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Denver, CO

Broncos are too collaborative for one 'final say' on roster decisions

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Broncos are too collaborative for one 'final say' on roster decisions


When the Denver Broncos hired Sean Payton as head coach last year, there was some speculation that he would have the final say on roster decisions over general manager George Paton.

Payton and Paton both said last spring that they would have a “collaborative” working relationship that would not necessitate one having the final say.

The coach and GM have now gone through a full offseason of free agency and the draft and Paton maintains that neither has the final say on roster decisions.

“That hasn’t come up, and it certainly does not come up with Sean,” Paton said during his end-of-season press conference. “He’s so collaborative. We would not bring in a player that Sean and I didn’t agree upon.

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“We wouldn’t bring in a player that two coaches probably [did not agree upon, or] a coach and a scout. We dissect it, and we get into it. We do deep dives. It has not really come up in my career very often, but it certainly hasn’t come up with Sean being here.”

Payton knows what he wants in a player as a coach, and Paton knows how to search for players as a former scout. It wouldn’t make sense for Paton to recommend a player that does not fit Payton’s scheme, so the GM’s comments about collaboration are certainly believable.

Paton and Payton are now set to enter their second offseason together this spring. Free agency begins in March and the draft will follow in April.

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Denver, CO

Colorado homes acquired by inheritance reach record 12% of home transfers

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Colorado homes acquired by inheritance reach record 12% of home transfers


In “The Game of Life,” landing on the “Inherit a House”  square is one of the most coveted on the board. In real life, a home or condo is also one of the greatest financial gifts that can be passed on, especially in a housing-strapped state like Colorado.

More Coloradans are seeing the big wheel spin in their favor each year. But the pace won’t be enough to make up for a housing shortfall estimated at more than 106,000 units in 2023, according to a report from the Colorado Department of Local Affairs.

About one in eight homes that traded hands in Colorado last year represented an inheritance, which is a little below the share that new home sales represented, according to data from the real estate research firm Cotality.

“Inheritance in the 12 months ending in 2025 totaled nearly 12,000 homes, which happened to be almost 12% of all total property transfers. This is higher, both in terms of the number and the share, than previous years — in line with the national trend,” said Matt Delventhal, a principal economist at Cotality.

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Cotality measured the 12-month pace of home sales, new and existing, and inheritance transfers in Colorado through October for the odd-numbered years from 2019 to 2025. Existing home sales were down sharply between 2021 and 2025, falling from 128,899 in 2021 to 75,833 in 2025.

Likewise, new home sales fell from 22,064 in 2021 to 15,610 in 2023 to 12,755 in 2025, according to Cotality.

Inheritances, by contrast, continued to chug along, going from 10,052 in 2021 to 10,243 in 2023 to 11,945 in 2025. The gap between new home sales and inheritances was only 810. Inheritances are contributing almost as much to inventory as new home construction.

A lack of enough new construction, especially for first-time buyers, has pushed up existing home prices. High prices, when combined with higher mortgage rates, have resulted in fewer sales. Because home sales have fallen so much, the “inheritance” share of all home transfers has nearly doubled in Colorado, from 6.2% in 2021 to 9.9% in 2023 to a record 11.9% in 2025.

“The increase in the share is a bit sharper than the national trend, mostly because Colorado resales drop off a bit more sharply in 2023-25 than the national average,” Delventhal said.

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Nationally, the market share of inherited homes went from just under 5% in 2021 to 6.8% in 2023 to 8.7% in 2025, which translated into 412,174 homes and condos passed down. Those percentages also reflect the 12-month tally through October.

“The behavior around inherited homes does feel different from what it did pre-2022. Historically, most estate transfers functioned as pass-through transactions. Heirs would inherit the property, do some light clean-up or updates, and put it on the market fairly quickly. That still happens, but I am seeing more cases where families pause and evaluate other options first,” said Cooper Thayer, a Realtor with the Thayer Group in Castle Rock.

Because inherited homes have little or no debt and strong rent potential, and because selling has become more difficult, heirs are increasingly looking at keeping the homes as rentals or to move into, he said.

While Colorado’s share of inherited homes is above average, it lags behind California, a more expensive market where 18% of home transfers involved an inheritance, according to Cotality.

In California, favorable tax laws locked in lower property tax rates and provided beneficiaries with an incentive to use an inherited home as a primary residence. For the first time this year, passed-down homes ran more than double the number of new homes sold in the state, according to Cotality.

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Prop 19, passed in 2020, limited the transfer of a lower tax base only to homes that a child or heir actually occupied, and excluded rental homes. It also excluded only the first $1 million in added value beyond the original value used to determine property taxes. The state, however, could see a ballot measure this year that would restore some of the more generous property tax breaks to heirs.

