Colorado
Colorado lawmakers reject request for more prison funding amid overcrowding frustrations
Frustrated Colorado lawmakers gave a “huge slap on the wrist” to the state’s correctional system and its leaders Wednesday, rejecting more than $20 million in funding requests.
They also vented their anger that senior officials hadn’t better planned to address prison overcrowding that’s coming to a head.
“I want to know what it is (Gov. Jared Polis’) administration is going to do and going to support, beyond just continued requests for more beds, building more prisons and spending more money in that respect,” Rep. Emily Sirota, a Denver Democrat who chairs the legislature’s Joint Budget Committee, told colleagues during a meeting Wednesday afternoon.
The rejections, including a refusal to pay for hundreds more prison beds, came a month after a legislative analyst warned that the state’s prisons were going to exceed their capacity in the coming fiscal year, primarily because the number of inmates released on discretionary parole has declined.
The four Democratic members of the JBC, which controls the state budget, asked with growing consternation why the Department of Corrections hadn’t brought them a plan to address overcrowding, to step up releases of old and infirm inmates, or to improve its own shortcomings. Those include challenges like high vacancies among sex offender treatment staff, a problem that’s kept scores of inmates in prison past their parole dates, as The Denver Post recently reported.
The goal of Wednesday’s votes, lawmakers said, was to spur Polis and prison officials to either support legislation intended to address prison overcrowding or to come up with their own plan to solve the problem, without simply increasing the number or size of state prisons. Sen. Judy Amabile, a Boulder Democrat on the committee, said bills she’s previously considered running were shelved because she was told “they wouldn’t see the light of day.”
“It all falls on deaf ears unless we push back,” she said.
A spokesperson for the Corrections Department did not return a message seeking comment Wednesday.
In a statement, Polis spokeswoman Shelby Wieman said the governor wanted to cover medical costs, address a jail backlog — in which local facilities are housing some state prisoners — and increase prison capacity.
“We are eager to explore any solutions that ensure we are protecting public safety, supporting and protecting the safety of DOC staff, provide safe living conditions for offenders, and better prepare offenders to go back into communities and not recommit a crime,” she wrote. “The Governor’s Office will be in front of the Joint Budget Committee on Monday and will consider what portions of the DOC request to potentially bring back for consideration.”
$2.4 million request for more beds
In a Jan. 9 letter to the committee, state budget director Mark Ferrandino wrote that Polis’ office and prison officials “are working diligently to identify options to address the additional demands for capacity.”
But his letter went on to describe only plans to increase prison capacity, including through purchasing or leasing new or dormant facilities.
“However, we remain committed to working with the Legislature and its staff to identify the best path forward for the State of Colorado,” Ferrandino wrote.
Among the funding requests rejected Wednesday: a $2.4 million ask for 788 more prison beds. Kyle Giddings, of the Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition, said it was the first time in his organization’s 25-year history that its leaders remembered the budget committee denying a request to add more prison beds.
Giddings’ group and Colorado WINS, the union that represents prison workers, had urged the committee in a statement Tuesday to reject the funding requests.
“Colorado WINS has never opposed a DOC request for additional prison beds,” Hilary Glasgow, the executive director of the union, said in a statement. “Limited prison capacity is of course a challenge for staff, but we are in the midst of a staffing crisis that’s compromising safety for our members, the incarcerated population, and the public, and adding more beds is only going to make things much worse.”
Lawmakers’ frustration with the state prison system has been building.
Sirota and Amabile described posing repeated — and unanswered — questions about prison planning and management. The Corrections Department’s annual budget recently surpassed $1 billion in a legislature that is often short on cash. The agency is seeking an additional funding boost this year, even as lawmakers grapple with a roughly $750 million budget shortfall that will likely require cuts to core services like Medicaid.
“As a person who’s focused his career on health care predominantly, it pains me to fund prisons,” said Rep. Kyle Brown, a Louisville Democrat on the budget committee. “We have to, it’s a necessary part of our state. But every dollar we have to spend on a new bed in a department that receives … no federal funding, is at least $2, maybe $10, that we could be spending on Medicaid to get people health care.”
