Speed Cameras Being Beefed up in Boulder; Mountain Lions Euthanized After Hiker Found Dead Near Estes Park; Telluride Ski Closure Enters Day Nine, Resort Partially Reopens

Headlines Monday January 5, 2026

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    Speed Cameras Being Beefed up in Boulder; Mountain Lions Euthanized After Hiker Found Dead Near Estes Park; Telluride Ski Closure Enters Day Nine, Resort Partially Reopens Jack Armstrong

Speed Cameras Being Beefed up in Boulder

Speed cameras and warning notices have reduced speeding by 80% in a work zone on the Diagonal Highway in Boulder County.

Starting next Monday, enforcement on the Diagonal Highway will go from warnings to actual fines, for people going more than 10 miles above the speed limit. Colorado Department of Transportation intends to expand the use of automated speed cameras to other work zones on its roads around the state. There were more than 500 injuries and 8 fatalities in work zones on Colorado highways last year.

That’s a decrease from 2024, but the state says there’s still more to be done to improve those figures.

 

Telluride Ski Closure Enters Day Nine, Resort Partially Reopens

Telluride Ski resort is set to partially reopen today, as the ski patrol enters the second week of their strike, demanding increased hourly rates and wages aligned with the increasing cost of living, in addition to 3 year contracts. 9 News reported that the new offer proposed by the ski company on Sunday faced criticism from the ski patrol. Their Instagram post claimed the ski resort, “did not bring more money to the table, they just moved it around.”

The ski patrol says the resort reduced the cost of living adjustment from their previous offer in year two and three of contracts, and moved it over to the new ‘complexity bonus’, equal to $1.50 for all hours worked, including overtime hours, paid out mid-season and end of season. The ski patrols’ most recent post says they have not yet arrived at a solution that benefits both parties.

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Mountain Lions Euthanized After Hiker Found Dead Near Estes Park

Two mountain lions were euthanized last week after a woman was found dead after a suspected mountain lion attack in Larimer County. Hikers reported the incident after they attended to a woman who showed no signs of life once they scared away a mountain lion stalking her body on Thursday, New Year’s Day, last week.

After the hikers reported the incident, Colorado Parks and Wildlife tracked and euthanized two mountain lions in the area. CPW is planning on testing the animals for any neurological diseases.

Mountain lion attacks in Colorado are considered extremely rare, with only 28 attacks being reported since 1990, with the last fatal attack being in 1999.

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Colorado Prison Management Still in Effect

Colorado’s prison population management plan is still in effect. It kicks in when state prisons are more than 97 % full for 30 straight days. The state activated the emergency plan for the first time last August. It allocated about $3 million to the Department of Corrections to add 153 more prison beds. The parole board has also released 29 inmates who met specific criteria for expedited releases. But prisons are still nearly 98 % full as of December, and hundreds of inmates already sentenced to prison are being held in jails across Colorado. Prison reform advocates say overcrowding is happening because prisons are understaffed and too many people are being incarcerated for minor parole violations.

 

You can hear daily headlines on the Morning Magazine, KGNU’s weekday morning show with coverage of local and regional public affairs and news with headlines and commentary. Click here to listen to full episodes of the Morning Magazine.

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