Face mask ban for ICE agents; New transport fee paid by residents and businesses; Neguse sues Trump admin

Headlines Tuesday January 13, 2026

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    Face mask ban for ICE agents; New transport fee paid by residents and businesses; Neguse sues Trump admin KGNU News

Denver considers face mask ban for ICE agents

The Denver City Council heard a proposed policy yesterday that would ban law enforcement agents, including immigration enforcement agents, from wearing face coverings while performing arrest and detention operations. The Denver Post said Councilwomen Flor Alvidrez and Shontel Lewis presented their policy to the council yesterday, though the presentation yesterday was for feedback and not an official submission of the proposed mandate.

The new rule was floated in the wake of multiple civilian shootings perpetrated by Immigration officers last week. Notably Renee Good was shot in her vehicle by a masked officer – the federal government has justified officers wearing masks to protect the safety of the officers.

A similar anti-face covering law was passed in California last year, The Trump admin later sued to block the bill citing a court precedent that says federal officers can’t be prosecuted while acting in the course of their duties.

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Boulder to bill residents, businesses for new transport fee

The Boulder City Council voted 6-3 on Oct. 23 to adopt the fee which was proposed by a 2008 report to the City Council about stabilizing revenue.

The city’s transportation projects budget is funded primarily through sales and use tax revenue which has not kept pace with inflation and rising labor costs, Transportation Advisory Board Vice Chair Darcy Kitching said “We do need something that is going to be able to cover that gap.”  The fee is expected to generate about $2.3 million in 2026 and $6.4 million annually in future years. The funds would be used for maintaining streets, sidewalks, multi-use paths, bridges and similar infrastructure.

City officials have said the amount each property owner will pay should reflect a property type’s estimated wear and tear on roads. For example, a detached single-family home would pay $54 a year, while a multi-unit dwelling would pay $42 per unit per year.  Non-residential properties, commercial properties, office space and industrial uses would pay different fees. CU Boulder, Boulder Valley School District, and other institutions will be exempt from these fees

Whether the payments will be added onto the existing utility bills or processed some other way is still being discussed with the City Manager’s Office.

City Council has requested their staff members plan additional outreach to residents and businesses due to concerns about public engagement and costs.

They are considering creating a webpage showing returns on investment and holding one-on-one meetings with businesses. Updates will be available through the city’s Transportation newsletter and the fee’s dedicated webpage. This is all according to the Boulder Reporting Lab.

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Neguse sues Trump admin for limiting detention center visits

Representatives Joe Neguse and Jason Crow have joined 10 other Democratic Lawmakers suing the Trump administration for reimposing a policy blocking unannounced congressional visits to immigration detention centers.

The motion including the two representatives from Colorado requests the US District Court for the District of Columbia order the Trump administration to explain that it doesn’t violate federal law that grants members of congress oversight of ICE facilities.

This suit comes almost a month after a federal judge ruled in favor group of law makers, Neguse and Crow included, requesting the resumption of unannounced visits and tours of detention centers and field officers run by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The lawsuit was brought on by representative crow after claiming he was barred from an unannounced visit to the GEO facility ion Aurora last July.

The latest motion now claims US Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem quietly signed a new memorandum reinstating a seven-day notice requirement.

That report came from Denver7 who says ICE could not be reached at the time of their reporting.

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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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