Jail payments, medical expenses
In addition to rejecting the bed request, the budget committee also agreed only to sign off on 50% of the requested money for jail payments, medical expenses and contract services for health providers. It delayed a $3.9 million payment for unfunded liability for the Colorado Public Employees’ Retirement Association, the state’s public pension plan.
Sirota and Amabile argued that they could pay for the rest of the jail and medical requests later in the spring.
The committee’s two Republicans — Sen. Barbara Kirkmeyer and Rep. Rick Taggart — expressed some sympathy and similar frustrations.
But they worried about the strain placed on local jails, which have housed some prison inmates to ease overcrowding. Plus, the Republicans said, the legislature will face the need to pay those bills in the near future anyway.
Kirkmeyer, of Brighton, said delaying full payment for jails could increase the risks for the people in the jails and the staff members overseeing them.
“I mean, I guess it’s a big, huge slap on the wrist — tell (Polis’ office and prison officials) to get in here and that you want to see the planning,” she told her Democratic colleagues. “But I don’t know why you haven’t been pressuring them in the last couple of years.”
Though Giddings’ group had urged lawmakers to reject the department’s requests, he said he was still surprised the committee followed through.
“The JBC just finally looked at everything that was happening and just heard what we’ve been saying for a long time,” he said. “The Department of Corrections isn’t underfunded; it’s underperforming. It’s time to fix what’s going on and stop holding up a broken bureaucracy.”
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Colorado
Recording reveals concerns over illegal activity in state’s marijuana industry
Colorado
Colorado’s Preseason Ranking Comes With Surprising Caveat
The Colorado Buffaloes have a revamped roster and coaching staff under coach Deion Sanders, but the expectations for the team are rather low.
Betting odds for Colorado’s win total are set at 4.5, per FanDuel Sportsbook, and they are tied with the worst odds of winning the Big 12 championship.
Colorado Buffaloes May Be Underrated
ESPN’s Bill Connelly revealed his Big 12 preview, and he explained an interesting caveat around Colorado’s ranking in the SP+, a predictive system that ranks teams based on their efficiency while adjusting for opponents. The Buffaloes are ranked No. 65 overall by the SP+, and only West Virginia is behind Colorado at No. 66.
With a new roster, Colorado is more difficult to predict, though.
“We saw last year that Colorado still has an awfully low floor, but if Lewis indeed comes into his own at QB, the ceiling could be just as high: There’s more proven production on this roster than even the nine-win 2024 team had. It has to jell, and massive makeovers always come with risks,” writes Connelly. “But I like this team’s potential a lot more than SP+ does. And when have I ever been wrong?”
If Colorado can string together some wins, the Buffaloes will be one of the more surprising teams in the country. However, some of the new transfers joining the program have already been drawing attention.
Out of Connelly’s top 10 transfers in the Big 12, two of Colorado’s newcomers made the cut: linebacker Gideon Lampron and wide receiver Kam Perry, while receiver Danny Scudero received a mention as well.
The Buffs’ schedule features two Power 4 teams in the non-conference slate with Georgia Tech and Northwestern, and then Colorado faces Big 12 play with matchups against Texas Tech, Utah, and Oklahoma State.
Colorado’s Chances in 2026
The bottom of the Big 12 is rather close together by the SP+ with seven teams, nearly half of the conference, ranked between No. 50 and No. 66 overall.
Not only does this give Colorado room to climb if the combination of quarterback Julian Lewis with his new wide receivers and a new offensive coordinator in Brennan Marion can click. The Buffaloes brought in Danny Scudero, Kam Perry, and DeAndre Moore to replenish the wide receiver room, but defensive coordinator Chris Marve will also have to do his part with a new group of defensive transfers.
Colorado was among the worst teams in the country in 2025 when it came to stopping the run, and a group of new Buffs will be tasked with turning around the unit. Some new names like defensive lineman Ezra Christensen, linebacker Liona Lefau, and defensive back Boo Carter.
Still, if Colorado is able to string together some wins, it will likely come from outscoring opponents on the offensive side of the ball with the arrival of Marion and the return of Lewis. The Buffaloes lost four one-score games in 2025, surrendering an average of 20 points in those losses.
Winning six games and making a bowl game would be beating expectations for Colorado, although the Buffaloes seem to have the potential to build some momentum and string together some wins in 2026.
