KRCC Newsroom
Image of a radio

Current News from NPR

September 3, 2010 | NPR · This was supposed to be the season the economy heated up, thanks to a wave of public works projects funded by the government's stimulus program. But summer is coming to an end and the recovery has not taken root. Forecasters are expecting another gloomy employment report on Friday.
 
September 3, 2010 | NPR · Are you really going to have to have a computer chip implanted in your head as part of the new health law? Will the law allow President Obama to create his own private army? While there are outrageous rumors circulating about the health law, some claims are grounded in truth.
 
September 3, 2010 | NPR · As a long Congo River barge journey ends, so, too, does a unique glimpse into the heart of a poor but potentially rich nation grappling with conflict. Despite the hardship, the people of the Democratic Republic of the Congo draw great inspiration from the inescapable and mighty river.
 
September 3, 2010 | NPR · The biggest cause for concern is that this month could show the weakest business hiring in months. Although the economy is technically a year into a recovery, that is not yet showing up in the jobs numbers.
 
September 3, 2010 | NPR · The program didn't bring any new buyers into the market, a study found. But it encouraged people who would have bought a car anyway to make their purchase a few months sooner.
 

Art & Life from NPR

September 3, 2010 | NPR · George Clooney's latest outing showcases a more internal performance -- as an assassin whose personal life threatens to further complicate an already hard-to-manage career. Kenneth Turan says Anton Corbijn's drama is impeccably composed and beautifully shot -- if a little lacking on the emotional urgency front.
 
September 2, 2010 | NPR · Director Zhang Yimou takes on the Coen brothers, remaking Blood Simple and setting it in the 17th-century "Chinese outback." Adultery, bloody mishaps and Chinese superstition are just the appetizers in this colorful film.
 
September 2, 2010 | NPR · Robert Rodriguez directs Machete, featuring a character first introduced in a fake trailer that played during his 2007 exploitation flick Grindhouse..
 
September 2, 2010 | NPR · Neither director Jean-Francois Richet's style nor star Vincent Cassel's swagger falters in Public Enemy Number One, the exhilarating follow-up to Mesrine: Killer Instinct. With its shootouts, prison breaks and wild flights of ego, the saga's second half was sure to be watchable. It's also smart, funny and incisive -- about the criminal and his era. (Recommended)
 
September 2, 2010 | NPR · Frequently moving and quietly enlightening, the documentary Last Train Home is about love and exploitation, sacrifice and endurance. Director Lixin Fan follows a single Chinese family from 2006 through the financial downturn of 2008. The parents work at garment factories in Guangzhou city; their teenage children live in an impoverished village and see their parents only once a year.
 

September 28, 2007

Breaking News: Incline Fire, NW of Manitou Springs

UPDATE 4:6:30pm [LISTEN]

UPDATE 3:5:30pm Interview with Barb Timmock, Public Affairs Officer with the U.S. Forest Service[LISTEN]

UPDATE 2: 2:30pm Listen to Eric Whitney’s latest update on the Incline Fire. [LISTEN]

UPDATE: 1:15pm Manitou’s Homecoming Parade has been cancelled to allow emergency vehicles to get to the wildland fire.

BREAKING NEWS: 1:00pm There is a wildland fire burning NW of Manitou Springs. Listen to Eric Whitney’s report here. [LISTEN]

Filed under: Manitou Springs — Delaney @ 5:30 pm

Kidnapping Suspect Arrested, Victim Safe


Jerry Gilley


Nancy Gilley

MEDIA RELEASE September 29, 2007 [1:25 p.m.]

KIDNAPPING SUSPECT ARRESTED AND VICTIM SAFE

El Paso County Sheriff’s investigators worked through the night on Friday to find information on the kidnapping victim, Nancy Gilley and her alleged kidnapper. Their diligence paid off and the two were located late Friday night.

Investigators followed leads which indicated Jerry Gilley and Nancy Gilley may have been at a hotel in Trinidad, Colorado. With assistance from the Trinidad Police Department, investigators confirmed their location. At approximately 11:35 p.m. on Friday, September 28, 2007, Sheriff’s investigators worked in collaboration with the Trinidad Police and the Trinidd SWAT team to contact and subsequently arrest Jerry Gilley. Nancy Gilley was with him and was taken to safety.

