Colorado
Colorado buys 1,800 acres near Fairplay as playground for hunters, anglers, bird watchers, wildlife lovers
Colorado Parks and Wildlife has acquired Collard Ranch in Park County and will turn it into a state wildlife area, an acquisition Gov. Jared Polis hailed Friday as an “enormous opportunity” for hunters, anglers, bird watchers, wildlife lovers and photographers.
The 1,860-acre property located near Fairplay provides an important elk migration corridor, officials say, and offers five miles of good fishing habitat along Tarryall Creek.
“Within 60 miles of the Denver metro area, to be able to have a breathtaking, significant 1,800-acre property with hunting and fishing for Coloradans to enjoy is absolutely incredible,” Polis said.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife will open it as the Collard Ranch State Wildlife Area following the completion of infrastructure and accessibility projects.
The purchase was completed in partnership with the Western Rivers Conservancy and Great Outdoors Colorado. GOCO contributed $6.25 million from state lottery proceeds. Another $2 million came from CPW’s habitat-stamp program from fees raised through the sale of hunting and fishing licenses.
“The state is able to engage in this kind of meaningful public access enhancement and improvement because of the lottery and fees paid by hunters and anglers,” Polis said.
“Tarryall Creek is a special area to so many people in Colorado, with easy access for Park County residents and folks living on the Front Range,” said Allen Law, Interior West Project Manager for the Western Rivers Conservancy, in a news release. “We are proud to partner with CPW to forever protect this stretch of the creek, especially given its importance to a critical wildlife corridor and its iconic views of Kenosha Pass.”
The conservancy acquired Collard Ranch in December to preserve it for public access under CPW management.
“One of the South Platte River’s principal tributaries is Tarryall Creek, which flows from the 13,823-foot Mount Silverheels and is known for its excellent brown and rainbow trout fishing,” according to a post on the conservancy’s website. “Roughly 10 miles northeast of the town of Fairplay, Tarryall Creek flows through the 1,860-acre Collard Ranch, which sits immediately off of Highway 285. For five miles, the stream meanders through the ranch’s open grasslands in beautiful horseshoe bends, with 360-degree views of the Lost Park Wilderness, the Kenosha Mountains and the Mosquito Range.”
Sales of habitat stamps have helped CPW guarantee hunting and fishing access to more than 146 million acres of land since 2006 with 316,000 acres of important fish and wildlife habitat.
“Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s acquisition of the Collard Ranch property marks a significant conservation success for our state,” CPW director Jeff Davis said in the release. “The purchase underscores CPW’s mission to preserve land for outdoor enthusiasts.”
Great Outdoors Colorado has invested $1.4 billion in Colorado Lottery proceeds since 1992 to help the state acquire and preserve land for public access. Through its Centennial Program, GOCO targets “once-in-a-generation” parcels.
“Western Rivers Conservancy and Colorado Parks and Wildlife have given us exactly that kind of opportunity with the Collard Ranch project,” GOCO executive director Jackie Miller said in the release, “and we are proud to help make it a reality for Colorado with our $6.25-million investment.”
According to the governor’s office, since Polis became governor, CPW has acquired 558,000 acres of new land for public access through fee titles, public access easements, and public access leases.
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Colorado
Colorado AD will step down, take advisory role
Colorado athletics director Rick George will step down from his role at the end of the academic year and become a special advisor to the chancellor, the school announced Thursday.
George has been the AD in Boulder since 2013, returning to the school where he once served on legendary football coach Bill McCartney’s staff as the recruiting coordinator and assistant athletic director for football operations. This coincided with Colorado’s only national title in 1990.
“It has been the honor of a lifetime to serve as Athletic Director for the University of Colorado for the last 13 years, but after considerable thought and discussions with my family dating back to last spring, I have decided it is time for new leadership to guide the department,” said George. “I wanted to make this announcement now in order to give Chancellor Schwartz plenty of time to find the right person for Colorado, and I look forward to doing everything I can to ensure a smooth transition.
“I also wanted to time my announcement so that I could support Coach Prime and our football team this season, which I’m looking forward to continuing in my new role.”
