Author: Denver Gazette Editorial Board
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Colorado’s tipping point on illegal immigration | Denver Gazette
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Denverites are becoming second-class citizens in their own city. To varying degrees, that could be said of Coloradans in other communities, as well. They have been elbowed aside by a new wave of immigrants — many from Venezuela — who have entered the U.S. illegally over the past year and have been deluging Denver and…
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Colorado’s tipping point on illegal immigration | Denver Gazette
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Denverites are becoming second-class citizens in their own city. To varying degrees, that could be said of Coloradans in other communities, as well. They have been elbowed aside by a new wave of immigrants — many from Venezuela — who have entered the U.S. illegally over the past year and have been deluging Denver and…
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Colorado’s government grows its payroll again | Denver Gazette
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Lawmakers at the Capitol are preparing to add another $2 billion to the state budget, bringing total state spending next year to $40.6 billion. That’s a tentative figure at this point because the budget is still a work in progress. It faces a final vote by the House before heading to the Senate for its…
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How not to house Denver’s homeless | Denver Gazette
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One of Denver Mayor Michael Johnston’s homeless hotels is turning into a hotel of horrors. The mounting death toll and recurring violence at the former DoubleTree by Hilton, at 4040 Quebec St., as reported by The Denver Gazette, are tragic. The implications are troubling for the Johnston administration’s approach to getting the chronically homeless off…
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Shackling landlords will backfire on tenants | Denver Gazette
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Every legislative session in recent years has sought to flog landlords in the name of protecting tenants. The 2024 session is no exception. After all, rent hikes and evictions make great fodder for grandstanding politicians amid Colorado’s affordable-housing crunch. Yet, attempts to “fix” the problem through more laws nearly always backfire on the tenants who…
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Shackling landlords will backfire on tenants | Denver Gazette
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Every legislative session in recent years has sought to flog landlords in the name of protecting tenants. The 2024 session is no exception. After all, rent hikes and evictions make great fodder for grandstanding politicians amid Colorado’s affordable-housing crunch. Yet, attempts to “fix” the problem through more laws nearly always backfire on the tenants who…
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Colorado’s Phil Weiser takes the wrong side | Denver Gazette
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Like the self-serving kid who cozies up to the schoolyard bully, Colorado’s attorney general is siding with the federal government as it treads on yet another state power in regulating air quality. As The Gazette reported last week, Colorado AG Phil Weiser has signed onto a motion in federal court to intervene in defense of…
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Colorado’s Phil Weiser takes the wrong side | Denver Gazette
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Like the self-serving kid who cozies up to the schoolyard bully, Colorado’s attorney general is siding with the federal government as it treads on yet another state power in regulating air quality. As The Gazette reported last week, Colorado AG Phil Weiser has signed onto a motion in federal court to intervene in defense of…
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The right way to restore a species | Denver Gazette
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No wildlife biologists or credentialed experts in related fields serve on The Gazette’s editorial board. And they are few and far between among the general public in Colorado, as well. That’s the top reason we opposed Proposition 114, introducing gray wolves into Colorado’s wilds. It’s also why we have continued to take a dim view…
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The right way to restore a species | Denver Gazette
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No wildlife biologists or credentialed experts in related fields serve on The Gazette’s editorial board. And they are few and far between among the general public in Colorado, as well. That’s the top reason we opposed Proposition 114, introducing gray wolves into Colorado’s wilds. It’s also why we have continued to take a dim view…

