Colorado
Drought Conditions Continue To Weaken Colorado Forests That Are Fighting Insects, Disease

State Service Champions Group Togetherness Throughout Little one Abuse Prevention MonthApril is Nationwide Little one Abuse Prevention Month, and state service CO4Kids desires to assist us all assist households to forestall abuse.

Drought Circumstances Proceed To Weaken Colorado Forests That Are Combating Bugs, IllnessState and federal forestry specialists emphasised the weakening of timber resulting from drought circumstances whereas presenting their newest observations made throughout an aerial survey of Colorado and Wyoming forests final 12 months.

#DuckPondFire Estimated To Be 88 Acres, 60% ContainedEvacuations have been lifted at 6 p.m. on Sunday, officers inform CBS4. Officers do not consider any buildings have been misplaced.

Public City Corridor Will Tackle Points Regarding Aurora Police DivisionThis week, a gathering will likely be held to deal with a number of the reported points with Aurora Police Division.
Final 12 months, Colorado’s lawyer common discovered a sample of issues with the division, together with racially biased policing and extreme pressure.

Digital TV Newscast 04-18-22CBS4 is Protecting Colorado First.

Sunny And A lot Calmer At presentWatch Meteorologist Ashton Altieri’s forecast.

First Alert Climate Go to With Weber ElementaryMeteorologist Dave Aguilera fires up his “Twister Machine” at Weber Elementary in Arvada

Much less Wind Monday With A Fast Comeback TuesdayWatch Dave Aguilera’s Forecast

Denver Firm Explores 4-Day Work WeekA Denver-based firm experimented with 4-day work weeks and located much less office stress and burnout.

Fort Collins To Enact Plastic Bag PaymentMassive grocery shops in Fort Collins will now not provide plastic baggage without spending a dime.

Pastor Who Misplaced Residence Appears To Scripture For Energy On Easter: ‘That is The Hope We Want Proper Now’Congregants of a Louisville, Colorado church touched by the Marshall Hearth search for hope Easter Sunday.

37E Hearth: Sheriff’s Workplace Declares Full ContainmentThe 37E Hearth in Larimer County is now totally contained as of 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, two days after it began.

#DuckPondFire Estimated To Be 88 Acres & 60% ContainedNew data on Sunday from Eagle County emergency officers states the Duck Pond Hearth is estimated to be 88 acres and 60% contained.

CPW Celebrates a hundred and twenty fifth BirthdayCPW on Faucet helps mark the state company’s a hundred and twenty fifth anniversary.

Man Killed In Severe Easter Sunday Crash In DenverDenver police say one man died in a crash at 14th Avenue and Syracuse Road on Sunday afternoon.

Home Violence Suspect Shot By Lafayette Police Late Saturday EveningLafayette Police positioned one in all their officers on administrative go away following a capturing late Saturday evening.

#DuckPondFire Estimated To Be 88 Acres & 60% ContainedNew data on Sunday from Eagle County emergency officers states the Duck Pond Hearth is estimated to be 88 acres and 60% contained.

Easter Sunday Service At Purple Rocks Resumes After 2 YearsThe favored dawn Easter Sunday service at Purple Rocks Amphitheater resumed after the coronavirus pandemic canceled the occasion the final two years.

Home Violence Suspect Shot By Lafayette Police Late Saturday EveningLafayette Police positioned one in all their officers on administrative leaved following a capturing late Saturday evening.

#DuckPondFire Estimated To Be 100 Acres; Some Evacuation Stay In PlaceNew data on Sunday from Eagle County emergency officers states the Duck Pond Hearth is estimated to be 100 acres and 20% contained.

Denver’s Chinese language Group Receives Apology For Riot 140 In the pastA proper apology the Denver Chinese language neighborhood has been ready on for greater than 140 years.

Ryan Lee Martin Charged With Inflicting A number of Arson FiresJefferson County authorities arrested a 33-year-old Golden man Friday afternoon and jailed him on eight expenses associated to a number of arson fires within the space.