At first glance, the increase in home inheritances seems to validate the “Silver Tsunami” hypothesis. Baby Boomers, those born between 1946 and 1964, were not only huge in numbers, but also more likely to own homes than earlier generations. By the time they turned 65, individuals born in 1948 owned 50% more homes than those who were born in 1938 did at the same age.

Compared to prior generations, baby boomers have also shown a greater propensity to hold onto their homes more tightly, adding a different meaning to “until death do us part.” About six in 10 say they don’t plan to ever sell their homes, and three in 10 are holding on so they can pass the properties down, according to HousingWire.

“They are going to have to take me out of there in a box, even though it is a two-story home,” said Jennifer Antonio, an agent with Sotheby’s International Realty in Denver.

Antonio, who puts herself in the never-sell boomer group, said she and her husband purchased their first home when she was 23. They did so on two minimum wage salaries, proof of just how much better the market did in matching options to incomes. Now the average age of a first-time homebuyer is 38, she said.

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Her four millennial children still don’t own, despite being college-educated. With her parents too old to host big events, her home has become a stable gathering place for the family, where adult children can flow in and out, and where everyone gathers for Thanksgiving and Christmas.

“I need to stay in that home,” she said. Antonio said her older clients complain about a lack of good options if they do sell, which can keep them locked into homes that have become burdensome. Builders, seeking to get as much square footage as they can on a lot, aren’t building enough products like ranch homes that would appeal to older buyers.

That baby boomer hesitancy, Cotality says, is “effectively freezing the anticipated flow of supply.”  Boomers can’t hold on forever, but it could be well into the 2030s before a substantial amount of older housing stock better-suited for young families emerges. Younger generations could find themselves stuck renting for longer than they would like.



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Hearings spike in months following change to Denver parking dispute process

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Hearings spike in months following change to Denver parking dispute process


Denver drivers continue to be impacted by a change in how parking tickets are disputed. That system changed in September, when the city eliminated the ability to dispute parking tickets online. CBS Colorado has reported on the impact in the past.

Denver’s Department of Transportation and Infrastructure said a new system would be in place this year. That has not happened, and in turn the number of requests for parking ticket hearings has skyrocketed.

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Dana Lingo was recently trying to visit a friend — who is also her accountant — in the city’s Cherry Creek neighborhood.

“I go up there and make a right,” she said while driving. “This is Detroit. She just lives a couple blocks down.”

Lingo says parking has become her biggest hurdle.

“It looks like there’s parking, but it’s all permit,” she said.

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Lingo has stage 4 cancer. Walking long distances is difficult, and she relies on a disability placard.

“It’s usually three or four blocks. On a good day, I can do it, but if I’m not feeling well, it’s a challenge,” she said.

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Dana Lingo drives in Denver.

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Lingo believed her placard allowed her to park in residential permitted areas — something some other cities allow. She later learned Denver does not allow it.

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“I wanted to dispute it, because there should be a provision for ADA parking,” Lingo said.

She decided to challenge the ticket — only to find out disputes can no longer be handled online.

“If you want to dispute this ticket, you come down here, make an appointment for a court date, then come back for the court date,” Lingo said.

Since the change in September, what used to be handled online is now moving to in-person hearings.

From January through September 2025, the city averaged about six parking ticket hearings per month. In the three months following the change — October, November and December — that number jumped to an average of 206 hearings per month.

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Those numbers are now adding pressure on Denver DOTI to create a better system.

“I sure hope that DOTI creates something similar to what we had,” said Denver City Councilmember Chris Hinds.

Hinds is among the council members who pushed for DOTI to make changes last fall. He’s also a longtime advocate for accessibility and says the current process places an unnecessary burden on drivers.

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“People are taking time off work or away from other things they need to be doing,” he said.

Until the change happens, Lingo worries about people who can’t make that extra effort.

“Most people are not going to do it. They’re just not — they’re going to pay it,” she said.



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Denver, CO

Denver Summit home opener set to break NWSL attendance record

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Denver Summit home opener set to break NWSL attendance record


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Denver Summit FC announced they have surpassed 40,000 tickets sold for their inaugural home game, putting them on track to break the NWSL’s single-match attendance record.

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Denver is one of two expansion franchises to enter the NWSL this year along with Boston Legacy FC, taking the league up to 16 teams.

The Summit will play their first three matches on the road before their inaugural home match against the Washington Spirit on March 28 at Empower Field at Mile High — home of the Denver Broncos.

The game will almost certainly break the current record of 40,061, set last year when the Spirit faced Bay FC at Oracle Park in San Francisco.

The Summit will play the majority of their home games this year at Centennial Stadium, a 12,000-seat temporary venue that will be used for two years until the team has a permanent stadium of its own.

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In December, the club received approval from the Denver City Council to move forward with a proposed 14,500-seat stadium to be built in the city’s Santa Fe Yards district.

The venue is slated to open in 2028.



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