Colorado
Colorado moves to cap price of arthritis drug Enbrel in first-in-the-nation action by state affordability board
A Colorado board voted to move forward with setting a price ceiling on the arthritis drug Enbrel on Friday, a first-in-the-nation step that raises questions about whether a single state can reduce drug costs without unintended consequences.
Colorado would be the first to set a price ceiling on any drug, meaning the state can’t look to others for clues to how drugmakers and other players will respond. Opponents of the process say patients could lose access to drugs under a price ceiling, while supporters say drugmakers can’t easily cut states out of their distribution chains and still make money.
The vote by the Prescription Drug Affordability Board kicks off a six-month process to determine what price would be appropriate for Enbrel. The board also has the option to ultimately vote against a price ceiling at the end of the process.
The move by the state board is different than the Colorado legislature’s limits on how much customers pay out-of-pocket for insulin or EpiPens, as an Enbrel price ceiling would also apply to how much pharmacies pay to stock the drug.
The board previously had determined the drug cost about $46,000 for one patient to take it for one year in 2022, with patients responsible for an average of $2,295 in Colorado if they have commercial insurance or Medicare Advantage. Some patients pay less because they qualify for assistance programs to cover their out-of-pocket costs.
The vote came one day after a state Senate committee voted to advance a bill that would remove all medications that have an “orphan drug” designation from the board’s list to consider in future years. The orphan status means a drug is approved for a rare condition, meaning it may not be profitable for drugmakers to develop such treatments.
The Colorado Consumer Health Initiative estimated that about 400 of the 600 drugs that the board identified as possibilities for review have orphan drug status for at least one condition.
Enbrel, which is approved for six conditions, has an orphan drug designation for one of them, polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
Friday’s meeting capped a months-long process of reviewing data about how much Enbrel costs, and how much patients typically pay.
Drugmaker Amgen and some patient groups criticized the board’s reliance on a survey that garnered responses from only 38 patients in Colorado to determine that the drug isn’t broadly affordable. Eight of those respondents said they went into debt because of their drug costs, 20 said they had to cut back on other expenses and nine said they sometimes stretched their doses to save money.
The board previously voted that the cystic fibrosis drug Trikafta and the HIV antiviral Genvoya both are affordable to patients because of assistance programs from drug manufacturers or the federal government. Neither drug will be subject to a price ceiling.
Cosentyx and Stelara, which both treat conditions where the body attacks its own tissues, will undergo affordability reviews later this year. The board’s charge is to determine if drugs are affordable to patients, not to the system as a whole.
Earlier in the review process, some trade groups had raised concerns about implementing a maximum price.
The Colorado Hospital Association said it worried that its members could be reimbursed less than the cost of drugs they buy if the board set upper payment limits. In a comment sent last year, the association said some of its members are part of multi-state purchasing groups, so they wouldn’t necessarily be able to buy drugs below the price ceiling, but insurance would still reimburse them at the rate the state set.
The Colorado Pharmacists Society also sent a comment with concerns that its members wouldn’t be able to recoup the costs of stocking drugs that require more complicated handling, while the Colorado Association of Health Plans said insurers might not be able to change their formularies to bring patients’ out-of-pocket costs down to whatever level the board sets.
Sign up for our weekly newsletter to get health news sent straight to your inbox.
Colorado
Colorado Springs officials provide details of recent closure, repair work on Uintah Street
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — Two weeks have passed since officials closed four blocks of Uintah Street to repair damage under a bridge over Shooks Run Creek, and we’re now learning specifics about the response.
Officials said that the city was the lead entity in the repair response, with Colorado Springs Utilities (CSU) providing a supporting role.
The closure began late in the afternoon of June 10 for what officials described as emergency bridge and utility repairs between Prospect and Institute streets, east of the Colorado College campus.
Officials said that on the previous day, a routine bridge inspection by the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) discovered a large “void,” or sinkhole, under the bridge that compromised a utility line.
But officials didn’t explain how the void developed or how they repaired it until earlier this week, when Richard Mulledy, the city’s public works director, elaborated on the situation.
“It was about a six-foot by eight-foot void,” he explained. “That void was really caused by an abandoned storm sewer line and then a leaking manhole. It’s something that we see from time to time, but really doesn’t happen often.”
Crews approached the problem from under and above the bridge, with workers excavating into the street to access the utility lines.
“The utility line being compromised was an active storm sewer line,” Mulledy said. “It was sort of hanging out in the open and was unsecured. The old storm sewer line had been abandoned for decades and was starting to fail.”
