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Grand Junction is 247 miles (398 km) west-southwest of the Colorado State Capitol in Denver.The city has a council–manager form of government. [8] It is a major commercial and transportation hub within the large area between the Green River and the Continental Divide, and the largest city in Colorado outside of the Front Range Corridor.
Rick Taggart is a state representative from Grand Junction, ... Taggart served from 2015 to 2022 on the Grand Junction City Council. He served as mayor from 2017-2019
After law school, Buescher returned to Grand Junction and joined the law firm of Williams, Turner and Holmes, where he practiced corporate law until 1987; that year he became president and CEO of West Star Aviation. [2] In 1996, Governor Roy Romer asked Buescher to serve as interim manager for the Colorado State Fair. Romer then appointed ...
Warren Barnes was a 69-year-old homeless man living in the city of Grand Junction, Colorado. He was known around the downtown community to read books and sit on a chair most of his time near Monique's Bridal, a wedding shop in downtown Grand Junction. He was named "The Reading Man" by some of the storeowners due to his interest in books.
The two stations share studios on Blichmann Avenue in Grand Junction; KKCO's transmitter is located at the Black Ridge Electronics Site at the Colorado National Monument west of the city. The station signed on for the first time on July 29, 1996, providing Grand Junction its first in-market NBC affiliate.
Janice Rich is a state senator from Grand Junction, Colorado. A Republican , rich represents Colorado's 7th Senate district which includes all of Mesa County and a portion of Delta County . [ 2 ] Previously, Rich represented Colorado House of Representatives District 55, which included the communities of Clifton , Fruitvale , Grand Junction ...
A job description from the city’s governmentjobs.com profile lists a salary range of $180,000 to $234,000 for the city manager. It’s unclear if this range is what they will use for the ...
1894: "The official newspaper of the city of Grand Junction" 1923: "Official newspaper of the county of Mesa" and "Official newspaper of the city of Grand Junction" 1933: Instead of a slogan, the Sentinel ran above its banner, "Yesterday's press run" which was about 6,200 at mid-year. 1943: "Today's news today"