Colorado
2024 Colorado Football Spring Game: How to Watch, Game Time, TV schedule
Deion Sanders and Colorado prepare for the start of the 2024 football season with the Black and Gold Spring Game at Folsom Field. Last year’s event was Coach Prime’s introduction to Boulder after taking over as Buffaloes head coach three months prior. The Hall-of-Famer put on quite the show in front of his first sellout crowd and ESPN broadcasting to the world.
A year later and the hype is still there for the Buffs. However, there won’t be the same type of build up from last April. The second second for Prime will bring more attention with the same celebrity atmosphere on the sidelines. There was a standard set and will only get bigger in 2024.
Colorado’s offensive attack runs through Shedeur Sanders who looks to build off a record-setting year with 3,230 passing yards and 27 touchdowns in 2023. The Buffs “Grown” QB could’ve done further damage, but was kept out for the final six quarters of the season with a fractured back. That could be in large part to CU’s offensive line giving up 56 sacks, which was the most in Power Five. However, Sanders and his staff made it a priority to rebuild the O-line with new talent, including five-star IMG Academy product Jordan Seaton. This will be the start of Sanders final season in Boulder. He has committed to the 2025 NFL Draft and is projected to be Colorado’s highest pick in school history.
Travis Hunter was the most electrifying player in college football last year. He saw the most snaps in the nation, averaging 116 per game on both sides of the ball. Despite missing three games due to a lacerated liver, Hunter finished second on the team with 57 receptions for 721 yards and five touchdowns. He was also tied for the team lead with three interceptions, recorded 31 tackles, led the team with five pass deflections and had two tackles for loss. The 2023 Paul Hornung Award winner will be in his final year with the Buffs.
Colorado’s defense went through struggles down the stretch last year, allowing an average of 453.3 yards and 34.8 points per game, with both in the bottom ten nationally. Hunter was one of the most dominant cover corners in college football last year. He’ll take on the senior leadership role with a handful of outstanding transfers coming aboard for the Buffs, including a trio of four-star defensive lineman– Pitt’s Samuel Okunlola ASU’s BJ Green, and LSU’s Quency Wiggins.
With the hype of Coach Prime’s Power Five debut season behind him, Colorado enters 2024 trying to silence the naysayers. Sanders will lean on a great number of transfers to carry the load once again, but the usual standouts will shine on their way to the league next year. Four wins was a great accomplishment after arguably the worst season in program history in 2022. Anything short of a postseason bid would be a letdown for the Buffs.
2024 Colorado Football Black and Gold Spring Game
Saturday, April 27
Game time: 3 p.m. ET
TV: Pac-12 Network (Available on Fubo)
Radio: 850 KOA (Mark Johnson, Gary Barnett)
Colorado
Denver shelter working to end homelessness for at risk youth, funding at risk
Colorado
GUEST COLUMN: Principles for Guiding River Water Negotiations – Calexico Chronicle
Next week is the annual gathering of “water buffaloes” in Las Vegas. It’s the Colorado River Water Users Association convention. About 1700 people will attend, but probably around 100 of them are the key people—the government regulators, tribal leaders, and the directors and managers of the contracting agencies that receive Colorado River water.
Anyone who is paying attention knows that we are in critical times on the river. Temporary agreements on how to distribute water during times of shortage are expiring. Negotiators have been talking for several years but haven’t been able to agree on anything concrete.
I’m just an observer, but I’ve been observing fairly closely. Within the limits on how much information I can get as an outsider, I’d like to propose some principles or guidelines that I think are important for the negotiation process.
See also

- When Hoover Dam was proposed, the main debate was over whether the federal government or private concerns would operate it. Because the federal option prevailed, water is delivered free to contractors. Colorado River water contractors do not pay the actual cost of water being delivered to them. It is subsidized by the U.S. government. As a public resource, Colorado River water should not be seen as a commodity.
- The Lower Basin states of Arizona, California, and Nevada should accept that the Upper Basin states of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming are at the mercy of Mother Nature for much of their annual water supply. While the 1922 Colorado River Compact allocates them 7.5 million acre-feet annually, in wet years, they have been able to use a maximum of 4.7 maf. During the long, ongoing drought, their annual use has been 3.5 maf. They shouldn’t have to make more cuts.
- However, neither should the Upper Basin states be able to develop their full allocation. It should be capped at a feasible number, perhaps 4.2 maf. As compensation, Upper Basin agencies and farmers can invest available federal funds in projects to use water more efficiently and to reuse it so that they can develop more water.
