Colorado
Music festival aims to bring Colorado piano students together, foster learning and growth
Inside a Denver-area home, students of all ages are perfecting their musical craft on the grand piano.
“I love being able to like express feelings and emotions and like really move people,” said Courtney Merrill, a senior in high school. “I like people saying that they got goosebumps after hearing me play because like yes, that’s exactly what I was going for.”
Both Merrill and her younger brother Trey have been playing the piano for most of their young lives.
“Just developing a hobby, and developing a skill that works, that takes hard work to develop,” said Trey.
“It’s not like doing a team sport. You’re not around a whole bunch of other kids when you’re working on it, you’re just kind of all by yourself,” said Cheryl Reeder, an Adams County piano teacher. “When you get together with a bunch of kids that are your age and you’re doing this too, it’s kind of encouraging to see that.”
It’s seeing that encouraging sight that, in part, encouraged Reeder to convert her house into the home of what has become the Adams County Music Festival.
Back in 2022, she and another piano teacher started raising money for a festival for piano players 6 to 18 years old after she says funding kept impacting an existing festival run by the Thornton Arts Council.
“There are opportunities if you like go down to Denver but then that’s a bigger pool of talent right and it’s a little more difficult for the kids to do well and things like that,” said Reeder. “We thought it was going to only be a one-year thing and then we would have this other competition would come back and it just didn’t.”
However, the demand among students and their families to keep this competition running was undeniable.
“It’s helped me become a better public speaker because it helps me handle the nervousness of being in front of people and it also helps me feel really confident in my ability to play,” said Courtney.
Giving Adams County kids a platform to compete amongst peers does come at a cost, however.
“We do have to pay our judges and we want them to be good judges,” said Reeder. “We also like to give the kids both trophies and some prize money. Because when they get that prize money it makes them feel like more like working towards it.”
As Reeder crowdfunds to continue the two-night festival, her students remain focused on honing down their pieces.
“Just to show what I’ve developed over the last couple years,” said Trey.
The festival runs from April 10 to April 11. Information about it can be found here.
Colorado
Some Colorado schools will be closed Thursday due to power outages
Some students at Colorado schools won’t be going to school on Thursday. That’s after strong winds on Wednesday on the Front Range and in the foothills caused power outages.
More than 100,000 customers were without power late in the day on Wednesday.
The closed schools include all of the Boulder Valley School District and 25 schools in Jeffco Public Schools. Schools in Gilpin County and Clear Creek County are also going to be closed.
See the full list of school closings.
Colorado
Colorado road conditions: High winds close roads, highways across Front Range
High winds roaring across the Front Range foothills on Wednesday forced road closures throughout northern and central Colorado, according to state transportation officials.
A wind storm is expected to bring gusts reaching 80 to 90 mph through the entire Interstate 25 corridor, from the Wyoming to New Mexico state lines, according to the National Weather Service.
Colorado Department of Transportation officials announced planned closures of Colorado 93, U.S. 128 and U.S. 287 starting at noon because of the high winds, with no estimated time of reopening. A “high wind caution” was also issued for roads in Clear Creek and Jefferson counties.
Some roads may also be closed to high-profile vehicles like tractor-trailers, RVs, campers or light vehicles because of the risk of blowing over, CDOT officials said.
Traffic signals that are dark because of power cuts should be treated as four-way stops.
Colorado road and highway closures as of 1 p.m.:
This is a developing story and may be updated.
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Colorado
Northern Colorado town to increase water and sewage rates 26% in 2026
As the demand for drinking water in Colorado continues to rise, a Northern Colorado community is planning to increase the price of its water and sewage services by 26% in 2026.
The town of Windsor, a rapidly growing community of more than 45,000 residents, plans to start increasing its prices in April of next year.
Town Manager Shane Hale told CBS Colorado the town and council had no other option but to rapidly increase their prices. He attributed it to a need for more services while also improving existing ones.
“We certainly are (aware of the sticker shock),” Hale said. “The town board lives in town. They are going to see these costs as well.”
Hale said the town needs to replace an aging infrastructure for their water distribution.
“We had a major distribution line for water that broke a couple times last year,” Hale said.
Also, to meet growth demand and EPA standards, the town also needs to completely replace its existing sewar treatment plant in the southeast corner of the community.
“We are not just building an expansion,” Hale said. “We have to build a brand-new plant.
Windsor originally hoped to build the new plant in 2020. Hale said, if they would have been able to do so, it would have cost around $50 million to complete.
However, since then, the cost of labor and supplies has inflated so significantly that the price for the same plant is projected to be three times more expensive than planned for.
CBS Colorado asked Hale why the town didn’t slowly increase rates over the years instead of completing one drastic spike of 26% in 2026.
“That is a great question. I will tell you we have been gradually increasing our rates each year,” Hale said. “The challenge that we had, especially on the sewer side, were our costs were increased by three times.”
In order to lower the price tag, the town has also reduced the size of the plant it’s going to build. Hale said the current plant can operate 2.8 million gallons of water per day. They hoped to build one that could accommodate 6.3 million gallons per day. However, to offset costs some while also meeting demand of the growing town, they now plan to build a plant that can manage 4.2 million gallons a day.
Hale said the town is at the mercy of the cost of construction and the price of getting machinery into their possession. He also said many of the items they need are only made internationally, meaning they are in line with others to get the product without much room for negotiation.
“Unfortunately, in order to manage our infrastructure and maintain it, the town doesn’t really have a choice,” Hale said.
Hale said the increased prices should be reflected in bills that arrive for residents in March of 2026. Not all residents will be impacted the same, as some are served water by other water providers.
Hale believes, if it weren’t for inflation, the town would not have increased the price of sewage treatment or water distribution in 2026.
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