Denver students to compete in FIRST Robotics world championship
DENVER (KDVR) — The future of robot battling is in safe hands.
A group of 43 Denver students from several schools with a passion for STEM traveled to Minnesota to put their robot to the test in a regional qualifier.
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They left Colorado as qualification hopefuls, with dreams of heading to the world championships in Houston. They returned back to their home state having realized that dream and will participate in the FIRST Robotics Competition Championship in April.
With April right around the corner and plenty of work left to do, FOX31 spoke with Internal Business Lead Jay Belasco in a Zoom interview.
Belasco started with the team, Brute Force, in his freshman year. Now, in his fourth year, he said things have changed drastically.
'The biggest thing where we've grown over the years is our project management. We went from, you know, a lot of sticky notes on a whiteboard of what we needed to get done to a real organized Gantt chart style system. Our leadership team meets weekly … We go over all of our milestones and assess where we're at, to get where we need to be,' said Belasco.
Although Brute Force started in 2007, like many things, Belasco said COVID-19 affected the team. Knowledge of work from prior teams being wiped out left them with a program that needed plenty of rebuilding post-pandemic.
'Our team kind of hit a brick wall in 2020 with COVID, we lost a lot of knowledge. My freshman year, we had four veteran members on the team, so we had to really work to get to where we are today and regain all of that knowledge,' said Belasco.
When the team heads to Houston, they will take on other world-class robots, full of ever-evolving components and software, to compete at the highest level. While most people think of the cage-fighting BattleBots when they hear robot battles, FIRST Robotics focuses on problem-solving and can involve games of offense and defense, taking turns shooting at or defending a basketball hoop, for example.
'Every year in January, the FIRST Robotics Competition team get a game that has different, you know, ways to score. You can think of it like a sport. We've had basketball games in the past… Your robot is in an alliance with three other robots that compete against a different alliance, and you're trying to score points as fast as you can,' said Belasco.
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He said it's a little bit like BattleBots, but you definitely won't be destroying the other team's robots because that would make quite the dent in the pocket of the high schoolers, who are responsible for fundraising tens of thousands of dollars to participate in these events.
FIRST Robotics Competition will also be holding a qualifying event in Denver from March 20 to March 22. Although they have already qualified, Belasco and team will still participate to try and refine and buff out any last-second issues.
Belasco said the reason they traveled to Minnesota to qualify was to try and get as many reps as possible so they can gather the most information on what works or what needs improvement and to give themselves the best shot possible to qualify for the worlds.
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The next steps in the team's journey will be to fundraise as much as they can before Houston. Belasco said 85% of the team is on a free or reduced-cost lunch program, so their robotics team has participation with absolutely no charge.
The team leaves for Houston on April 15 and 16 and will return to Colorado on April 20. More information on Brute Force, fundraising and the FIRST Robotics Competition can be found on the team's website.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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2 hours ago
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U.S. bishops contributed over one-third of the $22 million (19.3 million euros) collected annually under the provision from 2021-2023, according to Vatican data. The other main source of annual donations is more well-known to ordinary Catholics: Peter's Pence, a special collection usually taken on the last Sunday of June. From 2021-2023, individual Catholics in the U.S. gave an average $27 million (23.7 million euros) to Peter's Pence, more than half the global total. American generosity hasn't prevented overall Peter's Pence contributions from cratering. After hitting a high of $101 million (88.6 million euros) in 2006, contributions hovered around $75 million (66.8 million euros) during the 2010's then tanked to $47 million (41.2 million euros) during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, when many churches were closed. 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Even more important is leaving behind the 'mendicant mentality' of fundraising to address a particular problem, and instead encouraging Catholics to invest in the church as a project, he said. Speaking right after Leo's installation ceremony in St. Peter's Square, which drew around 200,000 people, Gahl asked: 'Don't you think there were a lot of people there that would have loved to contribute to that and to the pontificate?' In the U.S., donation baskets are passed around at every Sunday Mass. Not so at the Vatican. The Vatican has 4,249 properties in Italy and 1,200 more in London, Paris, Geneva and Lausanne, Switzerland. Only about one-fifth are rented at fair market value, according to the annual report from the APSA patrimony office, which manages them. Some 70% generate no income because they house Vatican or other church offices; the remaining 10% are rented at reduced rents to Vatican employees. 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2 hours ago
