Colorado °µºÚ±¬ÁÏ
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Justice Necessary offering grants to schools to supply pads, tampons and dispensers to meet requirements of legislation.
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Businesses and lawmakers are trying to address the U.S. affordable housing crisis by turning to alternative ways to build homes. These include 3D printing houses out of concrete, building homes in a factory and shipping them to their final destination, and even using the hemp plant in construction.
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Residents of Westwater, a small Navajo subdivision in Utah, set their sights on water in the early 2000s. Now, after years of effort, their dream is turning into a reality.
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Driven by years of pressure from parents and advocates, Colorado lawmakers are considering a bill that would require all schools to screen early elementary students for signs of dyslexia, an effort supporters say is critical to catching reading struggles before they deepen.
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House Bill 1295 eases licensing and permitting requirements for food trucks that operate in different jurisdictions.
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State lawmakers had to find more than $1 billion in savings in order to balance the state budget this session.
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Howelsen Hill is closing for the season on Sunday, March 30, and the Steamboat Springs ski area is marking the day with a beloved local event. The Rat Lake Pond Skim Competition is a closing-day tradition that started in the 1980s.
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The Catch Up brings you a roundup of the biggest stories from KUNC newscasts each week. It’s your go-to source for staying informed and up to date.
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The home reinsurance idea, which is unique to Colorado, aims to reduce private insurers’ financial risk and therefore drive down premiums.
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A federal judge in Denver is set to hear arguments over whether an immigration and labor activist who took refuge in Colorado churches to avoid deportation during the first Trump administration should be freed from detention. Jeanette Vizguerra's lawyers are expected to argue during a hearing Friday that a pending deportation order isn't valid.
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The cuts will enable the state to absorb the rising costs of Medicaid and fully fund K-12 for another year. But they didn’t eliminate the state’s structural deficit, which will require ongoing cuts for years to come.
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Congresswoman Lauren Boebert answered questions over the phone Wednesday, most of which were from people worried about what the Trump administration is doing.