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Category: Denver, Colorado Local News

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  • 2 hit-and-run incidents prompts search in Clear Creek County, suspect in custody

    DENVER (KDVR) — A suspect in connection with two hit-and-run incidents Saturday in Clear Creek County is in custody, according to law enforcement.

    The Clear Creek Sheriff’s Office said that the first hit-and-run incident occured around noon, where the suspect allegedly hit a parked vehicle in the parking lot of Safeway in the town of Idaho Springs.

    According to the sheriff’s office, officers attempted to make contact with the alleged suspect at his home. At that time, the suspect was reported traveling in a vehicle eastbound on Dumont Road.

    A Clear Creek deputy, along with an officer with the Idaho Springs Police Department, responded and stopped the vehicle, attempting to get the alleged suspect to exit the vehicle.

    “Instead, the suspect put his vehicle in reverse, knocking over the officer as he drove backward to try to flee,” said the sheriff’s office.

    The sheriff’s office said the officer was transported as a precautionary measure and is “expected to be okay.”

    After allegedly knocking over the officer, the suspect then drove east on Dumont Road and then entered east on Interstate 70 around mile marker 236. The sheriff’s office said that a deputy, shortly after, also entered east on I-70, ultimately locating the suspect traveling on the interstate in the right lane, which was around mile marker 236.

    The deputy then attempted to initiate a traffic stop, but the suspect allegedly “veered left,” pushing the Clear Creek patrol vehicle into the center barrier, causing the vehicle to be damaged, said the sheriff’s office.

    The vehicle was said to have exited the highway at Fall River Road, prompting a search for the suspect. The Idaho Springs department also issued a shelter-in-place at around 3:00 p.m. for residents and businesses in the areas of Lawson and Dumont.

    At around 3:15 p.m., the sheriff’s office reported that the suspect was taken into custody after allegedly crashing near West Dumont Road and Stanley Road.

    Parker Gordon

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  • Casey Mittelstadt trying to start over again in Boston after perplexing Avalanche stint

    Two things have always been true for Casey Mittelstadt in his hockey career: He can be too hard on himself, but he always digs his way out of a slump through hard work.

    Then he encountered a rough patch unlike anything he’d ever experienced last year with the Colorado Avalanche. It cost him a chance to settle at a place he thought might become home.

    It also gave him time to reflect on a whirlwind two years that saw him uprooted twice — and helped him realize that when times get tough, he needs to work on putting down the shovel.

    “Sometimes you almost care too much, and it’s better to go out and play carefree and not worry about the consequences as much,” Mittelstadt said. “It’s something I’ve struggled with, I would say, my whole career, not just even pro hockey. Something I’m definitely working on and going to continue to work on.

    “I think all of us are so competitive, and to some degree, we’re all perfectionists. Sometimes you get a little hard on yourself and get in that hole.”

    Mittelstadt returned to Ball Arena with the Boston Bruins on Saturday, back to the site of the worst hole he’s ever encountered. He arrived in Denver in a shocking trade that saw the Avs send their best young player, defenseman Bo Byram, to Buffalo for Mittelstadt, who was expected to be part of the core of the next great Sabres team.

    It was the type of one-for-one challenge trade of young players with immense potential that rarely happens in the NHL. Mittelstadt was the next in line to fill the No. 2 center position behind Nathan MacKinnon.

    The trade looked like a home run for the Avs. Mittelstadt fit in with the team immediately. He and MacKinnon quickly became practice buddies, as he tried to soak up everything he could from one of the best centers in the world. They’re both hockey nerds at heart, and it looked like a good match.

    Mittelstadt was productive at the end of the 2023-24 season and had a strong showing in his first Stanley Cup Playoffs. The Avs signed him to a three-year contract at $5.75 million per season. Then, he got off to a hot start last year when the depleted club needed him.

    Then … it just went sideways for him.

    “I don’t know,” Avs coach Jared Bednar said when asked what went wrong. “… It’s different for every player and how he feels in the environment. Some guys thrive in it, some guys don’t. You can hit a streak. You lose confidence, and things don’t go well. There’s high expectations and moves are made. Other guys gain confidence and play well. Every team’s not going to be a fit for every player.”

    From the day after the trade until mid-November of last season, Mittelstadt had 37 points in 48 games, including nine in 11 playoff contests. That’s a 63-point pace over a full season — exactly what the Avs have been looking for in that role.

    Then he had four goals and 16 points in his next 44 games. The next game after that came with the Bruins, when he was traded, along with prospect William Zellers and a second-round pick, for Charlie Coyle. That the Avs had to include two assets to acquire a less-productive center suggests that Mittelstadt’s stock had plummeted.

    “I think especially in the season when you’re playing every other day and things are crazy, it almost feels like it’s something different every game when it’s not going well,” Mittelstadt said. “Sadly, I think I probably fell into that rabbit hole a little bit too much.

    “It’s part of it, though. It’s part of growing up and maturing and learning from your mistakes. I think as long as you do that, you look back on every experience as a positive one.”

    Mittelstadt is already on his second coach with the Bruins, something he has experience with after spending the first six seasons of his career in Buffalo. He’s centering the second line for a franchise in transition. The spine of a potentially great team is still there with David Pastrnak, Charlie McAvoy and Jeremy Swayman, but the rest of the roster is a bit of an odd collection of players.

    He’ll have a local kid, Littleton’s Michael Eyssimont, on his wing Saturday night in Denver. Mittelstadt has two goals and no assists in five games this season, and six goals but just two assists in 23 games overall for the Bruins.

    “It’s been fun. Obviously, a crazy couple of years,” Mittelstadt said. “Trying to get settled in and get comfortable. It’s a great group of guys, so I’ve been having a good time. I think we’ve played overall pretty well and some things to improve on. I think we have a good team.”

    Mittelstadt was a phenom growing up in Minnesota. He struggled at first with the Sabres but eventually matured into one of their best players and a productive NHL player.

    Corey Masisak

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  • LIVE: 'No Kings' road closures, RTD service disruptions in Denver

    DENVER (KDVR) — A “No Kings” protest in downtown Denver is causing road closures and RTD service disruptions.

    The Denver Police Department said at 12:17 p.m. that Lincoln Street is closed at 14th Avenue and that additional road closures may occur in the area of the State Capitol Building. Alternate routes are advised to avoid traffic delays.

    As of 1:09 p.m., DPD said demonstrators have started marching from the State Capitol, and that drivers should expect rolling road closures in the downtown area and to avoid them, if possible.

    The Regional Transportation District, meanwhile, said at 12:29 p.m. that Lincoln Street is closed near Civic Center and that bus routes 0, 1, 6, 10, 15, 16 and 83 are currently being detoured.

    RTD riders can view service alerts online for more information.

    Fox31 will update this story with information as it becomes available.

    Abraham Jewett

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  • Thousands expected at Denver ‘No Kings’ rally opposing Trump

    DENVER — Crowds of up to 20,000 people are expected to gather in front of the Colorado State Capitol in Denver on Saturday to take part in one of several anti-Trump “No Kings” rallies in Colorado and across the country.

