“I think we’ve mentioned, many a time, that we’re willing to settle, when it comes to the attorneys fees, if the plaintiffs would like to approach us and discuss them reasonably….”
EDITORIAL: A Brief History of an Adversarial Relationship, Part Five
The 14 petitioners did not hire an attorney to represent them, but rather filed their request for an official ruling as pro se plaintiffs…
EDITORIAL: A Brief History of an Adversarial Relationship, Part Four
We might note here the authority given to the County Clerk and Recorder, to resolve “any questions about the applicability of the procedures…”
READY, FIRE, AIM: Dude, Where’s My Warning Label?
Two years later, I still hadn’t learned to read and wasn’t really keeping up on politics yet, so I missed hearing about the Federal Trade Commission report to Congress…
EDITORIAL: A Brief History of an Adversarial Relationship, Part Three
“I pushed for that work session on their behalf, because they weren’t getting anywhere. As commissioner, I argued that, look, these guys have legitimate concerns…”
EDITORIAL: More Thoughts About the ‘Gun Show Loophole’
Not many of us are laughing about guns, at this particular time in our nation’s history…
EDITORIAL: A Brief History of an Adversarial Relationship, Part Two
The very act of bringing these petitions to the BOCC and requesting their placement on the ballot was itself a challenge to the status quo…
EDITORIAL: A Brief History of an Adversarial Relationship, Part One
“Now the [2014] elections have passed, and you guys had an opportunity to do something with [the petitions] — either address them yourselves or put them on the ballot; you chose to do nothing…
EDITORIAL: Telling Tales About TABOR, Part Five
Despite long-standing complaints about potholes, crumbling roads, and unfixed highways, US states spent as much building new roads as repairing old ones…
READY, FIRE, AIM: Higher and Higher Education
Twenty years ago (1998) the University of Colorado at Boulder was charging $2,969 for tuition — no matter if you were in-state or out-of-state….
EDITORIAL: Telling Tales About TABOR, Part Four
The BOCC went ahead and borrowed the money for their new jail anyway, without voter approval, using a clever financial device well-loved by the banking industry…
EDITORIAL: Telling Tales About TABOR, Part Three
We also noted that, in 2016-2017, more than 69 percent of Colorado state revenue was exempt from TABOR limitations…
EDITORIAL: Building Glass Castles in the Sand, Part Two
Cardboard is now selling for $25 a ton. “Prices for OCC [cardboard] today are so low that in many cases the material is not even covering the ever-rising cost of freight to the mill…”
EDITORIAL: Building Glass Castles in the Sand, Part One
“Comparing $111,000 to the cost of constructing a new landfill, we’ll be saving money in the long run, by buying space that we’re not filling up….”
EDITORIAL: Telling Tales About TABOR, Part Two
Ms. Hedges wants us to repeal TABOR, and she apparently also wants us to believe that TABOR is to blame for the condition of our state highways and county roads…
EDITORIAL: Wings Over Pagosa, Part Five
Phone calls to these mothers and grandmothers revealed that only four of the seven will still be operating as licensed daycare providers in 2020…
EDITORIAL: Wings Over Pagosa, Part Two
Even with a rent-free building, the sliding tuition scale at Seeds of Learning leaves the non-profit organization with an annual operating deficit of about $200,000…
EDITORIAL: Wings Over Pagosa, Part One
“We’re not going to be a daycare center; we’re going to be an educational center…”