Land-use bill authors stand by plan
BY THELMA GRIMES TGRIMES@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COMAccording to authors of the land use bill making its way through the Colorado Legislature, the primary goal is stopping communities from exclusionary zoning that prohibits the construction of multifamily housing.
Known as SB23-213, the land use bill was unveiled in March by Gov. Jared Polis and Democrats as a solution to the growing housing crisis.

From pro sports to the streets
BY NINA JOSS NJOSS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COMOn March 15, a deceased man was found at the north bus stop at Englewood Parkway and South Acoma Street in Englewood. O cials said the man was “likely a transient” and that his death did not seem criminal in nature.
Little did they know, the man was Je Gaylord, a prominent football player, professional wrestler, brother and friend.
At his memorial service at Southeast Christian Church in Parker, dozens gathered to share stories of

with him.
“As I’m looking around this room today, I see many familiar faces, as well as new ones,” said Angelia Anderson, executive director of a program called Treasure House of Hope that Je participated in. “ is isn’t surprising to me because Je never met a stranger ... He always was so generous and outgoing.”
Athletic history
Je , who was born in 1958, grew up in the suburbs of Kansas City as the middle child of ve. From a young age, he was an impressive athlete, showing speci c strengths as a discus thrower and football player during his high school years.
“During his senior year, he was able to bench press 610 pounds,” his brother, Tim Gaylord, said at the


ing him a full-ride scholarship (for football) … Je chose Missouri.”
In college, Je became a four-year letterman and was named All-Big Eight and All-American in the early 1980s.
Je ’s success as a college athlete drew attention to him, inspiring the Los Angeles Rams to draft him in 1982. Released prior to the start of their season, he was picked up by the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League. With this team, he competed in the league’s championship game called the Grey Cup.
He later played for the Boston Breakers and the San Antonio Gunslingers of the United States Football League and was named First Team
While municipalities statewide are voicing opposition to the bill, authors are saying the 105-page document is vital to the state’s future in providing an adequate supply of a ordable housing.
In this case, a ordable housing does not mean more single-family homes, but instead duplexes, triplexes, other multiplexes, townhomes, condos and apartments.
According to the authors of SB23-213, some Colorado cities and counties have implemented zoning policies that decrease or completely bar the construction of multifamily housing.
Rep. Steven Woodrow, D-Denver, co-authored SB23-213 with Rep. Iman Jodeh, D-Arapahoe County, and Majority Leader Sen. Dominick Moreno, a District 21 Democrat covering Adams County, Commerce City, Federal Heights and Westminster.

Opponents of proposal not swayed by claims of a ordability, availabilityPhotos, certificates and awards from Je Gaylord’s life on display at his memorial service at Southeast Christian Church. PHOTO BY NINA JOSS
This concert features works for double, triple, and quadruple choirs, with 32 singers spaced around the audience providing a unique surround-sound experience. Composers including Gabrieli, Palestrina, Spohr, Rossi, and Hensel are presented, as well as the atmospheric Miserere by Gregorio Allegri. The concert is performed in two deeply resonant spaces – St. Andrew United Methodist Church in Highlands Ranch and St. Paul Lutheran in Denver.
























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































‘Bartending for healthy people’

































Hydrate IV Bar opens in Highlands Ranch

As Mary Wallin sat with an IV catheter in her outstretched right arm, moments after having her arm poked by a needle, the 42-year-old mother of two was, it would appear, the happiest person in Highlands Ranch.
A lot of people don’t exactly like the idea of having a needle inserted into one of their veins, but Wallin looks forward to this experience every month.

at’s because the Pilates and tness instructor wasn’t at a hospital or an emergency department receiving a simple saline solution. Rather, she was sitting in a plush leather chair, with the lights turned down and gentle music playing in the background, inside an IV therapy spa called Hydrate IV Bar.
Vitamin IV bars have exploded in popularity across the U.S. in recent years. ese facilities o er ondemand vitamin “cocktails” catered to each person’s needs. Celebrities like Chrissy Teigen and Gwyneth Paltrow have touted vitamin IV treatments for their ability to boost energy and “turn back the hands of time.”
Wallin was receiving what Hydrate calls its “Health & Wellness”

IV, which is packed with B vitamins, vitamin C and magnesium and designed “to help keep your brain and body running smoothly,” according to the facility’s website.
“For me, it’s all about being proactive, not reactive,” said Wallin, one of Hydrate’s founding members. “I do IVs because I want optimal health. I don’t want to treat
sickness.”
Does Wallin notice a positive difference from the vitamin IVs?



“Huge,” she said.



Wallin went on to tell a story about how she recently had shooting pain down her right arm and couldn’t feel three of her ngers because of some herniated discs she has in her cervical spine.
In January, she decided to give the facility’s NAD+ IV therapy a try (“NAD” stands for “nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide”). Because NAD is a coenzyme found in all living cells, it’s a key component in helping repair and rebuild a person’s cells.
THEFUTUREOFMEDICINEISNOWAVAILABLEINCOLORADO.
ElevateMedicaliscurrentlyusingcuttingedgetreatmentsforagerelatedinjuriesanddiseases,withoutthe devastatingeffectsofprescriptiondrugsandsurgeries.




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Wallin said as she was receiving her rst of four NAD infusions, she could begin to feel her ngers again.
“I was like, `Wow, this is incredible,’” she said. “I wasn’t doing cardio at the time. I wasn’t doing anything di erently. Just those infusions helped me so much.”
Of all the items on Hydrate’s menu, the NAD infusions especially aren’t cheap. Wallin paid north of $1,000 for the four IVs.
But for Wallin, it wasn’t so much a matter of “Can I a ord to do this?” It was more a matter of “Can I a ord not to do this”?

“I’m doing [an NAD injection] once a month right now because I love the results and don’t want them to go away,” Wallin said.
Hydrate owner Jessica Hackney, a nurse by trade, said Wallin is just one kind of client who walks through her doors. She said she serves a lot of athletes (CrossFiters, cyclists, hikers, powerlifters, triathletes); middle-aged men and women who are trying to slow down the aging process; and people with autoimmune diseases such as celiac disease, lupus and Lyme disease.
A local dentist also refers all of his clients to Hydrate for high-dose vitamin C IVs and injections, Hackney said.

“It’s like bartending for healthy people because you’re making them these cocktails to help them
feel better, no matter what their situation is. It’s so cool,” she said. Also on Hydrate’s menu of IVs are “ e Katie Cocktail,” “Myers Cocktail,” “Anti-Aging,” “Athletic Performance,” “Immunity,” “Jet Lag” and “Recovery.” Customers can also build their own IV if they so choose.
Hydrate also o ers seven di erent vitamin injections. e injections go into a person’s muscle or tissue and are absorbed at a slower rate, whereas the IVs go directly into the bloodstream and are absorbed immediately.
e positive e ects of the injections typically last between four








and six days, depending on the person’s metabolism and how active he or she is, Hackney said. Regarding the IVs, Hackney recommends getting them once a month for maintenance purposes.
So why can’t people just go to a grocery store and pick up several bottles of vitamins and take them orally?
“You’re going to absorb less than 20% of that because those vitamins have to be broken down and by the time they’ve been broken down, hardly anything is absorbed. And so we call it `expensive urine’ when people pay a lot of money for overthe-counter vitamins,” Hackney said. “With this, you absorb 100% of it and it’s instant. It’s liquid, and that liquid is the purest form of that vitamin. It’s already broken down and ready to be absorbed.”
And what would she say to people who have a fear of needles?
“Nobody likes needles, but there’s nothing that stays in your body. After the poke has been initiated, it’s a little plastic catheter that stays. You can move, bend, walk around, do whatever you want with it,” she said. “Also, I say to try it just once, because once people see how they feel with it, most of them sign up for a membership.
“To be honest, I’ve never had anyone say they didn’t like it or didn’t feel better.”
Hydrate IV Bar is located at 9245 S. Broadway, suite 600, in Highlands Ranch. A monthly membership is $139. e facility also has walk-in prices. People can learn more at highlandsranch. hydrateivbar.com.


