Cotter Managers Ask For Halt To Pond Testing
The managers of a uranium mill are asking state regulators to let them stop testing a leaking radioactive pond because conditions are too dangerous for workers.
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The managers of a uranium mill are asking state regulators to let them stop testing a leaking radioactive pond because conditions are too dangerous for workers.
A federal grand jury is investigating the practices of Denver-based kidney-dialysis firm DaVita.
The U.S. Forest Service is offering to renegotiate timber sale contracts in an effort to save sawmills in the Rocky Mountain region that have been hit hard by bark beetle infestations.
Commerce City has purchased the Mile High Greyhound Park with plans to redevelop the property.
The Commerce City Urban Renewal Authority says it has bought the former Mile High Greyhound Park for $3.3 million.
Denver voters will decide if businesses should be required to give employees paid sick days.
The town of Breckenridge is suing nearly two dozen online travel companies. Town leaders claim those websites are not paying the full lodging and sales taxes they should be.
Voters in Steamboat Springs are being asked to increase sales taxes to help airlines bring in more ski visitors.
Four environmental groups say a judge should dismiss a lawsuit challenging Colorado's renewable energy standard.
Gov. John Hickenlooper proposed Tuesday that energy companies operating in his state be required to publicly disclose the ingredients of the fluids they inject into the ground to extract more oil and gas, even though he said there is almost no chance the fluids are contaminating water wells.
Five Colorado-based fast food chains have made the annual QSR 50 list of the top-grossing quick-service restaurants in the country, though one -- Quiznos -- had the largest decrease in total units of any chain on the list.
A Littleton dress shop called The Green Bride specializes in dresses that leave a smaller carbon footprint.
The animal rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals said a Boulder-based company has changed its website after it came under fire.
Colorado provided 42 percent of Xcel Energy profits during the second quarter of 2011.
IKEA finally opened its doors Wednesday morning to lines of excited customers. The Swedish furniture store has a following for affordable, stylish furniture that customers construct themselves.
A marmot took an unexpected trip across Colorado this week after it climbed into the frame of a truck.
Rising tomato prices are putting pressure on restaurants across Northern Colorado, forcing some businesses to adapt while trying to keep costs low for customers.
The tragic shooting of a Denver teenager has rattled the Montbello community.
El Niño does not guarantee that it will happen. It just opens the door.
Harvest Farm, currently a long-running residential recovery program, will first be transitioned into a temporary emergency shelter for men experiencing homelessness before ultimately closing ahead of a Northern Colorado expansion.
A former town councilman is accused of shooting a teenager in the face after that teen came onto his property to ask if he could take homecoming pictures there. The trial is expected to last until Friday.
Changes in Colorado’s Office of Information Technology are happening after a blistering state audit.
CBS Colorado's Lauren Whitney spoke with Tina Gallegos from the Denver Public Library for Book Talk.
The ranch is 52 acres in size and includes more than 25,000 feet of living space and adjacent mountain views.
Police in Aurora are searching for the victim in an attack that happened last week at the RTD Florida station.
After a season filled with promise and a march through two rounds of the playoffs, the Colorado Avalanche got swept in the Western Conference final.
The squad was announced during an event in New York City on Tuesday after U.S. Men's National Team manager Mauricio Pochettino spent months evaluating players to finalize the roster.
Kyle Busch, who won more races in NASCAR's top three series than anyone in history, died suddenly on Thursday.
Kyle Busch, 41, died suddenly on Thursday after being hospitalized with an illness, according to his team.
Kyle Busch's family earlier Thursday announced he had been hospitalized with a "severe illness."
The U.S. military carried out another round of strikes on Iran, a U.S. official confirmed to CBS News on Wednesday, another challenge to a shaky ceasefire between the two countries.
Uganda on Wednesday ordered the closure of its border with Congo, where suspected cases of a rare type of Ebola are surging.
More than a dozen soldiers injured in Operation Epic Fury are still recovering at the military hospital.
The S&P 500 hit a new record on Wednesday, even as soaring gas prices fuel inflation and consumer confidence sinks.
The U.S. and Iran had appeared ready to de-escalate before the U.S. military conducted what it said were defensive strikes against Iran on Wednesday.
The U.S. military carried out another round of strikes on Iran, a U.S. official confirmed to CBS News on Wednesday, another challenge to a shaky ceasefire between the two countries.
More than a dozen soldiers injured in Operation Epic Fury are still recovering at the military hospital.
Former first lady Jill Biden said she thought her husband, Joe Biden, was having a stroke during the 2024 debate against Donald Trump.
The U.S. Department of Justice tells CBS News it will speed up review of certain whistleblower complaints dealing with fraud against benefits programs like Medicare.
ICE detainees are taking their own lives at a pace that's unprecedented in the agency's two-decade history, highlighting what experts call failures in care and oversight, an AP investigation finds.
Uganda on Wednesday ordered the closure of its border with Congo, where suspected cases of a rare type of Ebola are surging.
The head of the World Health Organization says Ebola has killed at least 7 people in Congo, but the U.N. agency says it knows the epidemic "is much larger."
A Colorado School of Mines senior recently diagnosed with leukemia graduated in the halls of his oncology ward in a surprise ceremony put together by his care team.
Dr. Peter Stafford was working with the missionary group Serge in Congo when he was infected with Ebola.
The bill will create a first-of-its-kind Ibogaine research pilot program, paving the way for Colorado to study the psychoactive compound that claims to treat PTSD, addiction, and mental health.
Rising tomato prices are putting pressure on restaurants across Northern Colorado, forcing some businesses to adapt while trying to keep costs low for customers.
The S&P 500 hit a new record on Wednesday, even as soaring gas prices fuel inflation and consumer confidence sinks.
The Insurance Institute and Consumer Reports ranked 96 of the safest cars for teens. Here's what to know.
Oil prices were also mixed after U.S. strikes on Iranian forces, underscoring the risks still hanging over markets and consumers.
South Korean Starbucks' boss apologized again as it faced a backlash over a marketing campaign widely seen as mocking victims of a bloody military crackdown in 1980.
An Aurora fire lieutenant will remain demoted after he and a fellow firefighter ran an Aurora police sergeant off the road with a fire truck last year.
A confidential investigative report commissioned by the City of Denver alleges a high-ranking Denver police division chief was "severely abusive."
The City of Denver and the parent company of the Denver Post have reached a tentative agreement to resolve a major lease dispute over the iconic downtown building that bears the newspaper's name, CBS News Colorado has learned.
A federal system is working to crack down on trucks skirting safety regulations, a problem inspectors are seeing on Colorado roadways.
Glendale city leaders are forcefully opposing Colorado's proposed Bus Rapid Transit project on Colorado Boulevard, warning the plan could dramatically worsen traffic for drivers while delivering only modest transit gains.