Denver, CO
Resignations and rainbow removals: What DU’s move to end DEI looks like on campus
The Pride Lounge at the University of Denver was a colorful conference room adorned with rainbows, LGBTQ-affirming posters and bookshelves crammed with queer literature.
Students of all backgrounds and beliefs could gather there to chat, study and build community, but the space was particularly affirming and welcoming for the campus’s LGBTQ students — a place they could be their authentic selves.
Eric Duran, former director of the Gender and Sexuality Student Success wing of the private university’s Cultural Center, said he broke down when DU leadership issued a directive last month to scrub the university of resources for LGBTQ people.
Duran and his co-director at the since-renamed Cultural Center resigned this month. Duran said he couldn’t bring himself to dismantle the Pride Lounge, so a colleague removed all LGBTQ-related items from the room — one of the most plainly visible examples of DU’s move this fall to end diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives on campus, drawing anger from some faculty, employees and students.
“It felt like I was being told to put students back in the closet or to not be visible at the university anymore,” Duran said. “I really did break down. It was a very hard day.”
The resignations occurred weeks after Chancellor Jeremy Haefner announced DU was doing away with many of the services and programs that support students of color and other marginalized scholars out of fear the school would lose federal funding from the Trump administration, which has labeled diversity initiatives as unlawfully discriminatory.
Since returning to office in January, President Donald Trump and his administration have railed against DEI efforts and pulled federal funding from institutions with programs supporting people of color, LGBTQ students and low-income residents who often face extra barriers to college.
Haefner declined an interview for this story, but provided an emailed statement saying DU remained “steadfastly committed” to inclusiveness. He noted that this year’s class of first-year students had the highest percentage of students of color in DU history at 34%.
“I understand change can be hard, especially when individuals feel as though the representation of particular identities may be at stake, and even more so when someone does not agree with why the change is occurring and has invested so much time in advocating for something so critical,” Haefner wrote. “But I continue to be inspired by our staff and faculty who lean into this effort and are focused on making sure that we continue to provide support and resources for all faculty, staff, and students at DU.”
People who work and learn at the Denver liberal arts college describe “a culture of fear” created by a “university bending to an authoritarian government,” Duran wrote in an email to colleagues upon his resignation.
Haefner told The Denver Post last month that DU was not “kowtowing” to the federal administration and that inclusivity would remain an institutional core value. But as programs and spaces benefitting the university’s most vulnerable students are moved, renamed or dissolved, DU’s marginalized community members say they wonder whether their diversity — once touted by the university as a positive — will be drowned out entirely.
Anxious students
Dheepa Sundaram, DU associate professor of Hindu studies and digital culture, called the current higher education landscape a “crisis situation.” She said she understands there is no easy solution and that the risk of seeing funding cut off is real.
Academic institutions across the country have lost hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funds this year as the Trump administration pulls grants deemed DEI-related.
“But I also think we should fight,” Sundaram said. “We have a risk-averse administration that is also not great at communicating, and that’s made this situation difficult. There’s a lot of confusion around why we won’t fight back. The administration is telling us, ‘Don’t worry. We’re erasing you, but we’re still here.’ That feels really tone deaf.”
Haefner noted in his statement that since 2023, all universities have been impacted by the Supreme Court ruling on the consideration of race in admissions, including through the “changes in interpretation of the law” that Trump’s Justice Department issued equating DEI with discrimination.
“We remain steadfastly committed to our values, including our commitment to inclusiveness and our collective work to make sure all students can feel welcomed and supported,” Haefner wrote. “We also are committed to comply with the law, and we are confident that we can achieve both goals.”
Sundaram recently met with her students of color to hear their thoughts on the changes at their school this year.
Not only was the Pride Lounge dismantled, but a lounge for students of color was dissolved, too, Sundaram said. The Cultural Center — formerly a space inside the Community Commons building — was relocated to a smaller space on a different floor and renamed Community Connections.
DEI training for faculty and staff was also eliminated.
