A list of child care centers and schools that El Paso County Public Health and Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment have identified with having outbreaks of coronavirus.
Bella O Reilly is the youngest graduate from Steamboat Springs High School in the class of 2021. She graduated in December at age 16. (Courtesy photo)
Bella O’Reilly has traveled to 47 different countries and lived in four. She started preschool while living in the Bahamas, and at 4 years old, O’Reilly returned to the United States having already completed kindergarten.
Since then, she has generally been the youngest student in her class, graduating from Steamboat Springs High School last December at the age of 16. O’Reilly will walk at graduation with her class this weekend as one of the youngest-ever graduates from the school.
Chinook Trail Middle School Colorado College Campus Wide Colorado School for the Deaf and the Blind
Colorado Springs Charter Academy Resolved investigation status Columbia Elementary School Coronado High School
CPCD Modular Falcon 1 Resolved investigation status Discovery Canyon Campus (Elementary, Middle and High School) Eagleview Middle School Early Connections Learning Centers at Antlers Child Care Center
Early Connections Learning Centers at the Day Nursery Child Care Center Resolved investigation status
Eastlake High School Resolved investigation status
Ellicott Elementary School Resolved investigation status
Ellicott Middle School Resolved investigation status
Ellicott Senior High School Resolved investigation status
Evangelical Christian Academy Resolved investigation status
Jonathan JC Norling was named vice president and dean of Colorado Mountain College Steamboat Springs last week, continuing the job he has been working on an interim basis since September 2020. (Courtesy)
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS Jonathan “JC” Norling, who has been the interim leader at Colorado Mountain College Steamboat Springs since September, has been named the permanent vice president and campus dean at the school.
The college pursued a variety of candidates for the role, but the process resulted in Norling “unanimously” standing out among the college’s leaders.
“It wasn’t just a matter of a home-grown guy naturally ascending to that role; they really looked far and wide,” said Bob Kuusinen, who is the Routt County representative on the Colorado Mountain College board of trustees. “It turned out we had the best candidate right in the community.”