Colorado Independent
The Colorado Independent is a Colorado-based news organization that publishes online journalism and investigative reporting covering state and regional politics, policy, and public affairs. Founded in 2007, the outlet emerged as an early entry into digital-first journalism in Colorado at a time when traditional newspapers were cutting staff and reducing statehouse coverage. The publication focuses on in-depth coverage of Colorado state government, legislative affairs, and political developments, with particular emphasis on accountability journalism and investigative reporting. It has covered major state issues including education policy, energy development, water rights, and electoral politics, and is recognized within Colorado's political journalism community as a source dedicated specifically to state affairs.[1]
History
The Colorado Independent was established in 2007 as a digital-first news organization, representing one of Colorado's earliest online-only journalism ventures. Its founding came during a period when many traditional newspapers were struggling with declining print circulation and advertising revenues, and when coverage of state government was beginning to contract across the industry. The publication launched with a mission to provide independent journalism focused on state and local issues, filling a gap that was widening as newspapers reduced their capitol bureau staffs.
In its early years, the outlet built credibility through investigative reporting on state government operations, legislative processes, and political accountability. It operated with a small editorial staff but developed a reputation for sustained reporting on policy areas and political developments that larger outlets were covering less thoroughly. That focus on depth over breadth set it apart from general-interest news sites competing for the same Colorado audience.
Throughout the 2010s, the Colorado Independent established itself as a consistent voice in state political coverage, particularly during legislative sessions and election cycles. The publication's coverage expanded beyond conventional political reporting to include investigations into environmental issues, public health matters, and state agency operations. It maintained its base in Denver while attempting to report on issues affecting communities across Colorado's diverse regions. The outlet's continued operation has depended on developing a dedicated readership interested in detailed political and policy coverage, combined with revenue from digital advertising, reader support, and grants from journalism-focused foundations.
Mike Littwin, a prominent Colorado political columnist, has been publicly associated with the Colorado Independent as a contributor, and his work on the outlet helped raise its profile among readers following state politics closely.[2] The Independent's emergence predates newer Colorado digital outlets such as The Colorado Sun, which was founded in 2018 by a group of journalists who departed The Denver Post. The two outlets have occupied similar space in the Colorado media market, though with distinct editorial identities and funding structures.
Coverage Areas and Journalism
The Colorado Independent's editorial focus centers on several key subject areas in Colorado public affairs. State government and legislative coverage forms a substantial portion of its work. Reporters have covered Colorado General Assembly sessions, gubernatorial administration activities, and major policy debates across multiple administrations. Political reporting includes coverage of elections, candidate profiles, and analysis of campaigns affecting state offices and ballot measures.
Investigative journalism has been a defining characteristic of the publication. The outlet has examined state agency performance, political spending and influence, and institutional accountability across Colorado government. These aren't the quick-turnaround stories that drive web traffic. They're the kind of detailed, sourced investigations that take weeks and generate policy responses rather than page views.
The outlet's coverage of energy and environmental issues reflects their importance to Colorado's economy. Reporting has addressed oil and gas development, renewable energy policy, water management and rights disputes, and environmental protection measures, all areas where Colorado's regulatory and political landscape directly affects residents across the state. Education coverage has addressed Colorado's K-12 and higher education systems, including school funding debates, curriculum controversies, and university governance issues. Public health and social policy reporting has covered healthcare access, criminal justice reform, and social services.
This range of coverage reflects the publication's commitment to examining multiple dimensions of Colorado public life and policy, rather than concentrating narrowly on electoral politics or partisan political commentary.
Funding and Business Model
The Colorado Independent's operational model reflects the challenges facing digital news organizations across the country. The publication has used various revenue approaches including digital advertising, grants from journalism foundations, and reader contributions. Like many independent digital outlets, it has handled the difficult economics of online journalism, where advertising rates have fallen substantially while content production costs remain significant.
The organization has experimented with membership programs and philanthropic support as traditional advertising proved insufficient to sustain independent journalism operations. Grants from foundations that support local and regional journalism have become a meaningful part of the revenue mix, a pattern common among nonprofit-affiliated and independent news outlets operating in state political coverage. Whether the Colorado Independent operates as a registered nonprofit or as a for-profit independent outlet has bearing on its funding eligibility, and the specifics of its legal structure affect how it can accept contributions and grants.
Still, the broader challenge is real. As local newspapers have consolidated or ceased publication, outlets like the Colorado Independent have attempted to fill coverage gaps in state and regional affairs. The publication's focus on topics that may not generate mass audience traffic but serve important accountability functions is consistent with the missions of many independent news organizations operating in state capitals across the United States.
Role in Colorado's Media Landscape
The Colorado Independent's emergence and continued operation reflects significant changes in Colorado's media ecosystem over the past two decades. Major Colorado newspapers, including The Denver Post, underwent ownership changes, staff reductions, and restructuring that reduced their capacity for sustained state affairs coverage. The Post's acquisition by Alden Global Capital, a hedge fund known for aggressive cost-cutting at regional newspapers, accelerated staff reductions that left fewer reporters assigned to the state capitol and statehouse politics. The Colorado Independent and similar digital outlets partially filled that reporting gap, though typically with smaller staffs and more limited resources.
The publication's investigative reporting has occasionally generated significant public attention and policy responses. Stories examining state government operations, legislative processes, and political spending have contributed to public understanding of how state institutions function and how decisions affecting Colorado residents are made. The outlet's work has been cited in other media reporting and recognized in Colorado journalism circles.
Colorado's media landscape now includes several digital outlets competing in the same general space as the Colorado Independent. The Colorado Sun, CPR News, Chalkbeat Colorado, and Colorado Politics each cover portions of the state political and policy beat. The Independent's focus on accountability journalism and investigative reporting gives it a distinct identity within that group, though the competition for readers, sources, and grant funding among these outlets is real. Colorado's political future is being shaped in part by this cluster of independent and nonprofit digital outlets, as independent voters become an increasingly large share of the state's electorate and demand for nonpartisan policy coverage grows.[3]
The Colorado Independent's continued presence maintains a publication dedicated specifically to state political and policy coverage at a time when such coverage has experienced reduced attention from traditional news organizations across the country.