Colorado
Colorado schools dramatically adjusting to teach migrant students – many who’ve never been to school before

Ashley is one of more than 2,200 students who have enrolled in Denver Public Schools, along with hundreds more in other Colorado school districts, since the summer. Some schools, lacking enough interpreters and bilingual teachers and aides, are struggling to meet all the needs of the sudden and rapid influx of migrant children.
“We’re seeing really full classrooms, and especially in a lot of our bilingual program schools, seeing in some cases classrooms that are so full, they actually can’t take any more students,” said Adrienne Endres, DPS’s executive director of Multilingual Education.
Endres acknowledges that the situation is stretching the district’s resources but she also sees it as an opportunity to “do differently and be different together.”
DPS is better suited than many districts to meet the needs because it has so many bilingual programs. The district also has newcomer centers that offer small class sizes and are dedicated to catching students up on content and offering intense English.
For the most part, so far, schools are adjusting.
“This is often painted as a crisis, but these kids are bringing smiles and hugs and joy to our school, and so we’re really glad to have them here and really glad to be able to support them and their families,” said Nadia Madan-Morrow, principal of one of the impacted schools.
As families search for cheaper housing, school districts outside of Denver are enrolling migrant children
While Denver Public Schools has enrolled most of the new children by far, Aurora Public Schools has enrolled 1,600 since July, with most from Venezuela, Colombia, Mexico, Honduras, and Guatemala.
Of the districts that responded to CPR’s inquiry, Adams 12 Five Star has 600 students who’ve been in the country for two years or less. Of those, 225 have arrived since Aug. 1, compared to 183 in 2022. The district has also opened its first newcomer “school within a school” center. On the first day of school, 30 students were enrolled. Now there are about 100.
Westminster has 230 new migrants compared to 150 at this time in 2022. Mapleton has had about 80 new arrivals. Greeley-Evans District 6 has seen a slight increase from last year – 228 newcomers over 193. 27J in Brighton said it has very few new migrant students, and far south in Durango only 29 newcomers are enrolled.
Several mountain districts have reported more students from Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, and Central America, but some have already transferred out, unable to find places to live.
One Denver school that is more prepared than most for the new arrivals is Place Bridge Academy
The preschool through eighth-grade school is designed to provide special programming for immigrant and refugee children. Forty-seven languages are spoken in the school. But even Place Bridge had to make a series of changes to meet all the needs of new arrivals like Ashley.
On a tour, Madan-Morrow points to what used to be just a library. Now it serves as a nook for math intervention with reading intervention in another area.
“We’re working on trying to get something to break up the sound because it’s noisy in there right now,” she said.
Every bit of space in Place Bridge Academy is full right now.
“Frankly, in schools, we were really caught off guard,” said Madan-Morrow, recalling how educators watched early news coverage of migrants arriving in Denver but didn’t expect the number of children that would be among the arrivals.

Over 100 more students than the school expected showed up this fall.
It was rough at the beginning. There weren’t enough teachers.
Literacy teacher Carmen Kuri-Moeller said the teachers who spoke Spanish could immediately start modeling behaviors, teaching students how the U.S. school system works. But when the kids went to classes like art or P.E. — classes that typically have more than 30 kids — teachers often didn’t know Spanish.
“Things were going crazy,” she said. “Some teachers were overwhelmed because they didn’t know how to communicate and they didn’t understand the background of the students.”
School leaders quickly realized they not only needed new teachers but would have to reconfigure classes because something was different about many of the new students.
“Our students who are newly arrived from Venezuela, many of them have had very long journeys to get here, about two years to get here, so we have some students who have never been in school, we have some students that haven’t been in school for several years,” said Madan-Morrow. “It’s been an all-hands-on-deck type of a situation that’s required a lot of flexibility and out-of-the-box thinking.”
School leaders hustled, using every connection they had, and hired five more teachers, most from Spanish-speaking countries. Madan-Morrow hired a health technician to help the nurse because there are many students with serious health needs.
Siete, ocho, nueve, diez … We put it here, remember?
Third-grade teacher Andres Leondardo Lopez-Pira, who’s been at the school several years, counts out numbers on his fingers along with a student and then asks if she remembers what number to “carry” over to the ‘tens’ side.

