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The Catch-Up: Teens pitch lawmakers, more wolf packs and testing dam safety

Two people in tee shirts lift a metal bar over a tall model of a dam with water rushing over it
Alex Hager
/
萝莉少女
Engineering students take measurements from a scale model of the dam at Halligan Reservoir in a lab at Colorado State University in Fort Collins on July 15, 2025. Their data will help make the soon-to-be-built dam safer in the real world.

Happy Friday from 萝莉少女 News! Here are a few of the most interesting stories from the week of July 14-18:

Teens pitch policy priorities to state lawmakers focused on education equity, substance abuse

Teens pitch policy priorities to state lawmakers focused on education equity, substance abuse

Despite budget cuts this year that nearly ended the program, members of Colorado鈥檚 Youth Advisory Council met with lawmakers this week to present more than a dozen policy proposals to legislators at the Capitol.

The group, known as COYAC, advises state lawmakers each year on issues and policies important to young people with the goal of having their ideas considered during the next legislative session.

This year's proposals included expanding access to vocational programs for students with intellectual disabilities, developing a statewide life-skills curriculum for high schoolers, and launching a telehealth pilot to address health care gaps in rural schools. 

Environmental policy was also a major focus, with recommendations to update how businesses are fined for pollution violations and reduce plastic waste in restaurants.

Three of the Council鈥檚 proposals covered youth substance abuse, including a push for more statewide data on oral nicotine use among youth and the creation of an oral nicotine guidance report for school districts.

While COYAC no longer has the power to draft bills for the legislature's consideration due to those budget cuts, some of the council鈥檚 proposals will still be sent to the General Assembly for consideration.


Loveland council member resigns amid recall effort

A red brick and concrete staircase leads to the front steps of Loveland City Hall, also made red brick and concrete. The Loveland City Council will hold a special meeting Tuesday to name a new city manager, city attorney and municipal judge.
The Colorado Sun
Loveland City Hall, where the Loveland City Council will hold a special meeting Tuesday to name a new city manager, city attorney and municipal judge.

A Loveland City Council member resigned Monday. The resignation comes a day before the city planned to schedule a recall election against her.

Erin Black faced calls to step down from the public and other council members after she was filmed having a verbal argument at a park in March. Residents gathered enough signatures to spark a recall election.

A city spokesperson says the special election won鈥檛 go forward. Black will be replaced during the November election. Black cited an increasingly hostile political environment in the city as a reason for her resignation.  


'The proof is in the pupping': 3 new wolf packs have formed in northwestern Colorado

A brown and gray wolf stands outside a metal crate at night in a snowy area.
Colorado Parks & Wildlife
Gray Wolf stands outside of its crate for a brief moment at the release site on Jan. 14, 2025.

A state document suggests three new wolf packs have formed in northwestern Colorado. They are listed as the One Ear Pack in Jackson County, the King Mountain Pack in Routt County and the Three Creeks Pack in Rio Blanco County.

The newly named packs were mentioned in a presentation that Parks and Wildlife biologists gave to a state board on Thursday.

A CPW spokesperson says new packs form when a pair of wolves have a litter of pups. The agency said last spring it had identified as many as four den sites around the state.


Neguse leads opposition to proposed NOAA cuts that would shut down Colorado lab

Colorado Congressman Joe Neguse is leading the opposition to a Trump administration proposal to cut funding for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Neguse says the cuts would hurt Colorado communities.

The cuts would shut down NOAA facilities across the country that conduct climate research, including several laboratories in Boulder. Other long-standing research institutes at the University of Colorado would shutter, too.

Neguse says closing them would make it harder for authorities to forecast weather and prepare for natural disasters. There are also jobs on the line.

The cuts are part of the Trump administration鈥檚 proposed budget for the next fiscal year. Neguse is among two dozen lawmakers who signed a letter this week urging the Department of Commerce and House Appropriations Committee to reject them.


'We're very proud of what we do': CSU students help test dam safety on Halligan Reservoir model

Water tumbles over a large model of a dam while a young man watches
Alex Hager
/
萝莉少女
Water tumbles over a model of the Halligan Reservoir dam in a lab at Colorado State University in Fort Collins on July 15, 2025. Students tested different baffles at the base of the dam to help prevent erosion during times of excess flow.

Student engineers at Colorado State University are using a giant model to test the design of a new Northern Colorado dam. The 24:1 scale model is a simulation of the maximum amount of water that could possibly spill over the dam at Halligan Reservoir.

The engineers are making sure it can handle a one-in-ten-million year rainfall event. Work on the real dam, about 25 miles northwest of Fort Collins, is expected to start in 2027 and take about three years to finish.

The expansion of Halligan Reservoir will help the city make sure it has a reliable water supply in the future. 


Colorado鈥檚 Poet Laureate has died

Colorado poet Andrea Gibson died of ovarian cancer this week after living with it since 2021. The 49-year-old had written several books and was known for their live spoken word performances.

A longtime Boulder resident, Gibson had been the state鈥檚 poet laureate since 2023. They died early Monday morning at home, surrounded by family, friends and three dogs.

In a statement, Gibson鈥檚 unique ability to connect with the vast and diverse poetry lovers of Colorado.


Falcon rescued from the Summit County landfill expected to make full recovery

A falcon with brown and white stripes sits on a blanket inside a pet crate.
Summit County Sheriff鈥檚 Office
A falcon that first responders saved from being stuck in netting at the Summit County landfill, nicknamed Scrappy, sits in an animal carrier. After being evaluated at the Summit County Animal Shelter, Scrappy made his way to an animal rehabilitation center on the Front Range and is expected to make a full recovery.

A falcon rescued last week from a Dillon junkyard is on the mend.

Responders named the bird 鈥淪crappy鈥 after finding him trapped in some netting at .

Summit Daily reports Scrappy is now at a Front Range wildlife rehabilitation facility with an injured wing. He鈥檚 expected to make a full recovery and eventually be released.

About The Catch-Up: Each week, 萝莉少女 collects and curates some of the more important stories of the week that have aired on our daily newscast. We know how busy life can be, and that it's not always possible to get your news on our airwaves (or from streaming us right here on our website). Fill in the gaps and catch up right here. No one enjoys the feeling of missing out!

As a reporter and host for 萝莉少女, I follow the local stories of the day while also guiding 萝莉少女 listeners through NPR's wider-scope coverage. It's an honor and a privilege to help our audience start their day informed and entertained.