37E Hearth: Higher Aerial Mapping Exhibits 114 Acres Burned, 75% ContainedNecessary evacuations have been lifted as of Saturday at 4:30 p.m. for the 37E Hearth burning in Larimer County, north of Lyons. Fortuitously, air surveillance resulted in a greater concept of the scale of the hearth.

Duck Pond Hearth Close to Glenwood Canyon Nonetheless Burning, Interstate 70 Is Re-OpenedFirefighters in Eagle County are dashing to a brand new fireplace between Glenwood Canyon and Gypsum.

Colorado
‘Incredibly special moment’: Colorado Springs firefighters help deliver baby

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KKTV) – It’s a girl!
Colorado Springs firefighters helped deliver a baby on the southwest side of the city on Wednesday afternoon, according to the Colorado Springs Fire Department.
CSFD shared the sweet moment in a post to social media about an hour after baby girl’s arrival. Officials said crews were dispatched to an “imminent delivery” in the Cheyenne Mountain area Wednesday afternoon, and Engine 4 crews and AMR both worked to help mom deliver the baby at around 2:20 p.m.
“We are thrilled we got to be there for the incredibly special moment,” the post reads. “It’s not every day we get to deliver a baby!”
CSFD said mom and baby are both doing great!
According to CSFD, last year, the department delivered 44 babies.
Copyright 2025 KKTV. All rights reserved.
Colorado
Castle Rock approves controversial Pine Canyon development, annexes Colorado land into town

Hundreds of homes will be coming to Castle Rock as part of a controversial development called Pine Canyon Ranch. Up until now, the proposed Pine Canyon development was in unincorporated Douglas County but was surrounded by the town of Castle Rock. For decades, it has been a cattle ranch belonging to the Scott and now Walker family.
CBS
The land is located on both the east and west sides of Interstate 25. To the east, it is north of Scott Boulevard, south of Black Feather Trail, west of Founders Parkway and east of Front Street. West of I-25, the property is east of Prairie Hawk Drive, south of Highway 85 and bisected by Liggett Road.
At a Tuesday night meeting, the Castle Rock Town Council voted to annex the land into the town of Castle Rock and approve its development plan and zoning.
This has been a controversial development, with neighbors saying they worry about its impact on traffic and town resources. But the public was notably absent from Tuesday night’s meeting, as originally there was no public comment scheduled.
CBS
After the vote, landowner Kurt Walker spoke to CBS Colorado on camera for the first time.
“What’s the next step for you guys now?” CBS Colorado’s Olivia Young asked Kurt Walker, Pine Canyon project manager and sixth-generation landowner.
“Take a breath!” Walker replied.
It’s the yes Walker and his family have been waiting 20 years for.
“It’s been a very, very long lead-up, multiple decades. We’re excited and relieved to have this chapter closed,” Walker said.
Most recently, Walker sought approval for the development through Douglas County, which drew outcry from neighbors and the town of Castle Rock itself, citing concerns that the development would develop solely off nonrenewable groundwater and would tax town resources without supporting them.
Ultimately, county commissioners directed the applicant to meet with the town of Castle Rock, and after months of moving through the town’s process, the land Walker’s family has ranched for the last 150 years will soon be officially a part of Castle Rock. It has also been greenlit for development.
“As of today, we get to be part of the fabric of the town itself and we are darn excited about integrating into the town,” Walker said.
The proposed Pine Canyon Ranch will include 800 single-family homes, 1,000 multifamily homes, open space and commercial space, which could include a hotel and spa. Many community members have said it’s too much.
“I’m worried about the traffic on Founders,” said Laura Cavey, Castle Rock mayor pro tem. “I would love to see a little less density and some real focus on the traffic.”
“Nobody wants a hotel there. Everybody I talk to thinks it’s a bad idea,” said Castle Rock Town Councilmember Mark Davis.
Echoing those concerns, three town councilors voted against the development plan.
“I cannot vote yes,” said Castle Rock Town Councilmember Tim Deitz. “We have one shot to do this right. Basically, I don’t like the fact that we would piece-meal it.”
CBS
But with four councilmembers voting yes, the development plan and zoning regulations passed. The annexation passed unanimously, and a final motion to approve annexation, a vested property rights agreement, and vesting site development plans passed 6-1. The only no vote was Councilmember Deitz, who said at times he felt the town was being “held hostage” in this process.
“They’re giving us all of our groundwater and we’ll be able to keep our sanitation process safe going forward,” said Kevin Bracken, Castle Rock town councilmember.
Bracken voted yes on the development plan, saying he was not willing to risk having the development move through the county. He and other councilmembers said it would be a “bait and switch” to reject the proposal now.
“We’ve worked really hard and done our due diligence to make sure it’s done in the town of Castle Rock,” said Jason Gray, Castle Rock mayor. “There are some things we don’t love about this. At the same time, we do love that it’s in the town of Castle Rock and not the county.”
Walker, pledging to listen to those concerns, as development begins: “We very much appreciate those comments and we look forward to working to do exactly what was said, which was work together to find the solution that works for the entire community,” Walker said.
While the project has been greenlit, the approval won’t be formally official for 30 days. A town spokesperson said:
“The annexation and zoning for Pine Canyon was approved by Town Council. There is a 30-day referendum period that starts now. Following that, the applicant will provide all of their signed mylars and agreements to the town for recording. Every project is different on when final documents are signed and submitted to the town. This typically ranges from one to six months from when the annexation and zoning was approved. The annexation and zoning are effective once all final documents are signed and recorded with the Douglas County Clerk and Recorder’s Office.”
This approval is just the first step of a long development process. Next, site development plans will be submitted for approval. The developers say they will look at doing an updated traffic study as part of this process.
Colorado
Gov. Jared Polis signs bill to increase number of young people Colorado can hold in pre-trial detention