All-American USFL nose tackle by the Pro Football Review in 1984, Tim said. Je then su ered a major knee injury, bringing his football career to a close. But as an athlete, he was only getting started.

At a gym in San Antonio, Je was o ered the opportunity to train to be a wrestler.
“Je , with his impressive physique, had done some bodybuilding competitions,” Tim said. “He trained for four months for his debut in professional wrestling in 1985.”
He carried the nickname “ e Missouri Tiger” into the new sport, competing for the Universal Wrestling Federation, World Class Champion Wrestling, United States Wrestling Association and American Wrestling Federation.
Among many accomplishments, he won the USWA World Tag Team Championship twice with Je Jarrett. From stardom to the streets
After 12 years as a professional wrestler, Je decided to start a career that would take less of a toll on his body. He worked successfully in the automobile eld, but after a few years, he began to face some personal and nancial struggles.
“In 1999, Je left Gaylord Sales and Leasing and went to work for another dealer,” Tim said. “ ings didn’t work out well for Je and he blamed his personal nancial conditions and turned to becoming a bank robber.”
Je committed a couple bank robberies and served about 12 years in prison, Tim said at the service. While Je was in prison, his wife passed away.
“ at was a crushing blow to my brother,” Tim said. “After his release from prison, with no hope, Je went to live on the streets while selfmedicating with whatever he could nd.”
Treasure House of Hope
For about two decades, Tim said, he prayed for his brother. In 2020,

Jeff said he was ready for a change. This is when he started participating in the Christian-based recovery program, Treasure House of Hope.
“It’s a house and it’s a safe place where broken, hurt … people come, voluntarily come here, and we saturate them with love, compassion, and give them hope for a better future, a better tomorrow,” said Anderson, the executive director.
At the home, Je joined other men who were struggling with addiction, mental health, homelessness and other challenges in a journey to improve themselves physically, mentally and spiritually.
During the year-long program, Je developed an identity in Christianity and was baptized. For his family and many in his church community, these decisions were monumental.
“ e best parts of the Je Gaylord story have been the last two years,” his nephew TJ Gaylord said at the memorial. “Je Gaylord nally coming to the Lord ... makes the story complete, makes it a story of joy instead of one of tragedy.”
After graduating from Treasure House of Hope in Aurora, Je stayed at the house to support the men by providing nutrition guidance and
physical training.
“Everybody just loved Je , you know?” Anderson said. “He was just that kind of guy. He just always tried to help somebody else … that’s just who he was.”

Living at Treasure House came with its challenges for Je , however. He was older than most of the other program participants and he tended to bottle up his frustration and pain, said housing director Rick Alston.
As time went on, Je began drinking again, Alston said, turning to alcohol as a remedy for signi cant pain from his athletic career. is resurfaced behavior was against house rules and began to impact others who also struggled with alcoholism.
“ e biggest problem that we began to have is that it started to a ect others in the home,” Alston said. “It did get to the point where we just could not have him in the home.”
e Treasure House team found several alternative treatment facility options for Je , but he decided to return to the streets, Alston said.
Champion of love





On the day Je died, Tina Hayhurst, executive director of the







Englewood organization Movement 5280, informed his family of his passing.
Movement 5280 acts as a support system for many who are unhoused, o ering shelter, food, clothing, showers, mental health support, housing navigation, health and dental services, addiction recovery services, Christian Bible studies and more.

Hayhurst said she wishes more people would recognize that those who struggle with homelessness are human.
“When you get to know them, they’re a person and they’re somebody’s son and daughter and uncle — and they’re not that much different from us,” she said. “We have a fear of what people on the streets are like. And when you sit with them and you have a cup of co ee with them, you realize that they’re just the same (as) us.”
During the last year of his life, Je re-started using several services that he relied on before Treasure House, including Movement 5280. Not only was he a part of the community, but he constantly brought others to help connect them with services.
“You can talk about a lot about his days in football … e champion I saw in him was, while he was on the street, he was helping others on the street to get services,” said Jim Hayhurst, a board member for the organization. “I don’t know that, if I was living on the streets, I could be as sel essly generous as he was in trying to help others.”
Je leaves behind the legacy of a gentle giant who, despite his challenges and mistakes, lived hard and loved even harder.
For Anderson, who has experienced homelessness herself, people like Je are worth getting to know.
“People are so beautiful,” she said. “Before you judge, before you be critical and stereotype, take a moment. It takes just as much energy to be negative and to be judgmental as it does to go and say ‘Hey, what’s your name? How did you get here? What could we do to get you out of here?’... Just share some compassion. Just share some love. at’s all it takes.”
New details released in Englewood police shooting
Video released
BY NINA JOSS NJOSS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COMe Englewood Police Department released audio and video footage of the police shooting that occurred on March 18, when an Englewood o cer shot and killed 34-year-old Christopher Michael Martinez.
e 7 minute and 27 second video includes 1 minute and 17 seconds of active video footage, with a few seconds of that in slow motion. e rest of the video is audio from the 911 call, police radios, aerial images of the scene and a voiceover from Deputy Chief Vance Fender.
e video does not include bodycam video from the o cer who shot Martinez. is o cer was reportedly not wearing a body-worn camera at the time of the incident, an April 10 press release from the department said.

“ e camera had been docked at the Englewood Police Department to download prior recorded incidents and was inadvertently left when the o cer responded to calls for service,” according to the release.
Department policy states that “body worn cameras shall be activated when responding to a call for service or during any interaction with the public initiated by the ofcer... for the purposes of enforcing the law or investigating possible violation of the law.”


require all local law enforcement agencies to provide bodycams to police o cers who interact with members.
A police spokesperson said the department will examine the case and deal with possible policy violations after the 18th Judicial District Critical Incident Review Team completes its investigation.
According to the Englewood Police Department’s original news release, the Englewood police were called to the Lucky U Motel, located at 4575 S. Broadway, at approximately 12:40 p.m. March 18.
In audio recordings released by the department, a caller says a male threatened to rob and shoot the caller and allegedly pointed a handgun at the caller.

e male then allegedly left the area on foot, carrying a handgun,

“Due to the dangerous nature of the call for service and the high risk posed to the community, o cers began searching the area for the suspect,” Fender says in a voiceover in the edited video from the department.
e video shows an animated line on an aerial image of Broadway, tracing the path that o cers allegedly chased the suspect northbound, across Broadway, into the Broadway-Lincoln alley and then northbound in the alley towards East Oxford Avenue.
O cers allegedly confronted the subject near the Pizza Hut at the corner of Broadway and East Oxford Avenue, where allegedly “Martinez fell to the ground and then pointed a gun at an o cer,” the press release says.
e o cer then shot and killed
Martinez. In the video, Fender says “the o cer used deadly physical force in defense of himself.” No o cers were injured during the incident.
“(Martinez) died of gunshot wound injuries and the death is classi ed as a homicide,” the coroner’s o ce said in a press release. e moment of the shooting cannot clearly be seen in the video, as it is captured by the dash cam of a patrol car coming towards the scene. An o cer can be seen with his gun drawn and gunshots are audible.
e video pauses at this point to zoom in, and a green circle highlights a handgun on the ground next to Martinez.
In the video, Fender says “the o cers on scene rendered medical aid to the suspect and requested an ambulance within moments of the shooting.” ese actions are not included in the video footage so it is not clear when exactly aid was rendered.
e suspect was transported to a nearby hospital where he died, per Fender’s narration.
An independent investigation of the incident will be conducted by the 18th Judicial District Critical Incident Response Team, according to the department’s release. e police department said involved o cers were placed on paid administrative leave.
Tayler Shaw contributed to this story.

