Sometimes he just cried in his office.Īs the novel coronavirus spread across the United States over the past two years, it ravaged Indigenous communities. Sometimes his days were broken up by a funeral. Sometimes he fought with the county government over its laissez-faire masking policies. Sometimes he took a call from a sick tribal member. It was not uncommon for the 60-year-old to pull 12-hour days guiding the reservation’s business amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Heart said these had been the most difficult 17 months in his more than two decades of tribal politics. Tí Cafe’s Vietnamese Coffee Is the Eye-Opener You Didn’t Know You Needed.Where Our Food Editors Are Eating Right Now, December 2021.These Colorado Startups Want to Make Holiday Travel Suck Less.Can the Colorado Climate Corps Help Prevent Devastating Wildfires?.5 Colorado Parks That Are Even Better in Winter.Exploryst Helps People of All Abilities Explore Colorado.The 25 Best Neighborhoods in Denver in 2023.
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