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Broncos 2025 in review: Sean Payton opts for change on offense after up-and-down campaign

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Broncos 2025 in review: Sean Payton opts for change on offense after up-and-down campaign


Sean Payton has already made his thoughts on the Broncos’ 2025 offense clear.

His overall discontent showed through days after Denver’s AFC Championship Game loss to New England when Payton fired coordinator Joe Lombardi and receivers coach Keary Colbert. Then he lost senior offensive assistant Pete Carmichael to Buffalo, too.

Payton promoted quarterbacks coach Davis Webb to offensive coordinator and quality control coach Logan Kilgore to quarterbacks coach. It’s a changing of the guard in Payton’s offensive meeting room — but regardless of whether Payton or Webb is the primary play-caller in 2026, it’s still Payton’s offense.

Here’s a look back at the unit’s 2025 performance and an early look at questions going into what is shaping up to be a fascinating offseason.

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Five key offensive numbers

25: Points per game (No. 10 in the NFL)

5.3: Yards per play (T-15 and up slightly from 5.2 in 2024 and 5.0 in 2023)

334: First downs (T-14)

25%: Three-and-out rate (No. 29)

37.8: Percentage of drives ending in an offensive score (No. 20)

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Quarterback Bo Nix (10) of the Denver Broncos fires one downfield during a 34-26 win over the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025, at Empower Field at Mile High Stadium in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

High Point

In terms of the regular season, there’s no more emotional high point offensively than scoring 33 fourth-quarter points in a comeback for the ages. There was no more thorough throttling than pouring 44 points on Dallas the very next week. Still, the real high point of the season for Bo Nix and company was a 34-26 win over Green Bay in mid-December. The Broncos entered as home underdogs, but Nix played perhaps the best game of his career to date. He traded blows with Packers quarterback Jordan Love in the first half, then took over in the second. He completed 23 of 34 passes for 302 yards and four touchdowns and helped bring the Broncos back from a 9-point, third-quarter deficit. It was a magnificent performance and at the time looked like it might provide a blueprint for how Denver could operate efficiently without much in the way of a running game after J.K. Dobbins’ injury a month earlier.

Low Point

Low points are relative during a 14-3 season that featured an 11-game winning streak, but the Broncos offense really did find itself in a funk for the better part of a month in that streak. The epic comeback against the Giants came only after New York shut Denver out for three quarters. The week before that, Denver had 246 yards against the New York Jets in London. After a one-week reprieve against the Cowboys, the Broncos mustered 18 points and 271 yards against a really good Houston defense, but then 10 points and 220 at home in Week 10 against Las Vegas in a 10-7 win. Nix turned the ball over twice. J.K. Dobbins was lost to a Lisfranc injury. Denver scored 20–plus in each of its three regular-season losses. Its three lowest-scoring games came between Weeks 6-10. That’s when it became clear that, for as good as the team results looked, the Broncos’ offense was a mostly middle-of-the-pack outfit and was capable of playing much worse than that.

Broncos quarterback Bo Nix (10) scores a touchdown in the fourth quarter against the New York Giants at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. Denver won 33-32. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
Broncos quarterback Bo Nix (10) scores a touchdown in the fourth quarter against the New York Giants at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025. Denver won 33-32. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

Late-game magic

MVP: QB Bo Nix. There’s a compelling argument to be made for first-team All-Pro Garett Bolles and for RB J.K. Dobbins, both for his 10-game production and his impact in absentia. Nix, though, gets the nod for his play but also for his leadership. He isn’t a perfect player and he’s got a lot of work to do to become a clear top-tier quarterback, but he’s a proven clutch performer and engineered countless big moments over the course of the season. It’s his team and his team was really good in 2025.

Tough Season: TE Evan Engram. It started with a ‘Joker’ meme this spring and high hopes. The end result wasn’t terrible, but it wasn’t exactly what anybody really expected, either. Engram, signed with the idea he might finally give the Broncos a dynamic, matchup-exploiting tight end, instead never quite seemed to find a groove. His numbers still ended up better than what Denver’s got from the position in recent years, but 50 catches for 461 and a touchdown also represent basically the worst production in a full season of his nine-year career.

