Organizing the Slopes As resort owners rake in record profits, organizers are trying to unionize ski patrollers across the West — and they’re winning. 04/12/2024 - 5:22 am | View Link
5 key questions as Trump’s first criminal trial begins Former President Trump’s first criminal trial is set to begin in New York on Monday. Trump is charged with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. He denies all charges. The underlying events ... 04/11/2024 - 11:06 pm | View Link
James Webb telescope model finds new home in Colorado Springs The full-scale model of the James Webb Space Telescope traveled the world for more than a decade before the actual telescope was launched on Dec. 25, 2021. Now, it has a new home in Colorado Springs. 04/9/2024 - 8:03 am | View Link
Election 2024: What states have abortion on the ballot in November Axios Visuals Florida this spring joined other states that have successfully, or are aiming to, put abortion on the ballot for voters in November — a winning issue for Democrats in the post-Roe era. 04/9/2024 - 7:40 am | View Link
James Webb telescope model finds new home in Colorado Springs COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KDVR) — On Monday, Northrop Grumman announced that the company is gifting the James Webb Space Telescope full-scale model to the Space Foundation, where it will be ... 04/9/2024 - 7:32 am | View Link
Former Trump attorney Tim Parlatore explains what he thinks could happen if prosecutors in Donald Trump's hush money criminal trial bring up Trump's other legal problems. He also shares whether he thinks the former president should testify.
President Joe Biden called China “xenophobic” while highlighting the Asian nation’s economic woes, as he sought to make the case for U. S. economic strength during a campaign stop in the swing state of Pennsylvania.
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“They’ve got a population that is more people in retirement than working. They’re not importing anything.
Colorado lawmakers are abandoning plans to overhaul the Regional Transportation District’s governing board and change how its members are selected after transit officials blasted the plan.
Reps. William Lindstedt and Meg Froelich said Wednesday that they are still set to pursue other RTD reforms through House Bill 1447. But they said they plan to drop the bill’s most contentious provision: a plan to eventually cut the board’s size down from 15 elected, voting members to seven voting members — with five elected and two appointed by the governor.
Froelich and Lindstedt told fellow legislators they wanted to further discuss board reform over the coming months.
“We ultimately feel that those sections of the bill should come out, and we will want a longer process,” said Froelich, an Englewood Democrat.