Colorado Matters

Hosted by Ryan Warner and Chandra Thomas Whitfield, CPR News' daily interview show focuses on the state's people, issues and ideas.
Airs Monday-Friday: 9 a.m.-10 a.m. & 7 p.m.-8 p.m.; Sundays: 10 a.m.-11 a.m.
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Latest Episodes

State Rep’s Personal Fight Against Opioid Addiction; Drilling Near Old Nuclear Site

Colorado may limit how many pain pills doctors can prescribe as part of the state’s fight against opioid addiction. It’s one of several bills a bipartisan group of lawmakers will bring to the Capitol next year in hopes of debate and passage. We speak with a lawmaker who helped shape these proposals, and with her mother, whose struggle with addiction motivated her daughter to act. Then, oil and gas drilling is coming closer to a spot in Western Colorado where a nuclear bomb was detonated underground four decades ago.

Talking Racism At A Denver Church; What It’s Like To Foster Parent

At one of the oldest African-American churches in Denver recently, about 200 people gathered in the sanctuary to hear the pastor and his wife, who’s a diversity consultant, share their views on racism. The topic: Whites can’t just be allies in fighting discrimination; they must be leaders. Also, in Colorado there are more kids who need foster homes than adults willing to take them in. People of color, especially, aren’t signing up.

Bundy Ranch Trial Gets Underway; Denver’s 1960s Underground LSD Labs

After refusing to pay to graze his cattle on public lands, Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy led an armed standoff against federal agents in 2014. His trial is underway, and could have impacts across the West. Then, why one city decided not to compete for Amazon’s headquarters. Plus, 1960s underground LSD operations in Denver. And, a pianist known for playing a few notes over long stretches of time.

Powerful Pot; National Monuments; ‘¡Ask A Mexican!’

Ride the CannaVan, where scientists detour around the feds to test extra-potent pot. Then, as the Trump administration considers shrinking Utah’s new Bears Ears National Monument, a look at how the law works and what’s really at stake. Plus, the syndicated column its author calls “notorious” is done. “¡Ask A Mexican!” ran in Denver’s Westword for several years.

Colorado Mass Shooting Survivors Visit Las Vegas Victims; Pot, Drilling On 2017 Ballots

Victims in Las Vegas are now trying to navigate life after a mass shooting. Last week they got some help from a handful of Coloradans affected by the shootings at an Aurora movie theater in 2012 and at Columbine High School in 1999. Then, a Colorado seventh-grader is “America’s Top Young Scientist.” And, voters are considering ballot measures on marijuana, broadband, and oil and gas issues.

Colorado Students On Journalism; Colonial America’s Influence On Horror

Trust in the news media is at historic lows, so we asked a group of high school students why they would want to get into journalism. Thirteen hundred student journalists from all over Colorado gathered this month in Fort Collins. The reporters from Grand Junction High talked about covering a rash of suicides, including some of their classmates. Also, why the American Colonial period was such a great time for horror.

Coloradan’s Run In With Weinstein; Green Roofs Debate; Latina KUVO Founder; Black And White Couples

A Colorado College professor tells of a run-in with Harvey Weinstein 30 years ago that led her to study in psychology and sexual objectification. Then, a debate over so-called “green roofs” in Denver. If voters pass a ballot initiative this election, it would mean large, new buildings would have to be topped by plants or solar panels or both. And, in 1985, a new Denver radio station went on the air. Its Latina founders were pioneers, and one will be inducted in the Colorado Latino Hall of Fame tonight. Also, what mixed race couples face in Colorado when it comes to discrimination.

Staff

Tom Hesse.
Colorado Matters Western Slope Producer

Tom Hesse