Colorado collecting higher gasoline tax
Total to be 3 cents
BY JESSE PAUL THE COLORADO SUNColorado began collecting a 2-cent-per-gallon fee on gasoline purchases on April 1.
Revenue from the fee, which increases to 3 cents per gallon on July 1, will go toward addressing the state’s multibillion-dollar transportation project backlog. e charge was imposed through a bill passed by the legislature in 2021 that also added fees on deliveries, rideshare rides and electric vehicles.
e gas fee was originally supposed to begin in July 2022, but the legislature delayed the start until April 1, at a cost of $45 million, because of high gas prices. A year ago, the average cost of a gallon of regular gas in Colorado was $3.97. is week, it was hovering around $3.47.
Fuel prices reached an all-time high in Colorado in June 2022, when a gallon of regular gasoline averaged $4.92 and diesel was at $5.54 a gallon, according to AAA.

e gas fee is set to increase gradually by 1 cent per year until it reaches 8 cents per gallon in July 2028. In July 2032, the fee will be adjusted annually based on in ation.
Other fees imposed by the bill include:
• A 27-cent fee on deliveries





• A 30-cent fee on rideshares


• A 4-cent-per-gallon fee on diesel fuel. Like the gas fee, the diesel fee
increases annually — but by 2 cents — until it reaches 16 cents in 2028.


e fuel and road-usage fees are the subject of a lawsuit led in Denver District Court by conservatives who argue the charges were illegally imposed. Colorado’s Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights requires that voters
approve all tax increases, but fees can be imposed by the legislature as long as the revenue goes to a set purpose.
Colorado also collects a 22-cent tax on each gallon of gas sold. e state’s gas tax is among the lowest in the country.
is story is from e Colorado Sun, a journalist-owned news outlet based in Denver and covering the state. For more, and to support e Colorado Sun, visit coloradosun.com. e Colorado Sun is a partner in the Colorado News Conservancy, owner of Colorado Community Media.
Reducing barriers to mental health treatment












Growing up in rural Iowa, mental health struggles were not something we spoke about openly or took seriously in any way. Most of my time outside school was spent working or playing sports, and there was never any time to address mental health — there was always something “more important” that needed to be taken care of.
It was especially unheard of at the time to think that a mental illness could be just as disabling as a physical injury.

I have struggled with suicidal thoughts since I was 9 years old and went without any sort of professional care or treatment for over two decades. From my experience, I know that professional intervention can have life-changing results, and one of my priorities as a legislator has always been to ensure those su ering from mental illnesses are able to access care that is as high quality as it is a ordable.
To further this goal, I was a prime sponsor of SB154 in 2021, which established a 988 Suicide Prevention Lifeline in Colorado to coincide with the federal launch in July 2022. For these e orts, I had the honor of being named a legislative champion by Mental Health America.
But there is always more to be done in correcting the healthcare gap between mental and physical illnesses. HB23-1130 is a bill currently gaining traction in our state legislature that is looking to reduce the amount of time between a patient with a serious mental illness (SMIs) being prescribed personalized treatment and when they are able to a ord it and actually begin receiving this form of care. is delay is primarily caused by “step therapy,” which is a treatment approach used by health plans to keep medication costs low.
When a patient is prescribed a drug by their doctor, their health insurance provider or Medicaid will have them try lower-cost medications rst to determine if they will be
GUEST COLUMN



e ective at treating the patient’s condition. If those treatments don’t work, the patient can “step up” to the potentially more expensive treatment originally recommended by their doctor. HB1130 recognizes the signi cant harm that a patient may experience as a result of this delay by seeking to limit its use when treating SMIs.
When HB1130 passed the House with an overwhelming majority vote and show of support from lawmakers with 39 representatives signing on as cosponsors, I knew I wanted to do everything in my power to ensure a similar result in the Senate. A rst “step” was signing on as a prime cosponsor.
e bill does not eliminate step therapy altogether, as it recognizes that insurers need to keep initial costs low to serve a greater number of patients. HB1130 remedies existing step therapy laws to allow patients with SMIs to try only one drug before they will receive insurance coverage for the prescribed drug. Additionally, HB1130 does not lessen step therapy requirements for all Coloradoans with a mental illness, and rather focuses on those with severe mental illnesses that are impacted the most by delays to the most e ective treatments.
As a lifelong advocate for behavioral health being accessible to all who need it, I am proud to be a prime co-sponsor for HB1130. is legislation is a leap forward in recognizing that mental illnesses can be as debilitating as physical illness, and require the same high-quality, a ordable, and individualized care as any other health condition.

Woodrow said while some communities have done an “exemplary” job at addressing a ordability, others have not and state intervention is required to stop the growing crisis where housing costs are at an all-time high and availability is at an all-time low.
“ is bill really does increase individual property rights,” Woodrow said. “If you are a property owner, you have the right to build an accessory dwelling unit and the government will not be able to prevent that. Some feel like we are taking away rights. We are adding to them. is bill will have some exibility, but it does set forth some minimum standards.”

Since the bill’s introduction, several Denver metro communities have passed resolutions to oppose the bill, including Westminster, Castle Rock, Lone Tree and Centennial. Other communities have said they may take similar votes.
At the center of the opposition is the plan for the state intervening in local development decisions, removing home rule authority. Home rule is a form or structure of governing dened by the citizens of a municipality or county that allows for more control over matters of local signi cance.
According to the proposed bill, municipalities will be required to submit land-use codes to the state. e state will review the proposed codes and if they are deemed insu cient, the state will impose its own codes.




Arapahoe County Commissioner Carrie Warren-Gully said the bill takes a one-size- ts-all approach and it will not work for all Colorado communities.
Woodrow said he disagrees, that the bill allows communities to develop and plan growth, but they have to meet minimum standards to avoid state intervention. He stressed the bill has tiers to address all populations, including suburban, urban and mountain towns.
“It is not a one-size- ts all,” he said. “ is only goes into e ect if a community refuses to adopt the (minimum) required standards. e only time you are a ected is if you decided to ignore it.”
e reason the state is taking steps to intervene in local control is be-




















cause of the excessive use of “exclusionary zoning,” by some Colorado communities, Woodrow said. Exclusionary zoning laws place restrictions on the types of homes that can be built in a neighborhood. Oftentimes, these laws prohibit multifamily homes and set limits on building heights.


Rep. Lisa Frizell, R-Castle Rock, said SB23-213 is a misguided piece of legislation that does nothing more than declare war on single family home construction.
“It’s built on a faulty premise that everyone wants to live in high density housing,” she said.






















Frizell said if the Democratic-led legislation wanted to adequately address the housing crisis, it would focus on the impact fees and permit fees that cities and towns are charging developers.
Pointing to Castle Rock as an example, Frizell said home prices have skyrocketed due to the costs home builders are having to pay local entities to build.
According to the fee sheet on the Town of Castle Rock website, a developer building a 2,000 square foot













































home can pay over $21,000 in impact fees, which includes a line item for parks and recreation, re protection, municipal facilities, police and transportation. at total does not include other required permit fees.


e construction of a multifamily building is more than $17,000 per unit, according to the fee schedule.




In drafting the legislation, Moreno said the authors looked at what other states have done, speci cally naming California and Oregon, which have also implemented land-use codes.

Moreno said the steps taken by both the Democratic-led states would not t Colorado’s current and future needs.
“(SB23-213) is drafted to provided local options for municipalities to choose from,” he said. “ is sets goals and gives choices on how to meet those goals. It’s easy. If (municipalities) don’t then the state will step in. ere is a bit more choice than other states.”