He sits briefly with each child individually, helping them make sums out of two double-digit numbers — in Spanish. Research shows the more kids can get up to speed academically in their first language, the more quickly they’ll learn English. The class is a combined second and third-grade bilingual classroom.
“Ba” “be” “bee,” said a 9-year-old boy as he learned the letter “b” with vowels. The aide said the boy, tentative and soft-spoken, is new to the country from Venezuela has never been to school before, and doesn’t know how to read. Lopez-Pira said it’s the situation with other third graders in the class.
“They don’t know letters, they don’t know letter sounds and so that’s why we’re going over this so they can start to learn how to read,” he said.
But today, every kid is busy, working at tables, helping each other, and learning.

The basic needs of students are significant
Many new arrivals came with no winter coats, hats, or boots. Sometimes teachers fill those needs. Classroom aide Lekbira Bensabahia shows boxes of boots that teacher Janet Taggart has bought for her seventh and eighth graders.
“She (Taggart) has a good heart,” said Bensahahia, patting her heart. “She gives them coats….there are gloves and hats here!”
Taggart deflects the attention, saying there’s a classroom economy where the kids earned ‘money’ for doing extra work, and that helped make the purchases.

In the hallway, project community coordinator Marisol Chavez pushes a cart piled with a recent donation of 900 pairs of gloves and hats.
“One hat, one pair of gloves!” she calls out to students who crowd around the cart.
The students smile and thank her.
Some kids live in shelters. The city gives families 37 days in a shelter and then they must find a place to live. Some have secured apartments with two, three, or four other families. The school houses one of the district’s six community hubs to help meet family needs. There’s a waitlist to access services like food and clothing. The Denver Health Clinic at the school has a waitlist for students needing mental health services.
That’s because the journey to the U.S. for some was traumatizing
When we entered the jungle, it was like a hell. We spent six days in that jungle. Each time we took a step we felt farther away each time. (From a student essay)
For children who need it, Place Bridge Academy has more support services than most schools: two school counselors, a psychologist, and two therapists in the building. Social worker Jessi Aragon said some kids just need help with the routine and the expectations of school that they aren’t used to, while others may need some basic skills to process what they’ve been through.
“Giving them a safe space, they are allowed to feel whatever they want to feel — if they are sad, guilty, angry, just normalizing that, giving them a safe place to feel that,” she said.
Sometimes the students can be triggered quickly. They may be very excitable or they shut down, head down on the desk. Knowing many have experienced trauma, Taggart navigates and negotiates. Sometimes the classroom aide will walk a few laps with a student around the school.
You got on the bus afraid that you would end up sleeping on the street without knowing what could happen. If you ran out of money you had to find a way to get it. (from a student essay)
“All my students can trace on the map and tell you the route that they took and how many months it took them to walk here,” Taggart said.
Ashley said the jungle part of the journey was easy. Indigenous guides who live in the jungle took care of them and ensured their safety. She said the hardest thing was the utter fatigue of walking such a long distance.
“First of all, thanks to God. It was dangerous especially in Mexico and Costa Rica because bad people can kidnap you, and what I recommend to others is to always have God with you,” she said.
Ashley said the journey changed her. She said she feels braver now. Bolstered by her experience, she wants to complete school so she can become a pediatrician.
Taggart knows the level of English her students will need to succeed in high school is high
She doesn’t want them dropping out in ninth grade.
“I feel such a strong need to help them move and push them to get as much as they can in the one year they have newcomer support,” she said.

Her students in the newcomer program get extra support for one year. Newcomers are students who’ve had interrupted schooling and also limited skills in both English and their native language. There were so many Spanish speakers this year they had to split Taggart’s class in two and create a new bilingual newcomers’ class.
“I love this country … I love learning English every day and my parents are proud of me.” (from a student essay)
Some have already left after their families found more permanent housing farther away. At the time of publication, 335 students have already moved out of their schools, district-wide, as their families have found more permanent housing.
Kuri-Moeller said smaller class sizes and more time with students, and teachers have been able to establish connections. And she said students are learning and changing.
“It’s getting better.”

Colorado
Denver police confront marchers upset with ICE in chaotic exchanges downtown, block group from accessing I-25

