Colorado
Police in Colorado scout vehicles with too dark window tint, issue citations
Boulder police officers are running into a major problem- drivers having their window tint too dark in their vehicles. To fix this issue, the department is increasing patrols to spot these vehicles and even fine drivers.
Boulder Police Officer Steve Coon tells CBS News Colorado First Alert Traffic Tracker Reporter Brian Sherrod if they can’t see inside your vehicle, they can pull you over right away. If officers can’t see your silhouette, your window tint is way too dark.
According to Colorado’s Motor Vehicle Window Tint Law, HB19-1067, motor vehicles registered in Colorado have to transmit at least 70% of light through the windshield and 27% of light through other windows. The bill requires motor vehicles registered outside Colorado but operated in Colorado to transmit at least 20% of light through windows other than the windshield. Boulder police told CBS Colorado the top strip on the front windshield can be tinted but nothing lower than four inches from the top.
Boulder Police officers test the windows with a tint meter and a calibration strip. The tint on your windows can be no more or less than 2% of the 27% or 70% law requirement. The machine reads the numbers after being placed on the windows.
Coon told CBS Colorado that with the upcoming Hands-Free Law that goes into effect next month and for their safety, the tint needs to be lighter.
“The danger for police officers is we can’t see out of the vehicle,” Coon said. “A lot of times, I try to focus on the tint that is so dark you can’t see in it at all. I can’t see a silhouette of who’s driving so that’s dangerous for me because I don’t know what’s in the car or what’s going on in the car when I walk up to the car.”
Coon said there are no programs right now that will pay to have your window tint lighter. Drivers will have to visit a tint repair shop to get it completed.
In Colorado, if you are pulled over, this is a misdemeanor traffic offense, with a fine between $500 to $5,000.
Colorado
Colorado Parks and Wildlife asks for public comment on possible commercial fur ban
Colorado Parks and Wildlife will consider a potential ban on the commercial sale of furbearers at its July commission meeting.
The idea for a ban on the commercial sale, barter or trade of furs from furbearer species — a classification that includes 17 wildlife species like foxes, beavers, coyotes, bobcats and other mesocarnivores — came from a citizen petition brought to Parks and Wildlife last year by a Colorado representative of the Center of Biological Diversity.
The commission approved the petition in March, against the recommendation of Parks and Wildlife staff, initiating a formal rulemaking process on the proposed ban.
Now, Parks and Wildlife is seeking public input on the proposal to inform staff’s development of an issue paper that will be presented to the commission during its July 16-17 meetings. The agency will be accepting input from the public through May 3 on EngageCPW.org.
The proposed ban — and agency’s overall management of these 17 species — has been a topic of much debate at commission meetings for many months.
In Colorado, furbearers can be hunted with the purchase of a $10 permit available to individuals who purchase a small game license. In its 2024-25 fiscal year, the agency sold 19,620 furbearer permits. While there are currently no limits on the number that a furbearer permit-holder can kill of these species, the agency has had initial discussions about potentially imposing a daily limit.
Samantha Miller, a Grand Lake resident and the senior carnivore campaigner for the Center for Biological Diversity who submitted the petition, has referred to the ban of commercial sale for furbearer furs as a “common sense change” and “low bar” that aligns furbearers with how Colorado manages other wildlife species. Miller and other supporters of the ban argue that allowing the commercial sale of furs incentivizes overharvesting of the animals and threatens overall biodiversity.
In her recommendation to the commission, Laura Clellan, the newly appointed Parks and Wildlife director, wrote that the agency’s main rationale for denying the ban on commercial fur sales is that the petition “lacks solid evidence that commercial fur sales drive harvest levels in Colorado.”
Opponents of the petition supported the agency’s stance and have argued that the state’s current furbearer management works and is backed by science. Many claim that the proposed commercial ban represents a greater attack on hunting and trapping, which represents an important tradition in Colorado and supports conservation.
Colorado
Fire crews knock down wildfire that prompted evacuations in northern Colorado
Fire crews are extinguishing hot spots on a wildfire in northern Colorado that prompted evacuations early Wednesday for people living near Carter Lake in Larimer County.
The Cougar Run fire was estimated at about 3 1/2 acres at about 8:30 a.m., down from an earlier estimate of 10 acres, according to the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office. The cause for the fire, which is burning on state land, remains unknown.
The mandatory evacuation remained in effect as crews continue to work but were lifted at about 10:30 a.m., the sheriff’s office said.
Voluntary evacuations were also being urged for residents in the area of Blue Mountain and Spring Valley, west of Carter Lake, the agency said.
Crews from the sheriff’s office, the state’s fire division and Berthoud and Loveland fire departments are on scene, the sheriff’s office said. A helicopter was ordered.
Fire restrictions are in effect for areas below 9,000 feet in unincorporated parts of Larimer County, barring uncontained open fires and smoking in open areas, such as trails and open spaces.
“Elevated to critical fire weather” is expected across the lower Front Range foothills and Interstate 25 corridor Wednesday due to warm, dry and breezy conditions, according to the National Weather Service. Moisture is expected to lower fire risk starting Thursday and through the weekend, with daily chances of showers and thunderstorms, the service said.
A separate fire that sparked northwest of Boulder grew to about 2 acres before crews stopped its progress earlier Wednesday. An evacuation warning was issued for the Goat Trail fire just before 4 a.m.
Colorado
Denver Silent Film Festival highlights upcoming feature film
Denver Film is hosting its Silent Film Festival beginning Friday, including eight feature films and 11 shorts with live musical accompaniment.
Howie Movshovitz, Programmer for the Denver Silent Film Festival, joined CBS Colorado in the studio on Tuesday to highlight the film “Queen Kelly” and share what festivalgoers have to look forward to.
In the film “Queen Kelly”, produced in 1928-1929, a convent girl is abducted and seduced by a prince betrothed to a mad queen, an event that drastically changes the course of her life.
“People talk about ‘Queen Kelly’ as a restoration, but it isn’t because it was never finished. In 1928, Gloria Swanson got together with her producer/lover Joseph Kennedy, father of JFK, and they got together with Eric von Stroheim, a celebrity director, and they went to make Queen Kelly. And about halfway into it, Gloria Swanson fired him,” Movshovitz said.
He said that it’s unlikely the three of them would have been able to get along. Although the film was incomplete, he says there have been many attempts to restore it.
“A man named Dennis Doros and his partner/wife, Amy Heller, at Milestone Films did a reconstruction of it, and then a reconstruction of it. It’s been done a number of times, and this is the most recent,” Movshovitz explained. “They work from script. They work from outtakes, the visual quality of what von Stroheim shot, he was a genius, is fabulous. But it’s, of course, an imaginative response to a 1929 movie.”
Movshovitz says the love of silent films is not just about nostalgia.
“There are many films that are utterly brilliant, utterly fabulous, and still work perfectly well today,” he said. “So, it’s a kind of film that people don’t look at very much, but it doesn’t need sympathy, it doesn’t need nostalgia. It needs people to understand that, just as we read old books and don’t think of them as old books, silent film has its own majesty.”
Watching silent films with musical accompaniment makes the experience unique, said Movshovitz, adding that the festival has a skilled group of musicians performing.
The Denver Silent Film Festival runs from April 10-12 at the Sie Film Center in Denver. Click here to learn more about the featured films and to purchase tickets.
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