Editorial: ICE walks a thin line in Aurora and Denver as it searches for 100 “gang members” but knocks on everyone’s door

An unidentified federal employee said a lot of the right things outside of apartments in east Denver Wednesday morning – they were looking for criminals and didn’t want to go door to door harassing residents but were left no choice by jail officials who refused to release criminals to their custody.

But a video and reports from inside the apartments, and another complex in west Aurora, tell a different story.

Rather than showing residents lawful warrants to search for known criminals, reports from residents were that officials were knocking randomly on doors and asking if anyone knew anyone undocumented. Officials may have had arrest warrants for specific people or search warrants for certain apartments — they said they did — but their actions went far beyond that scope.

That is not normal behavior for officials who are carrying out the long-stated purpose of Immigration and Customs Enforcement – “protect the homeland by enforcing immigration law against those who present a danger to our national security or are a threat to public safety.”

Colorado’s Enforcement and Removal Operations have long made it clear – as currently stated on their website – that they are working to remove those “who undermine the safety of our nation’s communities and the integrity of the U.S. immigration laws.”

The family who shared a FaceTime video with Denver7 of an official with a covered face standing at their door met neither of those standards. And yet they were targeted by ICE for questioning — in their own home at the Edge of Lowry.

The unnamed official in the video outside what looked like the Cedar Run apartment complex near George Washington High School in Denver explained why such activities were occurring: “Unfortunately we have to come to the communities because we don’t get the cooperation we need from the jails. It would be so much easier and so much safer for our officers and agents if we could take these people into custody from a safe environment, but if we have to come out in the community to do this, that’s what we’re going to do.”

There is some truth to that.

Colorado’s law enforcement officials do not send ICE a list of people in their custody, although if ICE has a valid deportation order or a detainer for an individual in custody, local officials will share details about when that person is going to be released. Miscommunication and mistiming – sometimes with tragic results – have been documented. A Colorado law in 2019 makes it even harder for local officials to cooperate with immigration officials.

We’ve long called for better communication and collaboration between local officials and ICE about dangerous individuals who are eligible for deportation.

The pendulum has swung too far, however.

President Donald Trump’s pledge to deport millions of people who are living and working in the United States without legal status will tear apart hard-working families. Now is not the time for Colorado to lessen its support for immigrants without legal status who have proven themselves to be good members of the community even though their arrival was unlawful.

Yes, deport dangerous criminals who are selling drugs and terrorizing Coloradans with gun violence and assault.

But don’t go door to door randomly asking people for their papers to prove they are in this country legally. We fully support federal operations to crack down on gun violence in our communities, whether the perpetrators have legal U.S. status or not.

We do not support harassing families, including recent asylum seekers, who are just trying to live their lives and stay out of trouble.

ICE said it was searching for more than 100 known members of Tren de Aragua in Aurora. The operation was in conjunction with the FBI, DEA, Customs and Border Protection, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the U.S. Marshals Service.

We wish officials luck in apprehending and charging those 100 individuals with crimes and then getting lawful deportation orders. We hope they remain safe in their pursuit of these criminals.

However, they can do that without striking fear into the hearts of Colorado’s immigrant community, who are now wondering if they need to carry their visas, parole documents, asylum papers or other paperwork with them everywhere they go.

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Blinded by Showbiz: The Stanley Hotel and the Sundance Film Festival shouldn’t get millions in state investments

We can follow the misguided path that has led state officials to purchase the Stanley Hotel for a cool $475 million plus interest, and we want to put up some serious roadblocks to make sure future public officials don’t follow.

Colorado’s government should not be in the hotel and hospitality business.

Just like how our government shouldn’t be in the business of underwriting film festivals with millions of dollars in taxpayer money.

But here we are, in need of a drastic course correction.

The Stanley Hotel is uniquely Coloradan. Separate plans are underway to use state-tax dollars to build a Stanley Film Center to honor horror films like The Shining, which made the Estes Park Hotel far more than a historic lodging option for those headed to Rocky Mountain National Park.

The Sundance Film Festival will bring millions of dollars in revenue to the Boulder area as 60,000 affluent tourists descend on the town for one of the world’s pre-eminent independent film screenings.