    Some RTD light rail lines have been impacted in anticipation of the crowds.

    The 50501 Movement, which is orchestrating the protests, says it chose the “No Kings” name to support democracy and speak out against what it calls the authoritarian actions of the Trump administration.

    The name 50501 stands for 50 states, 50 protests, one movement.

    Similar rallies are planned in Colorado Springs, Longmont, Arvada, Broomfield, and Northglenn, with over 2,600 events nationwide.

    Trump himself is spending the weekend at his Mar-a-Lago home in Florida.

    “They say they’re referring to me as a king. I’m not a king,” Trump said in a Fox News interview airing early Friday, before he departed for a $1 million-per-plate MAGA Inc. fundraiser at his club.

    Protests are expected nearby on Saturday.

    Political experts say these protests and the possible long-term political impact on President Donald Trump remain uncertain.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

    Robert Garrison

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  • Minor earthquake rattles Elbert County

    ELBERT COUNTY, Colo. — A minor earthquake was reported in Elbert County Friday night, according to the United States Geological Survey.

    The 3.0 magnitude tremor occurred at 6:51 p.m.

    The quake’s epicenter was located just north of Black Forest, according to the USGS.

    No damage was reported.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

    Robert Garrison

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  • Avalanche Journal: Five thoughts on Colorado’s fast, drama-free start

    Jared Bednar, an avid angler, likes to compare his hockey team over a long season to a boat.

    He sees it like this: The team builds its identity and what it wants to be over the first part of the season, and then there are aspects that just break during the grind of 82 games — kind of like a well-used fishing vessel. How quickly the club fixes the issues and regains its optimal performance is a big part of a successful campaign.

    The Colorado Avalanche left the dock with a major leak last season. Fixing the boat on the fly was an all-hands-on-deck situation, from the coaching staff to the front office.

    The start of the 2025-26 season has been a complete 180. The Avs were 4-0-1 heading into a Saturday night contest at Ball Arena with the Boston Bruins, and the one blemish might have been the best overall performance considering the foe.

    Colorado’s NHL team is relatively healthy, stable and off to a strong start. The Avs allowed eight goals in the season opener last year. They’ve allowed eight total in the first five contests.

    “Overall, a pretty good start, being able to win hockey games without really having played our best as a team,” Avs captain Gabe Landeskog said. “If you can figure out your game as a team while winning, and kind of go through some of those growing pains at the start of the season while racking up some points, I think that’s a positive thing.

    “And I think we are only scratching the surface.”

    Here are some observations from the first five-game segment of this Stanley Cup-or-bust season in Denver.

    1. Nathan MacKinnon is already in Hart Trophy finalist form

    Natural Stat Trick had MacKinnon on the ice for 17 scoring chances in Buffalo. He took 17 shifts in the game. The 2024 league MVP has been on the ice for 49 scoring chances at 5-on-5, which is tied for third among forwards. The two players ahead of him and the one who is even are all on the two-time defending champs, the Florida Panthers, who have also played an extra game.

    The Avs have outscored the opposition 7-0 at even strength with MacKinnon on the ice, 10-0 overall. Those are just some numbers in a small sample size.

    Corey Masisak

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  • Adams County warned of Byers Solar Project impersonation scam: Sheriff's office

    DENVER (KDVR) — There’s a new scam in town, and this time, it’s focused on Adams County residents and the development of a new solar installation near Byers.

    The Adams County Sheriff’s Office said Friday that individuals are impersonating representatives of Silicon Ranch, an independent power producer and renewable energy company, which is building a 150-megawatt solar farm about 10 miles northeast of Byers in Adams County.

    The sheriff’s office said that the scammers are attempting to collect residents’ personal information and are requesting payments related to the solar energy project. The agency said that residents should be aware that:

    • Silicon Ranch is the sole owner and developer of the solar farm property
    • No other consultants or renewable energy companies are involved
    • There are no third parties authorized to request payments, contract work or collect personal information for this project
    • There are no active construction activities at the Silicon Ranch Byers property

    If you are contacted by someone claiming to be a Silicon Ranch representative or a Silicon Ranch Byers project representative who asks for money, documents or contracting arrangements, the sheriff’s office says you should not engage and immediately report the matter to the Adams County Sheriff’s Office.

    “Silicon Ranch has reported this matter to local law enforcement and the FBI to protect our community and the integrity of the project,” the sheriff’s office said on Facebook.

    Questions or requests to confirm communications can be directed to Silicon Ranch at hanna.nordin@siliconranch.com.

    Heather Willard

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  • Grading The Week: Ex-Broncos RBs Audric Estime, Javonte Williams would love to have J.K. Dobbins’ problems right now

    Where there’s a Williams, there’s a whoa.

    As in former Broncos running back Javonte Williams, the Dallas Cowboy who somehow managed to have a rougher week than his successor, J.K. Dobbins, did in London.

    For the first time since Week 1, the Javonte Train finally went off the rails. Despite what the fantasy experts on the Grading The Week team saw as a (makes finger quotes in the air) “favorable” matchup at Carolina last Sunday, the ex-Bronco was held to a season-low 29 rushing yards on 13 carries and 5 receiving yards on five grabs.

    Context: Despite a banged-up, messed-up offensive line in front of him across the pond, Dobbins still managed more rushing yards (40) and more total yards (also 40) on far fewer touches (14).

    Life of an ex-Broncos RB — D

    And yet Williams’ statistical stumble was cupcakes and rainbows compared to the week of his former teammate — and backfield mate — Audric Estime.

    Estime, the Broncos’ fifth-round pick out of Notre Dame in the 2024 NFL draft, was waived by Denver this past August after falling behind Tyler Badie and Jaleel McLaughlin on the depth chart. The Philadelphia Eagles signed Estime a few days later and stuck him on their practice squad.

    On Tuesday, our man Audric became unstuck. The Eagles released him.

    The ex-Irish runner remained inactive for all six games with the Birds, including the Broncos’ 21-17 win at Philly back on Oct. 5.

    Burning through two franchises over your first 18 months in the league makes for something of an auspicious NFL start for Estime, no question. But there’s one thing on the dude’s side: Time. He just turned 22 this past Sept. 6. If Estime can land on his feet, with head, heart and hands all pointing the same direction, he’s got time to re-write his narrative.

    Wedgewood’s start for Avs — A

    When the kids at the GTW offices can’t trust our eyes, we trust the math. After its first five games a year ago, the Avalanche had given up 28 goals (5.6 GAA) and had lost four times. After five games this fall to open the 2025-26 season, the burgundy and blue had surrendered just nine goals (1.8 GAA) while winning four of those five contests. Avs faithful may not know what a good power play looks like, but they know what it’s like to have a grown-up — Scott Wedgewood — keeping watch between the pipes.

    Meanwhile, our old pal Alexandar Georgiev — the man in net here to start last season — just cleared waivers in Buffalo and was spotted in recent days practicing with the AHL’s Rochester Americans.

    Sean Keeler

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  • Bundle up! Colorado sees first widespread freeze and frost advisory

    DENVER — A strong cold front is sweeping across Colorado Saturday, bringing a big drop in temperatures, gusty winds, and the season’s first widespread freeze.

