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Cortez celebrates 100 years of the 19th Amendment

Cortez celebrates 100 years of the 19th Amendment

Suffragists often wore white with purple sashes in their parades, so members of the League of Women Voters of Montezuma County wore white shirts and purple sashes.

Purgatory Resort, Durango Chamber partner for COVID relief

The Coleman Charitable Foundation and Purgatory Resort recently contributed $60,000 to help businesses in La Plata County hurt by COVID-19. In this picture are Jack Llewellyn, executive director of the Durango Chamber of Commerce, left; and Dave Rathbun, general manager of Purgatory Resort.

Cortez clashes with Empire Electric over hydro plant

The hydroelectric plant is located at the water treatment plant on County Road N.

Cortez clashes with Empire Electric over hydro plant

The hydroelectric project owned by the city of Cortez and utilized by Empire Electric is in limbo starting next month, as the city and company await a ratification of their contract.

Toxic algae are filling Colorado lakes with slimy pea-green soup

Blue-green algae forced the closure of the swim beach at Cherry Creek Reservoir earlier this summer. Water-quality scientists describe the toxic algae as pea soup.

Toxic algae are filling Colorado lakes with slimy pea-green soup

Breanna Renken of Pierce tosses a ball to her Australian cattle dogs Ophelia, left, and Hendrix at the Windsor Lake Dog Park on Wednesday, August 19, 2020. Windsor Lake closed for about a week last summer because of a toxic algae bloom..

Toxic algae are filling Colorado lakes with slimy pea-green soup

A sign warns not to ingest the water at the Windsor Lake Dog Park on Aug. 19.

Garfield County spending $1.5M to challenge Colorado’s oil and gas regulations

Natural gas flares from a Williams Energy facility Aug. 14 in Garfield County. The county has emerged as a leading voice in challenging elements of new and proposed state oil and gas regulations.

Colorado Democrats mount defense of U.S. Postal Service

The U.S. House of Representatives questioned U.S. Postal Service Postmaster General Louis DeJoy on Friday after learning mail sorting machines were being decommissioned and overtime is not being approved ahead of the November election, which is expected to rely heavily on mail-in voting.
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