And yet, we can confidently say that these two deals – purchasing The Stanley and giving tax credits to Sundance – stretch the state’s mission of economic development and historic preservation too far.

We can see the writing on the wall with The Stanley Hotel. Originally the deal was slightly different but still concerning.

Arizona’s Community Finance Corporation was to act as a middleman – a pass-through if you will — that would oversee the purchase and updating of the facility. According to the nonprofit’s website it exists solely to facilitate these types of government projects: “The governmental entity typically takes possession of the completed facility when construction is complete and begins paying base rent equivalent to the debt service. In most cases, the project financing is paid back over time through lease payments and ownership of the project transfers to the governmental entity for a nominal cost when the debt is retired.”

But the middleman was cut out of the deal – perhaps for the better — and now Colorado will purchase the hotel through its own subsidiary. Our eyebrows are raised.

The executive director of the Colorado Educational and Cultural Facilities Authority was optimistic that not only could they pay off the debt but that there would be a share of profits remaining after the fact to help fund CEFCA’s main mission of helping other Colorado cultural and educational facilities with needed bonds and loans.

We see a vast difference between CECFA taking on the risk of issuing bonds to private schools and charter schools to build or upgrade their campuses, and taking on the risk of operating a hospitality business through a subsidiary. And where does this slippery slope end. Will the authority now rescue the Brown Palace in downtown Denver from its financial turmoil? And what if the Broadmoor in Colorado Springs suffers a devastating loss of business due to some unforeseen event?

Colorado should be investing in our history, heritage, and culture. But passing legislation specifically so CECFA can overstep its original intent of helping to finance independent projects feels like a risky precedent to set.

As does the precedent that would be set by House Bill 1005, a narrowly written tax credit that would only ever be available to the owners of the Sundance Film Festival should they decide to bring their 11 day event to someplace in Colorado. The tax credit would be fully refundable – meaning Sundance wouldn’t have to actually have any Colorado tax liability to get the cash – and would be worth $34 million over 10 years. In tax year 2027, the festival operators would get a $4 million check as long as they had 100,000 in-person ticket sales.

The bill is exactly the kind of economic development arms race that Utah and Colorado should not engage in. If Utah is able to keep Sundance, Colorado should be happy for our neighbors. If Sundance comes to Colorado, we should be thrilled at the opportunity, not wondering for a decade whether they would have come without the bag of cash.

It’s not too late for Colorado lawmakers to correct course and kill House Bill 1005, and we’ll just have to wait and see if getting into the hospitality business in Estes Park is as bad of an idea as we suspect it is.

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Editorial: The one thing in the West that Trump actually can take credit for this week

Look, folks, we generally don’t care who gets the credit for good things around the West, so long as progress is made and people’s lives are improving (or heck, just plodding along about the same.)

But it irks us a bit when a New Yorker comes to town claiming credit for all sorts of things he didn’t actually do, so we’d like to take a quick moment to set the record straight about what President Donald Trump has and has not accomplished in his first week back in office.

Trump did not orchestrate the months-long investigation that led to the arrest of 41 undocumented immigrants in Adams County, several of whom are tied to the international crime ring Tren de Aragua, according to the Drug Enforcement Agency, which carried out the raid after a months-long investigation in partnership with immigration agents. We celebrate the arrest of these individuals who had terrorized people in Aurora with their guns, armed robberies and assaults.

But The Colorado Springs Gazette trumpeted it as a victory for the Trump administration, reporting that the raid came as part of the president’s order to increase ICE raids. Do we know for sure that Trump didn’t order the DEA to execute their warrant earlier than intended? No, but we do know that government officials have been working on shutting down the gang long before Trump came to Aurora to draw attention to the problem.

Colorado’s new congressman, Gabe Evans, also attempted to give credit to Trump, writing: “We’re only one week into the Trump Admin and already seeing how strong immigration policies make #CO08 a safer place to raise a family and pursue the American Dream.”

The DEA made it abundantly clear that this investigation has been ongoing for months and an opportunity arose to capture many of the wanted suspects in the drug ring because of a party advertised on social media.

Less than a day later, Trump claimed credit for turning back on a water source in California, claiming he used “emergency powers” to send in U.S. troops to turn the water on and get it “flowing abundantly from the Pacific Northwest and beyond.” Hilariously Trump claimed this water had been shut off as part of a conspiracy to create a false shortage of water and fake drought conditions in California.