Students who give campus tours to incoming freshmen told Sundaram they’ve been instructed to remove references to resources for students of color and LGBTQ students, she said. Her students told her they feel like they have to censor themselves on campus. On a positive note for Sundaram, the professor said the curriculum appears to be untouched.
“I don’t think students know where to go for support,” Sundaram said. “Students feel like they have lost all the different things that made the campus feel special and connected. I don’t think the administration recognizes they are destroying that community aspect they keep emphasizing because students just don’t feel like they have their back. I don’t think I’ve ever seen the students so anxious.”
Haefner said the university created a new Division of Community Support and Engagement in the wake of the DEI rollbacks to further “new means of engagement to lead in building connections for an inclusive environment for the entirety of the DU community.”
Ember Zabe, a 33-year-old student working on a master’s of social work degree, was a queer mentor in a program through the Cultural Center in which they supported undergraduate LGBTQ students. The program was disbanded this fall.
DU also eliminated scholarships, internships, mentorships or leadership programs for specific racial groups or that target underserved geographic areas.
“My heart is very heavy knowing there are young people entering DU in search of connection and opportunity that no longer exists for them,” Zabe said. “It’s not acceptable that the university boasts about their diverse student body, tokenizing students who have marginalized identities while simultaneously stripping the student body of nearly all supports and resources that support LGBTQ, first-generation and BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and people of color) students.”
Evelyn Stovin, 23, used to be a student employee at the Cultural Center and served as the former president of DU’s Queer Student Alliance.
The Cultural Center once housed the Pride Closet, which offered free, gender-affirming products like chest binders or clothing that students experimenting with their gender identity could wear. The Pride Closet was moved and renamed the Care Closet. Its purpose will be broadened, Stovin said.
“I’m frustrated that we are supposed to be a liberal university in Colorado of all places and we are run by the most despicable people imaginable who don’t have the balls to try and stand up for their students,” Stovin said.
‘DEI is not dead’
The final straw for Duran came when senior administrators said his job title and job description must change to remove any association with diverse groups, he said.
“That was really when I was like, ‘This isn’t my job anymore to serve LGBTQ students the way I did,’” Duran said.
When Duran resigned Oct. 9, he sent a long email to his colleagues, which has since been widely distributed and referenced in public faculty meetings, Sundaram said. The email, Duran said, was a reflection of what it felt like to be marginalized by the institution.
He laid out a timeline of how senior leadership dismantled DEI at DU and the various programs and events he shepherded — homecoming and prom celebrations for LGBTQ students, for example — that will now fall to students to revive.
Duran and other DU faculty and students who spoke to The Post questioned whether the federal guidelines against DEI gave DU senior leaders cover to do away with policies and programs they already wanted chopped. Haefner did not answer whether this characterization was true when asked by The Post.
“But what can you expect from a university leadership wanting to uphold the voices of bigotry and white supremacy for the sake of their funding. I’m not necessarily calling executive leadership and the board of trustees homophobic or racist — but if the converse (sic) fits,” Duran wrote in his email to DU colleagues, referring to Haefner, who is known for wearing Converse shoes around campus.
Sundaram wanted to remind students that despite the administration’s efforts, diversity at DU was not snuffed out. Student groups remain active and passionate, she said, and faculty and staff are committed to supporting their students.
“It’s important to say that DEI is not dead,” Sundaram said. “It remains very much alive in the dedicated faculty, resilient students and our committed staff. We know the challenges we are facing will be with us for a while, and perhaps that much worse is ahead… We are scared and we are frustrated, but we are still committed to doing this work.”
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Denver, CO
Ex-Broncos wide receiver lands in UFL; ex-Denver RB joins 49ers
Kaden Davis is taking his talents to the United Football League.
The former Denver Broncos wide receiver signed with the UFL’s Houston Gamblers earlier this week, and he could make his debut as early as Friday evening when the Gamblers face the Columbus Aviators (5:00 p.m. MT on Fox and FuboTV).
