Denver, Other City Councils Consider Changes to Public-Comment Sessions
“Sometimes when our world is out of order, we need to do things that are out of order, and I think we should have representatives who are willing to listen to us.”
“Sometimes when our world is out of order, we need to do things that are out of order, and I think we should have representatives who are willing to listen to us.”
“With more and more deepfakes being circulated, I believe that people will become more and more skeptical of the content and information that they are seeing on the internet.”
Denver’s largest nonprofit for transgender and nonbinary homeless individuals parted ways with its CEO before opening the city’s newest micro-community.
One of them was closed on Monday, and then another on Wednesday.
The latest Colorado Polling Institute survey shows a loss of faith in the state’s direction, with significant worry about affordability.
The congresswoman required surgery and has been diagnosed with a rare vein condition, but her office says there are no major concerns going forward.
“It is a way in which we can really combat some employment failures at a federal level here.”
State lawmakers are considering three bills that would change the way young people use social media in Colorado.
House Bill 1355 calls for the release and outside treatment of approved defendants with mental health issues, including people who commit class 3, 4 and 5 felonies.
The Moving to Work program lets local housing agencies choose where to spend their money. Boulder County’s is the latest to join the exclusive group.
The suggested changes would affect construction work, trash trucks and, yes, music events.
Elitch Gardens asked the city to remove an encampment of about fifty migrants outside park gates before if opens in April.
The Quaker church’s shelter closes at the end of the month, leaving 29 migrants with nowhere to go — but the pastor is calling towns that need workers and students.
Emergency medical service providers, health care advocates and patients want to end balance billing, but the path is riddled with complications.
The strangest Colorado holidays you’ve never heard of, from Sesame Street Day to Cowboy Poetry Week.
The head of the U.S. Department of Intergovernmental Affairs and the husband of Vice President Kamala Harris made bold promises during a visit to Denver.
The Colorado congresswoman has come under fire for a pair of bills she’s trying to get passed, as well as her public touting of one that she voted against.
The city’s first newcomer director says her job is to shift the city away from emergency response and to be “a good steward of taxpayer dollars.”
The funding would be allocated if the pace of migrants arriving in Denver increases, but the city isn’t required to spend the money if extra rooms aren’t needed.
The lineup includes seven proposals from the legislature and seven initiated by citizens.
The city says all phone data is scrambled and no identifying information is involved, but you can’t opt out of the tracking program.
“We don’t have jobs, so it’ll help for a few days when the snow falls, and to get money to support ourselves.”