In reality, the water pumps had been turned off for three days as part of a maintenance issue. Water supplies in California are actually pretty good at the moment thanks to a wet year and careful water planning.

Were mistakes made during the catastrophic wildfires surrounding Los Angeles? Absolutely, and we hope the state investigates why some fire hydrants lost water pressure during the firestorm. It is critical information that every city facing the risk of urban wildfires needs to know and prepare for.

But Trump’s tweet claiming officials deliberately are withholding water from southern California is so far-fetched as to warrant a response, setting the record straight. Water allocation is not something we take lightly in the West, and Trump can posture all he wants but Coloradans know how hard a drought can be and that we must prepare. We also know our water officials don’t conspire against us to create false scarcity.

But there is one thing Trump can take full credit for, and that is dozens of Coloradans (and perhaps hundreds in the next month) who have lost their jobs because he cut federal grants to critical organizations across the state. This move came arbitrarily and with no review or debate from Congress. Many of these programs were both authorized and funded by Congress, and Trump is abusing his power.

We know that many Coloradans live paycheck to paycheck and this decision will harm families across the state as they try to get by.

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Editorial: Denver’s fight to preserve the Park Hill conservation easement rewarded with 155-acre park

Denverites knew inherently that a conservation easement shouldn’t be lifted on one of our last chances to create a large park in this city. So community members rallied against plans to lift the easement to allow development of the old golf course in northeast Denver.

As a result, Denver will get a new 155 acre park.

To put that in perspective, nearby City Park – the crown jewel of metro-Denver — is about 320 acres and includes the Denver Zoo, The Museum of Nature and Science and the City Park Pavilion and boat dock. And just in case anyone is bereft of the Park Hill Golf Club, City Park Golf Course was recently renovated and is open for business offering unparalleled views of the downtown skyline framed by Front Range mountains.

This new park – yet to be named – will transform northeast Denver.

Residents should dream big. We know that the Clayton community west of Colorado Boulevard needs easy access to a recreation center, especially one with an outdoor pool and a library too. But perhaps residents crave open spaces with long trails and natural features.

The possibilities are endless – dog parks, skate parks, basketball, tennis, and pickle ball courts, Nordic trails in the winter and an epic cross-country race course in the summer, flower gardens, and community gardens for fresh produce.

Mayor Mike Johnston deserves credit for the shift he has made on this issue. While running for office he supported the development of the land – as a way to bring much-needed housing to the area and a grocery store to a food desert.

But after voters upheld the conservation easement blocking development Johnston got to work to acquire the land from Westside Development. The land swap he orchestrated is a good deal for taxpayers who will get 155 acres of prime real estate in exchange for a slightly smaller amount of land out by the Denver airport.

We could not have asked for more, and we also extend our gratitude to the ownership of Westside for working with the city for an amicable solution to what was a difficult position. We hope they find success as they seek to develop the land in Adams County.

Colorado is a place that prides itself on recreation and access to the great outdoors. Our urban core needs more places for kids to explore and for adults to unwind. This park could be the legacy of both Johnston who saw it across the finish line and former Mayor Wellington Webb who was in charge of buying the conservation easement long before it was clear how valuable this land would become.

If we could transport this land to another part of Denver – one where there is a dearth of parks and an abundance of concrete we would, but that is not how land conservation works. City and state parks often are located simply by who is willing to donate the land or where the state happened to already own a parcel.

All of Denver should engage with the city to plan for this new park. It is located just off of Interstate 70 and there is access to light rail and bus transit. So while the park is known for now as Park Hill Golf Club, eventually it will be a regional draw for the entire city and the entire state.

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The Denver Post editorial board opposes the ban on mountain lion, lynx and bobcat hunting

Coloradans are being asked to ban mountain lion hunting and the hunting and trapping of bobcats and the endangered lynx should the animal ever get delisted.

A “no” vote on Proposition 127 will allow the hunting and trapping to continue under the careful regulation and scientific control of the Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

The Denver Post editorial board has long supported the wildlife officials at CPW in their pursuit of scientifically managed populations and supporting hunting as both recreation, food sources and a tool for population control.

