Colorado
Colorado weather: Light snow falls overnight in mountains
Light snow will fall Tuesday overnight into Wednesday in Colorado’s mountains, with minimal accumulation expected, according to the National Weather Service.
As of Tuesday morning, expected snow totals from the weather service included:
- Traces of snow in Breckenridge, Castle Rock, Georgetown, Grand Lake and Nederland, with up to 1/2 inch possible.
- 1/2 inch at Eldora, the Keystone Ski Area Summit and Winter Park, with up to 1 inch possible.
- 1/2 inch on Colorado 9’s Hoosier Pass near Breckenridge, U.S. 40’s Rabbit Ears Pass near Steamboat Springs, Interstate 70’s Vail Pass and Colorado 125’s Willow Creek Pass near Granby. Up to 1 inch will be possible.
- 1 inch on U.S. 6’s Loveland Pass, U.S. 34’s Milner Pass in Rocky Mountain National Park and U.S. 40’s Berthoud Pass near Winter Park. Up to 2 inches of snow will be possible.
- 3 inches on Colorado 14’s Cameron Pass near Fort Collins, with up to 4 inches possible.
Snow was already falling early Tuesday morning in parts of Colorado’s mountains, and was forecast to continue through 4 a.m. Wednesday, according to hourly forecasts from the weather service.
In lower-elevation areas expecting snow, the wave of winter weather likely won’t arrive until after 5 p.m. Tuesday, according to the weather service.
No snow is expected to accumulate in the Denver area, but forecasters said up to 1/2 inch of snow will be possible if the storm is stronger than anticipated.
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Colorado
Man found dead in Colorado’s Black Canyon of the Gunnison
Colorado
Driver dies days after head-on collision in Colorado Springs; surviving driver may have been involved in a race, police say
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KKTV) – One person is dead after unwittingly getting in the middle of a car race over the weekend.
Police say the victim was traveling westbound on Briargate Boulevard near Lexington Drive when an eastbound car slammed into them head-on.
“Preliminary information indicated that the eastbound vehicle had been engaged in a speed contest with another vehicle prior to the collision,” the Colorado Springs Police Department wrote in a blotter post on the crash.
Both drivers were taken to the hospital with serious injuries, but at the time they were transported, the injuries were not believed to be life-threatening.
“It was later reported that the driver of the westbound vehicle died as a result of complications related to surgery stemming from the crash,” police said.
CSPD’s Major Crash Team is investigating the head-on collision. Speed is suspected as a factor in the crash.
There’s currently no word on whether the surviving driver will face charges.
Copyright 2026 KKTV. All rights reserved.
Colorado
Biological sex and transgender rights for youth at the center of Colorado ballot measures
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KKTV) – Colorado voters will be asked in November whether or not state laws should change on how youth sports are organized and who is allowed to have certain surgeries in the state.
Protect Kids Colorado (PKC) is an organization that worked to get initiatives 109 and 110 on the ballot. Kevin Lundberg, a republican and former Colorado State Senator and State Representative, serves on the organization’s Board of Directors.
According to it’s website, PKC “is a grassroots, We the People movement to educate, unify, and mobilize … any concerned citizen to protect kids from becoming victims of a dangerous and false ideology.”
Several LGBTQ+ advocates in Colorado oppose the initiatives, including One Colorado. On Instagram, the organization called the measures “dangerous” and “anti-trans.”
Initiative 109 asks voters to make a new state law, requiring students compete on sports teams aligned with their biological sex, starting in kindergarten and lasting through higher education. There would be an exception for females to join male teams if there is no female team available. Schools and athletic associations would have to designate teams as male, female or coeducational.
Initiative 110 seeks to prohibit biological sex-altering surgery on minors. Doctors would not be allowed to provide such procedures, and public insurance companies, including Medicaid reimbursement, would not be allowed to pay for them.
Leaders with Inside Out Youth Services (IOYS), an LGBTQ+ advocacy group based in Colorado Springs, say these measures would harm young people.
“The message that this would send to our young people is that they matter less than their peers,” said Ollie Glessner with IOYS. “It would send the message that they don’t exist, their identities don’t exist and aren’t worth protecting.”
Erin Lee, Executive Director for PKC, says the measures secure protections that previous state legislative proposals have sought to secure but failed.
“These are not right versus left issues, these are just right versus wrong issues. And so we wanted to give the people a way to still put these common sense safeguards in place for children,” Lee said.
Similar proposals are being considered by congress within the SAVE Act.
The election is November 3.
Copyright 2026 KKTV. All rights reserved.
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