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003. Dead Patients, Empty Seats, and the Train Nobody Asked For

003. Dead Patients, Empty Seats, and the Train Nobody Asked For

Release Date

27 February, 2026

Duration

19:40m
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003. Dead Patients, Empty Seats, and the Train Nobody Asked For

003. Dead Patients, Empty Seats, and the Train Nobody Asked For

Release Date

27 February, 2026

Duration

19:40m
Episode 003 -- The Dais
⬡ The Dais
El Paso County  ·  Episode 003  ·  Week of Mar 3, 2026
Episode 003  ·  Week of March 3, 2026

Dead Patients, Empty Seats, & a Train Nobody Asked For

$25 million in flagged Medicaid billing. A school district cutting 50 positions. A $3.5 billion rail proposal that owes us answers. An empty board seat. Two votes that are really one policy. And a toy that might build the next Michael Jordan.

El Paso County & Colorado  ·  Week of March 3, 2026
Medicaid Fraud — New SD49 Cuts — New Front Range Rail — New CDBG Seat — Ongoing
What Happened 6 items
  • 💸
    $25 Million in Medicaid Fraud — Including a Dead Patient
    Colorado’s Medicaid program pays drivers to take patients to doctor appointments. Someone billed $3.3 million for rides that never happened — including repeated invoices for a patient who had died. A woman from Mesa County billed over a million dollars in rides, including transportation for her husband on days he was in jail. Both face federal charges. The state has suspended 64 providers, blocked 600 more, and has six open investigations. $25 million in abnormal billing flagged in four months. The AG’s fraud unit has recovered $50 million and convicted 62 people since taking office.
    ↳ 6 Investigations Open
  • 🏫
    School District 49 Cuts 50 Positions, Declares Fiscal Exigency
    School District 49 — eastern Colorado Springs and Falcon, 27,000 students, one of the ten largest districts in Colorado — cut 50 positions and declared a State of Fiscal Exigency. That’s the legal declaration that allows workforce reductions. The superintendent says there’s no fat left. The union says revenue has been underestimated by 20 percent for years and wants a detailed plan. Cuts included librarians and bilingual staff. A board member resigned before the vote.
    ↳ Budget Details Pending
  • 🚆
    Front Range Passenger Rail — $3.5 Billion, Questions Owed
    The pitch: five million people on the Front Range, three million more coming, I-25 travel projected to double, a passenger rail from Pueblo to Fort Collins at $12–15 a ticket. Questions that need answers first: Will anyone ride it? California’s Pacific Surfliner carried 1.98 million passengers in 2024 and still fights for ridership. Colorado Springs is a driving city with an airport and Bustang already running. What does rail bring to a neighborhood? Colorado law allows station area improvement districts within two miles of a station — with authority to levy additional property taxes. Before spending $3.5 billion, the demand study, projections, and who paid for them should be public.
    ↳ Public Forum Mar 26
  • 🪑
    The Empty CDBG Seat — District 5, Central Colorado Springs
    The Community Development Advisory Board has an opening in District 5, central Colorado Springs. This board reviews real housing and infrastructure funding decisions — the federal CDBG money that gets allocated to the people and projects that need it most. You don’t need experience. You need to care and show up once a month. April 15th is the final recommendation meeting. The application is open now.
    ↳ Apply Before Apr 15
  • ⛺️
    Two Votes, One Policy — Car Camping Ban + $4.8M Housing Grants
    City Council did two things in the same session: banned car camping and approved $4.8 million in federal grants for homeless housing support. Enforcement and investment in the same breath. A ban without housing is theater. Housing without accountability is also a problem. The question isn’t which vote you agree with — it’s whether both get followed through. Check back in six months.
    ✓ Both Passed
  • 🧸
    Pikes Peak Library District Has a Toy Checkout Program
    The Pikes Peak Library District runs a developmental toy checkout program. Six locations. Three-week loans. Free with a library card. Toys that make a three-year-old stack blocks and try again when they fall — building persistence, not just passing time. The championship moments come from unseen repetition. Go to ppld.org, get a library card, and sit on the floor while they figure it out.
    ✓ Available Now
Key Actions This Week
Body Item Outcome
State AG Medicaid providers suspended 64 Suspended
State AG Additional providers blocked pending review 600 Blocked
SD49 Board State of Fiscal Exigency — Declaration Declared
SD49 Board 50 staff positions eliminated Cut
City Council Car camping ban Passed
City Council $4.8M federal homeless housing grants Approved
Full Summary
Fraud. Fat trimming. A train. An empty seat. Two votes that are really one. And a toy. One week in Colorado and El Paso County. Most people had no idea.