    That front moves through this morning, kicking up strong north to northeast winds and ushering in cooler air.

    Mountain areas could see scattered snow showers, with 1–2 inches possible above the passes.

    Highs will stay much cooler than in recent days with temperatures upper 50s and low 60s.

    Denver7

    By tonight, winds ease, and skies clear the perfect setup for a cold night.

    A Frost Advisory is in effect for the Denver and Boulder metro areas from 10 PM to 8 AM Sunday, with temperatures dipping into the low to mid-30s.

    Outlying areas like Longmont and DIA could even slip below freezing.

    Be sure to cover or bring in sensitive plants before bedtime.

    Freeze/Frost Sat PM - Sun AM 10/18

    Denver7

    Temperatures rebound slightly with lighter winds and plenty of sunshine.

    It’ll feel more comfortable, but dry air keeps fire danger elevated across the plains and foothills.

    broncos Sunday 10/18

    Denver7

    By Tuesday, winds finally settle and more typical October weather returns.

    DENVER WEATHER LINKS: Hourly forecast | Radars | Traffic | Weather Page | 24/7 Weather Stream

    Click here to watch the Denver7 live weather stream.

    Clara Faith

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  • ‘Inspired by Liam’: Dad of Littleton 7th grader, killed riding his bike to school reflects 2 years later

    LITTLETON, Colo. – Two years ago Friday, Liam Stewart, a 7th grader was riding his bike to Euclid Middle School in Littleton and was only minutes away when he was struck and killed by a driver.

    It happened at an intersection Josh Stewart, Liam’s dad, had been concerned about well before his son, just 13, lost his life.

    “At the core of it, he was a kid on his way to school. He could have just as easily been walking through that intersection. And I think for me, getting every kid to school safely is important,” Josh told Denver7 earlier this week.

    Denver7

    He sat down at a bench outside of Bemis Library – dedicated a year ago when the community gathered to mark one year since Liam’s death – and talked about the positive changes he has seen in Littleton as the city works to address vulnerable road user safety.

    “It’s a really hard week for us. Liam’s birthday was one week before he was killed, so it was last Friday. The anniversary of his death is this Friday. So it’s for our family. We just, we like to stay together, be together. And Liam has two little brothers who are now 12 and 9, and that time with them is just so special and so important,” said Josh.

    liam stewart ghost bike.png

    Denver7

    He talked about how the family is honoring Liam this year.

    “We had a birthday party for Liam’s friends. So we just had a huge group of kids at our house, and that was amazing. It was amazing to kind of be reminded about the energy that he brought and see those kids, and it’s hard but also comforting to see how much he would have grown in that time,” said Josh.

    Liam Stewart

    Vibrant Littleton

    Liam Stewart’s father, Josh, described the 13-year-old boy as a friend to everyone.

    “That’s how we spent his birthday this year. And we’re spending this anniversary as a family this year, because we feel like that’s right. I’ve taken time and really dedicated, and we’ve advocated, and, you know, we’re doing other things… A local group, Littleton Social Cycle, put up a ghost bike in his honor.”

    josh stewart.png

    Denver7

    In the video player below, Josh opens up about his family’s difficult journey over the last two years and how he views his work as an advocate for change.

    Dad of Littleton student, killed riding a bike to school reflects 2 years later

    Denver7’s On Two Wheels also interviewed members of the City of Littleton’s Safer Streets team to learn more about recently-completed and future infrastructure projects in the works. Look for that story soon on Denver7.com.


    jeff image bar.jpg

    Denver7

    Denver7 | On Two Wheels: Get in touch with Jeff Anastasio

    Have a story idea about biking in Colorado you want shared from your community? Want to highlight a danger or give a shoutout to someone in the biking community? Fill out the form below to get in touch with Denver7 On Two Wheels reporter Jeff Anastasio.

    Jeff Anastasio

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  • 1 killed, 3 injured including suspect in Wheat Ridge crash on Highway 58

    DENVER (KDVR) — Highway 58 will remain closed Friday night as police investigators are on scene of a deadly crash involving four vehicles between Macintyre Street and Interstate 70.

    The Wheat Ridge Police Department said that at about 8 p.m. that it was investigating the multi-vehicle crash and said that one person had been killed in the crash.

    The agency also noted that it had closed the eastbound lanes of Highway 58 as of 8 p.m., and the lanes remained closed as of about 10:15 p.m. on Friday.

    The department said that the initial investigation revealed that there were four vehicles involved and three people were taken to the hospital, in addition to the fatality. Among the three people hospitalized was the suspect.

    Wheat Ridge police said the suspect was in police custody as of about 10 p.m.

    As of Friday night, it was unclear if there were contributing factors to the crash, such as speed, impairment or adverse conditions.

    Heather Willard

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  • Month after shooting, Evergreen High holds emotional homecoming: ‘We can be kids again’

    EVERGREEN — One by one, they filtered into an empty Evergreen High gymnasium, greeted by a tunnel of pompoms and an outpouring of joy they hadn’t felt for weeks. The kids were here, and they all carried hallmarks of one of the happiest nights of small-town USA. Some wore football jerseys. Some wore blue-and-yellow Cougars face paint. Some wore blue-and-white pinstriped overalls.

    Most, improbably, wore smiles.

    The only reminder that there was a shooting on this campus shortly over a month ago, in fact, was the slew of Evergreen Strong shirts across the crowd. These students needed nothing else. Their town is covered in signs that remember the day: 09/10/25. They needed a shred of normalcy to rip them out of the monotony of tragedy, and so the Student Senate pulled together a homecoming assembly Friday afternoon. And the games began.

    They took turns spinning on plastic bats and diving through hurdles for relay races. They scrambled through bleachers to find pairs of socks in a scavenger hunt. Each grade took turns belting out different songs in a karaoke contest, and the seniors didn’t hold back with Nicki Minaj’s “Starships”: “We’re higher than a mother(expletive!)”

    Everyone laughed. No teachers objected. There have been much greater problems at play.

    “I was gonna (vote for) the juniors, too,” one teacher, working as a judge for karaoke, said to the seniors. “Until you guys dropped a gratuitous ‘mofo.’”

    Outside these walls, a tight-knit mountain town of fewer than 10,000 has been trying to come to terms with the event that shattered their reality, after a teenager at Evergreen brought a gun to school and shot two of his fellow classmates before shooting himself. The adults are trying to solve why. And how. And how to not let this happen again. They should be taking care of the students, as Eric Martinez says, owner of local cafe staple Java Groove.

    Inside these walls, though, on Friday’s homecoming at Evergreen High, the kids were all right.

    “It’s our time to come together as a school and a community and say no to the hate,” 18-year-old Tyler Guyton said. “And the violence. And the exclusion. And the heartbreak. And the grief. And say no for this week — for this weekend.

    “We can have fun,” he continued. “And we can be kids again.”

    Community help

    On Wednesday, Sept. 10, Shellene Ellington’s son sent her a text: “Mom, shooter. Active shooter.”

