Colorado
Colorado fire department to break ground on new station to accommodate community growth
One community in Douglas County is preparing to break ground on a new fire station.
Castle Rock Fire and Rescue Department’s Station 156 will be located in the northeast portion of town.
The new station will serve Cobblestone Ranch and Terrain, two growing subdivisions. It will include a 13,000-square-foot fire station and a 13,000-square-foot logistics center.
“When I started 1986, we had two fire stations,” Fire Chief Norris Croom told CBS Colorado. “We were an all-volunteer department.”
In the 40 years Croom has been with the fire department, a lot has changed.
“7,500 people were in town,” Croom said. “Right now, we’re at about 87,000 people, and this will be our sixth fire station.”
Croom is presently the chief of a fire department that’s four times bigger and serves a much larger community.
“Just mind boggling that it’s grown so fast,” said Judy Barnett, who lives in the Castle Oaks community.
For 30 years, Barnett has also watched the town grow from her backyard.
“Just overnight, you look out, and there’s another house,” Barnett said.
Her rural home in northeast Castle Rock is getting more suburban, with the addition of communities like Cobblestone Ranch and Terrain.
“The Terrain pretty much surrounds us on the west side,” Barnett said.
Croom says his department is being stretched thin in those areas.
“We’re seeing response times as long as 14 to 15 minutes,” Croom explained.
But, soon, Castle Rock Fire and Rescue will break ground on a solution, a new fire station on Castle Oaks Drive.
“We believe that we’ll be able to cut those response times in more than half,” Croom said.
Fleet maintenance work is done at Castle Rock’s public safety training facility, but that work will soon have a new home. A logistics center will be built along with the new fire station.
Croom says the logistics center will provide a centralized location for equipment and space for maintenance work.
“As far as our equipment is concerned, we’ve got it stored throughout all of our different stations,” Croom said. “So, if you need hazmat equipment, you might have to go to Station 5. If you need wildland equipment, you might have to go to this station. We’ll be able to take all of that out of those stations and consolidate it into one central location.”
The total cost of the facility is $21.5 million. It’s being paid for with TABOR timeout dollars, a general fund loan, capital impact fees and certificates of participation. Twelve firefighters will be needed to staff the new station. Croom says the money to hire more firefighters comes from a ballot measure passed by Castle Rock voters in 2024.
“We do worry about fires as of lately. We’re surrounded by scrub oak,” Barnett said. “As dry as it is, it, you know, and it wouldn’t take much.”
The new Station 156 is just minutes from Barnett’s home, and will serve her community, as well as Terrain and Cobblestone Ranch.
“I think that’s great because, of course with all the growth around here, there’s a lot more chance of having a fire,” Barnett said. “The hard thing about growth is all the people, but then that good thing is that we get those kind of amenities.”
The station will break ground next week, and it’s expected to be operational in 2027.
“As the town continues to grow and as the community continues to grow, us being able to keep up with that growth is significant,” Croom said.
Colorado
New Colorado Conversion Therapy Ban With Clever Mechanism Close To Passing
On Monday, the Colorado Senate Judiciary Committee passed HB26-1322, a bill that creates a private civil right of action allowing survivors of conversion therapy to sue the practitioners who subjected them to it. The bill, which has no statute of limitations for such claims, would likely make the practice of conversion therapy financially prohibitive in the state. It comes in the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s 8-1 decision last month in Chiles v. Salazar, which found that Colorado’s 2019 ban on conversion therapy unconstitutional—effectively legalizing the discredited practice nationwide. The new bill has one final legislative hurdle to clear—the full Colorado Senate—before heading to Governor Jared Polis’s desk, though the governor has so far offered only lukewarm signals about whether he will sign it, saying he is “hopeful there is still time to construct a framework he could support.”
The bill targets what it calls “sexual orientation or gender identity change efforts”—defined as “any practice by a licensed mental health professional that seeks to direct a patient toward a predetermined sexual orientation or gender identity outcome, or to eliminate or reduce sexual or romantic attractions or feelings toward individuals of a particular sex or gender, regardless of the sexual orientation or gender identity the patient is directed toward.” The inclusion of “eliminate or reduce sexual or romantic attractions” is notable—conversion therapists have long used this framework to argue disingenuously that they are not trying to change a person’s sexual orientation, merely helping them manage unwanted feelings. The bill explicitly carves out any counseling or therapy that “provides acceptance, support, and understanding of a patient” or “facilitates a patient’s coping, social support, and identity exploration and development”—meaning therapists who support a patient’s own process of self-discovery, without steering them toward a predetermined outcome, would face no liability.