Gov. Jared Polis on Monday signed a bill into law that will increase the number of young people Colorado can hold in pre-trial detention facilities.
Current law allows the state to detain up to 215 teens at any one time. House Bill 1146 increases that number to 254 in the next fiscal year.
In subsequent years, a formula will determine the maximum bed count, based on the average daily population. The bill also removes the most serious type of felony charges from counting toward the cap, and creates 39 emergency beds that wouldn’t count toward the total bed cap.
The Colorado District Attorneys’ Council spearheaded the bipartisan bill, sponsored by Reps. Shannon Bird, D-Westminster, and Dan Woog, R-Frederick, and Sens. Barbara Kirkmeyer, R-Brighton, and Judy Amabile, D-Boulder.
The DA group originally wanted to bump the number of detained youth up to 324, a hike that received forceful pushback from juvenile justice advocates.
Prosecutors argued the state doesn’t have enough beds to house violent youth offenders awaiting trial.
Since fiscal year 2021, detained youth admissions with violent charges have increased by 49%, and admissions for homicide or manslaughter have risen by 80%, state figures show. As a result, prosecutors say, authorities have been forced to release teens who might otherwise be deemed a danger to the public to free up spots for someone else.
Critics countered that the lack of safety in these facilities — highlighted by The Denver Post in March — proves the state should not be dramatically increasing the bed count.
The legislation also includes a body-worn camera pilot program for juvenile detention and commitment staff. The test program in one youth detention facility and one commitment facility requires every staff member who is responsible for the direct supervision of youth to wear a body camera while interacting with them.
The program will be implemented from January 2026 through December 2028. The Colorado Department of Human Services will then recommend whether to continue and expand the program, or eliminate it.
The body-camera addition comes after a Post investigation found widespread allegations of excessive force by staff in the state’s 14 juvenile detention facilities. A year’s worth of internal incident reports reviewed by The Post showed teens suffered broken bones, sustained concussions and overdosed on drugs in these secure centers.
Colorado’s child protection ombudsman, tasked with investigating child safety concerns, has been calling since last year for the state to add body-worn cameras for staff in juvenile detention. Currently, facilities are equipped with video but no audio, making it impossible for investigators to determine whether verbal altercations contributed to excessive force or restraint incidents.
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