Across Colorado, CO|News|
No Time To Panic, But Time To Prepare: COVID Cases Rising In Colorado
The seven-day state average has gone from 302 people with COVID on March 26 to more than 1,000 in early May.

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The seven-day state average has gone from 302 people with COVID on March 26 to more than 1,000 in early May.

The Broncos open the season on the road against the Seattle Seahawks in September.
The bill stipulates some PFAS products will be banned as early as 2025.
“We’re all in a little bit of shock, because this was not something that would be high value for anybody else to steal.”
"It is terrible what we have to go through with social media...threatening us," said Frank Rzucek, Shanann Watts’s father.
This new worm never sees the light of day, thriving on a lack of oxygen.
The city has received 28 applications and approved 17 of them.
"I try and do the best job I can every day," Rob Schimoler said.
Drivers will notice changes in speed limits that could shift hourly, beginning in June.
In 1968, Frank Webb missed his commencement ceremony after receiving a draft notice from the U.S. military. A year later he was deployed.
Some horse advocates believe it's a waste of taxpayer dollars, but the Bureau of Land Management says it’s a necessary expense.
The state murals were included in the National Trust for Historic Preservation's annual list of America’s 11 Most Endangered Places.
The endangered fish is native to the waters near Palisade on the Western Slope.
Troy Schneider's crops across nearly 4,000 acres in Yuma and Washington counties aren’t growing as fast as inflation.
Colorado could become an island in a sea of states with restrictive laws, surrounded by barriers to women and reproductive care.
"I am so sad and so mad that five people could choose to take away our rights as women and as citizens of the United States."
Horvath faces disorderly and disruptive conduct charges, in addition to committing other offenses on capitol grounds.
The bill also requires insurance companies to pass along savings from manufacturer rebates when it comes to buying prescription drugs.
“We basically go until I get tired because he never gets tired of it,” Scott Brazelton said of three-year-old West.
The illegal modifications violated the Clean Air Act, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado.