Xcel Energy’s state-mandated transportation electrification plan for 2024-2026 is moving forward after getting the approval of Colorado's ener…
States initially scrambled to acquire limited supplies of face masks and protective gear for health care workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.…
As more students gather inside for school and college, Colorado is starting to see an uptick in COVID-19 cases, likely to continue into the fa…
Latest headlines
Walmart launched a new, same day Testing and Treatment program in Colorado pharmacies, including the Denver region, that will allow patients t…
COVID-19 hasn’t gone away.
It's almost exactly a year until Colorado's 2024 general election ballot will be set, and already the contours are beginning to emerge.
When Mike Johnston became principal of Thornton's Mapleton Expeditionary School of the Arts in 2005, he learned many of his students couldn't …
Kelly Brough, 60, faces Mike Johnston, a former legislator, in a runoff election in June.
Two actors are parents of Denver East High School students. And there was no way the company was going to ask them to work while their childre…
Colorado public health officials vaulted to prominence three years ago when residents started to sicken and die of COVID-19, kicking off a pan…
Latest headlines
As Colorado marks another COVID-19 anniversary, the takeaway for historians and epidemiologists is as simple as it is jarring: Americans haven…
An innovative program born out of the COVID-19 pandemic gives new meaning to the old proverb, “waste not, want not.”
Survey shows crowd counts routinely 20-50% lower than before pandemic shutdown
Treating diseases that vaccines could have prevented cost Colorado $13 billion over two years, according to a new report.
Survey shows crowd counts routinely 20-50% lower than before pandemic shutdown
With the federal government’s COVID-19 public health emergency set to end in May, an estimated 325,000 Coloradans face losing Medicaid coverage.
The “tri-demic” local health professionals had feared and warned the public about for months — the confluence of influenza, RSV and COVID-19 o…
The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) will close its 20 remaining COVID-19 testing sites on Jan. 15.
It seemed like 2022 would be the “get back to normal” year as Colorado pulled itself out of the pandemic, and the business and travel shutdown…
The results are in: COVID-19 is still here but in declining amounts. Influenza also continues to be present, but the Colorado Department of Pu…
Two years ago, infection control experts warned the confluence of influenza and COVID-19 could overrun hospitals in what they dubbed the “twin-demic.”
This year's virus season came roaring back with a vengeance, a top infection prevention expert said after noting that UCHealth hospitals are s…
Shows go on amid flareups, putting the health and safety of artists and audiences at greater risk
Despite speculation in social media circles and at the dinner table that the Thanksgiving Holiday may cause a spike of COVID-19 cases, the Col…
{{summary}}