The group that has proposed Proposition 127 – known as CATS – has focused its campaign on making the case that trophy hunting or sport hunting is inherently unethical and should be banned in a state known for its hunting recreation opportunities. For now, the target is big cats, but we fear what may be targeted next. Bear hunting?

No one is hunting moose primarily for the meat, and while fish often survive being caught and released, sometimes the stress or injury is too much and they die. Hunting and fishing, even when the primary motivation is not procuring meat, is not necessarily unethical.

While most Coloradans would not participate in a mountain lion hunt, or feel comfortable killing a bobcat that had been caught in a live trap, we do not find those practices to be beyond the pale. Like all outdoor recreation, it has an impact on wildlife, but CPW’s job is to carefully regulate and manage that balance between hunting and healthy ecosystems and between fishing in Colorado’s rivers and streams and flourishing trout populations.

Colorado’s mountain lion populations appear to be thriving. Bobcats are not listed in short supply, although population estimates are hard to do on the elusive animals, and lynx are already an endangered species, and hunting and trapping of the animal is not permitted.

Some shocking revelations have come from the CATS campaign, however. All is not lost just because voters might reject a complete hunting ban in a state known for its recreational hunting.

First, mountain lion hunters are killing too many female lions. About half of the 500 lions killed last year were females, which can endanger the lion population and also inadvertently lead to the death of nursing kittens if signs are missed or ignored by hunters. As it does for deer and elk, CPW should start limiting how many licenses are issued for female lions every year.

Second, there need to be annual limits put on fur trapping for bobcats. The tags are currently unlimited, meaning a hunter receiving an over-the-counter furbearer license can kill as many bobcats as they can using hunting and trapping. We don’t think that’s reasonable and could lead to overhunting. A per-license limit should be applied to the license for all furbearing animals — badger, fox, mink, muskrat, opossum, pine marten, raccoon, ring-tailed cat, skunk, weasel.

But again, those two concerns don’t support a full ban of our Colorado hunting traditions.

Finally, we do worry that the current method of hunting may not give mountain lions a fair chance to escape the hunters. Dogs pick up on a lion’s scent and pursue them for miles before treeing the animal and alerting the hunters with their barks. Today, however, hunters do not have to keep up with their dogs on foot. Instead, they use GPS tracking collars to find the treed cat and shoot it from the limbs of the tree. No matter how you feel about that hunting practice, however, that is not what this ballot measure is about. Proposition 127 is not a carefully worded regulation of hunting practices that ensures the critical principles of “fair chase.” It is a complete ban that would open up a slippery slope for all hunting across Colorado.

Voters in this state have long embraced and prioritized outdoor recreation — even if it’s a sport they don’t personally participate in. Hunting big cats is no different and we hope voters in cities and towns, on the plains and in the mountains will say “no” to Proposition 127.

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Endorsement: “Do not retain” votes on Colorado judges could inadvertently give a win to Trump supporters

Angry messages started rolling into the Colorado Supreme Court in December after a majority of judges ruled that President Donald Trump was not eligible to appear on the Colorado primary ballot because he had “engaged in” insurrection. Soon the FBI was investigating threats of violence because some Trump supporters had taken their legal disagreement with the court too far.

Now, Colorado’s Supreme Court Chief Justice Monica M. Márquez is being targeted again, this time by groups urging Colorado voters not to retain her on the bench in November’s election. Márquez, who grew up in Grand Junction and was appointed by Gov. Bill Ritter to the Supreme Court in 2010, is the only Supreme Court judge on the ballot this fall who joined the majority opinion in Anderson v. Griswold.

Coloradans should vote to retain Márquez and send a message to those wielding her retention as a political cudgel that far-right extremists cannot bully Colorado justices.

The four justices were sound in their finding last year that Trump had orchestrated a vast insurrection attempt that culminated with the violent Jan. 6 attempt to prevent Congress from seating Joe Biden as president.

“We are mindful of the magnitude and weight of the questions now before us,” wrote the four-justice majority late last year. “We are likewise mindful of our solemn duty to apply the law, without fear or favor, and without being swayed by public reaction to the decisions that the law mandates we reach.”

