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Will Colorado’s special session save restaurants? ‘Probably not,’ industry leader says

An empty Potager restaurant in Denver’s Capitol Hill neighborhood on Friday, May 22, 2020.

Will Colorado’s special session save restaurants? ‘Probably not,’ industry leader says

Clockwise from left: Sarah Curry Davis, Cecilia Edwards, Leslie Wicks and Kristen Condon enjoy wine and a meal inside one of the greenhouse buildings for dining used during the coronavirus pandemic at the Annette Restaurant at the Stanley Marketplace in Aurora.

Will Colorado’s special session save restaurants? ‘Probably not,’ industry leader says

Sonia Riggs, president and CEO of the Colorado Restaurant Association.

Will Colorado’s special session save restaurants? ‘Probably not,’ industry leader says

Joe Mahoney/Special to The Colorado SunTheodora Osei-Fordwuo, left, with her daughter, Maame, 15, prepare a catering order at the Afrikan Bar & Grill in Lakewood, Colo., one of two restaurants that Theodora and her husband, Sylvester (not shown) own and operate on Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2020.

Colorado oil and gas regulators finalize new rules for the drilling industry

A pickup truck drives toward an illuminated drilling rig very close Highway 66 north of Longmont on June 29, 2019.

There’s new data on coronavirus survivors. Here’s what it says

Dr. Sarah Jolley, University of Colorado School of Medicine

There’s new data on coronavirus survivors. Here’s what it says

A health care worker in the COVID-19 ICU at UCHealth Memorial in Colorado Springs.

There’s new data on coronavirus survivors. Here’s what it says

A health care worker checks a monitor in a room in the COVID-19 ICU at UCHealth Memorial in Colorado Springs.

Recall petition against Cortez school board member is upheld

Lance McDaniel, front right, meets with the Montezuma-Cortez Board of Education in 2018.

Cut off: School closings leave rural New Mexico students isolated

Social worker Victoria Dominguez collects supplies at Cuba High School to deliver along a rural school bus route outside Cuba, N.M., Oct. 19, 2020. The switch to remote learning in rural New Mexico has left some students profoundly isolated – cut off from others and the grid by sheer distance. The school system is sending school buses to students’ far-flung homes to bring them assignments, meals and a little human contact.
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