Ann Schimke
Ann Schimke covers healthy school topics and early childhood issues for Chalkbeat Colorado. She's written for The Washington Post as well as newspapers in Michigan, Virginia and Colorado. She holds a master’s degree in education policy from the University of Michigan. She joined Chalkbeat (then EdNews Colorado) in 2012.
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Health coverage for Colorado babies and toddlers could be disrupted by Trump administration policy
Colorado had been planning to roll out its continuous coverage initiative on Jan. 1, 2026.

Coming in 2026: A drop-in child care center at the Denver airport
The child care center is meant to provide occasional care and will primarily serve the children of airport employees or community members who are participating in training center activities.

Colorado school district approves transgender athlete ban, though questions about implementation remain
The high-profile decision in District 49, Colorado’s 10th largest, follows a February executive order from President Donald Trump targeting transgender youth in sports.

Colorado school district seeks restrictions on transgender athletes amid Trump crackdown
The discussion in conservative-leaning District 49 foreshadows what’s to come in other Colorado school districts as federal and local officials target transgender youth in sports.

Books banned in Colorado school district are back on library shelves — for now
While the lawsuit over the books’ removal by the school board has yet to be resolved, the books will be available to students for the time being.

As private equity invests in child care, Colorado lawmakers seek guardrails
A Chalkbeat analysis identified about 175 Colorado centers currently owned or backed by private equity or venture capital firms.

Religious freedom, LGBTQ rights collide in lawsuit over Colorado’s universal preschool program
Catholic preschools seek exemption from state non-discrimination rules; case could reach U.S. Supreme Court.

Colorado attorney general announces $50,000 grants so schools can cut student cell phone use
Colorado school districts will soon be able to apply for grants of up to $50,000 to help their students reduce cell phone use during the school day.

They were babies and toddlers when the pandemic hit. At school, some still struggle.
More of Colorado’s pandemic babies and toddlers are showing up with developmental delays than their counterparts born just a few years before.

Colorado school vaccination rates are public. Here’s how to find them.
How many kindergartners are vaccinated against measles at your son’s school? How many are vaccinated against whooping cough at your daughter’s child care center?