Under the radar: WR Pat Bryant. Denver was roundly questioned for taking Bryant in the third round of the draft, but quickly showed himself to be a player head coach Sean Payton trusts. Bryant played 29 snaps (16.7%) over the first three games, then averaged 55% for the rest of the season. He was part of the reason Denver traded Devaughn Vele in training camp and then released Trent Sherfied during the season. He finished with 31 catches and 378 yards, more rookie-year production than either Troy Franklin in 2024 or Marvin Mims Jr. in 2023, and is Denver’s best perimeter blocker, too.

Broncos conversion rates — Sean Payton era

Year Third down rate NFL rank Red zone TD rate NFL rank
2023 36.8% 21 51.7% 19
2024 39.6% 13 62.5% 7
2025 41.2% 11 57.9% 13

Run Offense

Five Key Numbers

31.6. Drop in rushing yards per game after J.K. Dobbins was lost for the season to a Lisfranc injury

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3.8. Yards per carry after Dobbins’ injury compared to 5.0 before

3.2. Yards per carry for the Broncos in two postseason games

74%. The Broncos’ run block win rate, according to ESPN (No. 4 in the NFL)

62.9%. Percentage of QB Bo Nix’s runs (non-kneeldown and sneak) that were categorized as scrambles. Down considerably from 81.2% in 2024.

J.K. Dobbins (27) of the Denver Broncos finds space as Will Anderson Jr. (51) of the Houston Texans misses a tackle during the first quarter at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas on Sunday, Nov. 2, 2025. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
J.K. Dobbins (27) of the Denver Broncos finds space as Will Anderson Jr. (51) of the Houston Texans misses a tackle during the first quarter at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas on Sunday, Nov. 2, 2025. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

The Good

For the first half of the season, the Broncos looked like one of the best in the business at rushing the football. They leaned on their big, veteran offensive line and Dobbins’ steady work. The veteran back was signed for just $2 million in June and turned out to be perhaps the most important single player on the unit over the first 10 games. As Denver slugged it out against the lowly Raiders in Week 10, Dobbins was on pace for 1,300-plus yards. Then he sustained a Lisfranc injury on what he believed to be an illegal hip-drop tackle and the going got tough from there. At their best, the Broncos have a highly paid and talented offensive line that can do everything. They can move people at the point, they can get out in space and they can crease runs between the tackles. They identified a couple of willing perimeter blockers, too. The ingredients were there and it showed… for half a season.

The Bad

The rest of the group just didn’t provide much punch once Dobbins was hurt. RJ Harvey racked up 12 touchdowns in his rookie season and the talent is obvious. He’s terrific with the ball in space and he’s got the potential to be a really good back in his career. The down-in and down-out work in his rookie year, though, was inconsistent. He ripped off a 50-yarder in the Broncos’ opener and touchdowns of 40 and 38 against Dallas and Jacksonville, respectively. Those certainly count. Harvey’s other 143 carries averaged 2.9 yards. In all, Dobbins had 21 rushes of 10-plus yards over 153 carries. The other three — Harvey, Jaleel McLaughlin and Tyler Badie — had 13 runs of 10-plus over 191 carries. Denver rushed for less than 100 yards once in its first nine games with Dobbins and then six times, including the postseason in 10 games he didn’t finish or play in.

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The Unknown

There are unknowns across the board. Will Dobbins be back? He’s said he’d like to be, but that will require the sides finding agreement on compensation for a back who is terrific when healthy and also has played more than 10 games once since his rookie year in 2020. How much of a leap can Harvey take in his second season? Will McLaughlin or Badie return or will the Broncos revamp the back part of their room? Just as pertinent, what will the Broncos’ schematic approach look like going forward? Payton nodded to this after the season when he said he’d already been talking with offensive line coach and run game coordinator Zach Strief about the research they had to do this offseason to diagnose a myriad of issues. The Broncos dabbled more in the outside zone world over the past year, but didn’t lean hard into it. Could that change? What influence will Davis Webb’s promotion to offensive coordinator — and potentially into a playcalling role — have?