In its early stages, Moreno said lawmakers have agreed not to immediately take votes on the proposed legislation, instead opting on April 6 to listening to debate, concerns and ideas.
Moreno said he has heard complaints that the bill does not address a ordability enough. e Adams County senator said amendments are likely as the bill moves through the process.
Moreno said the bill does address a ordability in the area of availability. Moreno said it increases stock, which means added supply will drive down
home prices.
According to a monthly report from the Denver Metro Association of Realtors, the median price for a singlefamily home in February was around $600,000, a more than 5% decline from the month before.
e median price for a condo was around $400,000 in February.
As amendments for better language, and clarifying information on water and infeasibility are already on the table, Rep. Mark Baisley, a District 4 Republican, which covers parts of Douglas County, Fremont County and Je erson County said he is “pleasantly surprised” that both Democrats and Republicans have expressed opposition to the bill’s current language.
Even with possible amendments coming to the bill, Baisley said it still wouldn’t work because the entire bill lacks “humility” and the only way to x it is to redo it completely.
No matter what concessions are made in areas of a ordability and language, Baisley said at the core of the bill is taking away home rule, which likely will not be eliminated. e state intervening just means more government, more state oversight and less local control, Baisley said. at aspect alone makes the bill unlikely to ever be successful.
Woodrow said it is sweeping legislation and can take time, noting that success will be gauged in 10 or 12 months. Instead, he said this bill addresses current needs while allowing Colorado to grow in a more strategic way.
Thu 4/20
Texas Hippie Coalition
@ 6pm Wild Goose Saloon, Parker
Creeping Death @ 6pm Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Engle‐wood
Sacred Reich @ 6pm Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Engle‐wood
Die Like Bothans: WP1313 presents
Jetboy @ 6pm
Herman's Hideaway, 1578 S Broadway, Denver
Rend Collective @ 6pm

Cherry Hills Community Church, 3900 Grace Blvd, Highlands Ranch


TJ Miller @ 6:30pm Gothic Theatre, 3263 South Broadway, En‐glewood




Fri 4/21
School Break Camp - 4/21 @ 6:30am / $45 Parker Fieldhouse, 18700 E Plaza Dr., Parker. 303-805-6315
Municipal Waste @ 6pm
Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Engle‐

wood
Frank Reyes @ 9pm Stampede, 2430 S Havana St, Aurora
Sat 4/22
Dear Marsha,: DM @ her Freaky Band @ Toleys @ 7pm Toley’s on the Creek, 16728 E Smoky Hill Rd Suite 11C, Centen‐nial


Mon 4/24
School Break Camp - 4/24 @ 6:30am / $45


Parker Fieldhouse, 18700 E Plaza Dr., Parker. 303-805-6315
Wed 4/26
Carcass @ 6pm Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Englewood


Barkin' Dog Duathlon @ 7am / $58.50-$72

4800 S Dayton, Englewood
easy life w/ Support from SAIAH
@ 8pm



Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Englewood
Tue 4/25



Dave Mensch - Tailgate Tavern - Parker, CO @ 5pm Tailgate Tavern & Grill, 19552 Mainstreet, Parker

Ladies Night @ 5pm / $10 Stampede, 2430 South Havana, Aurora
Fleming Mansion Walkthrough (about 45 days before event) @ 7pm Fleming Mansion, 1510 S. Grant St., Den‐ver. 720-913-0654
DJ Rockstar Aaron @ 7pm Bout Time Pub & Grub, 3580 S Platte River Dr A, Sheridan
Thu 4/27
The King Stan Band in Paradise @ 6pm Paradise Tavern, 9239 Park Mead‐ows Dr, Lone Tree

Vamonos Pest/Mobro: Vamonos Pest at Wide Open

Saloon @ 5:30pm
Wide Open Saloon, 5607 US-85, Sedalia
Rave On Productions: Yesterday and Today: The Interactive Beatles
Experience @ 6:30pm
Parker Arts, Culture & Events Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Avenue, Parker
Tony Medina Music: The Alley Open Mic Hosted By Tony Medina @ 5:30pm The Alley, 2420 W Main St, Little‐ton

Last Train To Juarez: The En‐glewood Tavern, South Broad‐way, Englewood, CO, USA w/ Special Guest Tom McElvain @ 5pm The Englewood Tavern, 4386 S Broadway, Englewood

Tom Mcelvain Music @ 5pm The Englewood Tavern, 4386 S Broadway, Englewood
Jamie Lissow @ 6:30pm Comedy Works South, 5345 Landmark Pl, Greenwood Village
A valued life
Afew weeks ago during a regular sta meeting, Colorado Community Media reporter Nina Joss brought up a story she was working on regarding a homeless man who had been found dead in Englewood. Police said he was a “transient” and no foul play is suspected.
Story done — right? Not even close. After hearing some tips about who the man was, Nina dug a little deeper, learning that he was a former pro athlete who was drafted by the Los Angeles Rams and later became a wrestler.
You see, Je Gaylord was not just some problem on a park bench. He was a human being who had fallen on hard times after losing his career. He made some bad choices, he became reliant on alcohol. All these things lead many to homelessness. It’s a series of trapdoors that for some reason just keep opening and closing behind someone. is
story is what humanity should be about.
We so often look past the person. We so often see that homelessness is a problem but do not want to look at the human part of it. Yes, homelessness is a problem not just in the Denver metro area, but the entire nation.
People in this situation — whether through choices or bad luck — should not be looked past but instead considered a part of society. ey are people who matter to their families, friends and others they have helped throughout their lives.
In this case, Nina attended the funeral for Je Gaylord. She listened to the stories from his friends and family about his natural talents in sports. About his abilities and dedication. She heard about his service to members of those going through the Treasure House of Hope where he coached and helped fellow members make good nutritional choices.
I loved this story for so many reasons. It took me into a life of someone we would have never given another thought to. Had Nina not followed up on a tip we would have just passed this o as a data point. So often the homeless population is boiled down to numbers. How many are there on any given night? How much funding is needed to help address the problem? How do they impact the healthcare system? How many have died?
In this case — Nina skipped the data and got right to the heart of who this human being was and why we should stop and think about how people who are struggling to survive deserve some sympathy and empathy.
Am I saying he was perfect? No. In fact, Nina, being a journalist, found that he also had a criminal record that took him to prison and likely helped lead him to the streets. However, he served his time and we are supposed to be a society driven by second chances.
In the end, he was just a member of our population who died alone without truly knowing the love many had for him. I appreciate Nina for giving us a little more insight into a life that mattered to many.
elma Grimes is the south metro editor for Colorado Community Media.

New beginnings begin with gratitude
He picked up his grandson from preschool and for a treat the grandfather decided to take his grandson to McDonald’s. It was late afternoon and hardly anyone was in the restaurant at that hour. As they ordered their meal and sat down at a table, the grandson was fascinated by the people cleaning up, sweeping the oor, wiping down tables and taking care of the trash.
As they nished their meal, the grandson was holding his grandfather’s hand as they were leaving the building. e grandson tugged on his grandfather’s hand and said, “Let’s go this way so we can say thank you to the people who work here.” e grandfather smiled, and walked with his grandson as he said thank you to the McDonald’s team. e look on the faces of those behind the counter was genuine warmth as they received the young boy’s gratitude. e only smiles bigger than the grandfather’s, were on the faces of the people working that day.
Last week I wrote about another season of new beginnings. If we have been challenged, in a rut, or facing di culties in our lives, we have every chance to start over, give ourselves a new beginning and stop doing what we have always done and expecting di erent outcomes. And maybe our new beginnings begin with gratitude.
Our attitude has so much to do with the way we choose to live, laugh, love, work and play. And it has been said that gratitude is one of the strongest human emotions. It’s also been said that the more we show our gratitude for what we have, the more we will have to be grateful for. So I think back to the story of the 4-year-old boy and his grandfather, asking myself: Am I saying thank
LINDA SHAPLEY Publisher lshapley@coloradocommunitymedia.com
MICHAEL DE YOANNA Editor-in-Chief michael@coloradocommunitymedia.com
THELMA GRIMES South Metro Editor tgrimes@coloradocommunitymedia.com
TAYLER SHAW Community Editor tshaw@coloradocommunitymedia.com
ERIN ADDENBROOKE Marketing Consultant eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com








