A combined total of more than $2.5 million has been spent by an array of outside groups seeking to influence school board races in some of Colorado’s largest public school districts. More than half of that has been spent on races for the Denver Public Schools board,
With a little over a week to go until Election Day, early data released by Colorado elections officials show 2025 mail ballot returns significantly outpacing figures from the past two off-year elections.
Election Day is Nov. 4, and Colorado voters will be able to cast their votes on two statewide propositions dealing with school lunch funding. There are also local elections around the state, including in Denver.
Colorado Revised Statue 1-7-102 specifies that Coloradans who are scheduled to work on the day of an election are entitled to up to two paid hours of leave between 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. — the period in which polls are open, according to past Coloradoan reporting.
Colorado voters are making decisions on two statewide measures, along with local issues and school board races.
In Aurora's city council race, conservative candidates lead financial races in campaign contributions over their progressive counterparts.
Colorado’s new free school meals program will face a key test when voters decide two statewide ballot measures that would put the program on sounder financial footing, mostly by raising taxes on high-income individuals.
The vast majority of Coloradans vote either by mail or by using a ballot box, but election officials want Coloradans to know the deadline for mail-in ballots is Monday.
Yes. A good rule of thumb is to mail back your ballot no later than eight days prior to Election Day. Ballots must be received by the Larimer County Clerk's Office by 7 p.m. on election night. Postmarks do not count as a received date.
With Colorado’s November 2025 election just around the corner on November 4, 11 News has compiled a list of drop box and in-person voting locations in southern Colorado counties.
Chalkbeat on MSN
Denver school board election spending tops $1.6 million less than a week from Election Day
Less than a week from Election Day, spending by candidates and outside groups in the Denver school board election has topped $1.6 million, campaign finance reports show.
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