Currently Jerry Gilley is in the El Paso County Criminal Justice Center facing charges of Domestic Violence-First Degree Kidnapping, First Degree Burglary, and Felony Menacing. He is being held without bond at this time.

Nancy Gilley is safe with family and friends today.

This investigation is ongoing and more details may be available at a later time.

Filed under: Colorado Springs,Crime,El Paso County,Regional — ewhitney @ 4:12 pm

Western Govs Want More Renewable Energy Access

Colorado Governor Bill Ritter has been a champion of renewable energy since taking office. He recently put solar panels on the Governor’s mansion and just got back from Washington DC where he asked congress to adopted national renewable energy standards for utilities. This week he’s hosting the Western Governor’s Association. The topic is getting more renewable energy on the electric grid across the region. Bente Birkeland reports from Denver.

[LISTEN]

Filed under: Business,Capitol Coverage,Energy,Environment,Regional,Utilities — ewhitney @ 9:39 am

September 26, 2007

Fair Trade: Expanded Golf Course in Return for Trout Habitat?

A proposed land swap in southwestern Colorado is generating controversy. Outside Durango, a company wants to expand a golf course and development onto neighboring land now owned by the Forest Service. In exchange, they're offering property that the government says could provide important habitat for rare native trout. Bente Birkeland reports.

[LISTEN]

Local News Roundup, Wed., Sept. 26, 2007

Paccione Drops Out of 4th CD Race

Private Developer to Build Housing on Petersen, Schreiver

Murder-Suicide in Fremont County

Cotopaxi Man Missing

Arapahoe, Douglas Counties Plan $20 Billion for Water by 2020

Boulder to Hire Urban Wildlife Coordinator

[LISTEN]

September 25, 2007

New Business Proposal from Governor

Governor Bill Ritter announced legislative proposals that he says would make the state more business friendly. His package includes property tax exemptions for small businesses and a streamlined business tax. But some Republicans say the proposals are nothing more than window dressing. Bente Birkeland reports from Denver.

[LISTEN]

Filed under: Business,Capitol Coverage,Colorado,Politics — ewhitney @ 5:06 pm

September 21, 2007

Denver Schools Make Gardening Part of the Curriculum

Three new farmers markets got started in Denver this summer, and they’ve beenselling things that are grown on the grounds of three different public schools. These schools are finding out how much there is to teach and learn in a garden, and that growing plants can generate hands-on lessons in science, math and social studies. This year they are teaching students about how the garden can be a business too. KCFR’s Helen Gray visited the farmers Market at a school near Washington Park and has this report.

[LISTEN]

Filed under: Agriculture/Ranching,Children & Youth,Denver,Education — ewhitney @ 5:00 pm

September 20, 2007

Court Rules Against Village at Wolf Creek

The Texas Billionaire who wants to build a village for 10,000 people on Wolf Creek Pass has been dealt a setback by the courts. On Thursday the Colorado Court of Appeals upheld a lower court ruling that threw out initial approval of the village by Mineral County, KSUTs Victor Locke reports.

[LISTEN]

Filed under: Business,Colorado,Environment,Legal,Regional — ewhitney @ 5:47 pm

"Truth in Translation" Opens World Theater Festival

The weeklong Colorado Festival of World Theater opens Friday, September 21st in Colorado Springs. Now in its fourth year, the festival brings some surprisingly major productions to the mid-sized city. “Truth in Translation” isn’t necessarily the kind of play you’d expect to see in Colorado Springs — one of five stops on its brief US tour that includes Flint, Michigan and Dallas, Texas. Arts reporter Noel Black reports.

[LISTEN]

Check out other festival events at the CFWT’s website here.

Filed under: Arts & Culture — ewhitney @ 5:05 pm

September 19, 2007

Salazar: Air Force Bases Need More Land

Senator Ken Salazar says the Air Force needs to start preserving land around the boundaries of their bases in Colorado. The Democrat has introduced an amendment to the Defense appropriations bill currently before the Senate that would require the Air Force to do so.

[LISTEN]

Filed under: Colorado Springs,Military,Politics — ewhitney @ 6:33 pm

Older Posts »