    Ellington thought this meant a drill. Evergreen High was supposed to have one just a few days earlier, after all, that got rescheduled. So she called her son, a freshman, to tell him this was in fact just a drill.

    She heard distant screams behind him, when he picked up.

    “No, mom,” her son told her, Ellington remembered. “I’m running home.”

    He had sprinted out of the cafeteria and into the woods behind Evergreen, along with a handful of other classmates. Ellington hopped in her car and sped over to a stretch of Jefferson County Road 73 that ran past town, finding her son and about 10 other kids hiding between a couple of cars parked off the road. She slid open the door to her GMC Yukon, waved them all in, and sped back to her house to let their parents know they were safe.

    People wait to reunite with students at the Evergreen Library after a shooting at Evergreen High School in Evergreen, Colorado, on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    “It’s kinda strange – I picked up 10 kids that I didn’t really know,” Ellington remembered. “Like, I knew maybe three of them.

    “But now,” she said, sobs catching in her throat, “those kids hug me.”

    Evergreen, Ellington noted, is an unincorporated community. It does not have its own police department. It does not have any city government. The closest hospital, she pointed, is in Lakewood. They are used to helping each other out, as Ellington said, without the help of any city infrastructure. The school debuted a new set of bleachers this fall down at the football field, which — aside from a grant of $25,000 through T-Mobile — came entirely through the community raising more than $325,000, as Evergreen’s Parent Teacher Student Association president, Cindy Mazeika, said.

    Most every single business along Evergreen’s main drag has pulled its weight in some way for community relief. Chelsea Treinen, the owner of Sweetwater Boutique, came up with the idea to plant yellow, blue and white flags around the area as a show of strength. Martinez has helped raise money for shooting victim Matthew Silverstone, as Silverstone’s sisters work at Java Coffee. Community members have been donating meals every night of the week to Silverstone’s family, Ellington said, with different people signed up to deliver meals every day through New Year’s.

    “I’ve never seen a community pull together like this before,” said Brian Peluso, general manager at the Muddy Buck Cafe. “It’s absolutely amazing.

    “Everybody wanted to be a part of it,” Peluso continued. “Everybody wanted to have their hand in the healing process, so to speak. And it was fabulous to watch.”

    That healing process, though, has brought difficult questions. The Jefferson County Parent-Teacher Association, Ellington said, is holding an open forum this upcoming week for families to air their concerns. A full-time school resource officer has been placed on campus, after none was present at the time of the shooting. Evergreen is trying out a black Labrador named Oat on campus, as Mazeika said, to sniff out gunpowder. The community is engaged in debate over whether to introduce metal detectors.

    An officer walks outside Evergreen High School before the school's homecoming football game in Evergreen, Colorado, on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
    An officer walks outside Evergreen High School before the school’s homecoming football game in Evergreen, Colorado, on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    But the reality of a potential threat is still in the back of students’ minds, as one Evergreen student told The Denver Post on Friday. And the community of Evergreen — a place where Peluso and Martinez and many more moved to for a quiet mountain paradise to raise a family — is still reeling.

    “I think it kind of shattered that a little bit, that — it’s not safe,” Treinen said. “But is anywhere, really, immune from something like that happening?

    “And I think no.”

    Student pride

    Just a few days after the shooting, the school’s Student Senate “went to every place in Evergreen” that it thought could feasibly host a homecoming dance, as Guyton said.

    There was a quick decision by the student body, through conversations with administration, to try to pull together a homecoming for the weekend of Oct. 17. But all, too, quickly realized they couldn’t host a dance in Evergreen High’s gym. It would be dark. It was too soon. They moved Saturday night’s dance to Evergreen Elks Lodge, and made admission free for all students.

    Students at Evergreen, Guyton said, have been “longing” for a moment to reconnect with their community at large. To feel, as he said, like a school again. This was it.

    “Unfortunately, a lot of us have had to grow up super quickly. … It’s not fair that a 14-year-old has to become an adult in one day,” Guyton said.

    Schools from around JeffCo pitched in, as Evergreen athletic director Maddy Hornecker told The Post. Bear Creek High designed posters. Dakota Ridge brought in a coffee cart on Tuesday morning. Ralston Valley helped plan Friday’s assembly. Columbine High helped write the halftime script for Friday night’s football game.

    Emma Cox, 16, prepares to cheer during Evergreen High School's homecoming football game in Evergreen, Colorado, on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
    Emma Cox, 16, prepares to cheer during Evergreen High School’s homecoming football game in Evergreen, Colorado, on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    The Student Senate at Evergreen, too, tried to think of every conceivable angle, as memories of Sept. 10 still hit Guyton when a loud noise echoes in Evergreen’s halls. There would be no loud confetti poppers; instead, the students shot off streamers inside the gymnasium. The school provided spare rooms, too, for students to sit and talk who didn’t feel comfortable gathering for the assembly.

    “It’s important that – no one feels alone,” said senior Will Carlin, who helped plan the assembly. “Obviously you can be alone, and sometimes it’s part of how people process, but it’s important that everyone knows you have someone around.”

    At that moment, sitting in the bleachers after the assembly, a fellow student high-fived him.

    “It’s important,” Carlin continued, “that everyone knows that people are there to care about you.”

    As the sun disappeared Friday and community members bundled up Evergreen Strong T-shirts in jackets, the crowd moved down to the football field. And on the first drive of Evergreen’s Friday night matchup with Skyview, a throng of hundreds stamped their feet against the metal of the stands — the $325,000 bleachers they’d built with those own same feet.

    “I don’t think anybody is 100% OK,” Guyton said. “But compared to where we were a month ago, we’re really good.”

    Originally Published:

    Luca Evans

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  • Trump: Air Force Academy Cadet Chapel a 'catastrophe'

    (The Hill) — President Trump railed against the increasing renovation cost of the Air Force Academy Cadet Chapel project in Colorado, now ballooning to north of $300 million, and called for an investigation into the “mess.” 

    The Cadet Chapel restoration, which started in 2019, is rising in cost and is now expected to be completed in November 2028, prompting a rebuke from the president Thursday night. 

    “The United States Air Force Academy Cadet Chapel has been a CONSTRUCTION DISASTER from the time it was built in 1962. The earlier stories are that it leaked on Day One, and that was the good part. Hundreds of Millions of Dollars have been spent,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social

    “The renovation, which essentially has been going on since the day it was built, is now projected to go on until 2028, costing an additional $90 Million Dollars, bringing the grand total to $335 Million Dollars,” the president said. “This mess should be investigated. Very unfair to the Cadets — A COMPLETE ARCHITECTURAL CATASTROPHE!” 

    In August, the Department of Defense awarded JE Dunn Construction Co. a contract worth slightly more than $88 million for renovation work of the chapel, bolstering the total cost from $247 million to almost $335 million.

    The Air Force Civil Engineer Center (AFCEC), which oversees the project, told KOAA News5 in Colorado Springs, Colo., last month that the new contract was needed to “address unforeseen structural discrepancies and design conflicts discovered during the restoration process.” 

    The AFCEC added that the funding ensures the “long-term structural integrity and watertightness of the Cadet Chapel and will resolve issues that have plagued the building since its opening 60 years ago.”

