Colorado Politics

EDITORIAL: BID will be worth the wait

The city of Steamboat Springs has made a significant investment in downtown improvements as evidenced by the extensive work that has been completed on Yampa and Oak streets this summer, and we have no doubt downtown businesses have benefitted tremendously from the transformation.

With this in mind, we were encouraged to read that downtown business leaders are looking ahead to 2018 as the year when a downtown property tax proposal could go back on the ballot.

Main Street Steamboat Springs Executive Director Lisa Popovich announced last week that a tax question seeking funding for the downtown business improvement district, or BID, would hit the ballot next year to give those promoting the plan the proper amount of time to mount an educational campaign in support of the proposal.

Read more at Steamboat Today.

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EDITORIAL: Don’t be a dupe

Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach thinks you are an easy dupe, as former Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler once did. Kobach, who is serving as vice chairman of the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity, is trying to sell voters on the profound lie that the nation’s election system is fraught with fraud. […]

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An emotional Ed Perlmutter said Tuesday that he does not have “enough fire in the belly” to juggle both a gubernatorial campaign and to serve in Congress. The high-profile Democrat bowed out of the governor’s race at a news conference in Golden that at times felt more like a funeral, as supporters hugged each other […]


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