AUDREY BROOKS Business Manager abrooks@coloradocommunitymedia.com
ERIN FRANKS Production Manager efranks@coloradocommunitymedia.com
LINDSAY NICOLETTI Operations/ Circulation Manager lnicoletti@coloradocommunitymedia.com

you enough? Am I showing gratitude to everyone, not just those closest to me? Am I living out the actions of living and working with an attitude of gratitude?
You have all probably heard about this thing called a gratitude challenge. It’s where we are challenged to come up with a few things every day that we are grateful for. One of my close friends, John Brokken, does this every day and posts his gratitude list on social media. It’s one of my very favorite things to read each day.
Here are a few ways that I am changing in my word choices when it comes to showing gratitude, I am sure you have your own too, but feel free to put these to good use as well. “ ank you very much.” “I appreciate you so very much.” “I am so grateful for you.” “I am so thankful that you are in my life.” “ ank you for being such a blessing to me.”
How about you? Is it time for new beginnings in your own life? And would a new beginning have a better chance of success if you started with lling your gratitude bucket? I would love to hear your story at gotonorton@gmail.com, and when we remember to show our gratitude, it really will be a better than good life.
Michael Norton is an author, a personal and professional coach, consultant, trainer, encourager and motivator of individuals and businesses, working with organizations and associations across multiple industries.

Not a one-size-fits-all solution to local a ordable housing crisis
As many are aware Colorado, like most of the country, has a housing crisis with a de cit of a ordable, attainable, and available housing. It’s in the headlines daily and has become a top priority for local elected leaders and state lawmakers. And like our entire state, Arapahoe County is appealing to new people who want to call it “home.”
In fact, some forecasts show Arapahoe County could add as many as 120,000 people by 2030. But while the appeal is understandable, our a ordable housing supply has not kept up with demand, which will be the case as our County continues growing.
at’s why Arapahoe County is partnering with our 13 cities and towns to work on solutions that address this predicament. As local government leaders, we collectively understand and support housing coordination because we also recognize and respect each community’s unique challenges and di erences. We have a variety of tools at the local level that can help shape our housing strategy more quickly and e ciently than broader e orts.
Among large counties, Arapahoe County has one of the most diverse housing stocks in the state –meaning a sound variety of single-family homes, townhomes, and apartments. In fact, 64% of those housing units are owneroccupied. The County also has what is called middle housing–or duplexes and triplexes–that are already allowed in certain zone districts and planned unit devel-
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Misguided a ordable housing bill
Senate Bill 23-213 is a 105-page jerrycan of gasoline ready to pour onto the re of housing shortages in Colorado. e bill’s title alone is 148 words long.
SB213 sets out to “diagnose and address housing needs across the state.” e Department of Local A airs will manage “Several hundred million dollars for a ordable housing [that] will become available in the second half of 2023 due to the enactment of Proposition 123” (from the department’s website). at measure, approved by Colorado voters last year, authorizes one-tenth of 1% on federal taxable income taxes to be spent on a ordable housing.
e approach being taken in SB213 is to displace local zoning rules with a statewide mandate to incorporate a ordable housing everywhere. is misguided worldview ignores the natural balance of market forces and neighborhood sensibilities. e real shame is that nothing in this 105-page radical masterpiece will resolve the actual housing troubles. Rather, it will simply move Colorado several steps closer to liberal utopia, which maintains an embarrassing track record of unsuccess.
Excessive housing costs, like so many other challenges that Coloradans face, are created by government meddling. We repeatedly hear
opments across the County. On the downside, a significant number of residents are housing burdened – meaning one in three residents, or over 88,000, pay more than 30 percent of their income on housing. That’s a 13 percent increase since 2016.
The good news is that Arapahoe County has more than 108,500 new housing units approved and ready to be built — that’s housing for at least 284,000 individuals.
But for several complicated reasons, it is taking a long time for these approved units to be built. ose reasons include labor and supply chain shortages, developer priorities, and nancing backlogs for a ordable housing projects, which result in increasing capital costs due to market conditions. ere also are signi cant infrastructure costs — like water and
sewer — that need to be built for both new and in ll housing projects. e County also lacks public transportation options to make transit-oriented development less car-dependent.
Another piece to the housing crisis is nding quality, long-term solutions for homelessness. We are currently working across the County to coordinate homelessness response and program o erings, including expanding shelter options, providing eviction support services and expanding navigator programs. Most of these services, however, have been funded by onetime federal dollars, so it is crucial that we nd a sustainable revenue source to continue these critical programs.
Like us, Governor Polis and our legislative delegation are interested in attacking the housing cri-
sis. ey have proposed land-use legislation that seeks to encourage denser building in key urban areas and alter single-family zoning in Colorado cities. is is of concern because it would allow the state to build additional middle housing units without current local approvals.
at’s why local governments— like your Board of County Commissioners and your mayors and city councils—are working diligently to nd solutions and proactively respond to the changing needs of our communities every day. We know a one-size- ts-all approach won’t work locally to increase housing a ordability, accessibility, and diversity. Local oversight takes time to ensure housing is safe for all within our community and services and infrastructure for new housing are readily available.
In the coming weeks and months, your elected leaders look forward to having more meaningful conversations about this topic and we urge you to get involved. Call your state representative and let them know how you feel about housing. Read up on the great work our cities and towns are doing. And look for future telephone town hall events at www.arapahoegov.com/townhall, follow us on social media, or subscribe to The County Line newsletter to stay informed.
The Arapahoe County Board of County Commissioners is made up of Carrie Warren-Gully, Jessica Campbell-Swanson, Jeff Baker, Leslie Summey and Bill L. Holen

from the Democrats that “we must do everything possible to x this problem.” And I repeatedly respond that they do not possess the humility to “do everything possible.”
A study by the National Association of Homebuilders concludes that, “Regulations imposed by all levels of government account for 23.8% of the current average sales price of a new single-family home …” NAHB Chairman added that, “ is study illustrates how overregulation is exacerbating the nation’s housing a ordability crisis and that policymakers need to take bold steps to reduce or eliminate unnecessary regulations that will help builders increase the production of quality, a ordable housing.”
Adding to the cost of regulation is the $250% increase in lumber costs thanks to the Biden administration’s in ationary supply chain mess. is accounts for an additional $35,872 premium to the average house. If the Democrats were honest with themselves, they would direct their attentions to reducing in ationary housing regulations. But their religious devotion to government micromanagement concludes as it always does; treatments for the symptoms while clinging to the causation.
e Colorado Legislature should “do everything possible” to address a ordable housing by weeding out
costly regulations from the existing laws. en, watch the magic of free enterprise do what it has always done — respond to demand with attractive supply.
Mark BaisleyState senator for District 4, including rural Douglas County Woodland Park
Back assault-weapons ban
Cavitation (noun): the formation of an empty space within a solid object or body. is is the mechanism by which the ammunition from an assault-style weapon penetrates another person’s body. If that person happens to be a child, like the 19 children slaughtered at Robb Elementary on May 24, 2022; or one of the three 8- and 9-year-olds from the Covenant School in Tennessee on March 27; then the impact and penetration will essentially liquefy their organs. I challenge anyone reading this to nd a reason why any American citizen who is not in the military has a need to possess a weapon that can liquefy the organs of a child with the pull of a trigger.
I’ll save you some time: we do not need access to these weapons. ere is absolutely no reason to have unfettered access to these weapons. When the Bill of Rights was ratied in 1791, assault ri es had not yet been developed. I think we can easily assume that our Founding Fa-
thers did not intend for the Second Amendment to be a free pass for untrained, average citizens to access rearms that are solely for the purpose of hunting and slaughtering other human beings, including children.
Voting to pass HB23-1230 and ban assault weapons in Colorado will send a number of crucial messages to Coloradans. It will tell us that our elected o cials are dedicated to the safety of their citizens. It will also tell us that they hold a great respect for our Founding Fathers, our Constitution, and the Second Amendment — as its original intention was not, in fact, to give citizens the right to weapons of war. And nally, most importantly, it will send the message to those who have survived the abject terror of being targeted by an assault weapon — that they matter, and everything will be done to prevent it from happening again.
To my fellow Coloradans reading this: get on Twitter, get on social media, and start sending emails to your elected o cials. We deserve better. Let’s show our neighbors in Tennessee who are currently outraged with their lawmakers about inaction on this issue; that we know how to organize and hold lawmakers accountable to protect their constituents.
Gina M. Myers Castle RockWarm Hearts Warm Babies serves hospitals, agencies across Colorado


