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Yampa Valley Visit Concludes Colorado Project’s Rural Learning Tour & Inspires Next Steps
Over three immersive days in the Yampa Valley in northwestern Colorado, community leaders from across the state gathered for the final stop on the Colorado Project’s Rural Learning Tour. Convened by the University of Denver’s Josef Korbel School of Global and Public Affairs and the Scrivner Institute of Public Policy, the Colorado Project is a statewide effort to advance shared prosperity, sustainability, and inclusive growth in every region of the state. The Yampa Valley convening offered a clear view of both the opportunities and challenges facing rural communities. Guided by the project’s cornerstones—sustainability and resilience, economic mobility and workforce, cost of living, and entrepreneurship and innovation—participants engaged directly with local partners who are shaping the Valley’s future.
The convening kicked off in Craig with a site visit to Fitch Ranch Artisan Meat Co, where we learned about small-scale meat processing supporting local ranchers. That visit was followed by a roundtable with local leaders including the City of Craig, the Small Business Development Center, and Memorial Regional Health, framing the region’s need for economic diversification, small business vitality, and healthcare access.

Day two in Hayden focused on infrastructure solutions, economic development, and workforce needs. A visit to the Yampa Valley Regional Airport showcased the need for creative transportation options to the region, which is approximately a 3.5-hour drive from Denver’s airport. An opening conversation with the Yampa Valley Community Foundation at the historic Hayden Granary grounded participants in regional history and values, and an economic development and workforce panel explored career pipelines, employer needs, and regional collaboration opportunities. A Hayden Heritage Walking Tour showcased main street revitalization efforts and community-led placemaking.

The final day underscored the valley’s creative and systems-level approaches. Site visits to Steamboat Creates and the Yampa Valley Foods Marketplace highlighted how arts, culture, and local food systems contribute to economic resilience. A session on mental and behavioral health support examined cross-organization coordination to improve access and outcomes. A cost-of-living panel with representatives from Colorado Mountain College, the City of Steamboat Springs, Yampa Valley Housing Authority, Northwest Colorado Health, and Routt County surfaced strategies around attainable housing, childcare, and workforce stability. The convening concluded with a collaborative session focusing on key takeaways from the Rural Learning Tour and exploring next steps for the Colorado Project, with participants affirming their commitment to continue engaging.

The Yampa Valley convening underscored that rural Colorado is actively building solutions, linking energy transition and infrastructure planning with workforce pathways, pairing cultural and agricultural assets with entrepreneurship, and aligning local leadership around attainable housing and community wellbeing. As the Rural Learning Tour concludes, lessons from the three convenings—Northeast Colorado, the San Luis Valley, and the Yampa Valley—will inform the Colorado Project’s evolving roadmap for inclusive and resilient growth, ensuring that rural ingenuity remains central to Colorado’s future. Stay tuned for the project’s next steps!
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