Broncos RB Production

Player Games Rushing yards Per carry 10-plus runs First downs
J.K. Dobbins 10 772 5 21 37
RJ Harvey 17 540 3.7 8 28
Jaleel McLaughlin 8 187 5.1 5 8
Tyler Badie 16 23 2.9 0 1

Pass Offense

Five Key Numbers

613: Pass attempts in the regular season (No. 4 in the NFL)

0.02: Estimated points added per pass play (T-9)

3.6%: Sack percentage for the Broncos (Lowest in the NFL)

139: Yards after catch over expected (No. 23)

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21.7%: Blitz rate against (Fourth-lowest in the NFL)

Bo Nix (10) of the Denver Broncos rolls out as Garett Bolles (72) blocks Dante Fowler Jr. (13) of the Dallas Cowboys during the first quarter at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver on Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
Bo Nix (10) of the Denver Broncos rolls out as Garett Bolles (72) blocks Dante Fowler Jr. (13) of the Dallas Cowboys during the first quarter at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver on Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

The Good

The Broncos were really, truly elite at exactly one thing offensively this year: Sack avoidance. Between their offensive line, Nix’s mobility and a mandate from Payton on down not to take sacks, Denver did it better than anybody in football. More than propel an offense into the NFL’s upper echelons, though, what the league-low 23 sacks did was mostly help offset too many penalties and too few big plays. Denver was good on third down (10th in the NFL), decent in the red zone (T-13), and pedestrian on a per-drive basis (T-18 in points per drive at 2.05). That’s partially because the Broncos went long swaths without throwing the ball consistently enough. Late in the season, when they strung together long, grinding drives, it happened because of a short passing game and the ability to stay on schedule. One other bright spot: Courtland Sutton checked in with top-15 marks in receiving yards (1,017; No. 13) and touchdowns (7; T-15).



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Denver Catholic community bids farewell to Archbishop Samuel Aquila

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Denver Catholic community bids farewell to Archbishop Samuel Aquila


On Sunday, a special Mass was held to say goodbye to the archbishop of the Archdiocese of Denver, Samuel J. Aquila.

Aquila was appointed as the diocese’s archbishop in 2012 and submitted his resignation last year as he neared his 75th birthday, in accordance with Canon Law. Pope Leo XIV accepted his resignation in February and appointed his successor, Archbishop-designate James R. Golka.

Aquila (left) and Golka (right)

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Dan Petty/DenverCatholic


A Mass of Thanksgiving was held at the Light of the World Catholic Church on Sunday to bid farewell to the man who led the diocese for nearly 14 years and to thank him for his service. Aquila was ordained as a priest in the Archdiocese of Denver in 1976, and this year marks his 50th anniversary as a priest.

As archbishop, Aquila spoke out against abortion and called on officials to find a balance between protecting the United States’ borders and welcoming immigrants.

Aquila says that during his time as archbishop, the diocese has received many blessings and seen significant growth, including an increase in the number of young families.

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Archbishop Aquila at the Mass of Thanksgiving

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“I think that the Lord has blessed this archdiocese tremendously, especially since World Youth Day in 1993; things really began to change here. Many new apostolates were born from the visit of Pope John Paul II, of Saint John Paul II. And there is a very deep awareness of how God providentially watches over this archdiocese,” said Aquila. “And so, I am handing off a very blessed archdiocese with many young families and many people who are deeply committed to the gospel.”

He shared a feeling of gratitude and joy for the opportunity to serve the diocese, knowing the faithful, and leading people to Christ. Aquila hopes that his community has found a deeper love of Christ and the sacraments through his service and an understanding of the importance of being missionary disciples.

“Of being those who go out themselves and invite others to encounter Christ and to come to know Jesus Christ. And proclaiming the, what we call the ‘kerygma,’ the basic good news of the gospel, or the joy of the gospel. That in Jesus Christ sin and death have been conquered, and He is the one that is the way to the Father,” Aquila said.

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Archbishop Aquila

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He said he hopes the diocese continues to grow in faith and that he believes Golka will be a good shepherd of that faith.