Game odds refresh periodically and are subject to change. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help, call 1-800-GAMBLER.
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Colorado
Drought impacts flow into northwest Colorado fisheries
Unprecedented spawning, low flows, hotter temperatures — these are some of the phrases used by state biologists to describe the situation facing Colorado’s northwestern fisheries as a drought persists in the region.
At the start of June, 100% of Colorado was experiencing some drought conditions following the state’s lowest snowpack on record and warmer-than-normal temperatures across the winter months. Record-setting heat in March led to an early melt-off and has brought concerns into summer for Colorado’s fisheries as the drought impacts streamflows and reservoirs.
“This drought is something that’s being closely watched with a lot of anxiety by many, many people,” said Jon Ewert, Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s aquatic biologist for Grand and Summit counties, during a June 2 drought tour in Grand County.
“As far as impacts we’ve seen so far this year, it’s kind of interesting because what we have seen so far this spring in terms of recreational angling is an incredibly good spring for fishing,” Ewert said.
This, however, has more to do with timing than as a predictor for what the drought will mean for anglers this summer. The March heatwave moved up the timelines for peak streamflow and other aquatic markers.
“Everything’s a month ahead of schedule this year,” Ewert said. “The rainbow (trout) spawned a month early … The caddis are hatching on the Colorado River, which is usually like a July 1 thing. And so the thing is that the water is low and clear, and the fish are hungry coming out of winter, and they’re very aggressive and the bugs are hatching early.”
Ben Felt, Parks and Wildlife’s senior aquatic biologist in its northwest region, at a Monday, June 1 meeting of Colorado’s Drought Task Force in Winter Park, said this has also brought “unusual timing” for Parks and Wildlife’s projects in the region.
“What we’re seeing is that the ice came off most of our reservoirs, a good 4 to 6 weeks earlier than usual, and that throws off a few things where a lot of the work that we do in the spring is aimed at removal of invasive northern pike, and northern pike spawning timing was way earlier this year,” Felt said. “We’ll likely see some increases in northern pike numbers, just based on our reduced ability to be out there that early when the pike are spawning — it’s just completely unprecedented in terms of the timing of this fish.”
While Ewert said this is leading to “really great conditions” compared to what Colorado anglers typically see in spring and early June, it begs the question: “What’s it going to look like in July? What’s it going to look like in August?”
“We all have some grim ideas about that,” he said.
Russ Schumacher, Colorado’s state climatologist, said climate models are forecasting a good chance for an active monsoon season kicking off in the middle of July, with a continued trend of warmer-than-normal temperatures through the summer. Schumacher added that whatever relief was brought by cooler temperatures and closer-to-normal precipitation in May is not going to make up for deficits in the winter’s snowpack.
“The river flows are going to be extremely low in the summer,” he said. “The drought impacts are going to continue to emerge.”
Ewert shared some hope — with a caveat — around what an active monsoon could mean for the state’s fisheries.
“The thing about a monsoon in low water years like this, in terms of the rivers, we know we’re not going to get flushing flows anywhere this year… and we’re probably going to have high temperature issues in rivers like the Colorado and the Fraser,” Ewert said.
“However, if we have a consistent and active monsoon, the thing about monsoonal patterns is that even if we don’t have enough precipitation to even be a measurable amount of precipitation, it’s getting that cloud cover … that consistent cloud cover every afternoon that interrupts the solar gain heating up that water,” he added.
Low streamflows and high air temperatures can prove stressful and deadly for Colorado’s fish populations.
“We actually pretty regularly implement voluntary fishing closures in these fisheries during drought years,” Ewert said.

Per Parks and Wildlife’s fishing regulations, when river temperatures rise above 71 F, the agency will issue an emergency fishing closure. When temperatures rise, oxygen levels in the water drop and fish can stop feeding, become more susceptible to diseases and stress from angling, which can ultimately cause them to die. The agency can also issue emergency closures when streamflows drop below 50% of the daily average. Low flows can cause fish to bunch up in small areas, increasing competition for food and making them more susceptible to angling pressure and disease.