Police in Denver responded in full force on Tuesday night to marches downtown after an early evening protest at the Colorado State Capitol.
CBS
Video captured near the intersection of 20th Street and Little Raven Street in Denver showed a large crowd of demonstrators and smoke just before 10 p.m. At one point in the video, a marcher threw an object that looked to be a pepper ball back at police.
At least one person was detained on Tuesday night.
Police also blocked the entrance to Interstate 25 at Broadway so marchers couldn’t enter, and there was another large police presence at Market Street and 20th.
Break-off groups from an earlier peaceful protest against Immigration and Customs Enforcement grew more chaotic as the night went on. Denver police told CBS Colorado rocks and bottles were thrown at officers near Coors Field.
Some video was circulating online showing smoke. CBS Colorado contacted police to find out what it was. Their final report is not available so it’s not known what was used, but they confirmed to CBS Colorado that no tear gas had been used.
Similar confrontations have been happening in several other cities across the country, including Los Angeles. Protests and marches have been going on there for days as demonstrators have been clashing with police. Many protests — including in Texas, in Chicago, and now in Denver — have come about in response to the situation in California.
Colorado
June’s full moon is called a strawberry moon. How to see it in Colorado

Astronomy events to look out for the month of June
Professor Chris Palma shares the top astronomy events to watch this June, from the Strawberry Moon to the summer solstice.
- The June full moon, nicknamed the strawberry moon, will be at its fullest on June 10 and 11.
- This year’s strawberry moon will be the lowest in the sky since 2006 due to a “major lunar standstill.”
- Partly cloudy skies are forecast for June 10 in Fort Collins, while June 11 has a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
June’s full moon is coming with a strawberry on top, and bottom, and is one not to be missed — unless the weather doesn’t cooperate.
Here’s what you need to know to enjoy this celestial show:
Best times to see the June strawberry full moon
The moon will be fullest the nights of June 10 and 11.
This June’s full moon is special in that while all June full moons ride low in the sky, this June’s full moon will be the lowest full moon since 2006, according to EarthSky. More on that later.
While the moon will shine on these nights, there are two special times to view this full moon. The moon will appear plump hanging low in the eastern horizon just after sunset, which is 8:30 p.m. MT in Fort Collins both evenings.
The strawberry moon is the most colorful of the year because it takes a low, shallow path across the sky, Bob Bonadurer, director of the Milwaukee Public Museum’s planetarium, told USA TODAY.
Another optimal viewing time is when the moon crests, the point at which it appears fullest and brightest. That will occur at 1:44 a.m. MT on June 11 and the moon will hang low in the west opposite the sunrise on June 11, which is at 5:29 a.m. in Fort Collins.
Why Tuesday might make for better full moon viewing than Wednesday in Fort Collins
The Fort Collins forecast calls for partly cloudy skies the night of June 10, according to the National Weather Service.
The forecast for the night of June 11 calls for mostly cloudy skies with a 20% chance of showers and thunderstorms before 9 p.m. and a slight chance of showers between 9 p.m. and midnight.
Why the June moon is called the strawberry moon? Will it appear that color?
All full moons have names.
Some Native American tribes called the June full moon by this name because June is the time of year many berries ripen, especially strawberries, according to EarthSky.
Despite the name, don’t think of the color of this moon as a ripe strawberry. However, the moon’s low arc means more moonlight in the Earth’s atmosphere might add a hint of color.
“So there’s a chance it will actually look a little bit reddish or pink, and so that may also be part of the origin of the name,” Chris Palma, professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State University, told AccuWeather.
Why this strawberry moon is special
This June’s full moon will ride the lowest since 2006 because of what’s called a “major lunar standstill,” according to EarthSky.
All June moons ride low in the sky and the sun rides high in the sky this time of year. The summer solstice is June 20.
“It’s all about the inclination of the moon’s orbit, which undergoes an 18.6-year cycle,” EarthSky’s John Jardine Goss told USA TODAY. “The cycle happens because the moon’s orbit is being slowly dragged around — mostly due to the pull of the sun — every 18.6 years.”
This year’s major lunar standstill culminated in January 2025. And we’re still close enough to it that the standstill is affecting the path of this June full moon, EarthSky said.
Reporting by USA TODAY reporter Doyle Rice contributed to this report.
Colorado
They hoped their children’s deaths would bring change. Then a Colorado bill to protect kids online failed

