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President Biden to visit Colorado for national monument designation: AP

President Joe Biden speaks during the White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health, at the Ronald Reagan Building, Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

LEADVILLE, Colo. (KDVR) – FOX31 has confirmed that President Joseph Biden will be in Colorado for a visit next week.

The Biden administration is preparing to designate its first new national monument, preserving a World War II-era alpine training site and providing a boost to the reelection campaign of the state’s senior senator, Michael Bennet, a person familiar with the process told the Associated Press.

The designation is expected to come next week, when the president will join Bennet, a fellow Democrat, and other elected officials in Colorado, according to the person, who declined to be identified discussing the designation before it is formally announced. Bennet is locked in a re-election fight with Republican businessman Joe O’Dea, during which the Democrat has pushed the president to preserve Camp Hale, about 20 miles south of Vail.

The camp was where soldiers of the 10th Mountain Division trained in the harsh, wintry conditions of the Rocky Mountains in preparation for fighting in the Italian Alps during World War 2. After the war, many returned to Colorado and played pivotal roles in the founding of the state’s ski industry.

Lawmakers have pushed for Camp Hale monument

Despite pushback from the state’s Republican representatives, Colorado’s democratic lawmakers have made it to the finish line now that the protective status of Camp Hale is set to be elevated to national monument status.

For more than a decade, Colorado lawmakers have been trying to get the site protected as a national monument in the CORE Act.

Camp Hale is the historic military site in Leadville that served as a World War II training site. The 10th Mountain Division of the U.S. Army trained on the grounds.

On Wednesday, Biden is expected to take part in a ceremony that will be the first monument designation of his presidency.

Bennet, who has been one of the officials leading the push for this designation, retweeted the granddaughter of one of those who trained at Camp Hale when it was still an active military site.

Courtesy: Chris Muff

“My grandfather trained at Camp Hale and was inspired by the surrounding landscapes to fight for wilderness after his army career. It would be wonderful for @POTUS to designate this land to inspire others. Thanks @SenatorBennet for your ongoing efforts,” Kerry Donovan said in the tweet.

That request to the president has been heard, and now, the memory of those who sacrificed so much after training at the site will be federally protected thanks to this national designation.

This is the second time Biden has visited Colorado this year and the third of his presidency. In January, he toured the area destroyed by the Marshall Fire with the first lady and last September he toured the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Arvada and spoke about the importance of clean energy.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.