A sinkhole under the library and other rural school issues
Plus: Why people don’t want a free apartment, Senate overrides Polis veto, PETA wants snakes to have room to slither and much more


Good morning and happy Monday! As soon as I finish writing this, I’m jumping in the car and road-tripping to Silver Cliff. I’m most looking forward to that first view of the Sangre de Cristos, made even better because it’s the time of year when Colorado’s snow-capped peaks are such a vivid contrast to a springtime landscape of green grass and blooming pink trees.
I’m going to Custer County to report on an upcoming story about rural resources. It’s our mission at The Sun to tell stories not just about Denver, but about mountain towns and rural communities. We have staff who live in Eagle, Durango, Salida and Colorado Springs, plus about a dozen freelancers in places including Crested Butte, Pueblo, Mesa County and the San Luis Valley.
It’s thanks to your support that we’re able to keep going, bringing you stories that help inform how life in Colorado varies depending on where you are. Tell your friends!
THE NEWS
EDUCATION
A sinkhole formed under a rural school library. Colorado may cut funding to a program that could fix it.

Holyoke Elementary’s library started sinking into the ground three years ago and the school is trying again for a grant from the state’s Building Excellent Schools Today program (aka BEST) to fund the construction of a new school building. But as Erica Breunlin reports, lawmakers want to limit how much the state contributes to the fund — just as schools face funding cuts and ballooning maintenance costs.
EQUITY
A free apartment comes with strings for Denver RV dwellers — and no place to park

Denver’s All In Mile High is one of the city’s highest profile programs aimed at reducing homelessness. But as Lincoln Roch reports, the program’s efforts to get people into apartments are meeting resistance from RV dwellers who say the laundry list of rules that could get them kicked out on a moment’s notice is not worth the risk of abandoning their homes on wheels.
ENVIRONMENT
Let them slither: PETA wants Colorado to require longer enclosures for pet snakes
The Colorado Department of Agriculture’s rules about pet animal care have gotten the attention of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, who want the state to change the current rule that allows snake enclosures to be half as long as the snake’s body. Tracy Ross has more.
POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT
Colorado Senate overrides Jared Polis’ veto of bill regulating social media in extremely rare rebuke of governor

For the first time since Gov. Bill Ritter was in office, the Colorado Senate passed an override of a governor’s veto. Jesse Paul and CPR’s Bente Birkeland have more on the next step of the override — and why lawmakers are choosing this battle.
IMMIGRATION
ICE raids Colorado Springs illegal after-hours nightclub, detain more than 100 immigrants
More than 300 agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration and other federal agencies raided what they called an illegal after-hours nightclub early Sunday morning. A similar raid at a club in Adams County in January claimed to be targeting gang members, but no criminal charges were filed or evidence of gang activity was produced.
MORE NEWS
COLORADO SUNDAY
Magic mushrooms aren’t the only fungi growing in Colorado. Meet the gourmet “weirdos.”

While psychedelics grab the headlines, interest in edible mushrooms is also peaking. With at least 100 varieties grown in Colorado and millions around the world, it’s boom times for fungi enthusiasts, Nancy Lofholm reports.
THE COLORADO REPORT
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THE OPINION PAGE
COLUMNS
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Hope your week starts off great!
— Jennifer and the whole staff of The Sun

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