The bill uses a novel legal mechanism to target conversion therapy—a private right of action. Rather than the government banning conversion therapy outright, which is what the Supreme Court struck down in Chiles, the bill instead allows survivors to sue their practitioners directly, stating that “a person who suffered an injury as a result of sexual orientation or gender identity change efforts may bring a civil action for damages” against their conversion therapist. It also states that a lawsuit to recover damages can be commenced “at any time without limitation,” making its statute of limitations effectively endless. The mechanism may be insulated from the constitutional problem the Supreme Court identified in Chiles because the government is not restricting speech—instead, private citizens are seeking civil remedies for harm they suffered, the same way a patient can sue a doctor for malpractice. As Alejandra Caraballo, a clinical instructor at Harvard Law School, told Erin in the Morning after the Chiles ruling, “While the Supreme Court decision limits the abilities of states to regulate conversion therapy through professional standards, they did not limit the ability for states to protect LGBTQ youth from these abusive practices through tort or malpractice law.”
If the mechanism sounds familiar, it is because Republicans pioneered it to get around Supreme Court rulings they didn’t like—most famously in Texas’s SB 8, the 2021 abortion “bounty hunter” law. That law banned abortion after six weeks not through government enforcement but by allowing any private citizen to sue anyone who performed or aided an abortion for $10,000 in damages. The legal trick was simple: when abortion providers tried to challenge SB 8 in court, they couldn’t get an injunction because there was no government official to enjoin. Courts found that you can’t sue “the state” to block a law that only private citizens enforce. The Supreme Court effectively let SB 8 stand, and the strategy worked—abortion access in Texas collapsed virtually overnight even while Roe v. Wade was still the law of the land. Kansas used the same model in SB 244, which allows anyone to sue a transgender person for using a restroom that doesn’t match their assigned sex at birth. Now, Colorado Democrats are exploiting the same constitutional loophole in the opposite direction—using private civil enforcement to deter a harmful practice that the Supreme Court says the government cannot directly ban.
It is important to note that some have raised concerns the bill could be weaponized against gender-affirming therapists—with anti-trans groups arguing that helping a trans youth transition constitutes its own form of “conversion therapy.” But the bill contains multiple layers of protection against such misuse. Its carveouts explicitly shield counseling that provides “acceptance, support, and understanding of a patient.” The bill also has protections in its causation standard. To establish that conversion therapy caused harm, a court must weigh “the nature, duration, and intensity” of the efforts, “the age and vulnerability of the plaintiff at the time,” “the relationship between the plaintiff and the mental health professional,” and “expert testimony regarding the general psychological effects of sexual orientation or gender identity change efforts.” It is unlikely that judges will consider anti-trans activists to be considered medical “experts” on this topic.
LGBTQ+ organizations, activists, and Democratic lawmakers in the state have supported the bill’s passage. “This decision only reinforces the urgent need for state-level protections,” said One Colorado, the state’s largest LGBTQ+ advocacy organization. “[HB 1322] provides a pathway for accountability, allowing survivors to seek justice against those who administer this harmful practice. We remain committed to ensuring that those responsible for such profound damage are held accountable.” Rep. Karen McCormick, a Democrat from Longmont, was blunt about the bill’s intent: “The purpose of this bill is seriously to send a chilling effect to any licensed professional therapist who may think about bringing that practice back.”
Conversion therapy is a discredited practice broadly decried by every major American medical organization. The APA concluded in a 2009 systematic review that the practice is “unlikely to be successful and involves risk of harm, including depression, suicidality, and anxiety,” and called for its total elimination. The United Nations has deemed conversion therapy a form of torture. A 2020 study published in the American Journal of Public Health found that LGBTQ+ youth subjected to conversion therapy were more than twice as likely to report attempting suicide. For transgender people specifically, conversion therapy often takes the form of so-called “gender exploratory therapy,” a rebranded approach that seeks to convince trans youth they are not actually transgender, keeping transition just out of reach by tricking trans youth that it might be offered if they jump through endless hoops while intending to deny it the entire way.