In other words, the justices stood strong against threats and angry messages flooding into the courts. The majority applied the clear language of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, a guarantee that Americans not be governed by someone who had betrayed the cornerstone of American democracy by treason or insurrection. The facts of the case had been litigated in a lower court that also found Trump had engaged in insurrection.

A national social issue non-profit called the Article III Project launched a campaign not to retain Márquez.

“Monica Márquez attempted to disenfranchise over 550,000 Colorado Trump primary voters,” Mike Davis, founder and president of the nonprofit group, told The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel earlier this month. “She doesn’t respect democracy and the rule of law. So it’s time for Colorado voters to fire Monica Márquez in this November 5th election.”

This is utter nonsense.

The U.S. Supreme Court did strike down their decision with a unanimous ruling that states could not enforce the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution on their own. But, this ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court was based entirely on their interpretation of Section 5 of the 14th Amendment, giving Congress the power to enforce the post-Civil War amendment. The justices lamented the “chaos” that would come if states were able to enforce the insurrection clause of the 14th Amendment without a federal process spelled out in legislation for doing so. Perhaps, if the U.S. Supreme Court had more courage, they would have been less worried about “chaos” and more worried with enforcing the U.S. Constitution faithfully.

In other words, Colorado’s justices did what the nation’s top justices were too afraid to do – stand up for the amendment as written, no matter the difficulty that could ensue if enforced by a state-court.

We would ignore this fringe movement to punish a Colorado justice for her part in a sound legal ruling if it weren’t for a compounding threat to her retention. The Colorado Springs Gazette recommended this week that none of the three justices up for consideration be retained for office.

Their logic is far more sound — the Colorado Supreme Court recently weathered a tremendous scandal under now-retired Supreme Court Chief Justice Nathan Coats. Combined the two efforts may have the unintended consequences of ejecting a very fine justice from Colorado’s Supreme Court.

We too have expressed discontent with Coats’ involvement in the scandal, and frustration with the lack of transparency into the investigation afforded by his replacement Justice Brian Boatright who is also up for retention this year. But Coats is long gone from the court and there is no evidence that Boatright or any of the other justices were aware of the hush-money contract awarded to a former judicial employee.

We hope voters retain Márquez, Boatright and Justice Maria E. Berkenkotter.

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Endorsement: Fund services for victims with a tax on guns. Yes on Proposition KK.

If a crime or tragedy happens in Colorado, the second person a victim talks to after the police is often an advocate from one of the dozens of organizations primarily funded by a dwindling pot of federal money.

These organizations offer a critical service for Coloradans. Whether it’s a domestic violence organization offering shelter to a mother and her two children after police arrive to a dangerous situation involving a gun or a volunteer from the district attorney’s office sitting for hours with a family after someone has committed suicide in a home – victims’ advocates are essential to helping Coloradans recover from the unimaginable.

However, the funding from the federal Victims Crimes Act is not only unreliable but is drying up, leaving these organizations across the state to make tough decisions about how many victims they can serve and the level of service they can offer. Does the mother fleeing her own home get a week’s stay in the shelter and legal aid, or just one night and an ex-parte form to file on her own? Does a family get put in a hotel room while the location of the suicide is processed by detectives, or must they find their own place to stay at 3 a.m. without a credit card or any other personal belongings?

Coloradans have a chance during this election to give these critical services the funding they need.

Proposition KK would levy a state-wide 6.5% excise tax on large gun and ammunition sellers in Colorado.

The hope behind this new tax is not to reduce the number of guns sold in the state, but rather to generate revenue to fund critical services for the victims of crime. Not all crisis services involve a gun, but we do know that if a gun is involved in a crime, domestic violence incident or suicide attempt, the outcome is worse.

Already, the federal government charges an 11% tax on most gun and ammunition sales. Colorado lawmakers decided last year to ask voters to add another 6.5% onto that to fund state-wide victims programs. The fund will raise an estimated $39 million and the first $30 million will go through the existing board to award grants for victim assistance. After that, $8 million will go to the Behavioral and Mental Health Cash Fund ($5 million of which is earmarked for veterans programs) and $1 million to the School Security Cash Fund, both of which are administered by lawmakers in the General Assembly.

