People are coming together around the country and here in the Roaring Fork Valley in the wake of the deadly shooting at an LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs over the weekend. Local advocates say there’s still a lot of work to be done.
After a tragedy felt throughout the state and the entire nation, members and supporters of the local LGBTQ+ community have banded together to prove there is still love and support in the Roaring Fork Valley. .
“With every negative, there’s always a ton of positives,” says Kaleb Cook, the community and therapeutic recreation supervisor for Glenwood Springs. The 22-year-old supervisor came to Colorado and got his job in Glenwood almost by.