-
In his ruling, Judge David Goldberg said “the public has the right to know” how individual lawmakers vote to prioritize bills and that the so-called quadratic voting system at the Capitol violates Colorado’s Open Meetings Law.
-
A Denver district court judge has ruled that a secret ballot system state lawmakers have used since 2019 to help decide which bills should live or die, violates Colorado’s open meetings law.
-
Paul Anslow called residents living near the Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport “nut jobs” and belittled their concerns about the airport’s impact on their neighborhood, according to a 2021 transcript of a private conversation given to KUNC ڱ as part of a public records request.
-
Supporters say the system helps lawmakers decide which bills should get a piece of the state’s limited budget. But critics have raised transparency concerns, saying it shuts the public out of an important part of the legislative process.
-
The McCoy Family Funeral Home in Windsor lost its state license in October after state regulators alleged it was using subcontractors for its services without telling clients.
-
Some cases of alleged misconduct at funeral homes can live in this database for months without gaining attention from the public.
-
An unlicensed funeral home was allegedly cremating bodies in Weld County. Then a fire led to chargesIt was almost midnight on a clear night in early April when police officer Chad Berry saw an unusual haze to the east in the town of Frederick. He followed the haze in this small Weld County town until he got to the Greenwood & Myers Mortuary.
-
Six months ago, Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport Director Paul Anslow didn’t want to talk about leaded fuel. He said he had "zero control" over the airport's use of it. Today, the airport is racing to become the first in Colorado to completely phase the fuel out.
-
For Westminster resident Charlene Willey, the sight of an unleaded fuel tanker truck parked near one of the runways at Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport was a gratifying sight that’s been years in the making.
-
City officials told residents their new Housing First program has helped house 26 people experiencing homelessness so far this year.