Colorado
Patriots Urged to Make Blockbuster Trade for Colorado Star
The New England Patriots currently hold the No. 4 overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft. With that pick, they should be able to find a key impact player. However, losing out on the No. 1 pick by winning the final game of the season was a tough break.
Looking ahead to the draft, there is one player that most fans want above any other. Colorado Buffaloes star and Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter is the player that many would like to see join the Patriots.
Drake Maye needs a legitimate No. 1 playmaker at wide receiver this offseason. Hunter would be that guy.
Unfortunately, there is a good chance that Hunter could end up being drafted before New England is on the clock at No. 4 overall.
With that in mind, Michael DeVito of Musket Fire has suggested that the Patriots could consider trying to trade up from No. 4 in order to land him.
“The argument is that Mike Vrabel should do whatever it takes to bring Travis Hunter, a generational talent, to Foxborough,” DeVito wrote. “Trade 2025 picks, 2026 picks, and players in the optimum combination you can to Tennessee to get the job done. You win with top players. Travis Hunter is the best player in the 2025 NFL draft. Make the deal.”
Making a strong move for Hunter does make sense. Tee Higgins is no longer expected to hit free agency, which takes the main target for New England at wide receiver off the board.
Pivoting to pursuing Hunter would be the kind of move that could take Maye and the offense to the next level.
During the 2024 season with Colorado, Hunter racked up 96 catches for 1,258 yards and 15 touchdowns offensively. He also had a big year as a cornerback, totaling 35 tackles, a forced fumble, four interceptions, and 11 defended passes.
All of that being said, this will be a scenario to keep an eye on. Hunter to the Patriots would be an ideal fit for both parties and should be something New England tries to get done.
Make sure you bookmark New England Patriots on SI for the latest news, exclusive interviews, film breakdowns and so much more!
Colorado
Colorado mountain pine beetle task force getting to work as another outbreak looms
Members of Colorado’s task force on the Front Range pine beetle infestation met at Chief Hosa Lodge on Wednesday morning amid worries about the expected wide-ranging damage that hangs over hundreds of thousands of acres of Colorado forests.
“This is a wicked problem,” said John Sanderson, director of the Center for Collaborative Conservation.
He outlined some of the goals for local and state leaders: “Who’s going to do what by when?”
Colorado has about 4.2 million acres of pine forest. Approximately 3.4 million acres were affected by the last pine beetle outbreak, which began in the 1990s and faded in 2013. That was primarily in lodgepole pine.
There are 800,000 acres along the Front Range at risk this time, said the Colorado Forest Service’s state entomologist, Dan West. And this time, the pine beetle is showing up in ponderosa pine.
“If you were along the Front Range in 2013, we had the 100-year rain event, or the huge rain event, along the Front Range. And that kind of stopped the beetle in its tracks and allowed these trees to be able to draw up enough resources and start to defend themselves,” said West.
That’s not the case this time, he explained. Climate change has led to warmer temperatures, and Colorado experienced a warm, dry winter.
“Given the alignment with the precipitation, temperature, everything we’re sitting at right now, we will for sure see an increase in intensity and the footprint of the mountain pine beetle moving forward,” he explained.
While the acreage at risk may seem smaller, there is potential for very costly damage from the current outbreak. Forests along the Front Range have faced firefighting efforts for 100 years or more, but the affected area may be at greater risk, experts say.
“We’ve got property, life, egress, all the utilities, everything we’ve got along the Front Range that we’ve been protecting. But most of the ponderosa pine in these lower elevation forests are really at-risk because they’ve been there with not much disturbance, and of course, the lack of fire, which creates the mosaic of species and age diversity. And so what we’ve really seen is this kind of ever-increasing larger fuel load and or trees that are along the Front Range, so that’s in large part why I’m more worried about this one than I was in the past,” said West.
“There’s a couple real bad infestations, one along I-70. There’s more in Pine and Conifer and a little bit in between,” explained Brad Huddleston, owner and certified arborist with Splintered Forest Tree Service of Evergreen. On Wednesday, they were working to protect trees in the Ruby Ranch area.
Injecting pesticide into trees helps it uptake into the tree’s vascular system, which can save some trees and protect them longer than an external application, Huddleston explained. He pointed out a goopy pitch on the tree’s exterior as evidence of an attempted invasion. When a tree is stronger, he says it will be better able to resist the infestation. A tree with only a few visible pitch tubes still has a chance to survive.
“That’s what the grant program is trying to address, is trying to get the currently infested trees,” he explained.
That program in Jefferson County is the Mountain Pine Beetle Landowner Assistance Program. It started only a month ago, with $500,000 set aside for homeowners who contract work to fight the pine beetle. Homeowners can apply for reimbursement of 50% of the cost of contracted mitigation services, with priority going to properties of less than 40 acres.
After one month, the program is already planning to pay out $183,000 of that money after receiving 47 applications.
Evergreen resident Scott Porter has been doing work himself after pine beetles wiped out dozens of trees on his property.
“We started having trees die this summer,” he said. “When a tree died, we’d cut it down, and we probably felled close to about 70 trees.”
