Ryan Zinke’s Monuments Plan: Happy 101st Birthday, National Parks!
Is any of what Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is proposing to do with national monuments even legal?
Is any of what Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is proposing to do with national monuments even legal?
It’s not easy to prove that Mayor Michael Hancock and his minions are violating the Denver City Charter in their pursuit of a $300 million stormwater diversion project, but opponents of the controversial project have managed to keep things interesting in Denver District Court this week.
Undoing a national monument is apparently a casual and half-assed process, judging by the way the Trump administration is going about it.
Just how deep into public-private partnerships is Mayor Michael Hancock’s administration willing to go?
Proposed DIA renovation partner Ferrovial manages two refugee camps for the government of Australia, which have been denounced as “islands of despair.”
An Alamosa judge has ordered a new trial in the case of Krystal Voss, who was convicted of child abuse in the death of her 19-month-old son and sentenced to 20 years in prison. The reversal is another setback for advocates of “shaken baby syndrome,” a diagnosis that’s been attacked by skeptics as junk science.
After suffering three grand mal seizures in a nine-hour period, Justin Stieb was placed in an observation cell, where he was supposed to be closely monitored by camera. But was he?
The author of American Eclipse says watching a total solar eclipse is “the closest thing to space travel.”
His obituary describes Kabelman’s death as “a tragic accident,” but Lakewood police detectives have declined to declare it an accident or a suicide.
This week siblings of Michael Blagg went to court to try to get information released in the state’s tight-lipped attempt to convict Blagg a second time around for murdering his wife — including defense documents that they believe identify a possible alternate suspect.
Sen. Cory Gardner has a plan to put the party back in the Grand Old Party. Gardner is headed for Disney World — with an entourage of donors, lobbyists, PAC contributors, and very special friends in tow.
The firing of philosophy instructor Nate Bork is a startling lesson on the plight of adjunct teachers and a window into a much larger issue: the crusade at community colleges across the nation to revamp curriculum and teaching methods to boost grades and retention rates.
The owners of a “luxury smoke lounge” have filed suit against Trinidad officials, claiming the city is courting out-of-state tourists with its burgeoning cannabis industry, yet providing them with no legal way to consume their purchases.
The ACLU of Colorado has filed a class-action lawsuit seeking a dramatic change in the Colorado Department of Corrections hepatitis C policy, calling its approach to rationing treatment a violation of constitutional guarantees against cruel and unusual punishment.
Imagine my astonishment when I tried to switch my home Internet service to Century Link and was told to get in line and wait for an indeterminate period of time — possibly a few months.
Opponents of the $1.8-billion highway expansion claim the federal government shirked its obligations to fully consider a range of economic and environmental impacts before approving the biggest road project in Colorado history.
A new report from the Prison Policy Initiative delves deeply into Colorado’s “free” tablet program and concludes that the arrangement strongly favors the private company supplying the devices, at the expense of the inmates.
Denver Parks and Recreation crews have embarked on a series of landscape improvements outside the Hiawatha Davis Jr. Recreation Center only days before Mayor Michael Hancock is scheduled to deliver his 2017 State of the City Address at the rec center.
The medical establishment is skeptical of laser treatments for traumatic brain injuries, but two Centennial researchers claim they’ve found a way for their patients to “say goodbye TBI.”
The administration plans to rescind the Clean Water Rule, a contentious Obama legacy that President Donald Trump has described as “this very destructive and horrible rule.”
Part pub crawl, part group therapy, the Denver HowdyCon was not so much a convention as an informal meet-up of Scientology dissidents, united by a history of similar experiences and traumas.
State officials say there’s no danger that the Colorado Mental Health Institute at Pueblo will be shutting down any time soon, despite the recent departure of its director and a finding by federal regulators that patients faced “immediate jeopardy” as a result of a severe staffing shortage.