    The renovation work done at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs is expected to be completed by Nov. 13, 2028, according to the Pentagon.

    The chapel, standing 150 feet tall, first opened in 1962 and was built to “meet the spiritual needs of cadets and staff.” 

    “It contains a separate chapel for Protestant, Catholic, Jewish and Buddhist faiths, and two all-faiths’ worship rooms,” according to the Air Force Academy. “There are two main levels, with the Protestant nave on the upper level. Catholic, Jewish and Buddhist services take place beneath it.”

    Filip Timotija

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  • ‘We need a paycheck’: Colorado TSA officer’s concern grows as shutdown continues into third week

    DENVER — As the government shutdown continues into its third week, Denver7 is hearing from Colorado federal employees who say they’re growing extremely concerned.

    Angela Grana, a Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officer at the La Plata Airport in Durango and the regional vice president for AFGE TSA Local 1127, spoke with Denver7 in her personal capacity Friday. She said she’s worried about her fellow officers and how they’ll pay for everyday expenses, with no end to the shutdown in sight.

    “I’m nervous. I’m nervous for my fellow employees, I’m nervous that their funds are running out,” Grana said. “I don’t know how they’re going to pay for their child care. I don’t know how they’re going to pay for their gas and their food to get to work. It’s getting difficult. It’s getting harder and harder, and… my hands are tied.”

    Denver7

    Pictured: Angela Grana, a TSA officer at the La Plata Airport in Durango and the regional vice president for AFGE TSA Local 1127

    Grana has been a TSA officer at the La Plata Airport for four years. She told Denver7 her concern started to grow after the shutdown surpassed the two-week mark.

    “We need a paycheck. We don’t need a rain check. We need a paycheck,” she said. “We were paid up through the 30th. The end of the week will be Saturday — tomorrow — and it’ll be an 80-hour paycheck with no funds.”

    Grana said the stress of the shutdown is only compounded by other job stressors.

    “We’re looking for things that go bomb, bash, boom, right? We’re looking for explosives. We’re looking for dangerous items,” she told Denver7. “We’ve got a lot of stress on our plate. In the back of our mind is, ‘How are we going to pay our rent? How am I going to pay my child care? Oh, my God, I’m hungry.’”

    Grana’s concern comes after multiple days of exorbitant delays at Denver International Airport, much of which were caused by bad weather, though it’s unclear if they all were.

    Denver7 reached out to TSA, asking if any employee callouts contributed. A TSA spokesperson said in a statement, “TSA has not experienced any delay in operations due to callouts and remains fully capable of facilitating safe and secure travel for passengers.”

    Denver7 also reached out to officials at the Denver International Airport, inquiring about the hundreds of delays. In a statement, a spokesperson attributed the “periodic disruptions” to weather and said most delays were 30 minutes or less.

    • Read the full statement below

    DEN experienced a few, periodic disruptions this week, mostly due to morning fog and evening thunderstorms in the area (typical of this time of year), however most delays were 30 minutes or less. For context, delays over an hour are considered notable for DEN operations as the likelihood for lingering impacts and recovery of aircraft backups increases.

    DEN has support staff and volunteers throughout the entire airport to assist passengers by providing general airport information. We also have our Canine Airport Therapy Squad (CATS) team to help ease passenger stress.

    Travelers are always encouraged to check with their airlines for information on delays.

    Grana told Denver7 she’s encouraging her coworkers and union members to continue showing up to their scheduled shifts.

    “I know it’s difficult,” she said. “We’ll get through this, we have to. We’ve done it before. We’ll do it again, and this is just another stepping stone in our careers for working for the federal government.”

    Grana’s ultimate hope is that the shutdown ends soon.

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    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Veronica Acosta

    Denver7’s Veronica Acosta covers stories that have an impact in all of Colorado’s communities, but specializes in reporting on immigration and wildfire management in our state. If you’d like to get in touch with Veronica, fill out the form below to send her an email.

    Veronica Acosta

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  • What you’ll find at the Biennial of the Americas, now in full swing

    Artist Jonathan Saiz stands in his “Candy Store” installation for the Biennial of the Americas at downtown’s Writer Square. Oct. 15, 2025.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    This year’s Biennial of the Americas launched Wednesday night and is open until Oct. 26, spreading a celebration of the culture of the Americas across seven vacant storefronts in downtown Denver.

    There’s a clothing store in what used to be a Subway, an art exhibit in an old real-estate office and another art exhibit in an old jewelry store, all of them part of the Writer Square area.

    “It’s kind of the fun that comes when you go into new and different spaces, and you get to let the spaces speak to your point for themselves,” said FloraJane DiRenzo, executive director of the nonprofit behind the event.

    The Biennial of the Americas has taken over downtown’s Writer Square. Oct. 15, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The celebration of international culture was founded in Denver 15 years ago. This year, the focus is hyperlocal, due in part to the difficulties of obtaining visas and making international visitors feel safe in the U.S. under the Trump administration.

    Also in the mix is a multisensory mezcal experience in an old cigar shop. The exhibit was created based on the available space and the lingering smell of the tobacco.

    Bobby LeFebre’s “Sabor Ancestral” mezcal bar installation for the Biennial of the Americas, at downtown’s Writer Square. Oct. 15, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “The smell naturally was reminiscent of mezcal bars we had been to in Mexico City,” DiRenzo said. 

    The Biennial also partnered with Denver Digerati, a local nonprofit, to put on the art installation “Despídete de Todos.” It’s an extension of a film, “Aferrado,” by Estben Azuela.

    It’s set in Mexico in the 1990s, when the North American Free Trade Agreement was dramatically changing life in Mexico and its relationship with the U.S.

    Esteban Azuela stands in the light of a projector in his installation for the Biennial of the Americas at downtown’s Writer Square. Oct. 15, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The art installation tells the story of everyday televised violence and different versions of consumption. 

    “These are fragmented pieces of memories of the character. It’s like a fragmented world of his memories,” Azuela said. 

    The installation includes art projected onto car doors, walls and seemingly into midair.

    Video is projected onto a car hood and a piece of sheet metal for Esteban Azuela’s installation for the Biennial of the Americas at downtown’s Writer Square. Oct. 15, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Next to “Despidete de Todos” is a bright pink storefront. Some might remember when it was a Subway, but now the shop is a store for people to buy clothing mostly from Mexican brands and designers. 

    Proprietors Gabby Sanchez and Anna Gonzalez own a storefront in Mexico City, where they sell merchandise from their brand, GAG. They brought some of their bags, alongside items from 30 other brands, to Writer Square.

    Bags, clothing and accessories for sale at the M68 fashion shop at the Biennial of the Americas’ takeover of downtown’s Writer Square.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Two former pilates studios were transformed for the Biennial, too. One became a “liberation movement space,” and another into a reading room. The reading room is full of grass installed by artists, and according to DiRenzo, it’s meant to be a reflection space.

    “It’s been magically transformed now into a space that I think calls for a different kind of behavior and opportunity for reflection in a way that you only can build with fresh nature,” DiRenzo said.

    There’s also a cantina where people can buy empanadas and drinks.

