Why are so many pedestrians dying in Colorado?

Plus: A 13-year-old backcountry phenom, tariffs wreaking havoc on climate goals, another case of measles and more

Why are so many pedestrians dying in Colorado?
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Good morning and happy Tuesday!

The idea of the American male midlife crisis was pretty set in my mind as a kid thanks to TV: sports car, toupée, sudden interest in reliving the “good ol’ days.” I don’t really like cars, I’ve been at peace with my hairline’s journey to the back of my head since I was 23 and my ol’ days were fine, but nothing I want to revisit. So I thought I was immune.

But I’ve realized, here in the long shadow of my 41st birthday, that the drive to defy the march of time can come in many different forms. For instance, deciding to run a triathlon despite only ever participating in a single public race over 5K (and having failed swim lessons several times as a kid).

A few months of increasingly frantic training later, I finished my race Sunday, comfortably in the middle of the pack. And rather than feeling like a “crisis,” I now find myself more grateful than ever to be in the middle of the cozy little life I’ve been gifted.

And part of that life is getting to help my colleagues share the great work they do with readers like you! So let’s tighten up our laces, grease up the gears and dive into some news, shall we?

P.S. — We have a lot of fun stuff happening outside of the news right now:

Pedestrians cross 30th Street at Arapahoe Avenue on March 27 in Boulder. (Alyte Katilius, Special to The Colorado Sun)

19%

The share of the state’s traffic deaths who were pedestrians, up from 11% in 2013.

Nearly 1,000 pedestrians have been killed on Colorado streets and roads in the past decade, a proportionally higher share than nearly every state. And as Elizabeth Koenck reports, as pedestrian deaths become more common, the efforts to make roads safer continue to be tackled in a patchwork, ineffective way from city to city and district to district.

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Griff Pinto is a 13-year-old backcountry skiing phenom from Silverton who spends more than 100 days a season climbing and skiing peaks in the San Juans (Cliff Pinto, Special to The Colorado Sun)

Griff Pinto made a big decision at the beginning of the pandemic lockdown: It was time to go all-in on skiing. Sure, he was 8 years old at the time, but as Jason Blevins reports, those five years have turned Pinto into a backcountry expert unlike any seen before.

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An array of solar panels face the sun at the Summit Plant Laboratories on Oct. 17, 2024, in Fort Collins. The Solar panels were installed by Sandbox Solar as part of an agrivoltaic project with Summit Plant Laboratories. (Garrett Mogel, Special to The Colorado Sun)

From the giant Xcel Energy to the smallest rural electric cooperatives, Colorado’s electric utilities are all rushing to meet reliability and clean energy standards. But as Mark Jaffe reports, the “clear policy decision of the Trump administration to drive up prices for wind, solar and storage” — as one co-op CEO put it — is adding significant costs to every plan.

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Colorado has had its share of high-profile crimes and criminal trials, but few produced the tragedy, intrigue, courtroom theatrics and unsatisfying resolution of the United Bank robbery that resulted in the loss of $200,000 — and the murder of four unarmed guards. Author Steven Epstein, a North Carolina attorney who made “Deadly Heist” his fourth true crime title, recounts the twisting, often emotional narrative from an outsider’s point of view. This excerpt describes the investigation that closed in on enigmatic suspect James King.

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I can almost walk up a flight of stairs without wincing now, which I’m going to call my second-biggest accomplishment of the week. Thanks for reading, and we’ll see you back here tomorrow!

Eric & the whole staff of The Sun

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