“The blessing is that my successor is an incredibly good man whose heart is on fire for Jesus Christ,” he shared. “And so, it’s like running a race and handing off the baton and saying, ‘Okay, you run with it.’ And knowing that Archbishop-designate Golka, who will be Archbishop Golka on Wednesday, that he will be one who continues caring for the gospel and making disciples for Christ.”

Golka’s installation as the new archbishop will begin with evening prayers at the CoBank Arena at the National Western Complex on March 24, followed by an Installation Mass the next day. A Mass of Taking Possession of the Cathedral will take place on March 26 at the Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception.

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Colorado is proposing major changes to autism therapy — and families are worried

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Colorado is proposing major changes to autism therapy — and families are worried


Sabrina Ortengren had almost no hope when she and her husband Jay sat down with an autism therapy provider in Evergreen in 2022.

All of the specialized schools in their home state of Virginia had deemed their son Ethan’s needs too severe to manage. The family had made the three-day journey west based on reports that autism services in Colorado would be better, but in the upheaval of a move, Ethan had gotten worse and thrown his father into a wall.

After a week in Children’s Hospital Colorado, he was doing better, but she couldn’t imagine anyone would want to work with a 14-year-old with the build of a lineman and a history of aggression.

“We were telling them every awful thing we could think of, so they’d know upfront,” she said.

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Rebecca Urbano Powell, who owns Seven Dimensions Behavioral Health, could tell Ethan was going to be a challenging student, but she was confident he could make progress with applied behavior analysis, a therapy focused on breaking down tasks and using repetition to help people with autism learn to function more independently. The technicians working with him had to wear pads at times during the first year to limit injuries when he lashed out, but then, something began to shift.

Ethan Ortengren, 18, who has autism, takes a break from assembling a Lego set during therapy at Seven Dimensions Behavioral Health in Evergreen, Colorado, on March 16, 2026. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

Ethan began learning to express himself through a combination of short spoken phrases and pointing to icons on a tablet. He developed enough self-regulation that his parents felt safe taking him to restaurants and stores, confident that he wouldn’t bolt into traffic or hurt someone. He started to develop passions, such as building with Legos, riding over “bumpity bump” mountain passes and listening to 1980s hair bands, Jay Ortengren said.

His therapy “changed how our family is able to live,” Sabrina Ortengren said. “It gave him a life, and us with him.”

But the Ortengrens worry that Ethan and others like him in Colorado may not be able to get applied behavior analysis — known as ABA therapy — as easily in the future. The state agency that funds Medicaid is asking lawmakers to lower the rate paid to providers to help balance the budget and to allow more chances to review payments. The department is also seeking a new requirement that behavioral technicians doing most of the front-line therapy get certified, following a federal audit that flagged most bills for the service as questionable.

Kim Bimestefer, executive director of the Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing, said the state has to make changes if Medicaid is going to continue paying for ABA therapy. Colorado’s payments to providers quintupled in six years, reaching $287 million in the fiscal year that ended in June.

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Practices owned by private-equity firms that were “exploiting” the lack of standards for autism care accounted for a significant share of that increase, she said.

“Ultimately, evidence-based guidelines and best-practices assessments — which exist in most every other area of care — would enable Medicaid programs and commercial carriers to drive the right care, at the right price, in the right setting, for the right patient outcome for autistic children, thereby curbing the current outrageous, profit-driven provider behaviors,” Bimestefer said in a statement.

Colorado is facing a budget deficit as high as $1.5 billion, making Medicaid cuts almost inevitable, because the program accounts for about one-third of the state’s spending. In the current year, the Department of Health Care Policy and Financing’s budget, the vast majority of which goes to Medicaid, reached $18 billion, including about $10 billion in federal funds.

In addition, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the Inspector General found Colorado may have overpaid ABA providers by about $78 million in 2022 and 2023, based on a sample of claims it reviewed. The OIG report recommended the state repay almost $43 million to the federal government, though Colorado is contesting the way it calculated that number.

