Colorado Politics

EDITORIAL: Bike to Work Day should foster unity on the road

More than a century ago, there wasn’t a special “drive your car to work day” to raise awareness of the horseless carriage and the wonders of transportation that didn’t leave solid waste in the streets.

Slowly and surely, though, local and national government policies bent toward the new form of transportation. Roads were laid out and paved. Highways were re-engineered for cars and trucks, and then interstate highways were built that allowed through traffic to avoid cities.

Today, Bike To Work Day, the policy goals might not include a series of interstate bicycle routes (although that would be interesting) but simple changes that might make it easier for residents to get to their workplaces under their own power instead of using fossil fuels.

Read more at The Longmont Times-Call.

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Back in 2011, Grand Junction had the unwelcome distinction of becoming Colorado’s divorce capital. State demographers speculated that it had a lot to do with a combination of stressors, like stagnant wages, a low ranking for household income and tougher-than-average economic conditions. The local economy may have improved since then, but it still lags behind […]

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EDITORIAL: Stephen Jordan transformed Metro State and championed underserved students

In Stephen Jordan’s 12 years as president of Metropolitan State University of Denver, he’s shaken hands with more than 33,000 graduates. The figure accounts for almost 40 percent of the urban college’s graduates over the last 50 years, a testament to the growth and academic achievement that has occurred under Jordan’s watch. As he prepared […]


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