Bereaved parents saw their hopes for change dashed after a bill meant to protect children from sexual predators and drug dealers online died in the Colorado state legislature last month.
Several of those parents had helped shape the bill, including Lori Schott, whose 18-year-old daughter Annalee died by suicide in 2020 after consuming content on TikTok and Instagram about depression, anxiety and suicide.
“When the legislators failed to vote and pushed it off onto some fake calendar date where they’re not even in session, to not even have accountability for where they stand – as a parent, it’s a slap in the face,” said Schott, who identifies as a pro-second amendment Republican. “It’s a slap in the face of my daughter, and to other kids that we’ve lost.”
Had the legislation passed, it would have required social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram and TikTok to investigate and take down accounts engaged in gun or drug sales or in the sexual exploitation or trafficking of minors. It also mandated the creation of direct hotlines to tech company personnel for law enforcement and a 72-hour response window for police requests, a higher burden than under current law.
Additionally, platforms would have had to report on how many minors used their services, how often they did so, for how long and how much those young users engaged with content that violated company policies. Several big tech firms registered official positions on the bill. According to Colorado lobbying disclosures, Meta’s longtime in-state lobby firm, Headwater Strategies, is registered as a proponent for changing the bill. Google and TikTok also hired lobbyists to oppose it.
“We’re just extremely disappointed,” said Kim Osterman, whose 18-year-old son Max died in 2021 after purchasing drugs spiked with fentanyl from a dealer he met on Snapchat. “[Legislators] chose big tech over protecting children and families.”
Protections for users of social media (SB 25-086) passed both chambers before being vetoed on 24 April by governor Jared Polis, a Democrat, who cited the bill’s potential to “erode privacy, freedom and innovation” as reasons for his veto. Colorado’s senate voted to override the veto on 25 April, yet those efforts fell apart on 28 April when the state house opted to delay the vote until after the legislative session ended, effectively blocking an override and keeping the bill alive.
The bill originally passed the senate by a 29-6 vote and the house by a 46-18 margin. On 25 April, the senate voted 29-6 to override Polis’s veto. Lawmakers anticipated that the house would take up the override later that day. At the time, according to those interviewed, there appeared to be enough bipartisan support to successfully overturn his veto.
“It was an easy vote for folks because of what we were voting on: protecting kids from social media companies,” said the senator Lindsey Daugherty, a Democrat and a co-sponsor of the bill. She said she urged house leadership to hold the vote Friday, but they declined: “The speaker knew the governor didn’t want us to do it on Friday, because they knew we would win.”
The parents who advocated for the bill attribute its failure to an unexpected, 11th-hour lobbying campaign by a far-right gun owners’ association in Colorado. Two state legislators as well as seven people involved in the legislative process echoed the parents’ claims.
An abnormal, last-minute campaign disrupts bipartisan consensus
Rocky Mountain Gun Owners (RMGO) cast the bill as an instrument of government censorship in texts and emails over the legislation’s provisions against “ghost guns”, untraceable weapons assembled from kits purchased online, which would have been prohibited.
RMGO launched massive social media and email campaigns urging its 200,000 members to contact their legislators to demand they vote against the bill. A source with knowledge of the workings of the Colorado state house described the gun group’s social media and text campaigns, encouraging Republicans voters to contact their legislators to demand opposition to the bill, as incessant.
“[Legislators] were getting countless calls and emails and being yelled at by activists. It was a full-fledged attack. There was a whole campaign saying: ‘This is a government censorship bill,’” they said.
The group’s actions were instrumental in a campaign to deter house Republicans from voting against the veto, resulting in the quashing of the bill, and unexpected from an organization that had been facing funding shortfalls, according to 10 people interviewed who were involved in the design of the bill and legislative process. Sources in the Colorado state house spoke to the Guardian on condition of anonymity out of fear of reprisal from RMGO.
The house had delayed the vote until 28 April, which allowed RMGO time to launch a campaign against the bill over the weekend. When lawmakers reconvened Monday, the house voted 51-13 to postpone the override until after the legislative session ended – effectively killing the effort.
The gun activists’ mass text message campaign to registered Republican voters asserted the social media bill would constitute an attempt to “compel social media companies to conduct mass surveillance of content posted on their platforms” to search for violations of Colorado’s gun laws, describing the bill as an attack on first and second amendment rights, according to texts seen by the Guardian.
A familiar, aggressive foe
Founded in 1996, RMGO claims to have a membership of more than 200,000 activists. It is recognized as a far-right group that takes a “no-compromise” stance on gun rights. Dudley Brown, its founder and leader, also serves as the president of the National Association for Gun Rights, which positions itself further to the right than the National Rifle Association (NRA). RMGO has mounted criticism against the NRA for being too moderate and politically compromising. Critics have described RMGO as “bullies” and “extremists” because of its combative tactics, which include targeting and smearing Democrats and moderate Republicans. The group did not respond to requests for comment on its legislative efforts.