Proposition KK is a smart way to assess a tax directly on objects that play a role in making crime worse. The tax will only be levied on gun dealers and manufacturers who sell more than $20,000 worth of new guns and ammunition every year, meaning the tax won’t hit small gun sellers or used gun dealers. Sales to police officers or members of the military are exempted because we do need a well-regulated militia or, in this case, a police force.

Additionally, we are thrilled that the bill does not create a new program for administering grants to victims’ advocates; instead, it relies on the existing Crime Victim Services Advisory Board to make recommendations to the Department and the Division of Criminal Justice.

We would ask that future gun owners in Colorado view this tax not as a punishment but as an investment in services should their gun ever fall into the wrong hands or be used in a tragedy or crime. These services are essential.

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Updated Oct. 22, 2024 at 6:17 p.m. Due to an editor’s error this editorial had the wrong amount the tax would raise in the first year. The estimate is $39 million.

Endorsement: Colorado isn’t ready for ranked-choice voting, yet

Colorado isn’t ready for major changes to our election system, even if adopting an all-party primary and ranked-choice general election could mean more and perhaps better choices for voters in future years.

Tina Peters’ saga of dragging Colorado’s election system through the mud just came to an end this month when she was sentenced to nine years in jail and prison. And despite humiliating smack-downs in the legal system of other notorious election conspiracy theorists — Jenna Ellis, John Eastman and more — they and others continue to cast doubt on our election systems.

We know that Colorado’s elections are the “gold standard.”

However, enough Colorado voters still question the integrity of our elections that we think implementing a drastic change now could be disastrous.

Proposition 131 would change how the state elects candidates for the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives and statewide offices for governor, secretary of state, attorney general, treasurer, state Board of Education and University of Colorado regents. Additionally, it would change how candidates are elected to the Colorado General Assembly — House and Senate. It would not change county, municipal or special district elections.

The first change would be to eliminate primaries — for both the Republican and Democratic parties — and instead create a single primary ballot for candidates from all parties including unaffiliated candidates.

The top four candidates would then advance to the general election ballot, where voters would be asked to “rank some or all of the candidates for each office in order of preference.” Here’s where ranked-choice voting comes in — if someone’s first choice proves to be unpopular, their vote goes to their second choice, then third choice, until a single candidate gets more than 50% of the vote.

This system requires faith in the election administrator not to monkey around with the totals. The complicated reallocation of votes is done by computer, sometimes in real time, meaning a candidate might be “out” with the first batch of ballots but “back in” with the second batch. We were reassured that hand counts of Colorado’s secure paper ballot system — as required by law in close elections or if a candidate is willing to pay for it — would still be possible. The recounts would be expensive and time-consuming.

Implementing this on a statewide basis will take money and time, including creating a way to perform a risk-limiting audit with independent software to make certain that the original tally is correct.

While the actual ranking process is fairly straightforward, Colorado voters will have to pay close attention to make sure they don’t accidentally spoil their ballot by ranking two first-choice candidates or other easy mistakes. Also, having city and county elections that are not part of the open primary adds to the confusion, especially for unaffiliated voters who will still get both the Republican and Democrat primary ballots but can only participate in one.

Someone like Tina Peters would have a field day casting doubt on election results from this system. Across the nation, we’ve seen that hand counts closely matching machine counts don’t dissuade conspiracy theorists, even when coupled with detailed lists of voters who participated in the election.

For Colorado to transition to such a system will take time and trust. We’d need something closer to a super-majority vote than a mere 50% win this November to convince us Coloradans are ready to fight this election battle.

There is one guaranteed clear advantage of Proposition 131 — a candidate would have to get at least 50% of the vote to win. No longer would third-party candidates serve as only spoilers, but voters would feel liberated to cast a ballot for someone unaffiliated or libertarian without throwing away their vote.

Kent Thiry, the former CEO of DaVita, is financially backing the effort to bring ranked choice voting to Colorado. He says the goal is to create an election system that does three things: 1. Levels the playing field in the primary for all candidates regardless of party, giving Colorado’s huge segment of unaffiliated voters a voice in the nominee selection process. 2. Because most voters don’t participate in the primary, give voters a choice in the general election by having four candidates advance. 3.  Require that any candidate get majority support to win.

