Denver to Cover 100 Pet Deposits for Renters Amid Surge in Shelter Surrenders
“We [shouldn’t] have to choose between a home and the loved ones we share it with.”
“We [shouldn’t] have to choose between a home and the loved ones we share it with.”
Prices and urgency are down for Denver metro renters, while vacancies and landlord concessions are up.
“She had a bedbug crawling out from her shirt,” recalls the daughter of a Francis Heights tenant. “They’re everywhere.”
Lakewood’s efforts to make its residents more financially resilient is under threat in the upcoming special election.
The planned apartment complex is “a complete loss.”
“I would love to say that there’s nobody in there, but we can’t get in and search that building because it’s so dangerous.”
Urban Peak influenced the way the City of Denver solves homelessness. Will that continue?
One dishonest influencer started the viral rumor.
The state’s minimum wage increases today!
Five homes sold for $10 million or more, from a penthouse to a 600-plus-acre ranch.
Rather than monks, the Old Snowmass property will now house a tech billionaire enabling ICE deportations and attacks on Gaza.
Now you can afford to live in RiNo and be an artist!
The Mile High City has the second-highest rate of houses being taken off the market.
Recent election results suggest this state’s voters might support programs that help the most vulnerable families.
The city is willing to cover between 4 and 10 percent of a home’s down payment, but there are deadlines.
The town had the highest eight-year percentage increases in population and income.
Denver had the second-highest rate of delistings in the country in October.
If any platform knows annoying and unfriendly, it’s Nextdoor. Perhaps that helped the community website rank Mile High hoods.
The traveling photo program helps children in foster care find permanent homes.
From Highlands Ranch to Brush, the most affordable cities for homeownership are…
Granite Peaks Church has been walking the walk for nearly a decade.
The City of Denver will decide on $64 million worth of housing contracts to replace the Salvation Army.