The bill now heads to the full Colorado Senate for a floor vote, where Democrats hold a 23-12 majority and passage is expected. Coloradans who support the bill can contact their state senator through the Colorado General Assembly’s legislator lookup tool. If the Senate passes the bill, it will go to Governor Polis, whose signature remains the final and most uncertain step. Polis, the first openly gay governor elected in the United States, signed the original 2019 conversion therapy ban and has called the practice “a scam and a waste of people’s hard-earned money”—but his office has stopped short of committing to sign this bill, saying only that he is “hopeful there is still time to construct a framework he could support.” What changes, if any, the governor is seeking remain unclear. The bill includes a safety clause that would make it take effect on July 1, 2026, and would exempt it from voter referendum. If signed, Colorado would become the first state in the country to use a private right of action to combat conversion therapy in the wake of the Supreme Court’s ruling.
Colorado
‘It really tore me up’: Funeral home probation leaves southern Colorado woman questioning care of her father’s remains
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KKTV) – Losing a loved one is never easy, and for one Colorado woman, her loss was compounded by recent news of disturbing discoveries in funeral homes eroding her trust.
Renee Crippen’s father, Charles, was a Colorado Springs native who made a career in construction. Crippen said he always kept busy, be it at work, in his garden, painting cars or just generally finding something to tinker with.
“He was a stubborn guy,” she joked, “but he is well-loved, and we miss him tremendously, for sure.”
When he passed on New Year’s Eve, Crippen said she wanted to ensure he was laid to rest properly. But with recent news of discoveries at places like the Return to Nature funeral home and Davis Mortuary, she said she wanted to be thorough in her vetting process.
“I think, probably, previously, I wouldn’t have thought that much, I would have reached out for sure, but I probably wouldn’t have been as concerned,” she said.
Crippen said she used Evergreen Funeral Home, but after they took possession of her father’s remains, she went a while without hearing from them. So, she said she emailed a series of questions, which she said were answered, but she said something felt off.
“Just some inconsistencies that just kind of left me feeling unsettled,” she explained.
At the time, she said she was told by Evergreen that the funeral home was dealing with an influx of bodies coming in after the holidays.
El Paso County officials said they had a contract between county administrators, the coroner’s office and Evergreen. Typically, these contracts involve county officials working with a funeral home to handle the remains of people without family or whose family has no means to pay for burial or cremation services.
But county officials said Evergreen had requested to terminate its contract.
“The County was not notified of any investigation or inspection findings. When we asked Evergreen directly whether they were under investigation, they advised that they were in compliance with all applicable standards,” a county spokesperson said.
In January, the state’s Department of Regulatory Agencies said they got an anonymous tip, which led to an inspection. In this, DORA said they found violations of state statutes. In a probation order, they said the funeral home stored more bodies than they had capacity for, kept them in temperatures warmer than what is allowed by the state, and had some inconsistencies in paperwork used to track who had custody of the bodies.
This led to Evergreen being placed on a year-long probation.
“The County was not notified and had no knowledge that Evergreen Funeral Home was operating above capacity,” a county spokesperson said.
For Crippen, this news was hard to hear.
“Seeing it is heartbreaking. It really tore me up,” she said.
She said she ultimately did get her father’s remains back, though, and was able to lay him to rest, but the news of the probation left her wondering what happened between his death and when she got those remains.
“My concern became, was he being taken care of properly and respectfully?” she said.
11 News spoke with the manager of Evergreen, who said his lawyers advised him not to speak with media.
Copyright 2026 KKTV. All rights reserved.
Colorado
Colorado real estate broker expands to Breckenridge
Summit County’s newest real estate brokerage, milehimodern, opened a new office in Breckenridge in March.
A news release from the company states it has a focus on how “climate, craftsmanship, and landscape” shape mountain homes. A quote from co-owner Carmelo Paglialunga stated milehimodern will look to integrate into Summit County’s “close-knit community,” which Paglialunga said has a “strong” architectural identity.
Learn more about milehimodern at MHMHomes.com, and find their office at the corner of Main Street and Lincoln Avenue in Breckenridge.
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