During his tenure as athletics director, George oversaw the development of a new athletics building attached to Folsom Field and was named the Athletic Director of the year in 2023-24 by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics.
His time as AD will perhaps be most remembered by his hiring of Deion Sanders as football coach, which generated significant national interest in Colorado football. He also returned Colorado to the Big 12, which represented a significant domino in the collapse of the Pac-12 following UCLA and USC’s departures for the Big Ten.
George also spent time as a member of the College Football Playoff Selection Committee and served on the Division I Council.
“Rick’s contributions to our university in his 13 years as head of our athletic department have been incalculable,” Chancellor Justin Schwartz said. “He is a nationally respected leader who has always kept CU at the forefront of the dynamic and highly competitive landscape of college athletics. I am grateful for his leadership and am elated he has decided to stay on as a Special Advisor and AD Emeritus.”
Prior to becoming AD, George was the Chief Operating Officer for the Texas Rangers of Major League Baseball.
The school did not announce a timeline for hiring a replacement.
Colorado
Colorado community college receives grant to support those not yet in school, or still seeking employment
The Community College of Aurora just got a big chuck of change to help young people who are not in school or working to reconnect with education and career opportunities. They hope it can help close what youth advocates call “the opportunity gap.”
There are lots of reasons people won’t seek education after high school.
“Some may not see it as a good investment at the time. Honestly, we also compete with the gig economy. Right? You see the money in your pocket immediately, and you think, ‘This is great money,’” said Clair Collins the vice president of Enrollment Success and Completion at the college.
That kind of experience described by Collins is among many reasons college students don’t finish their degrees.
“Maybe, they have a family member that they’re the primary caretaker of,” Collins said. “Maybe, they feel that they cannot currently invest the time or money into going and pursuing a college education. Maybe, they’re a parent.”
But thanks to a new $100,000 grant from Aspen Institute Forum for Community Solutions, the Community College of Aurora hopes to enable those people to invest in their future.
“What we see over time is that return on investment is better if students go to college,” Collins said.
The college plans on using the money to work with other organizations to reach out to young people to see why they aren’t going to college, then provide them resources and services they need.
“Also investing in some proactive system redesign so that students don’t have to self-identify as needing this help in the first place,” Collins said. “That they can just come to us and expect that their needs are going to be met.”
CCA says this will not only benefit the students they can help and the college, but also the state.
“Colorado is well poised to be a true economic engine, for the United States, and CCA wants to be a big part of that,” Collins said.
Colorado
What channel is Louisville vs Colorado on today? UofL WBB game time, TV schedule
Louisville women’s basketball coach Jeff Walz talks about the Cards’ first half
Louisville women’s basketball coach Jeff Walz says the Cardinals have to start better going forward after their home-opening win over Northern Kentucky.
No. 21 Louisville women’s basketball has one more game before jumping into ACC action, facing Colorado tonight at the KFC Yum! Center.
The programs have only played three times before, with U of L winning the last two games. Last year, Taj Roberts scored 13 points in the Cards’ 79-71 road win over the Buffaloes. The sophomore comes into this year’s game after tying her career high with 23 points in a dominating win over Northern Kentucky.
She’ll have help from forward Laura Ziegler, who is averaging a double-double in her first two games as a Cardinal. The Saint Joseph’s transfer had nine points, 11 rebounds and five assists with only one foul against NKU.
Can’t make it to the KFC Yum! Center? Here’s what you need to know to follow tonight’s game from home:
The Cardinals and Buffaloes are scheduled to tip off at 7 p.m. today.
The game will not be on national television but will be streamed on ACCNx.
If you subscribe to a cable package, you’ll be able to livestream the game via ESPN.com and the ESPN app. If you don’t have cable, you can livestream the game via ESPN+ (subscriber only) or Fubo, which offers a free trial here.
Nick Curran (play-by-play) and Cortnee Walton (analyst) will have the call on the Cardinal Sports Network (WLCL 93.9-FM and WGTK 970-AM in Louisville).
You can also listen online via GoCards.com.
Reach Louisville football, women’s basketball and baseball beat writer Alexis Cubit at acubit@gannett.com and follow her on X at @Alexis_Cubit.
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