He bought pheromone packs and a tree injection system for pesticides.
“We have ten acres, and I’ve probably treated over a hundred trees that have not yet been killed by the beetles,” said Porter.
There could be some rough years ahead. Porter said he hopes he’s winning the battle.
Colorado
Did you spot the ‘Doomsday’ and ‘Electronic Attack’ aircraft circling Colorado Springs this week?
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KOAA) — Social media lit up on Monday after two unique military aircraft were spotted flying laps over and around the Colorado Springs area.
The so-called “Doomsday” plane, or the E-4B “Nightwatch,” took off from Omaha and made its way to Colorado Springs airspace, making several loops before returning to Nebraska, according to its flight data from FlightAware.
The large plane is a militarized version of the four-engine Boeing 747-200, so it’s hard to miss in the sky. Its FlightAware path showed it was on a somewhat low altitude between 6,000 to 9,000 feet during its stay in Colroado Springs.
The aircraft is often referred to as the “Doomsday” plane because it helps ensure continuity of government in the event of a national emergency like a nuclear attack.
Of course, with a plane of that notoriety circling the city, some on social media sites questioned why it was in the area. Residents should rest easy as it appeared to be a typical training and operation flight.
Space Base Delta 1 at Peterson Space Force Base referred questions to the Global Strike Operations Center, which operates out of Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana.
“The National Airborne Operations Center has several missions, both operational and training, which require travel to a wide variety of locations, both within the United States and around the world,” said the Global Strike Operations Center in an email. “The E-4B’s visit was part of meeting both the operational and training requirements of the 95th Wing and NAOC mission.”
Around roughly the same time, another noticeable military plane was circling the Colorado Springs area.
The EA-37B took off from the Tuscon area and made its way to central and southern Colorado for laps as well.
This aircraft is known for electronic attacks that disrupt enemy communications.
Neither Space Base Delta 1 nor the Global Strike Operations Center addressed why that plane was in the region at the same time as the E-4B.
If you spotted either aircraft and took photos or video, you can submit them here.
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This southeast Colorado reservoir completely dried out, taking away one of the best recreation spots
All that’s left of the Two Buttes Reservoir is a scattering of lifeless buoys, a rusty lawn chair, empty beer cans, and a number of fishing lures that have fallen into the water over the years.
This southeast Colorado reservoir completely dried out, taking away one of the best recreation spots
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Colorado
Colorado counselors, parents say Supreme Court ruling on conversion therapy ban will have long-lasting effect on youth
Many Coloradans feel the recent Supreme Court case considering whether Colorado’s law addressing conversion therapy violates free speech will have long-lasting effects on the health and well-being of our children, but disagree on what that outcome will be.
On Tuesday, the court ruled in favor of a Colorado counselor who argued that the law banning conversion therapy for minors violates the First Amendment. The ruling reverses a decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, which found that the law regulates professional conduct.
Colorado’s Minor Conversion Therapy Law prohibits mental health professionals from any practice or treatment that attempts to change the child’s sexual orientation or gender identity. Tuesday’s ruling doesn’t overturn that law; it requires lower courts to apply strict scrutiny to its constitutionality.
For Steven Haden, a licensed social worker in Colorado who works with LGBTQ youth, the decision is alarming.
“The decision made today by the U.S. Supreme Court is deeply concerning,” Haden said.
“We are not talking about a difference of opinion here,” he said. “Conversion therapy has been associated with increased risk of depression, anxiety and suicide among young people, particularly for LGBTQ adolescents, who already face disproportionate mental health risk. So this decision removes a layer of protection that existed precisely because of the documented harm.”
Haden, founder of the nonprofit Envision, said Colorado’s ban reflected decades of research and the state’s responsibility to regulate licensed mental‑health professionals in the interest of public safety.
“The First Amendment protects a therapist’s right to hold personal beliefs,” Haden said. “It does not create a license to practice discredited medicine. A provider’s recommended prayer instead of an evidence‑based treatment for a broken arm would face malpractice, plain and simple. So we must hold the same standard across all clinical domains.”
Supporters of the ruling, however, argued that the state went too far by limiting the conversations that families and therapists could have during counseling sessions.
“I just think this is a win for the First Amendment,” said Erin Lee, a Northern Colorado mother. “This is a win for free speech and common sense and people in Colorado not being forced to hold a specific viewpoint in their profession.”
Lee said her family became aware of the law when her daughter, then 12, began feeling distressed about her body and identity.
“And so we as parents were thrown for a loop and took her to a therapist, thinking we need help just to talk to her about this,” Lee said. “She wants to be comfortable in her body, in her natal sex, and we learned the hard way that this law even existed.”
Lee said the therapists they encountered felt constrained by the law’s requirements.
“It prevented licensed counselors from being able to do their job,” she said. “It limited their speech in a way that they can only express one ideological viewpoint instead of addressing reality.”
Lee emphasized that the Supreme Court’s ruling does not require therapists to take a particular approach, but instead allows families greater discretion in determining which type of counseling best fits their needs.
“I think this will have real positive outcomes for Colorado families in that now everyone can take the approach that fits their family best,” she said.
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