
Polis touts affordable housing, calls for end to "threatening and bullying"
The Colorado State Legislature heads back to work in three weeks and Gov. Jared Polis is once again laser focused on affordable housing.
Watch CBS News
Shaun Boyd is one of the most experienced television news reporters in Colorado. She joined CBS News Colorado in 1998 and has worked as a general assignment reporter, bureau chief and political reporter, interviewing everyone from Nobel prize winning scientists to the President of the United States.
Shaun has earned the respect and trust of law enforcement and government sources throughout the state. She was one of the first reporters on the scene of the Columbine shooting, has been on the front lines of some of Colorado's biggest wildfires, broke stories on the University of Colorado football scandal and VA Hospital construction debacle, and is the only reporter to be invited by former Boulder Police Chief Mark Beckner into the evidence room for JonBenet Ramsey murder investigation.
As a veteran political reporter, Shaun has covered six national political conventions, providing instant analysis of keynote addresses in live reports, and is one of the early reporters nationally to begin fact-checking political ads in her Reality Check segments. She has also reported from the State Capitol since 2011, covering battles over civil unions for gay couples, marijuana regulation, gun control, and the repeal of the death penalty.
Her reporting has been recognized by the American Legion of Colorado, Mothers Against Drunk Driving Colorado, Colorado Coalition Against Sexual Assault, National Association for the Mentally Ill, and The Emergency Services Public Information Officers.
Shaun is a native of Michigan and graduated cum laude from the University of Notre Dame. She has worked at WNDU-TV in South Bend, Indiana, KGAN-TV in Cedar Rapids, Iowa and WOOD-TV in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
She is married to former CBS Colorado reporter, turned private practice attorney, Raj Chohan. They have a son and daughter who are twins.
You can contact Shaun by sending an email to sboyd@cbs.com or yourreporter@cbs.com.
The Colorado State Legislature heads back to work in three weeks and Gov. Jared Polis is once again laser focused on affordable housing.
Nearly two years after the Marshall Fire, the organization in charge of donations is under fire after giving some of the money it received to local governments.
State Rep. Karen McCormick is introducing a package of bills aimed at addressing an increasingly dire shortage of veterinarians in Colorado. The impact is not only on animals but those who care for them, especially in rural areas.
December marks the two-year anniversary of Colorado's most devastating wildfire, and many Marshall Fire survivors are still struggling.
Headed into an election year you expect animosity between Democrats and Republicans. You don't expect Democrats to turn on each other. But that is exactly what is happening as the war in Gaza divides the Colorado Democratic Party.
While Gov. Jared Polis called lawmakers back to work to address property taxes after the failure of Proposition HH, a bill dealing with income taxes is the first one they sent to the governor in the special session.
The special session of the state legislature has turned the Capitol into a pressure cooker as Democrats and Republicans debate how much relief the state can and should provide.
Gov. Jared Polis may have called a special session of the state legislature to address property taxes, but Democrats are stopping there.
Lawmakers reconvene for a special session of the legislature on Friday, and Democrats and Republicans have released competing plans for property tax relief.
A study underway at Denver Health has big implications for cancer patients in Colorado.
A Denver District Court judge is expected to decide this week whether former President Donald Trump is eligible for Colorado's 2024 primary ballot.
Sixty years after a Denver restaurant owner started providing free meals on Thanksgiving to those in need, volunteers are struggling to keep that tradition alive.
Under the bill, which State Rep. Judy Amabile says is still not finalized, any city with 1,000 or more residences would have to allow accessory dwelling units.
Nearly 60 years after he returned from fighting in Vietnam, Ed Sharp stood in the Windsor American Legion and with tears streaming down his face, recalled the men and women who didn't return.
Two days after voters rejected Proposition HH, Gov. Jared Polis called a special session of the state legislature.