KSJD News
Weekdays at 5:30am, 6:30am, 7:30am, 8:30am, and 5:30pm
Local newscasts and interviews featuring news from across the Four Corners region.
Latest Episodes
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Angel Mollel was adopted as a teenager by an aid worker who lived in Colorado. As a teenager, she launched a non-profit in Denver to improve the lives of people in her home village–especially women and girls.
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Matt Traynham, the Dolores District Fire Management Officer talks about upcoming prescribed burns with KSJD's Cara Gildar.
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The disagreement over an alleged dress-code violation during last year’s county fair led to the young woman and her family filing a complaint with the Colorado Civil Rights Division that says she was subject to discrimination. The fair board denies that and says it did nothing wrong. More than eight months later, the disagreement is still going on.
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Colorado state legislators passed a bill that would add a Climate Education Seal of Literacy to high school diplomas. Durango High School students helped advocate for the bill to state legislators.
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Veterans who served at the Nevada Test and Training Range over the past 50 years are experiencing health issues that many of them attribute to exposure to radiation and other contamination during their time there.
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A new study from University of Colorado Boulder researchers finds a strong chance that precipitation will make the next two decades on the Colorado River wetter than the last.
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Each spring, a week-long quilt workshop takes over the Gateway Resort along a remote stretch of the Dolores River in Colorado's canyon country.
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Carbondale Fire, Roaring Fork High School, and Valley View Hospital partnered this semester to organize a fake crash scene, where student volunteers and first responders showcase the consequences of drinking and driving. Emergency agencies in the Roaring Fork Valley scheduled the event the day before prom so that the message remained fresh.
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The short documentary won the People’s Choice Award at this year's 5Point Adventure Film Festival and will be showing at the festival's encore screening on Saturday, May 4. The film follows Triston Chaney and his Alaskan Yup'ik family as they fight to protect their culture and fishing livelihood against a proposed mining project.
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A group of tribes that use Colorado River water sent a list of principles to the federal government amid contentious talks about how to share the shrinking supply.