“The problem right now … there can be no debating that voters lack choice. That they get to cast very few meaningful votes in a general election and that spoilers play a big role,” Thiry said.

These are goals worth of pursuing and voting “no” on Proposition 131 doesn’t mean Colorado won’t eventually tackle the complex process of improving elections.

And Thiry has already helped improve Colorado’s system by opening up primaries to unaffiliated voters. Rather than spending millions of dollars to upend the system completely, the state could work on getting voters engaged with the existing system. If turnout was the same for caucuses and primaries as it was for the general election, Colorado would have more choices and candidates more aligned with the average voter.

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The Denver Post’s endorsements for the 2024 election

The Denver Post Editorial Board is making endorsements on state-wide and City of Denver ballot measures ahead of the Nov. 5, 2024 election. The Post is not endorsing candidates this year. Ballots for the election will be mailed to registered voters as early as Friday, Oct. 11, and will begin arriving the following week.

Oct. 28 is the last day to register to vote and still receive a ballot in the mail. Coloradans can also register to vote and vote in person at Voter Service and Polling Centers across the state which open Oct. 21. Check your county for details. Registering to vote and casting a ballot at these locations is available until 7 p.m. on election night.

Judicial Retention

Vote to retain all three Supreme Court Justices. Coloradans should vote to retain the three Supreme Court justices on the ballot this year and send a message to those wielding her retention as a political cudgel that far-right extremists cannot bully Colorado justices.

State of Colorado Ballot Measures

Vote yes on Amendment G. This simple fix to the Colorado Constitution will ensure all disabled veterans who are unable to work can get the same break on their property taxes that other veterans are guaranteed.

 Vote yes on Amendment H. Colorado’s judicial branch has long needed reform. While this proposal put forward by state lawmakers as a compromise isn’t perfect, it is a huge improvement over the police-themselves policy that led to judicial misconduct getting swept under the rug. Judicial discipline should come from outside the Supreme Court and this will create an external mechanism for oversight.

Vote yes on Amendment J. Colorado has long recognized marriage between same-sex couples and even longer supported civil unions. Remove the language put into the Constitution in 2006 defining marriage as only being between a man and a woman.

Vote yes on Amendment K. Give election officials more time to get the ballots set and sent out, especially to oversees voters.

Vote yes on Amendment 79. Guarantee all Coloradans have access to abortion by voting “yes” to repeal a portion of the Constitution that prohibits Medicaid from covering abortions.

Vote no on Amendment 80. School choice has been excellent for Colorado students and families, and is now under assault from teacher’s unions. However, we worry that placing this vague language in the Colorado Constitution could lead to unintended consequences, including giving taxpayer dollars intended for public schools to families already exercising choice through private schools.

Vote yes on Proposition JJ. Colorado voters approved a 10% tax on casinos for their sports betting profits in 2019 at the same time they legalized the practice. Since that time sports betting has boomed far beyond the three gaming towns. The state should keep the increased revenue to fund water projects — approximately $29 million — instead of returning it to taxpayers or the casinos under the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights.

Vote yes on Proposition KK. Help fund services for victims with a tax on guns. Federal funding for victims’ services has declined significantly and this 6.5% excise tax on gun sellers and manufacturers will help fully fund programs for victims of crime and their families.

Vote no on Proposition 127. Allow the hunting and trapping to continue under the careful regulation and scientific control of the Colorado Parks and Wildlife. The Denver Post editorial board has long supported the wildlife officials at CPW in their pursuit of scientifically managed populations and supporting hunting as both recreation, food sources and a tool for population control.

Vote yes on Proposition 129. Creating a mid-level “master program” for veterinarian professionals is a no-brainer that could help reduce costs without reducing the quality of care.

Vote no on Proposition 131. Colorado isn’t ready yet for ranked-choice voting given the ardent election deniers who don’t even trust the straightforward process used today.

City and County of Denver Ballot Measures

Vote no on Ballot Measure 2R. Denver voters should say no to this sales tax for affordable housing.

Vote yes on Ballot Issue 2Q. This is a much-needed sales-tax increase to help fund Denver Health.

Vote no on Initiated Ordinances 308 and 309. Banning a slaughterhouse and fur sales in Denver is pure folly.