Surrounded by colorful fabric patterns, handmade baby items and frequent laughter, volunteers of the Warm Hearts Warm Babies nonpro t went to work on a Friday morning to put together layettes for organizations who need them.
e nonpro t has a list of roughly 40 agencies it delivers items to throughout Colorado, said Kathleen Williams, the nonpro t’s grant coordinator. e list includes the Children’s Hospital Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, Platte Valley Medical Center and Denver Medical Center.
“Warm Hearts is totally made up of volunteers,” said Sandi Powis, president of the board of directors. “Everyone’s volunteering with their heart and skills to make things for newborn (babies), preemies to help them get a good start in this world.”
Volunteers sew, knit, crochet and quilt items such as bibs, burp pads, jackets, hats and blankets. e items are assembled into a layette, which is a collection of clothing and accessories for newborn infants.

Each layette contains a quilt, two receiving blankets, bibs, burp pads, clothing and a goodie bag containing items such as a bottle, some diapers and a small toy. ese items are delivered in a handmade tote bag.
“All these items are made with love,” Powis said. “We don’t connect to the individuals personally. We deliver the layettes to hospitals, birthing centers, food banks — anyone that can help us help the newborn.”
A number of the mothers who receive these items are experiencing homelessness, sometimes living in shelters or in their cars, Williams said.
e nonpro t also o ers items for the neonatal intensive care units at hospitals in Colorado, such as positioning roles that are used to help support the infants.
“We also provide clothing for babies that don’t survive, from tiny little babies to full-term babies,” Williams said. “We have clothing for them that we hand out at the hospitals.”
Included in those burial layettes is a cloth-made envelope intended for the parents to hold important items and memories, Powis said.

“It’s sad, but it’s so important,” Powis said. “And to know that a mom wouldn’t have to go out, or send her mom or her sister to go out and nd things for her precious one that has passed — that it can be given to them and that’s not a worry for them.”
How it began
e nonpro t’s origin dates back to 1996, when a woman named Victoria Swain gave birth to a stillborn infant, according to the nonpro t’s website. e hospital she was at could not provide a blanket or clothes for her infant, prompt-

ing Swain to look into how she could help donate these types of items.

After recruiting some volunteers and spending a few years working through a di erent organization called Newborns in Need, in 2000, Swain and the other board members decided to create their own nonpro t: Warm Hearts Warm Babies.
Powis estimated the nonpro t currently has about 200 volunteers and 12 work groups throughout the state including in Arvada, Brighton, Littleton and ornton.
Powis is part of the work group in Conifer, where she lives. She joined the organization roughly six years ago.
“I’ve been doing things for babies for many years, donating to other groups, but they were all missing something. ere was no social connection with anyone else making things,” Powis said. “I found that they had a local organization up here in Conifer and it was like, that’s it — that’s one I can link up with. I can meet people right here in our community.”
Williams learned about the nonpro t through a quilt show, as representatives of the organization had a table at the event. Living in Aurora at the time, she initially joined the Aurora group. Since then, she has moved to Colorado Springs

SEE IN NEED, P15






Women+Film Festival brings small stories to big screen
There are many features that make lm festivals special events for attendees, but one that keeps me returning every year is the opportunity to catch lms on the big screen you might not be able to any other time. And providing that very experience to audiences is one of the top priorities of the 2023 Women+Film Festival
“So many lms, including a lot of independent lms, just don’t have the same budgets as major studio projects. So, we’re excited to bring smaller lms to local audiences so they can be seen,” said Ambriehl Turrentine, Denver Film programming manager. “ is year we’re looking to connect with viewers who may not be as familiar with the lm world and work we do at Denver Film.”
is year’s festival runs from April 13 through April 16 at the Sie FilmCenter, 2510 E. Colfax Ave. in Denver. e festival will screen 11 full-length movies, as well as short lms, and Denver Film ensured that special events aimed at drawing in more of a crowd are included as part of the lineup.
One of the most exciting events is a marketplace, which will be held from noon to 5 p.m. on April 15 in the Sie lobby. According to provided information, shoppers will be able to peruse “gifts, artwork, crafts and novelties from local, woman-owned businesses.” ere will also be live question and answer sessions with

COMING ATTRACTIONS
lmmakers following showings of “ e Disappearance of Shere Hite” on April 15 at and “Girl Talk” on April 16.
“We’ll also have a discussion after ‘Plan C’ on Friday, which will feature the director and representatives from Planned Parenthood,” Turrentine said. “We always look for was to tap into the local lm community, and this lm is a great opportunity to do so.”
As far as lms to get excited about, there’s also festival opener “Judy Blume Forever,” which will be shown before its streaming debut. With a lm version of Blume’s immortal, “Are You ere God? It’s Me, Margaret” coming later in the month, this is a great opportunity to learn more about the wonderful author.
No matter what audiences see, Turrentine hopes people come away with something new to explore.
“I don’t want people to be intimidated by any of the lms or the festival. At the end of the day, it’s another form of entertainment,” she said.
“ ey provide the chance to connect — with a story, someone in the audience or a lmmaker.”
Full festival details and tickets can be found at www.denver lm.org.
gradually grown and expanded in di erent areas of Colorado, said Bredeson, vice president of the nonpro t’s board.
Take a trip to world of the beyond with Paranormal Cirque
Most of us probably have a pretty good idea of what a circus performance will look like. at’s not how Cirque Italia does things, and “Paranormal Cirque,” its latest production, proves that and then some. Described in provided information as an “innovative horror story” for a mature audience, the show aims to take audiences on a thrilling and sexy ride that combines theatre, circus and cabaret. e show will be staged under a big top tent at the Denver Premium Outlets parking lot, 13801 Grant St. in ornton, from April 20 through April 23. Performances are at 7:30 p.m. ursday and Friday, 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday and 5:30 and 8:30 p.m. Sunday.
All the information and tickets van be found at http://www.paranormalcirque.com/tickets.
Samantha Bee, Your Favorite Woman, comes to Denver
Canada’s Samantha Bee is, quiet simply, one of the funniest people on the planet. It’s a total bummer her talk show, “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee,” was cancelled last year, as the world could really use her whipsmart take on the day’s events right now.
Fortunately, Bee is doing a national tour and she’ll be bringing “Your Favorite Woman” to the Paramount eatre, 1621 Glenarm Place in Den-
ver at 7 p.m. April 15. I’m not even a little doubtful that it will be one of the year’s funniest and most thoughtprovoking evenings, so secure tickets by visiting https://www.ticketmaster. com.
Clarke’s Concert of the Week — Dawes at the Ogden Theatre ere’s not a lot of folk rock bands making the rounds on the music scene anymore, which is too bad. e genre was at its peak at the same time some of the century’s best music was being written. ankfully, there are still a few laborers working in the eld of this particular genre, and one of the best is Dawes. e Los Angeles based group not only excel in the kind of music pioneered by e Byrds and CSNY, but over their career they’ve added alt-rock elements, which keeps the sound from growing stale. Last year’s “Misadventures of a Doomscroller,” is their most experimental and far-ranging release to date. Dawes will be performing at e Ogden eatre, 935 E. Colfax Ave. in Denver, at 8 p.m. April 19. I saw them perform at the Arvada Center last summer and can personally attest to the quality of live performance attendees are in for. Get tickets at https://www.ticketmaster.com.
Clarke Reader’s column on culture appears on a weekly basis. He can be reached at Clarke.Reader@hotmail. com.