    Ren Cannon’s grassy installation for Biennial of the Americas at downtown’s Writer Square. Oct. 15, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Another space is taken over by local artist Jonathan Saiz, who worked with 22 other local artists. Saiz miniaturized their art and put it up in a candy shop-style store. There are around 2,000 pieces for people to shop.

    “Some of them are $20, the most expensive is $100, which is a pretty great entry point,” Saiz said.

    The image features a wall with a variety of small, colorful, and unique pictures. These pictures are arranged in a visually appealing manner, creating an interesting and engaging display. The wall serves as a backdrop for the artwork, which is likely intended to be appreciated by viewers.
    Tiny artwork by Memphis Milanoish and others for sale in Jonathan Saiz’s “Candy Store” installation for the Biennial of the Americas at downtown’s Writer Square. Oct. 15, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
    Tiny art by Erin McAllister for sale in Jonathan Saiz’s “Candy Store” installation for the Biennial of the Americas at downtown’s Writer Square. Oct. 15, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
    Tiny artwork for sale in Jonathan Saiz’s “Candy Store” installation for the Biennial of the Americas at downtown’s Writer Square. Oct. 15, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Party on the Plaza

    On Saturday, Oct. 18, there will be the “Party on the Plaza” from 2-10 p.m. Expect four local DJs, two local bands and a variety of family activities. The party is free and open to the public.

    According to Bruce Trujillo, a board member for the Biennial, while all the artists for the Saturday event are local, they still capture the international spirit of the event. 

    “I think it really showcases where the Biennial is based out of what we’re able to do here in Denver, and also the people that have chosen Denver as their home,” Trujillo said. “So I think it really showcases what the Biennial is year-round.”

    The Biennial of the Americas’ contributors and organizers pose in downtown’s Writer Square, where the festival is beginning its first day. Oct. 15, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

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  • Colorado-based Newmont Corp. announces third round of layoffs at headquarters

    In a third round of layoffs, Newmont Corp. plans to let go 65 employees at its headquarters in Denver, bringing to 107 the number of recently announced staff reductions.

    Newmont, the world’s largest mining company, notified state and Denver officials Wednesday that the layoffs are expected to occur around Dec. 14. The announcement follows one in August that 19 employees would be laid off and one Oct. 1 that 23 positions, primarily in its headquarters, would be terminated on or around Nov. 30.

    Many of the targeted positions are management jobs. Newmont said in its notice that the reductions don’t “constitute a shutdown or closure of all operations at the company’s Denver headquarters.”

    Newmont said the employees will be offered severance.

    The latest notice of layoffs is part of a process the company has been working through, according to a statement from Newmont on Friday. Newmont won’t have a total number of affected employees until the process is finished, the company said.

    Newmont has said the layoffs are part of a plan announced in February that includes both labor and non-labor reductions. The company said in August that it is taking several steps “to reduce our cost base and improve productivity” to deliver on commitments to shareholders and partners.

    The cuts come as gold prices have hit record heights, rising above $4,000 an ounce for the first time. The price was about $4,265 per ounce Friday, down slightly from recent highs of above $4,300 per ounce.

    The New York Times reported that gold has jumped more than 50% in value this year.

    Newmont’s cost-cutting follows its $19.5 billion acquisition of Australian-based Newcrest Mining Ltd. in late 2023. Newmont completed its sale of the Cripple Creek & Victor Gold Mine in March. SSR Mining Inc. paid Newmont $100 million in cash and agreed to up to $175 million in additional payments for the Colorado mine.

    Judith Kohler

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  • 6 bystanders shot by Denver police officer to receive nearly $20 million

    Bailey Alexander (left to right), Yekalo Weldehiwet and Willis Small sit inside the Rathod Mohamedbhai law office in Five Points. Aug. 17, 2022.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    A jury awarded $19.75 million on Friday to six people who were hit by police gunfire as bystanders to an officer-involved shooting in 2022 on a busy Lower Downtown street.

    Lawyers filed civil rights lawsuits on behalf of the people who were hit by stray gunfire.

    They sued Brandon Ramos, a former Denver police officer who acknowledged that he shot into the crowd when he saw a suspect begin to pull a gun.

    The jury award will be divided between the plaintiffs — Yekalo Weldehiwet, Bailey Alexander, Willis Small IV, Mark Bess, Angelica Rey and Ayla Bersagel. The city generally pays for settlements like these.

    Ramos took a plea deal in 2024 after being charged criminally for firing into a crowd. He was convicted of third-degree assault and sentenced to 18 months of probation. He also had his peace officer’s license revoked.

    The shooting happened early on July 17, 2022. At 1:30 a.m., officers were looking for Jordan Waddy, who was involved in a fight before the shooting and was suspected to have a gun. The bars were closing and the streets were filling up on the 20th block of Larimer Street, according to video footage of the incident.

    As officers closed in on Waddy, queues were circling around several food trucks. Three officers approached Waddy, who can be seen in body-worn camera footage backing up onto a sidewalk, between a bar and a food truck. Police said they gave verbal commands for Waddy to stop as they approached him. But officers say he disregarded the command and began pulling a gun out of his waistband.

    Three officers fired at least seven rounds toward him, but Officer Ramos also fired into the crowd. Five people were hit by bullets and a sixth person was hit by shrapnel from a bullet that lawyers believe hit a metal tree ring first. Video footage shows Ramos had his spotlight turned the wrong direction and shining into his own eyes.

    One of those bystanders, Mark Bess, said in an earlier interview with CPR News that he felt lucky to be alive.

    “We want justice and we’re tired of getting thrown to the side with no regard for how we’re doing. They changed our lives forever and they keep making us relive it by not owning up to their bad apples, as they would call it,” Bess said.

    Ramos was not in immediate danger when he fired his gun, according to his criminal indictment. Waddy was also shot, and everyone survived. Waddy later pleaded guilty of possession of a firearm by a previous offender.

    Juries set civil damages awards by considering whether any of the victims have permanent disfigurement, economic loss or permanent economic loss, like a disability and emotional trauma. They also can consider whether to make the award punitive, which means the person causing the harm had a reckless disregard at the time.

    Denverite editor Andrew Kenney contributed to this story.

    Allison Sherry

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  • Places to see fall leaves at peak in Denver

    DENVER (KDVR) — The Denver metro area is seeing lots of color as fall leaves are reaching their vibrant peak of the season.

    Colorado has some of the best places in the nation for fall foliage, but leaves have already fallen and left bare branches in many areas of the high country, and some ski areas are preparing to open for winter sports.

    Meanwhile, in the Mile High City, the foliage is just getting started.

    FOX31’s Pinpoint Weather team put together a forecast map showing when and where leaves would peak across the state. There may still be some color left in the foothills, but the metro area is where leaf-peepers will want to go for the remainder of the season.

    Fall foliage outlook as of Aug. 25, 2025 (KDVR)

    Last weekend was not ideal weather for leaf-peeping, but the Denver weather forecast for the coming days looks a lot more pleasant, at least before the sun sets around 6:25 p.m.

