Colorado Politics

EDITORIAL: Big questions emerge from crime data

When local media report on the law enforcement activities in their communities, the underlying question, even if it is unstated, is whether those communities are safe.

By shining a light on the work of police, sheriff’s deputies and state patrol troopers, local publications like this one offer a glimpse into activities that perpetrators wish would go unreported – making it easier for them to find their next victims, whether it’s a crime against a person or involving property.

This past week, another component to help give insight on community safety was released to the public: the Colorado Bureau of Investigation’s “2016 Crime in Colorado.”

Read more at The Boulder Daily Camera.

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EDITORIAL: Office-holders should know who polices residency rule

What could have been a sticky situation for the Loveland City Council has been avoided, for now at least, with a sworn affidavit from a councilor regarding residency. At the council’s meeting on July 11, members Don Overcash and Troy Krenning expressed doubts in public that had previously been presented only in email to other […]

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Sen. Ray Scott calls for tax on bicycles to help pay for Colorado roads

Senate Republicans in the last legislative session wouldn’t allow any new taxes to pay for roads, but Sen. Ray Scott has found one he can embrace: taxing bicycles. Scott, an influential Republican from Grand Junction, first made the announcement on Facebook Wednesday morning, atop a Washington Times story about Oregon becoming the first to implement […]


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