and joined the local work group there.
e importance of the nonpro t’s work resonated with Williams after an interaction she had with a stranger a number of years ago, she said.
“I was still up in Aurora, out buying onesies and things for our (goodie) bags so that we could deliver onesies and diapers and things, and a lady was standing behind me at the cash register,” Williams said.
e woman asked her what she was buying the materials for, to which Williams began to explain Warm Hearts Warm Babies.
“And she stopped me and she said, ‘ en, I need to thank you, because my daughter just had a baby at the hospital and it was wintertime and … we had nothing to bring that baby home in. And I told the nurses and they brought us one of your bags,’” Williams said.
“And so that keeps me going,” she continued. “I think about that and that keeps me going and seeing how important it is, the work we do.”
Fostering community
Materials for making items and assembling the layettes are stored in the nonpro t’s building, based in Arvada, which is nicknamed “ e Baby House.”
Among the volunteers who gathered at the building that Friday was Glenda Bredeson, an Arvada resident who has been a part of the organization since 1999.
Over time, the nonpro t has

Volunteering for the nonpro t has become a family a air, as Bredeson’s 18-year-old granddaughter, Eleanor Morris, worked alongside Bredeson in e Baby House.
“I remember volunteering here when I was a little girl,” Morris said, explaining she and her cousins would help assemble goodie bags.
“I’ve always loved it.”
Since then, she began crocheting and knitting items to donate.
“She was thrilled when she made her rst two baby hats and brought them in,” Bredeson said.
Although Morris lives in Virginia, she visits when she can and also plans to still create items to donate and ship them to the nonpro t.
“I was so excited just to be here and volunteer because I grew up always coming here. Every time I visited, I would be here, and it was just amazing,” she said.
One of Bredeson’s favorite parts of the nonpro t is the people. Vickie Lutz, an Arvada resident who began volunteering for the organization in 2020, agreed and said that’s true for most of the volunteers.
Lutz said the nonpro t has incredibly talented volunteers. She showed o intricate blankets, toys and clothing items in e Baby House that volunteers spent hours creating.
Challenges and goals
e talent of the volunteers isn’t just for making impressive items, though — it can also be applied toward teaching younger people the craft.
“Eleanor came to us. She didn’t know how to knit or crochet, and now she’s phenomenal at it. ere are so many people here that are willing to teach,” Lutz said.
e need for more younger volunteers is a challenge the nonpro t faces.
“We’re all older, and it’s just not going to be sustainable if we don’t get young people,” Lutz said.
Powis said the organization also needs more volunteers who will sew.
“ e last couple of months, unfortunately, we’ve had to cut back. We’ve had to cut back on the clothes,” Powis said. “We were sending out two out ts. Now it’s down to one.”
Before COVID-19, the nonpro t was able to have a backup supply of clothing, she said. Now, the organization is scraping by, month by month, due to losing a lot of active members.
On top of the need for volunteers, there are also nancial pressures.
“Our donations have gone down drastically over the last couple of years,” Powis said. “And again, our volunteers and the items coming in have really gone down — but the need is still the same — more, more.”
To help raise funds to pay for costs such as rent, volunteers will create items to sell at various craft shows.
e nonpro t is also one of the charities that people can select as part of the King Soopers Community Rewards program.

As the grant coordinator, Williams plans to work this year on nding new areas to get donations and support, she said. She noted that Sue Lee, cofounder of the nonpro t
Sock It To ‘Em Sock Campaign, has helped by not only donating socks to Warm Hearts Warm Babies but also in providing connections to other people.
e nonpro t creates 125 to 150 layettes every month, Powis said.
e main goal she has for this year is getting enough donations of money and items to continue the nonprofit’s work.
“ ere are other organizations out there that would love to have us help them, but at this point, we can’t go out and look for more agencies. But I know they’re there — I know there’s more mamas that could use the help,” she said. “I would (like) not only to be able to help who we have, but also for it to grow and help more.”
ere are a variety of ways that community members can support Warm Hearts Warm Babies, Williams explained.
“Even if people don’t sew or … they don’t crochet, but they can help in, you know, at e Baby House or they can help in collecting donations for us — do a donation drive for us in their schools or their churches — to help us so that we can continue to help these mothers and babies and give them a good start in life,” Williams said.
Powis encouraged people to reach out to the nonpro t and come visit them. ose interested in learning more about Warm Hearts Warm Babies can visit warmheartswarmbabies.org.
“We’re a world that needs to be more interactive with each other,” Powis said, emphasizing the importance of volunteering. “It’s so good for your soul.”
Town Hall gallery opens ‘Performances’ exhibition
tanton Gallery at Town Hall Arts Center, 2450 W. Main St. in downtown Littleton, has a new exhibit of works by Littleton Fine Arts Guild members, “Performances.” e show includes “Island Sunset,” a digital painting by Jacqueline Shuler.

New at Depot
New works at the Depot Art Gallery in Littleton include: Best of Show — “Ian” by Kathy Triplett; Best of eme — “Bald River” by Richard Simpson; Second Place — “Just Before the Morning”; ird Place — “Prairie Homes” by William Knoll. Honorable Mentions: Pat Hartman, Carl Paulson, Laurel Burns and Peggy Dietz. e juror was Tim Kathka. See depotartgallery.org for location and hours.
Lecture on city’s culture
Historic Littleton Inc. invites readers to a lecture, “Littleton’s Culture,” by Pat Cronenberger, former mayor and city council member, at 7 p.m. on April 25 at Carson Nature Center King sher Center, 3000 W. Carson Drive in South Platte Park. Free admission.

Opera at DU
Lamont Opera eatre presents Rachel Portman’s “ e Little Prince” at the Newman Center for Performing Arts, University of Denver, on April 20-23. Tickets: bit.ly/lamontopera.
Art in Lakewood CORE New Art Space at 40 West Art Hub, 6501 W. Colfax Ave. in Lakewood, features works by Kathryn Cole and Edgar Dumas: “Autonomy” and “Works on Paper.” Gallery hours: Fridays, 5 to 10 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 5 p.m.; or by appointment.
Month of Photography
Curtis Center for the Arts, 2349 E. Orchard Road in Greenwood Village, hosts “Inside and Out,” as part of Month of Photography Denver.
Hours: Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 303-797-1779.

Theater for kids
“Robin Hood” by Scott Koop, directed by Amy Arpan, will be presented at Miners Alley Playhouse Children’s eater, 1224 Washington Ave., Golden, on Saturdays through April 22 and May 27-June 24. 303935-3044, minersalley.com.
Central City Opera
Central City Opera’s Summer Festival tickets are now on sale. Opening on June 24: Gounod’s “Romeo and Juliet,” followed by “Kiss Me Kate”
and “Othello.” 303-292-6700 or centralcityopera.org.
National Geographic Live
National Geographic Live — “Life on the Vertical with Mark Synnot” will be at the Newman Center on May 15 at 7:30 p.m., presented by the Denver Museum of Nature & Science in June Swaner Gates Hall. Synott is a pioneering big wall climber. Travel with him to Ba n Island, Pakistan, Yosemite. newmancenterpresents. com, 303-871-7720.
Spring Plant Sale
Denver Botanic Gardens at 1007 York St. will hold its Spring Plant Sale on May 12 and 13 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Birdathon reminder

