State Rep. Scott Bottoms, ministry leader Victor Marx and state Sen. Barbara Kirkmeyer are facing off in the June 30 GOP primary
State Rep. Scott Bottoms, ministry leader Victor Marx and state Sen. Barbara Kirkmeyer are facing off in the June 30 GOP primary
It’s rough out in the job market, especially for teenage workers as summer jobs drop to a 78-year low. Plus: Denver ranks 2nd for employers who expect to rehire after AI job cuts.
Two of the state's largest districts pulled students from Austin Centers for Exceptional Students, which is funded by the state and tuition payments from districts
The lawsuit, by the drug-maker Amgen, is looking to overturn a decision by Colorado’s Prescription Drug Affordability Board to cap the price on Enbrel
Colorado Parks and Wildlife's now-state-funded dog squad is nose down looking for missing hikers, busting poachers and hazing bears
Yes. Sloan’s Lake has experienced numerous algae blooms, some resulting in water so toxic, it killed thousands of fish.
Since 2020, disc golf participation has increased by 86% and continues to rise, with Colorado’s 320 courses leading the boom.
Matthew Prince promises a $500 million investment in Park City Mountain Resort and pushes Vail Resorts to start selling ski areas as part of an “asset-light” franchise model for its Epic Pass
In "What'd I Miss?" Myra and Ossie try to follow the right's narrative on who was behind the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol to thwart the election.
Cartoonist Jim Morrissey sees frontrunner in the GOP primary Victor Marx campaigning as an outsider with the political playbook of an insider.
Cartoonist Drew Litton illustrates how, even well ahead of training camp, Broncos Nation remains fixated on the health of Bo Nix's injured ankle.
The $225 million increase would raise the average residential bill by $6.13, but the proposed rate needs PUC approval and consumer advocates oppose it
The war in Iran, immigration, healthcare and agriculture are among the top issues in the race between U.S. Rep. Jeff Hurd and former state Rep. Ron Hanks
The Colorado Search and Rescue Association did not submit a proposal to continue its 53-year role managing statewide search and rescue responses and volunteer training
Susan Nottingham says her ranch hand shot the King Mountain pack female after pack members repeatedly harassed or killed her cattle
A jury found Peter Cichuniec, the senior medical responder, and Jeremy Cooper, who injected McClain with ketamine, guilty of criminally negligent homicide in 2023
Plus: Even more pride in Fort Collins, Loveland, Leadville and the Roaring Fork Valley
The streak is over. Colorado ski areas saw a 24% collapse in visitation in 2025-26, marking the sharpest downturn for the state’s signature resort industry in more than 40 years. After four years of record-setting traffic, visits to the state’s 26 ski hills fell to 10.5 million in 2025-26, down from 13.9 million the previous […]
The Democratic candidate running to represent Colorado’s tossup 8th Congressional District had different answers for the Working Families Party in July 2025 than he did during a recent interview with The Colorado Sun
Governor’s order directs the state to reduce water use and strongly encourages all Coloradans to do the same.
With three vetoes Wednesday, Jared Polis has now rejected 12 bills passed by the legislature this year — eclipsing the personal record the term-limited governor set in 2025
Polis rejects measures on data-driven pricing, arbitration rules and single-use plastics, citing concerns over scope and state authority
Columnist Mike Littwin writes that Tina Peters' unapologetic remarks after her release just reminds us all over how wrong Gov. Jared Polis was to grant her clemency.
Colorado is the first state to create “A Corps” or artist companies, a subset of limited liability corporations that keep creative control of companies in the hands of the artists
The Colorado Sun interviewed Jena Griswold, David Seligman, Michael Dougherty and Hetal Doshi to get their views on the issues facing the state’s next attorney general
Colorado’s agriculture heritage and community are central to the state’s identity. Here are some of those places as we celebrate 150 years of state history.
Drought impacts are straining household budgets and mountain town economies. Rafting outfitters urge visitors to come, saying there’s still room for fun on the milder flows
The renewable power landmark comes courtesy of Holy Cross Energy in Glenwood Springs
Colorado voters have shown they support investing in early education. Legislators must make teacher compensation a greater priority in the coming sessions.
The law will add new staff to the state department of education who will investigate complaints of discrimination in schools — if Colorado finds the money