    • Friday
      • Sunny with a few clouds and high temperatures in the 60s
    • Saturday
      • Sunny with highs in the lower 60s and an afternoon breeze
    • Sunday
      • Sunny and warm with highs in the 70s and a light breeze

    Here are some places to take a stroll in the autumn colors around the metro.

    University of Denver arboretum

    2199 S. University Blvd.

    The University of Denver and the surrounding areas did not use to have trees, as not many deciduous trees are native to the high plains. But thanks to a Denver pioneer’s conditions for how his land would be developed for the university, the campus makes for a great leaf-viewing spot today.

    View of the Chamberlin Observatory on the University of Denver campus in Denver, Colorado circa 1898-1900. The rusticated stone building has an arched entryway and a spherical roof.View of the Chamberlin Observatory on the University of Denver campus in spring 2024.
    Chamberlin Observatory circa 1898-1900 compared to 2024.

    Throughout the University of Denver campus is the Chester M. Alter Arboretum with over 2,000 trees of hundreds of different species, including 10 state champion trees, the largest of their species in the state.

    The arboretum is free for anyone to visit any day of the year. Visitors can find an information kiosk near the southwest corner of the Mary Reed Building and a map detailing where each tree can be found online.

    Washington Park

    701 S. Franklin St.

    There are some 2,000 trees in Washington Park, including several species that change colors and some champion trees. Most of the trees are estimated to be around 150 years old, as they were planted after settling occurred.

    The Friends and Neighbors of Washington Park organization has put together a guide for 84 different tree species found in the park. Some of the trees have red flags with numbers to help visitors identify the tree. The guide also has information about trees at South High School near the park, which is home to some species not seen at the park and some Colorado Champions.

    Additionally, several streets in the area are lined with silver maple, ash, walnut, American elm and other trees.

    City Park

    2001 Colorado Blvd.

    The largest urban park in the city has lots of deciduous trees and great views of the mountain peaks you can see from Denver.

    It is also home to a famous 109-year-old tree: the Shakespeare Elm, a wych elm, which was planted exactly 300 years after William Shakespeare died on April 23, 1916. Historians cannot confirm, but legend has it the tree grew from a scion taken from Shakespeare’s grave in England.

    Denver Colorado skyline from City Park with City Park Boathouse and Rocky Mountains in background on autumn morning
    (Credit: Getty Images)

    There are plenty of sidewalk trails that weave throughout the park as well as benches and areas to have picnics.

    Cheesman Park

    1599 E. 8th Ave.

    Cheesman Park has lots of trees and walking trails, but that’s not the only reason why this is a great spot for fall activities.

    The park was once a cemetery before the city got permission from Congress in 1890 to use the land for a park. Many bodies were moved to Riverside Cemetery, however, historians estimate there may still be thousands buried under the grass.

    From 2010 to 2012, construction at the park led to the discovery of eight bodies, a Denver Parks and Recreation spokesperson told FOX31. There are stories of people finding bones in the park, however, experts say those may just be stories to scare people, and most bodies are likely still several feet below the ground.

    Sloan’s Lake

    1700 Sheridan Blvd.

    The Sloan’s Lake park is lined with many deciduous trees of various colors, making for vibrant views that reflect on the water against a background of the city skyline.

    The area wasn’t always a park — or even a lake. According to the Denver Public Library, it was used as agricultural land in the mid-1800s before Thomas M. Sloan tapped into a water aquifer while digging a well in 1861, creating a 200-acre lake almost overnight.

    The area quickly became an attraction with activities like boating, swimming and ice skating.

    Denver City Skyline from Sloan’s Lake – Colorado Cityscape – Autumn Reflection

    South High Street

    Between Louisiana Avenue and Alameda Avenue

    South High Street is a great place to see leaves for anyone who wants to take a stroll or those who may want to stay in the comfort of their vehicles.

    The street between Louisiana Avenue and Alameda Avenue, near Washington Park, is lined with hundreds of trees of various species. According to DLC Landscape and Arbor, there are 57 silver maple trees that are around 75-100 years old each.

    Though many American elm trees in the neighborhood have been lost to Dutch Elm disease over the years, DLC said on its blog that there are two “huge” ones on High Street with limbs that interweave above the street.

    Brooke Williams

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  • Outside groups pour dark money into Denver Public Schools board races, again

    Dark money — some of it from out-of-state multimillionaires and billionaires — is once again flowing into elections for the Denver Public Schools Board of Education.

    With four of seven seats up for grabs, the spending is leading some to question how democratic and transparent the race to guide the education of 90,000 students really is. Others contend large sums of money help inform voters in races that traditionally have low turnout.

    Dark money groups — organizations whose donors aren’t fully disclosed — cannot coordinate with candidates, but they can buy TV ads and glossy brochures. So far this year, one independent expenditure committee has spent big on a slate of candidates, while a second committee backing a competing slate has yet to give. 

    Back in 2023, donors backing charter school interests outspent teachers’ unions 5-to-1, with $2.2 million spent on the race.

    In that last election, the group Denver Families Action, the political arm of the nonprofit Denver Families for Public Schools, pushed all three of its candidates to victory, unseating three of the seven union-backed candidates on the board. Dark money made up more than 70 percent of the funding in the 2023 race, according to longtime education analyst Van Schoales.

    “Since 2011, there has been no [Denver] school board member that has been elected without the support of either of the major groups,” he said. The amount that candidates are raising from their traditional supporters is shrinking, giving more power to outside, opaque groups that dominate in spending.

    Schoales and others would like to jumpstart conversations about how to make Denver’s races more transparent and democratic.

    Who are the dark money players in this year’s race?

    A decade ago, sharp lines were drawn between groups of candidates. On one side were those who supported charter schools — publicly funded, privately run schools — as well as other “reform” strategies. On the other side were teachers union allies who often backed neighborhood public schools. 

    Today, those lines are more blurred, with candidates more likely to hold a mix of positions. But that hasn’t stopped dark money from flowing into the race.

    On the one side are Better Leaders, Stronger Schools, an independent expenditure committee that’s raised $718,000 as of mid-October. Its top donor is Denver Families Action, the political arm of Denver Families for Public Education, which has contributed $600,000 so far. It’s reported spending more $637,000 on campaign ads for its endorsed four candidates, Mariana del Hierro, Caron Blanke, Timiya Jackson and Alex Magaña.

    Denver Families Action says it’s broadened beyond its charter school roots and focuses on issues central to all models of public schools. But its primary funding source is The City Fund, founded by out-of-state billionaires Reed Hastings and John Arnold. The City Fund has donated millions to urban school board races in support of “charter and charter-like schools.” 

    Wealthy individual donors also are contributing to Better Leaders, Stronger Schools:  Republican billionaire Phil Anschutz has given $40,000. Another multimillionaire businessman, Bruce Benson, former president of the University of Colorado and former chair of the Colorado Republican Party, also has donated.

    Multimillionaire Kent Thiry, former CEO of health care company DaVita, donated $350,000 in the 2023 school board race but hasn’t donated so far this year.