Sayeena Normanleier, a registered behavior technician (RBT), left, and Dezart Stover, a behavior technician (BT), right, help Ethan Ortengren, 18, who has autism, assemble a Lego set during therapy at Seven Dimensions Behavioral Health in Evergreen, Colorado, on March 16, 2026. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Sayeena Normanleier, a registered behavior technician, left, and Dezart Stover, a behavior technician, right, help Ethan Ortengren, 18, assemble a Lego set during autism therapy at Seven Dimensions Behavioral Health in Evergreen, Colorado, on March 16, 2026. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

Two sides pointing fingers

The Department of Health Care Policy and Financing and therapy providers have dramatically different takes on the OIG’s findings.

Colorado officials say autism therapy providers, especially those owned by private-equity investors, saw an opportunity to make money in a new field without much federal guidance. Providers say the state failed to provide clear guidance about how they should document their work and is punishing them for its mistakes.

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The OIG focuses on whether payments followed Medicaid’s rules and can’t determine if anyone attempted to defraud the program, said assistant regional inspector general Kim Kennedy.

In about one-third of the sample of bills the OIG examined, enough evidence existed to conclude the state shouldn’t have paid because the bills didn’t have the right documentation, the provider didn’t have the necessary credentials, or the child didn’t have a relevant diagnosis recorded. In the remainder, the documentation was too poor to say one way or the other.

Without sufficient records, states have no way of knowing whether providers just didn’t document the high-quality sessions they offered, or if Medicaid has paid for little more than babysitting, Kennedy said.

“You could not tell what’s a good provider, a bad provider or a fraudulent provider from the documentation,” she said. “It’s not just a payment issue. It’s a quality of care issue.”

The OIG found similar problems in Maine, Wisconsin and Indiana, and is working on audits of three additional states, which haven’t been publicly identified. Medicaid has only consistently covered ABA therapy since about 2015, and states may still be learning how to make sure providers are following rules and giving necessary care, Kennedy said.

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Urbano Powell, who is president of the Colorado Association for Behavior Analysis, said the Department of Health Care Policy and Financing has itself to blame for the findings, because it didn’t provide clear information about how to document sessions with clients, told providers to use the wrong billing codes for services, and continued to pay claims now flagged as problematic.

The state is sending a message with the cuts that it doesn’t value people with developmental disabilities, she said.

“Budgets are important, but I think humans are more important,” Urbano Powell said.

Bimestefer countered that some providers have pushed families toward more hours than necessary to maximize their payments. Those providers also billed for time that clearly wasn’t eligible, such as when children took play breaks or naps, she said.

Ethan Ortengren, 18, who has autism, right, places his hand on his father Jay Ortengren's hand after his father arrives for a visit during Ethan's school day at Seven Dimensions Behavioral Health in Evergreen, Colorado, on March 16, 2026. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Ethan Ortengren, 18, who has autism, right, places his hand on his father Jay Ortengren’s hand after his father arrives for a visit during Ethan’s school day at Seven Dimensions Behavioral Health in Evergreen, Colorado, on March 16, 2026. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

All medical specialties have rules for filling out their notes, and ABA providers shouldn’t need the state to tell them that copying and pasting the same summary for each session, as the inspectors found in some cases, wasn’t good enough, Bimestefer said.

“The industry has to evolve,” she said. “In the meantime, we have to hold bad actors accountable.”

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Nationwide, Medicaid payments for autism behavioral therapies increased from about $660 million in 2019 to $2.2 billion in 2023, and the number of companies offering the services roughly doubled.

In some cases, states reimbursed providers hundreds of dollars for an hour of therapy, even though the workers providing it had little education beyond high school, according to The Wall Street Journal. The average rate was $61. Indiana was particularly prone to high spending because it reimbursed providers 40% of whatever they billed, rather than setting an hourly rate for therapy.

Certification and reviewing payments

Two of Colorado’s proposals, increasing payment reviews and requiring behavior technicians to get certified, appear targeted at problems the OIG report found. The state pays board-certified behavior analysts to assess children, develop care plans and supervise the technicians doing much of the hands-on work with clients.