How the Vatican manages money and where Pope Leo XIV might find more
VATICAN CITY -- The world's smallest country has a big budget problem. The Vatican doesn't tax its residents or issue bonds. It primarily finances the Catholic Church's central government through donations that have been plunging, ticket sales for the Vatican Museums, as well as income from investments and an underperforming real estate portfolio. The last year the Holy See published a consolidated budget, in 2022, it projected 770 million euros ($878 million), with the bulk paying for embassies around the world and Vatican media operations. In recent years, it hasn't been able to cover costs. That leaves Pope Leo XIV facing challenges to drum up the funds needed to pull his city-state out of the red. Anyone can donate money to the Vatican, but the regular sources come in two main forms. Canon law requires bishops around the world to pay an annual fee, with amounts varying and at bishops' discretion 'according to the resources of their dioceses.' U.S. bishops contributed over one-third of the $22 million (19.3 million euros) collected annually under the provision from 2021-2023, according to Vatican data. The other main source of annual donations is more well-known to ordinary Catholics: Peter's Pence, a special collection usually taken on the last Sunday of June. From 2021-2023, individual Catholics in the U.S. gave an average $27 million (23.7 million euros) to Peter's Pence, more than half the global total. American generosity hasn't prevented overall Peter's Pence contributions from cratering. After hitting a high of $101 million (88.6 million euros) in 2006, contributions hovered around $75 million (66.8 million euros) during the 2010's then tanked to $47 million (41.2 million euros) during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, when many churches were closed. Donations remained low in the following years, amid revelations of the Vatican's bungled investment in a London property, a former Harrod's warehouse that it hoped to develop into luxury apartments. The scandal and ensuing trial confirmed that the vast majority of Peter's Pence contributions had funded the Holy See's budgetary shortfalls, not papal charity initiatives as many parishioners had been led to believe. Peter's Pence donations rose slightly in 2023 and Vatican officials expect more growth going forward, in part because there has traditionally been a bump immediately after papal elections. The Vatican bank and the city state's governorate, which controls the museums, also make annual contributions to the pope. As recently as a decade ago, the bank gave the pope around 55 million euros ($62.7 million) a year to help with the budget. But the amounts have dwindled; the bank gave nothing specifically to the pope in 2023, despite registering a net profit of 30 million euros ($34.2 million), according to its financial statements. The governorate's giving has likewise dropped off. Some Vatican officials ask how the Holy See can credibly ask donors to be more generous when its own institutions are holding back. Leo will need to attract donations from outside the U.S., no small task given the different culture of philanthropy, said the Rev. Robert Gahl, director of the Church Management Program at Catholic University of America's business school. He noted that in Europe there is much less of a tradition (and tax advantage) of individual philanthropy, with corporations and government entities doing most of the donating or allocating designated tax dollars. Even more important is leaving behind the 'mendicant mentality' of fundraising to address a particular problem, and instead encouraging Catholics to invest in the church as a project, he said. Speaking right after Leo's installation ceremony in St. Peter's Square, which drew around 200,000 people, Gahl asked: 'Don't you think there were a lot of people there that would have loved to contribute to that and to the pontificate?' In the U.S., donation baskets are passed around at every Sunday Mass. Not so at the Vatican. The Vatican has 4,249 properties in Italy and 1,200 more in London, Paris, Geneva and Lausanne, Switzerland. Only about one-fifth are rented at fair market value, according to the annual report from the APSA patrimony office, which manages them. Some 70% generate no income because they house Vatican or other church offices; the remaining 10% are rented at reduced rents to Vatican employees. In 2023, these properties only generated 35 million euros ($39.9 million) in profit. Financial analysts have long identified such undervalued real estate as a source of potential revenue. But Ward Fitzgerald, the president of the U.S.-based Papal Foundation, which finances papal charities, said the Vatican should also be willing to sell properties, especially those too expensive to maintain. Many bishops are wrestling with similar downsizing questions as the number of church-going Catholics in parts of the U.S. and Europe shrinks and once-full churches stand empty. Toward that end, the Vatican recently sold the property housing its embassy in Tokyo's high-end Sanbancho neighborhood, near the Imperial Palace, to a developer building a 13-story apartment complex, according to the Kensetsu News trade journal. Yet there has long been institutional reluctance to part with even money-losing properties. Witness the Vatican announcement in 2021 that the cash-strapped Fatebenefratelli Catholic hospital in Rome, run by a religious order, would not be sold. Pope Francis simultaneously created a Vatican fundraising foundation to keep it and other Catholic hospitals afloat. 'They have to come to grips with the fact that they own so much real estate that is not serving the mission of the church,' said Fitzgerald, who built a career in real estate private equity. ___