Colorado built a Medicaid program to do something genuinely good: make sure people who can’t get to a doctor’s appointment don’t miss it for lack of a ride. The idea is sound. What followed is a case study in what happens when a well-designed program meets determined fraud. Someone billed $3.3 million for rides that never happened, including repeated invoices for a patient who had already died. Pause on that. A patient died, and someone kept submitting paperwork. Month after month. Trips to appointments the patient could not attend because they had, medically speaking, stopped existing. A Mesa County woman billed over a million dollars in rides — including transportation for her husband on days he was incarcerated. Both now face federal charges. The state has suspended 64 providers, blocked 600 more, and flagged $25 million in abnormal billing in four months. The Attorney General’s fraud unit has recovered $50 million and convicted 62 people since taking office. The work matters. But the episode is also a prompt: we built a multimillion-dollar system to replace something neighbors used to do for each other. While the auditors audit, maybe we introduce ourselves to the person three doors down.

School District 49 — eastern Colorado Springs and Falcon, 27,000 students — cut 50 positions and declared a State of Fiscal Exigency. That’s the formal legal declaration that allows workforce reductions. The word “exigency” sounds like an emergency. It may be. Or it may be an organization that has finally decided what it actually needs. The superintendent says there’s no fat left. The union says revenue has been underestimated by 20 percent for years and wants a detailed plan. Both could be true. A board member resigned before the vote. Cuts included librarians and bilingual staff. Sometimes audits find inefficiency. Sometimes they find people. You don’t know which this is until you look. The budget is at d49.org. School board meetings are public.

The pitch for Front Range passenger rail is compelling on its face: five million people, I-25 projected to double in travel time, twelve to fifteen dollars a ticket from Pueblo to Fort Collins. Clean, green, visionary. But the proposal carries questions that deserve clear answers before a single dollar is committed. Will anyone ride it? California’s Pacific Surfliner — one of the most favorable rail corridors in the country — carried under two million passengers in 2024 and still fights for ridership. Colorado Springs is a driving city. We have an airport. We already have Bustang. Who fills the trains? Beyond ridership: Colorado law allows station area improvement districts within two miles of a station, with authority to levy additional property taxes on nearby properties. If a station lands near you, your neighborhood may look materially different in twenty years. Not necessarily worse — but denser, more connected, more changed. The demand study, the ridership projections, and who funded them should be in front of the public before the concrete is poured. The public forum is March 26th, 3:30 PM, Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center. That is the room where questions belong.

City Council voted twice in the same session and produced one policy. They banned car camping. They approved $4.8 million in federal grants for homeless housing support. Enforcement and investment. You can agree with both. You can disagree with both. What you cannot do is pretend they’re unrelated. A ban without housing is theater. Housing without accountability is also a problem. The question is whether both get followed through. Check back in six months. Did the money get spent on what it was approved for? Did enforcement stay consistent? That follow-through is the story.

Finally: the Pikes Peak Library District has a developmental toy checkout program. Six locations. Three-week loans. Free with a library card. A toy that makes a three-year-old stack blocks and try again when they fall is not entertainment — it’s practice in persistence. The championship moments visible to the world come from repetition that nobody watched. Go to ppld.org. Get a library card. Sit on the floor and let them figure it out.

Next Public Forum
March 26, 2026
Front Range Rail · Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center · 3:30 PM
Take Action
🗣 Attend
Front Range Rail Public Forum
March 26th, 3:30 PM, Mt. Carmel Veterans Service Center. Ask about the demand study, station area tax districts, and ridership projections. Ask now — before the concrete is poured.
Get directions →
🪑 Apply
CDBG Board — District 5 Opening
Central Colorado Springs. You don’t need experience — you need to care and show up once a month. April 15th is the final recommendation meeting. The seat needs a warm body.
Apply Now →
📚 Read
SD49 Budget — d49.org
27,000 kids. 50 positions cut. The budget is public. Attend a school board meeting. You don’t know whether it’s fat or muscle until you look.
Go to d49.org →
🧸 Borrow
PPLD Toy Checkout Program
Developmental toys. Six locations. Three-week loans. Free with a library card. Sit on the floor and let them figure it out.
Go to ppld.org →
Watch For
Upcoming Resolutions
Rail demand study — release TBD
CDBG District 5 application Apr 15
SD49 budget details TBD
Car camping enforcement follow-up 6 mo.
$4.8M housing grant spending Ongoing
Your Commissioners
District Contact
Carrie Geitner (Chair) D-2
Holly Williams D-1
Stan VanderWerf D-3
Longinos Gonzalez Jr. D-4
Michael Gifford D-5
Take Action
Rail Forum Mar 26 → Apply for CDBG SD49 Budget PPLD Toys
⬡ The Dais
Source: El Paso County Agendas · agendasuite.org/iip/elpaso · Not affiliated with El Paso County government.
Full Record
  • Season One
  • THE DAIS

  • THE DAIS — The Import Economy : Special Series

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