Good morning and a very merry Christmas Eve, Colorado — especially to all those who travel via train, plane or car to be with your loved ones! I made my way back home to the cornfields of Illinois yesterday first by train, then plane and finally car, and am happy to report not a single hiccup along the way.
It was such a relief after a turbulent trip home last Christmas when I found myself seconds away from missing my flight. I definitely should have gotten to the airport sooner and had instant regrets as I crawled through a very long TSA line. When my plane began boarding and I was still several people deep in the security line, I became *that* person and pleaded with my fellow passengers to let me skip ahead. They kindly stepped aside, but my hopes of making my flight dissipated when the TSA agent couldn’t scan my ID and sent me back to the airline desk.
I ugly cried my way to the airline desk, sure my plane would take off without me. But then, an angel of an airline employee appeared, giving me the documentation I needed and escorting me through the security line to make sure I passed the checkpoint. I became *that* person racing for her life through the airport and hurtled practically head first onto my flight before they closed the doors.
My very own Christmas miracle.
All this to say, learn from my foolishness and, if you must fly this holiday season, show up to the airport the standard two hours before your flight, if not sooner.
Now, let’s all send good vibes to the thousands of travelers making their way home today and dive into today’s news, shall we?
THE NEWS
OUTDOORS
Ranchers, rural community leaders at odds with Colorado governor over wolf reintroduction program

When the discussion at the Winter Conference of Colorado Counties Inc. turned to wolves, Gov. Jared Polis seemingly blamed ranchers’ complaints for the fact that the state has had to turn to Canada to import the predators instead of nearby Western states. Tracy Ross cuts into the tension and provides a thorough look at what’s actually happening with the next phase of reintroduction.
OUTDOORS
Winter Park reopens gondola Monday after replacing cracked steel beam. Other resorts keep eye on towers.

Grand Junction’s Leitner-Poma of America got the call that Winter Park’s gondola needed a new steel beam on Sunday — and less than four hours later, the beam was fabricated, packed and on the road. That’s just one component of the swift response that allowed the resort to reopen a little more than 24 hours after a dramatic evacuation. Jason Blevins has more.
WATER
Federal Colorado River conservation program lapses, faces uncertain future

The pilot program that aimed to pay farmers, ranchers and other water users to, well, not use their water, expires this year. And as Shannon Mullane reports, the program’s funding was not renewed during the current lame duck session, leaving the program and its advocates feeling stuck.
THE COLORADO REPORT
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THE OPINION PAGE
CARTOONS

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SunLit
REVIEW
“Dying to Ride” melds mystery with competitive equine culture
The death of a beloved mentor stuns protagonist Margo Richards in author Lenore Mitchell’s equine-centric mystery “Dying to Ride.” But the circumstances of her demise — a suspicious fall from a cliff —raise questions. This Colorado Authors League award finalist reflects the author’s lifelong love affair with horses. In fact, “every character in the story loves horses in some way,” she says.
Thanks so much for spending some time with us this morning before wrapping your final gifts and sneaking a few morning Christmas cookies. Have a very happy holiday!
— Erica & the whole staff of The Sun

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