Crews removed the old stormwater pipe, repaired the manhole, and backfilled the void with a material called “flow.”
“Flow fills almost like a kind of liquid concrete,” Mulledy detailed. “And that’s a really great structural solution. So, we filled that entire thing up, made sure the void is closed, and made sure it’s structurally sound.”
He added that the bridge is around a century old, the same age as most bridges across the creek.
“This was identified and got fixed in 48 hours, rather than let something structural fail, and then we’d be in a big, giant construction project,” Mulledy said. “The structure itself, I don’t think, was ever really threatened.”
The closure ended on Saturday, June 13.
Colorado
Colorado man dies after dislodging rocks, getting crushed by 1,000 pound boulder
A Colorado man died on Tuesday when a boulder fell on him and crushed him. That’s according to the Chaffee County Sheriff’s Office, who identified the man as 59-year-old Paul Frasch.
Frasch is a resident of Silverthorne. The sheriff’s office says he was walking in an area along the Arkansas River in Buena Vista in the middle of the day with his coworker when rocks fell and hit him.
According to investigators, the boulder that landed on Frasch weighed at least 1,000 pounds.
The coworker received injuries to his arms after trying to help Frasch.
When first responders got to the scene, the boulder was still on top of Frasch. He was declared dead at the scene.
Colorado
Longmont declines to join Superior airport noise appeal before Colorado Supreme Court
The Longmont City Council voted unanimously Tuesday night to decline a request from the town of Superior to support its appeal to the Colorado Supreme Court in a long-running lawsuit over aircraft noise from Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport.
The decision comes about a week after the council met in a closed-door executive session to receive legal advice regarding Superior’s request that Longmont join an amicus brief supporting the appeal.
Councilmember Jake Marsing moved to adopt the city’s proposed response to Superior, and the motion passed 7-0 after a brief discussion.
Superior is seeking Colorado Supreme Court review of a Colorado Court of Appeals decision that found federal law prevents courts from ordering Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport to restrict aircraft operations because regulation of air traffic falls under the authority of the Federal Aviation Administration.
Superior and Boulder County sued the Jefferson County-owned airport in 2024, arguing that training flights create excessive noise and lead emissions for nearby communities. While a district court dismissed the lawsuit in 2025, the Court of Appeals this year revived part of the lead contamination claim while upholding the dismissal of the noise-related claims.
In the statement adopted Tuesday, Longmont acknowledged it has also heard complaints from residents about airplane noise and said the city takes those concerns seriously. However, the statement said, Longmont’s position differs from neighboring communities because it owns and operates Vance Brand Airport.
“The city believes that local control over airport operations is important and these rights should not be taken by the courts,” the adopted statement reads. The city also said it is continuing efforts to address noise concerns through voluntary measures, including updates to its voluntary noise abatement procedures and a voluntary saturated pattern policy that limits the number of aircraft in the traffic pattern.
Mayor Susie Hidalgo-Fahring also noted the city is continuing discussions about its long-term vision for airport operations.
The statement leaves the door open for future collaboration with regional partners and the FAA but concludes that Longmont will not file an amicus brief with the Colorado Supreme Court at this time.
Before the vote, Councilmember Matthew Popkin asked City Attorney Eugene Mei to clarify for residents who, exactly, had provided legal advice to the council during the executive session. Mei said Longmont’s outside aviation counsel did not advise the city because that firm is representing Jefferson County in the appeal and therefore has a conflict of interest. Instead, the council received advice solely from the city’s legal staff.
Longmont’s decision contrasts with those of neighboring Lafayette and Louisville, whose city councils have approved joining an amicus brief supporting Superior’s petition. Broomfield has also indicated support for the effort.
-
Maine2 minutes agoPerson hospitalized after shed fire in Harpswell
-
Maryland5 minutes agoNavy ship USS Marinette arrives in Maryland for Sail250:
-
Michigan11 minutes agoMichigan president has strong words for college sports after Dusty May exit
-
Massachusetts17 minutes agoMass. lawmakers prioritizing 100 high-risk locations to implement wrong-way driving prevention measures – Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News
-
Minnesota20 minutes agoRationalizing Charlotte’s Shocking Decision to Trade LaMelo Ball to Minnesota
-
Mississippi25 minutes ago
Mississippi Legislature will talk school choice, redistricting in 2027
-
Missouri32 minutes agoMissouri Highway Patrol investigating KCPD officer involved shooting
-
Montana35 minutes ago
Montana DEQ works toward impairment designation for Big Hole River