
The best Local 303 acts of 2024!
We asked you to vote for your favorite Local 303 acts of 2024, and the results are in!

Colorado’s economic outlook could show ‘some weakening’
Unemployment rate hits 4.4 percent, but there are still questions about the accuracy of the data

“Palentine’s” Day requests on CPR Classical
Forget the card and chocolates, share the greatest gift of all with your loved one: classical music! Send in a dedication to your beloved below.

The RTD board will vote Tuesday on performance goals for CEO Debra Johnson. Some members are pushing for them to be tougher
Johnson got a new contract late last year, but some board members want her goals to include improving safety and reducing fare evasion.

Jan. 27, 2025: Preservationist Dana Crawford; ‘The Reservoir’ takes on tough subjects with comedy
She loved old buildings. And fought to save them from the wrecking ball. Today, we remember Colorado developer and preservationist Dana Crawford who’s died at age 93. Then, playwright, and recovering alcoholic, Jake Brasch, takes us inside his mind with his new play, “The Reservoir” at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts.

Spectator killed after hammer-throw accident at Colorado Springs high school track and field meet
First responders provided medical care to the man struck by the hammer, but he died on scene.

In ‘The Reservoir,’ alcoholism, Alzheimer’s and, yes, laughter take the stage
In “The Reservoir,” playwright and Denver native Jake Brasch explores addiction and dementia… with a heaping side of laughter. The show was incubated at the prestigious Colorado New Play Summit.

A bill requiring schools to have cell phone policies aims to boost classroom learning
The bipartisan legislative proposal isn’t mandating a statewide ban of phones in classrooms. Instead, it would require individual school districts to develop their own policies spelling out how and when students can use cell phones in schools.

Showing cattle at the National Western Stock Show is a whirlwind of work and tradition for Yuma’s Weathers family
Nate and Nikki Weathers bring up their kids to learn the family business. Part of that involves learning how to raise and show cattle for auction.

Air Force clarifies Tuskegee Airmen content will continue to be taught amid removal of DEI courses
The Tuskegee Airmen, known as the “Red Tails,” were the nation’s first Black military pilots who served in a segregated WWII unit.

Here’s how to get your valentine addressed from ‘The Sweetheart City’
Loveland’s Chamber of Commerce is in the business of love.