Davis (6-1, 193 pounds) entered the league with the Broncos as an undrafted free agent out of Northwest Missouri State in 2022. After spending part of his rookie season on Denver’s practice squad, Davis played for the Michigan Panthers (then of the USFL) in the spring of 2023.
After that, Davis spent time with the Arizona Cardinals (2023) and Detroit Lions (2024) before returning to the Broncos as a member of the practice squad in 2024. He was later cut, re-signed, and cut again by Denver that fall. Davis joined the Cleveland Browns’ practice squad late in the 2024 campaign, and he remained with the Browns in 2025. He’ll now look to impress in the UFL.
Elsewhere on the ex-Bronco front, the San Francisco 49ers signed running back Sincere McCormick, who had a brief stint on Denver’s practice squad last season.
Social: Follow Broncos Wire on Facebook and Twitter/X! Did you know: These 25 celebrities are Broncos fans.
Denver, CO
Troubled apartments: Breaking down Denver’s distressed multifamily properties
The Waterford RiNo building at 2797 Wewatta Way was given to a lender in 2025. (BusinessDen file)
Denver’s apartment market is facing headwinds.
BusinessDen scoured county foreclosure records, third-party reports and court filings to determine the area’s apartment buildings that have exhibited signs of financial distress in recent months.
The list below is not necessarily comprehensive, but will be updated when we have more information, or when a particular property’s situation changes.
Foreclosed
2617-2667 W. Evans Ave., Denver
Loan: $14 million
Former owner: JTA1 Real Properties LLC AND JTA4 Real Properties LLC
Unit count: 125
456 S. Ironton St., Aurora
Loan: $25.54
Former owner: HL Lofts LLC/Summit Communities
Unit count: 112
Deed-in-lieu of foreclosure
2797 Wewatta Way, Denver
Loan: $91 million
Former owner: SRGMF III Wewatta Way Denver LLC/Sares Regis Group
Unit count: 301
Foreclosure initiated
1259 Newton St., Denver
Loan: $12.65 million
Owner: AVP Newton Venture LLC/Armada Venture Partners
4510 W. Saint Clair Place, Adams County
Loan: $6.35 million
Owner: 4510 Saint Clair Apartments LLC
2038 South Vaughn Way, Aurora
Loan: $57.15 million
Owner: Arboreta Apts LLC/Summit Communities
Unit count: 268
1433, 1451 and 1463 Macon St., Aurora
Loan: $2.98 million
Owner: West Macon Street LLC
In receivership, not in foreclosure
10101 Washington St., Thornton
Loan: $17.5 million
Owner: Meadows at Town Center LLC/Summit Communities
Units: 104
7500 Dakin St., Adams County
Loan: $49.5 million
Owner: Boulder CR Apts LLC/Summit Communities
Units: 322
Bankrupt
1592 Boston St., Aurora
Loan: $3 million
Owner: 1592 Boston Street LLC/Shaul Gabbay
Unit count: 32
1960 Dallas St., Aurora
Loan: $4.8 million
Owner: 1960 Dallas Street LLC/Shaul Gabbay
Unit count: 32
Denver, CO
Recruit dies during Denver Sheriff Department academy training
DENVER (KDVR) — A recruit has died after participating in physical training at the Denver Sheriff Department Training Academy, officials report.
According to the Denver Sheriff Department, following physical training on Tuesday at the academy, Recruit Dorbor Mulbah “expressed discomfort and became unwell.”
DSD said staff members at the academy began life-saving medical measures on Mulbah.
Upon arrival, the Denver Fire Department and Denver Paramedics continued to provide critical medical attention before Mulbah was taken to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead on Wednesday morning.
DSD provided the following statement in part:
“As a matter of protocol, we have asked the Administrative Investigative Unit to open an inquiry into the matter. We have deployed wellness and mental health resources for the Academy cadre, to include the Recruits.
We ask that the family’s privacy be honored during this difficult time. Thank you for keeping Recruit Mulbah’s family and our Department in your thoughts and prayers.”
DSD said Mulbah was set to graduate from the academy in May.
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