Currently, Colorado doesn’t require specific credentials for behavior technicians.

In December, the department asked the state Medical Services Board to pass an emergency rule requiring the roughly 2,000 technicians without credentials to complete a certification. About 6,600 technicians had already completed the process, which includes about 40 hours of coursework, on-the-job training and a test. The board ultimately didn’t pass the rule, but the department plans to try again this year.

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The credentialing is one part of a rule to create regulations specific to ABA, said Adela Flores-Brennan, Medicaid director at the Department of Health Care Policy and Financing. Right now, providers operate under the rules for services to screen and treat young children, she said.

“It’s mostly about who can provide the services, what services can be billed,” she said of the proposed regulations.

Most providers support requiring technicians to get certified, but they need a grace period so that new hires can complete their training while they work, said Will Martin, a board-certified behavior analyst at Soar Autism Services, which has 15 locations in the Denver area and one in Colorado Springs.

The certification requirement would have little impact on the state’s budget. Legislative staff estimated that increasing reviews before and after payments to ABA providers go out could save about $10 million in the coming fiscal year, though.

Unlike prior authorization, which happens before the patient gets a service, pre-payment review occurs after the service but before reimbursement, while post-payment review could force providers to pay Medicaid back. Pre-payment reviews would likely be the bigger problem, because they could mean providers wait as long as six months for reimbursement on services they already provided, Martin said.

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Medicaid currently does pre-reviews of payments for non-emergency medical transportation because of fraud in that field, and the pauses for review are typically less than three months, Flores-Brennan said. Post-payment review takes longer because the state has to dive into medical records, she said.

Legislative staff also said the state general fund could save about $2.7 million in the coming year by lowering Medicaid’s rate from 100% of the average paid by comparable states to 95%. The state would pay about 47 cents less for time spent assessing a child and $8.49 less for ABA therapy delivered in a group.

Colorado had raised that rate in 2023 because nine providers had left the state, and lawmakers were worried about access, Martin said. Lowering it risks creating the same problem again, he said.

Ethan Ortengren, 18, who has autism, left, and Dezart Stover, a behavior technician (BT), walk down a hallway at Seven Dimensions Behavioral Health as they head outside for exercise in Evergreen, Colorado, on March 16, 2026. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Ethan Ortengren, 18, who has autism, left, and Dezart Stover, a behavior technician, walk down a hallway at Seven Dimensions Behavioral Health as they head outside for exercise in Evergreen, Colorado, on March 16, 2026. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

‘Fearful for what’s going ot happen’

Urbano Powell said she already had to stop taking new clients covered by Medicaid because the $80 per hour rate doesn’t cover her costs, especially since she can’t bill for time supervising technicians or working with parents, which takes up about half of her day.

School districts pay for the therapy that full-time clients such as Ethan receive during classroom hours, but Medicaid or private insurance pays for any services outside that time, she said.

“I can barely support myself and my husband at this point,” she said. “I really am fearful for what’s going to happen to our Medicaid families in Colorado.”

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When Colorado raised its rates in 2023, the group of comparable states included Nebraska, despite the department’s request to exclude it as an outlier, Bimestefer said. Nebraska has since lowered its rates, and states are adjusting after overpaying for a time, she said.

The number of providers increased steadily from 88 in fiscal year 2017 to 373 in fiscal year 2024, and pushing providers to stop prescribing more hours than necessary will free up sessions for additional children, Bimestefer said.

“We’ll be fine,” she said.

While a few providers probably are overprescribing therapy or providing less care than they bill for, the majority are trying to help kids reach their potential based on their best clinical judgment, Martin said. The state should focus on auditing outlier providers, such as those giving every client 40 hours of therapy each week, rather than reviewing payments for everyone or cutting rates, he said.



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Denver Library’s used book sale offers deals on books, media

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Denver Library’s used book sale offers deals on books, media


Denver Public Library’s Central branch is hosting its used book sale this weekend and hundreds have already flocked to the downtown library to take advantage. The sale began Friday and will end Sunday at 3 p.m. It is the first of three book sales the library sponsors every year, with much of the sales being used […]



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