Vote yes on Ballot Issue 4A. Denver Public Schools students and teachers deserve safe, comfortable facilities to learn and work. Support this $1 billion in bond funds.

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Endorsement: Guarantee all Coloradans have reproductive freedom with Amendment 79

Colorado voters have an opportunity this fall to guarantee reproductive freedom in the state Constitution, and also to finally make certain that this liberty doesn’t just pertain to affluent women with private health insurance. We urge people to vote “yes” on Amendment 79.

This amendment is needed to repeal another constitutional amendment passed by Colorado voters 40 years ago that prohibits taxpayer money, including Medicaid, from being used to pay for abortions. Striking section 50 of article V of the Colorado Constitution would provide equitable health care in this state for the thousands of women on Medicaid. Without insurance coverage, women must find a free clinic or save enough money to obtain a safe abortion in a timely manner.

Colorado clinics have waiting lists for abortion care because this state is pulling women from places across the nation where Republicans have banned abortions. So instead of having an abortion at, say, six weeks gestation performed by her own OBGYN, a woman would be forced to wait two or three more weeks to go to a clinic.

Nothing about that is good for Coloradans, including the blastocyst that is rapidly developing into an embryo and by nine weeks gestation will become a fetus.

We trust women to judge their own personal circumstances and make this decision for themselves. We are resolute that abortions be conducted at the earliest possible moment in gestation. Amendment 79 would make certain that women who choose to have an abortion can do so quickly, with Medicaid coverage, and with their own doctors.

But Amendment 79 is also about protecting Colorado’s status as one of the few remaining safe havens for pregnant women in a post-Roe v. Wade world where 13 states have religiously framed laws banning abortions from the moment an egg is fertilized.

Opponents of Amendment 79 want to make the issue about the regulation of late-term abortions.

Thomas Perille, a doctor with Democrats for Life, told The Denver Post that he fears if Amendment 79 becomes law this state will never be able to regulate abortion clinics, including prohibiting abortions after 20 weeks gestation that are “elective” and providing similar licensing and review processes as other hospital clinics and outpatient surgery centers.

But the language of Amendment 79 would not prohibit all future regulation of abortion. We know that the most basic constitutional rights can and should have reasonable restrictions placed on them. We have freedom of religion until a cult begins harming people. We have the right to bear arms but not machine guns. We have free speech unless it’s a vicious lie that harms someone’s reputation. Even before five conservative Supreme Court justices stripped pregnant women of their constitutional protections, abortion was heavily regulated across much of the nation at all points of gestation.

If Amendment 79 passes, Coloradans will have the right to have an abortion but lawmakers can ensure those abortions are safe and conducted within the medical best practices recommended by the state’s Board of Health.

Perille cites data from 2014 released by an abortion clinic in Boulder that says over the course of five years, only 30% of abortions were prompted by a fetal diagnosis. He’s attempting to scare Coloradans into believing that women and doctors are regularly seeking and performing late-term abortions on perfectly healthy babies.

We know that is not the case.

The study itself is focused on second- and third-trimester abortions, but the reference to 30% of abortions being for a fetal diagnosis is referring to all of the abortions — not just abortions after 12 weeks gestation — at the facility in the five-year period, 1,251 patients, as evidenced by the note that the increase in the percent of abortions done for fetal anomalies “reflected a gradual change in clinic policy to accept patients with more advanced gestation.” Clearly, the more patients served later in pregnancy the higher percent of abortions were performed due to fetal anomalies because the two are closely correlated. Today that clinic does not provide first-term abortions but at the time of the study it did.

Only 1% of abortions are performed after 21 weeks of gestation according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, and there’s no data to show how many of those are performed absent a fetal anomaly or concerns for the mother’s health. Doctors do talk about a small number of abortions later in pregnancy in instances of rape, incest, and sex trafficking.

We know that the No. 1 way to prevent abortions from being needed in the second trimester is to make access to care faster. Fewer Colorado women will need to find a clinic at 12 weeks gestation if their own OBGYN can treat them using Medicaid dollars at nine weeks gestation.

Coloradans have a chance to undo years of harmful public policy and make abortions a part of regular health care. It takes 55% of voters to change the state Constitution, so please, don’t skip over Amendment 79 on the ballots that arrive in mailboxes starting Monday.

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