The
Independent was founded in late 1993 by John Weiss and Kathryn Carpenter Eastburn. The pair started the paper to provide "...informative, entertaining and thought provoking..." articles. The paper was initially available on Wednesdays locally and was also featured as a supplement to the Thursday edition of the
Denver Post. Later changed to Thursdays, the paper eventually reverted back to a Wednesday release date, and could still be home delivered along with the Sunday
Denver Post, and still includes local news, opinions, and food, film, music, and culture articles. The newspaper was privately owned by co-founder John Weiss under the name Colorado Publishing House. In October 2022, the cooperation dissolved and all of its assets were transferred to a newly created nonprofit called Sixty35 Media. In December 2022, it was announced the
Colorado Springs Business Journal would merge with the
Colorado Springs Independent and
Pikes Peak Bulletin into a new publication called
Sixty35 News Magazine.I n March 2023, the publication laid off half its staff and changed its name back to
Colorado Springs Independent. The rebranding effort left the paper nearly $400,000 in debt, which it was unable to cover. On December 20, 2023, publisher Fran Zankowski announced the
Colorado Springs Independent's last issue would be published on Dec. 27, citing a lack of funds to pay staff in January. The entire 14-person staff was laid off. Zankowski said he hoped the publication would resume in February. But come February Citizen-Powered Media, the nonprofit that owned the paper, ceased all operations and liquidated or donated all physical assets. The company’s intellectual-property was acquired by Zankowski, including names, websites and social media accounts. Also in February 2024, Zankowski sold the rights to publish the
Colorado Springs Independent and
Colorado Springs Business Journal to business partners J.W. Roth and Kevin O’Neil. The two new owners created a for-profit business called Pikes Peak Media Company to produce the papers. The plan was to print twice a month, with 20,000 copies mailed directly to area residents and another 10,000 copies free to pickup at businesses. Zankowski was hired as publisher. Fourteen months later, the new owners laid off all staff and sold the
Independent to Dirk R. Hobbs and Colorado Media Group. He planned to relaunch the
Independent and fold the
Business Journal into
Southern Colorado Business Forum & Digest. ==Best of Colorado Springs==