    The teachers union is on the other side

    On the other side, the Denver Classroom Teachers Association and its committee Students Deserve Better, funded mostly by the Colorado Education Association, are backing Amy Klein Molk, Xochitl Gaytan, DJ Torres and Monica Hunter.

    It’s collected $280,000 in donations as of mid-October, but so far hasn’t spent on the DPS race this year. Instead, it’s focused on several other Colorado school districts. DCTA’s small-donor committee, which must report who gives it money, has collected $200,000 and has contributed $24,000 to DPS candidates so far. Another small donor committee, the Public Education Committee, has contributed about $21,000. DCTA president Rob Gould contrasted the sources of money.

    “When it comes to billionaire money versus teacher money, they’re two very different things … The money that comes to the fund, those are voluntary contributions from individual teachers … the same teachers that have to go spend their own money on their classroom,” Gould said.

    Teachers’ union says reform era did damage

    Gould said the DCTA chose candidates who understand the challenges in the classrooms and will advocate for lower class sizes and greater teacher input in decision-making.

    He said DCTA doesn’t want a return to the turbulent education reform era of 10 to 20 years ago that brought instability: less teacher voice in curriculum, a performance pay system that caused teachers to leave high-needs schools, and schools filled with novice teachers that would be closed because of poor performance.

    “We just don’t want to go back to some of the reform policies of years past,” Gould said. “Those reforms eroded teacher voice, caused burnout, and led to a 20 percent turnover rate year after year.”

    Gould believes Denver’s choice model has deepened inequities because some have ways to transport their children to higher-performing schools that sometimes have less crowded classrooms. Some charter networks have access to millions in outside funding.

    “If we are going to have this true choice system, everybody should be able to access it…We have kindergarten classrooms with 35 kids in them. We’ve been talking about that for the last four years… Students can’t wait. We need to have fixes to these issues today.”

    Charter supporters say it’s about good schools

    Clarence Burton Jr., CEO of Denver Families for Public Schools and its political arm, acknowledged the organization has received millions of dollars from out-of-state interests that back charter schools and other education reforms. But he sees Denver Families for Public Education as bringing forward a “deeply community rooted voice.”

    Over two years, the organization canvassed 100,000 Denverites about what they wanted for the future of public education. It used a 37-member community panel to vet candidates.

    “Our North Star,” Burton said, “is making sure that every kid in the city of Denver has access to a great public school.”

    The organization’s priorities include improving academic outcomes, fully funding classrooms and teachers, providing more mental health support, and repairing the “deep mistrust” between the school board and community.

    Burton commends DPS’s recent progress but said the district needs a stronger vision for moving forward.  “DPS going green for the second time in its history is a good thing,” he said, referring to the state’s performance rating system.

    “But is it fast enough to ensure that all students, regardless of their backgrounds, are going to get what they deserve on the timeline they deserve it?

    Burton rejected the idea that his group represents only charter interests. He said the organization works with all school models and wants to replicate what works best at each.

    “Families don’t care what the governance model of their schools are,” he said. “What they care is that they have access to great public schools … As much as possible, we’ve tried to be an organization that has built a big tent.”

    Burton defended Denver Families Action’s significant campaign spending — $600,000 so far. He said it’s meant to increase voter engagement in a race that often has low turnout because many voters don’t have school-aged children.

    How does money influence the board?

    Some former board members say they didn’t feel pressure to vote a certain way after getting outside backing. 

    Still, incumbents Scott Esserman and Michelle Quattlebaum, whom DCTA supported in 2021, lost that backing this year after a few votes the union disagreed with. Esserman now touts his independence, quoting a Denver Post editorial on his campaign web page: the “ideal candidate will be independent enough to buck the union when it is wrong, and strong enough to stand up to failing charter schools and demand accountability.”

    Gould said the union’s expectations were to make sure teachers have the ability to keep the rights they’ve worked hard for in their contract that “gave a teacher voice within their school.”

    Schoales said multimillionaire funders, too, have expectations. It could be how candidates approach authorizing charter schools or what expectations are for performance or whether to keep schools open or closed, he said.

    “Why would they fund somebody unless there was an expectation that they were aligned in terms of both philosophically as well as particular policy positions?”

    The downsides of dark money

    Independent expenditure committees can escape accountability. Donors can give through layers of organizations so voters often don’t know exactly who’s funding them. When they send out a misleading or negative mailer, candidates can claim they had nothing to do with it. Schoales points to a recent attack ad claiming that at-large candidate Amy Klein Molk, who once founded an ed-tech company, wanted to replace teachers with AI robots.

    “It’s sort of comical because she’s the one who’s supported by DCTA and the teachers’ unions and they would never support a candidate that wanted to replace teachers with AI robots,” Schoales said.

    He calls it “bizarre” that a handful of wealthy, often Republican-connected donors wield such power in a heavily Democratic city. He criticized both sides for a lack of transparency.

    He’d like both sides to publicly share lists of who sits on their boards or who is giving them money.

    Solutions for the future?

    Schoales, a longtime charter school proponent and frequent union critic, recently teamed up with former union-backed DPS board member Scott Baldermann to argue for structural reforms.

    In a Denver Post editorial, they proposed creating public matching funds for school board candidates – similar to the nine-to-one small-donor match that is available for Denver City Council candidates.

    They also called for expanding the Denver Public Schools board from five to 11 members to mirror the city of Denver’s district structure.

    “It’s easier to connect with your constituency if you have a smaller area of folks to represent,” Schoales said. They argue that with small districts, candidates might be able to run a campaign through community outreach rather than relying on big-money committees.

    Denver Families’ Burton said his organization hasn’t examined these ideas yet.

    The union’s Gould said he supports exploring the ideas but is skeptical they’ll fix the problem.

    “My fear is that these billionaires can just pour $4 million into a school board race. Is it going to help the problem or exacerbate the problem?” he asked.

    Ballots are due Tuesday, Nov. 4, by 7 p.m. (Our voter guide is available here.)

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  • Kash Patel’s Denver appearance canceled

    FBI Director Kash Patel speaks during an event with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House, Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025, in Washington.

    John McDonnell/AP Photo

    FBI Director Kash Patel’s appearance at a law enforcement conference in downtown Denver this weekend has been canceled.

    Patel was scheduled to speak in Denver at the International Association of Chiefs of Police conference on Sunday, but the event is now listed as canceled on the website. 

    Patel had been expected to “share insights on FBI priorities and reinforce the critical law enforcement partnerships needed to combat violent crime and address transnational threats,” according to the IACP website.

    Patel was appointed by President Donald Trump earlier this year. He was recently at the center of a heated Senate hearing, with Democrats accusing him of “hollowing out the nation’s premier law enforcement agency and pursuing President Trump’s promised campaign of retribution,” as NPR reported.

    The IACP conference is still expected to draw some 16,000 police professionals to Denver. (It’s also why a helicopter landed on Colfax the other day.) This weekend also marks the second “No Kings” protest, which could bring large crowds of anti-Trump protesters to downtown on Saturday.

    Neither the FBI nor the IACP immediately responded to a request for comment or provided any public explanation. An automated response from the FBI noted the agency is focused on national security, violations of federal law, and essential public safety functions amid the federal government shutdown.

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