“Warm temperatures and low flows that we are seeing across the state are likely to get more pronounced as we get into the summer months,” Felt said. “Overall, there’s just gonna be a higher potential for fish kills this year based on the drought and issues with water levels and temperatures and water quality.”
During his presentation, Felt shared how Parks and Wildlife’s fisheries work in the region has been impacted by the conditions so far.
The Colorado River
The Colorado River’s headwaters are located in Grand County. Felt reported that in the river’s upper reaches, “the reservoirs and transbasin diversions up there have reduced the flows and flow regimes that the upper Colorado would traditionally have.”
The Colorado River has 12 major transmountain diversions. They carry water from west of the Continental Divide — where 80% of the state’s water supply comes from — to the east — where 90% of the state’s population lives.
“The situation is that the natural morphology of the rivers in this part of the state just don’t align with the reality of the flows that are in those rivers, and that could cause some habitat issues and temperature issues,” Felt said. “Those concerns can become more pronounced in drought years.”
While the transmountain diversions can create a “lack of high volumes of water” in Grand County, Ewert said that there can be some benefits.
“There are tradeoffs that occur when reservoirs are drawn down, of course,” he said. “We benefit from, in Grand County, these places where bottom release dams are cooling down the river and we can make use of that in really beneficial ways … that water can be used to mitigate some of these high-temperature periods of time that we see.”
This year, the draw down of some reservoirs in the upper reaches of the Colorado River could impact recreation and fisheries. The Williams Fork Reservoir, currently sitting at 54% full, will be closed to boating this year due to its lowered level.
“We kind of expect to be rebuilding the Williams Fork fishery more or less from scratch once we get to the other side of this drought,” Ewert said.
Downstream on the Colorado River, Parks and Wildlife is monitoring the 15-Mile Reach — which Felt called a “stronghold” for native fish species that are threatened and endangered.
“This is a stretch that’s in the Grand Valley that’s especially vulnerable to low flows because it’s located just downstream of a couple major diversions in the Colorado, and it’s also upstream of the Gunnison River confluence,” Felt said. “We did see that the flows in the 15-Mile Reach drop to 52 cfs earlier this spring, which is a pretty alarming amount of water to be in the mainstem Colorado River.”
Felt reported that around that time, monitoring efforts showed the fish in “good condition, but were fairly concentrated in the pools of habitat.” This quality habitat can be hard for fish to travel between when flows are low, he added.
“This is certainly a situation that we will continue to actively monitor, and if flows drop again, and if fish start to become stranded, we may consider some sort of salvage efforts out there,” Felt said.
The Yampa and White rivers

Felt shared that within the Yampa and White rivers, Parks and Wildlife’s work around recovery of native fish species has been limited by the low flows.
As of June 10, the Yampa River in Steamboat Springs was running at 330 cubic feet per second, significantly lower than the 2,320 cfs it was running at the same time last year, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The White River below Meeker was running at 214 cfs on June 10, when the normal flow for this time of year is closer to 1,500 to 2,500.
“There’s not enough water to launch the rafts or the jet boats,” Felt said. “What we anticipate is that if there are reductions in electrofishing efforts, that will, combined with low water levels, likely result in some increased densities of some of these non-native fish species that we’re managing against.”
Within the Stagecoach Reservoir tailwaters on the Yampa River — which Felt called an “incredible” and “very, very popular” fishery — there has been a mandatory fishing closure since October. Felt said when the flows here drop below 40 cfs, the fish become “very vulnerable to angling,” and experience “increased levels of angler-induced mortality.”
Parks and Wildlife works alongside the Upper Yampa Water Conservancy District and the Colorado Water Trust to plan releases out of the reservoir as part of an instream flow program.
“We decided to wait till later in the year to release that water — the Water Trust made that decision — to ultimately hedge our bets a little bit, and still have that water available when the conditions could be even more critical in the Yampa,” Felt said, adding that the groups are also studying the changes to habitat quality during “unprecedented flow levels down there.”
Felt added that Parks and Wildlife has been “actively working” to rebuild fisheries in Lake Avery and Rio Blanco Lake, which were both drained in the past few years for outlet and dam repairs.
“There’s some uncertainty that remains on both the water management and fisheries management at both of those lakes based on these drought conditions,” he added.
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