed as a “forum,” not a “debate.” But a debate it turned out to be, from the moment the two Democrats began fielding questions from a panel of three local ministers and passionately responded to each other’s positions in a fast-paced, issues-focused back and forth. Two- term incu...

Despite Oil Bust, Midland is Still Bustling

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How plunging oil prices are reversing fortunes across Texas. Read all the stories in this series. MIDLAND — Thousands have been laid off. Tax collections are plummeting. Many are on the brink of homelessness.   Rows of drilling rigs and white company trucks sit idle — there’s no telling for how long. And, yet, amid the worst oil bust in decades, the energy capital of West Texas hasn ’t slowed down much. Several oil companies have recently built  office complexes in the area, and drilling continues , albeit at a more sluggish pace. The city plans to build a new convention center, and construction of a municipal courthouse is underway. Several more hotels, apartment complexes and eateries are expected to open   this year, and a second H-E-B grocery store just came online . "For hire" signs are ample, road crews prolific . And people still complain about the traffic. “People from the outside come in expecting to see boarded-up windows, 'for sale' signs everywhere,...