- Despite the drought, we know there will be some wet years. To compensate the Lower Basin states for taking all the cuts in dry years, the Upper Basin should release more water beyond the Compact commitments during wet years. This means that Lake Mead and Lower Basin reservoirs would benefit from wet years and Lake Powell would not. In short, the Lower Basin takes cuts in dry years; the Upper Basin takes cuts in wet years.
- Evaporation losses (water for the angels) can be better managed by keeping more of the Lower Basin’s water in Upper Basin reservoirs instead of in Lake Mead, where the warmer weather means higher evaporation losses. New agreements should include provisions to move that water in the Lower Basin account down to Lake Mead quickly. Timing is of the essence.
- In the Lower Basin states, shortages should be shared along the same lines as specified in the 2007 Interim Guidelines, with California being last to take cuts as Lake Mead water level drops.
- On the home front, IID policy makers should make a long-term plan to re-set water rates in accord with original water district policy. Because IID is a public, non-profit utility, water rates were set so that farmers paid only the cost to deliver water. Farmers currently pay $20 per acre foot, but the actual cost of delivering water is $60 per acre foot. That subsidy of $60 million comes from the water transfer revenues.
- The SDCWA transfer revenues now pay farmers $430 per acre-foot of conserved water, mostly for drip or sprinkler systems. Akin to a grant program, this very successful program generated almost 200,000 acre-feet of conserved water last year. Like any grant program, it should be regularly audited for effectiveness.
- Some of those transfer revenues should be invested in innovative cropping patterns, advanced technologies, and marketing to help the farming community adapt to a changing world. The IID should use its resources to help all farmers be more successful, not just a select group.
- Currently, federal subsidies pay farmers not to use water via the Deficit Irrigation Program. We can lobby for those subsidies to continue, but we should plan for when they dry up. Any arrangement that rewards farmers but penalizes farm services such as seed, fertilizer, pesticide, land leveling, equipment, and other work should be avoided.
- Though the IID has considerable funding from the QSA water transfers, it may need to consider issuing general obligation bonds as it did in its foundational days for larger water efficiency projects such as more local storage or a water treatment plant to re-use ag drain water.
Much progress has been made in using water more efficiently, especially in the Lower Basin states, but there’s a lot more water to be saved, and I believe collectively that we can do it.
Colorado
Colorado mother says Lakewood crash killed son, left 2 of her children critically injured as driver is arrested
A mother is grieving after a crash in the Denver metro area last weekend left her son brain-dead and two of her other children fighting for their lives.
Lakewood police say 22-year-old Andrew Logan Miller has been arrested in connection with the crash, which happened Dec. 6 around 7:30 p.m. near Kipling Parkway and West 6th Avenue.
Police say Miller was driving an SUV southbound on Kipling Parkway at a high rate of speed when it collided with a bus carrying a wrestling team from Central High School, which is located in Grand Junction in Mesa County.
Sixteen people were taken to hospitals.
Among the injured were three siblings who were riding inside the SUV.
On Friday, their mother, Suleyma Gonzalez, identified them as Julio Gonzalez, 18, Analelly Gonzalez, 17, and Christopher Gonzalez, 14.
Analelly and Christopher remain in critical condition. Julio will never wake up.
“I didn’t want to believe it, until they had to do the second testing where they didn’t find blood going through his brain,” she said. “My other two are in comas.”
Gonzalez said doctors ultimately declared Julio brain-dead.
She describes her children as disciplined students and ROTC members with plans for the future.
“Two of my kids were going to graduate this year,” she said. “No drugs. No alcohol. They were good kids.”
Gonzalez confirmed that Miller, who was driving the SUV at the time of the crash, was her daughter’s boyfriend.
“I know he loved my daughter,” she said. “I don’t think he did this on purpose or intentionally. It was an accident.”
Police say the investigation is ongoing, but believe speed played a major role in the crash.
Miller was arrested Wednesday night and is facing multiple charges, including:
• Vehicular assault (7 counts)
• Speeding 40 mph or more over the limit
• Reckless driving
• Child abuse (2 counts)
• Reckless endangerment
“My kids know when you get in somebody’s car, there’s always a risk. Always,” she said.
Julio’s organs will be donated. He’s on life support, while the hospital searches for matches.
“He wanted to give to the world,” she said. “Now that I can’t get him back, we want to give life to somebody else.”
Miller is currently being held in the Denver County Jail and is awaiting transfer to the Jefferson County Jail. His bond and court appearance have not yet been announced.
Lakewood police say the investigation remains active.
Gonzalez, a single mother of five, says her focus now is on her surviving children and getting clarity.
“I just want answers.”
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