RMGO is a well-known presence at the Colorado capitol, typically opposing gun-control legislation. Daugherty described its typical campaign tactics as “scary”. She got rid of her X account after being singled out by the group over her work on a bill to ban assault weapons earlier this year.
“When we were running any of the gun bills at the capitol, they put my and some other legislators’ faces on their websites,” she said. A screenshot of a tweet from RMGO showed Daugherty with a red “traitor” stamp on her forehead.
The group’s campaign resulted in the spread of misinformation about the bill’s impact on gun ownership rights, sources involved in the legislative process said.
“The reason I was in support of the bill, and in support of the override, was it has to do with child trafficking and protecting the kids,” said the senator Rod Pelton, a Republican, who voted in favor of the veto override in the senate. “I just didn’t really buy into the whole second amendment argument.”
after newsletter promotion
The bill had enjoyed the backing of all 23 of Colorado’s district attorneys as well as bipartisan state house support.
RMGO’s late-stage opposition to the social media bill marked a break from its usual playbook. The group generally weighs in on legislation earlier in the process, according to eight sources, including two of the bill’s co-sponsors, Daugherty and the representative Andy Boesenecker.
“They really ramped up their efforts,” Boesenecker said. “It was curious to me that their opposition came in very late and appeared to be very well funded at the end.”
In recent years, RMGO group had been less active due to well-documented money problems that limited its ability to campaign on legislative issues. In a 2024 interview, the group’s leaders stated plainly that it struggled with funding. Daugherty believes RMGO would not have been able to embark on such an apparently costly outreach campaign without a major infusion of cash. A major text campaign like the one launched for SB-86 was beyond their financial capacity, she said. Others in Colorado politics agreed.
“Rocky Mountain Gun Owners have not been important or effective in probably at least four years in the legislature. They’ve had no money, and then all of a sudden they had tons of money, funding their rise back into power,” said Dawn Reinfeld, executive director of Blue Rising Together, a Colorado-based non-profit focused on youth rights.
The campaign made legislators feel threatened, with primary elections in their districts over the weekend, Daugherty said, particularly after accounts on X, formerly Twitter, bombarded the bill’s supporters.
“Folks were worried about being primaried, mostly the Republicans, and that’s kind of what it came down to,” Daugherty said.
Aaron Ping’s 16-year-old son Avery died of an overdose in December after buying what he thought was ecstasy over Snapchat and receiving instead a substance laced with fentanyl. Ping saw the campaign against the bill as an intentional misconstrual of its intent.
“It was looking like the bill was going to pass, until all this misinformation about it taking away people’s gun rights because it addresses people buying illegal shadow guns off the internet,” he said.
Ping gave testimony in support of the bill in February before the first senate vote, alongside other bereaved parents, teens in recovery and a district attorney.
“The bill gave me hope that Avery’s legacy would be to help. So when it didn’t pass, it was pretty soul-crushing,” said Ping.
States take up online child-safety bills as federal lawmakers falter
Several states, including California, Maryland, Vermont, Minnesota, Hawaii, Illinois, New Mexico, South Carolina and Nevada, have introduced legislation aimed at improving online safety for children in the past two years. These efforts have faced strong resistance from the tech industry, including heavy lobbying and lawsuits.
Maryland became the first state to successfully pass a Kids Code bill, signing it into law in May 2024. But the victory may be short-lived: NetChoice, a tech industry coalition representing companies including Meta, Google and Amazon, quickly launched a legal challenge against the measure, which is ongoing.
Meanwhile, in the US federal government, the kids online safety act (Kosa), which had wound its way through the legislature for years, died in February when it failed to pass in the House after years of markups and votes. A revamped version of the bill was reintroduced to Congress on 14 May.
In California, a similar bill known as the age-appropriate design code act, modeled after UK legislation, was blocked in late 2023. A federal judge granted NetChoice a preliminary injunction, citing potential violations of the first amendment, which stopped the law from going into effect.
-
West4 days ago
Battle over Space Command HQ location heats up as lawmakers press new Air Force secretary
-
Alaska1 week ago
Interior Plans to Rescind Drilling Ban in Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve
-
Education1 week ago
Video: Inside Trump’s Attack on Harvard
-
Politics1 week ago
California beach ‘Resist!’ protest pushes ‘kindness’ while calling to ‘86 47’ in anti-Trump message
-
Technology1 week ago
Microsoft will finally stop bugging Windows users about Edge — but only in Europe
-
World1 week ago
Two suspected Ugandan rebels killed in Kampala explosion
-
Politics1 week ago
Red state tops annual Heritage Foundation scorecard for strongest election integrity: 'Hard to cheat'
-
World1 week ago
South Korea’s presidential election aims to restore democratic credentials