Denver Audubon reminder about Birdathon: Pick a day in May. Sign up as a Green Team (only walking and biking to birds) or a Group Team (driving allowed). Get a form at denveraudubon.org/birdathon-teamform. Rules, fundraising tips and team pro les available at: denveraudubon.org/birdathon. Get pledges (for example, $1 a bird or a lump sum amount). Individuals who don’t have a team, but would like to help can contact Rhonda at info@denveraudubon.org. ere is a Birdathon webpage for easy donation access. ere will be a Birdathon workshop on April 16 at Denver Audubon Nature Center, 9308 S. Wadsworth Blvd., Littleton. 303-973-9530.
Voices West Chorale to share TV themes
April 29 performances are set for rec center in Highlands Ranch
BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

e south metro area’s Voices West Chorale will have one more season performance on April 29, called “TV eme Songs,” before members take a summer break.
It will be a cabaret-style concert and fundraiser at Wildcat Mountain Auditorium at Southridge Recreation Center, 4800 McArthur Ranch Road in Highlands Ranch. Tickets are available at voiceswest.org. ere will be two performances, at 2 p.m. and 5:30 p.m., according to chorale president Kelli Chan, who lives in Highlands Ranch.
Chan says the chorale will reach a 45th anniversary in August of
this year.
It started as the Littleton Chorale and was first directed by Bud Nicholson, with musical members of the Friends of the Littleton Library joining together to make music and entertain local friends.
Subsequent directors included Vicki Burrichter, Larry Johnson, Glen McCune and James Ramsey. Many of the original members were also involved in creating “Fiasco,” a musical spoof of Littleton: its city council, school board and whoever else was active around town. That show was created by members for a number of years and was a source for lifelong friendships

Since that was just a beloved spring event, they continued to gather and sing together through the year, performing an occasional concert at Littleton United Methodist Church, another church, or a school.
Chan says Voices West membership is about 50 right now, although
it had reached 70 before the COVID scene hit the world of entertainment hard. All members are volunteers except the director, assistant director, accompanist and assistant accompanist.
Michael Krueger, who is director of Voices West, is also director of music at King of Glory Methodist Church in Lakewood.
“ e chorale is a lot like a family. We are getting younger and younger members,” she says of choir members, who o er a mix of age, economic status, political views and abilities.
Chan said that when she joined the choir, she had not sung for over 30 years, but on the rst night, she could feel her voice coming back. When she was a child, she joined a band, a choir and sought out music wherever she could.
“For other members and myself, making music together brings joy to us and the audience.”
“Members cover a wide range —
not all are music teachers, music majors — there’s a wide range of interests.”
“We’ll watch for opportunities to collaborate with other area groups. Our rst event after the pandemic was a collaboration with Ballet Folklorico,” she said.
After the nal concert for this season, planning for the next season will be underway. e group will travel to Spain and Portugal, leaving a day after Christmas.
Smaller groups from the membership perform throughout the community during the year and Chan hopes to have a quartet or two to sing at the August Western Welcome Week booth the group is planning. (Near the ice cream store.)
Prospective members can see the chorale in the Western Welcome Week Parade and inquire about membership, Chan says, or can go through the website at voiceswest. org.
streets, in recited of Grandview Arts they landed and buses tion students to rainbow pasture. Cork, seniors and Deputy dignitaries. and tour through perform Mary choirs perform “ by performance, began Patrick’s blasting by small attention di pictures band, from Television marching playing Jackson twirler sta viewed. viral orchestra hall Lord from parade Mayor were Orchestra ous
Grandview students tour, perform in Ireland
Sites, competition and fun



ey marched down cobblestone streets, sang and played instruments in stained-glass cathedrals and recited Shakespeare on the grounds of a historical castle. Students from Grandview High School Performing Arts performed at historical sites as they traveled across Ireland.
Around 200 students and sta landed in Dublin, sorted out luggage and instruments and loaded onto buses to head to their rst destination in mid-March.
On the way to the city of Cork, students and sta were welcomed to the Rock of Cashel with a bright rainbow overlooking the green pasture.
Cork, Ireland
As the rst bus made it to Cork, the seniors changed into nice clothing and went to city hall to meet the Deputy Lord Mayor of Cork and city dignitaries. e remaining students and sta were taken through a quick tour of the city where they walked through the famous English Market.
After two days, the group was set to perform on St. Patrick’s Day.
At the Roman Catholic Church St. Mary and St. Anne, three Grandview choirs brought 81 voices together to perform powerful pieces, one being “ e Gift Be Simple/Shenandoah” by David Zimmerman.
While the choir was nishing their performance, the marching band began to warm up for e Cork St. Patrick’s Day Parade and Festival.
e sound of drums and horns blasting “Hey Look Ma’ I made It” by Panic! At e Disco through the small streets of Cork grabbed the attention of the public. People from di erent countries came by to take pictures and videos of the marching band, color guard and baton twirler.
A news anchor and cameraman from TV 3 Ireland, Virgin Media Television came to spotlight the marching band. With the band playing “I Want You Back” by e Jackson 5, the color guard and baton twirler performed their routine as a sta member of the band was interviewed.
e marching band even went viral on Tik Tok.
When the parade nished, the orchestra was on their way to city hall to perform at a reception for the Lord Mayor of Cork.
“ ere were all these dignitaries from Cork that had come from the parade to hear this speech by the Mayor and some local music groups were also performing there,” said Orchestra Director Mindi Loewen.
e orchestra performed various pieces, including “American Landscape” by Soon Hee Newbold, “America’s Cup” by Alan Silva and a “La La Land” melody.
“It wasn’t like we were background music, it was more like we were the show and they were so kind and attentive and supportive. And it was really quite a spectacular event for the students to get to do,” said Loewen.
Before leaving Cork, the groups
had the chance to walk around and experience Blarney Castle and Gardens, where many students lined up to kiss the Blarney Stone.
On the way to the next city, there was a stop at Bunratty Castle and Folk Park in County Clare. On a ledge covered in green moss and in between old canons, the theater group took turns reciting Shakespeare on the entrance to the castle.
Limerick, Ireland
e next set of performances took place in Limerick, starting with the theater group performing at the Milk Market.
As the rain poured down, the marching band embraced the weather - whether they wanted to or not - and prepared for the 51st Annual Limerick International Band Competition. Although everyone was soaking wet and cold, the band had fun randomly playing with another band and getting into a friendly drumline battle while waiting for the event to start.
“I was most proud of the band for battling through very cold temperatures and pouring down rain in Limerick, but still having a wonderful performance and earning ‘Best Youth Band’,” said Marching Band Director Keith Farmer.

After the marching band dried o , they went to St. Mary’s Cathedral to watch the orchestra and choir perform.
e orchestra and choir performed Mozart’s “Ave Verum Corpus” together. e choir went on to perform with beautiful stained glass behind them.
Galway, Ireland
e groups enjoyed sightseeing and exploring some of the most famous landmarks such as the Cli s of Moher on their way to Galway.
Tucked away in a side street, in the Collegiate Church of St. Nicholas, Grandview had the chance to watch the performing arts in Ireland. After Grandview’s musical theater performed numerous classic broadway pieces with multiple quick changes, a school musical theater group performed some of their more mellow pieces.
Following musical theater, the students got a taste of Irish culture



violins, banjo and utes. Students erupted with excitement as traditional Irish step dancing began. e Grandview orchestra and choir then shared their pieces for the students and public of Galway.
“I tried to get them ready for how great the acoustics are in Europe,” said Loewen. “ ey get that last note in that last song and it reverates through the hall; I try to get them ready for it and when it happens, as it did, every kid just lit up with a smile as soon as they heard the
magic ray on the last note. ey get it. It cascades down like glitter. It’s amazing.”




Dublin, Ireland
Before departing for the last city, the groups fought harsh winds and rain while exploring the Kylemore Abbey and learning about sheep herding at Dan O’Hara’s Homestead. Blue skies appeared for the performing arts last full day in Dublin.
As the sun shined through the stained glass and centered in St. Patrick’s Cathedral, the choir’s voices echoed throughout the church. e high notes in “Northern Light” by Ola Gjeilo and the upbeat melody of “Battle of Jericho” by Moses Hogan enchanted the public.
“The cathedral acoustic is such a unique thing,” said Choir Director Darin Drown. “Most of the songs we sing are meant to be performed in the acoustic environment of the cathedral. We really need to use our eyes more than our ears in such an environment. You cannot trust your ears to tell you because of the echo.”
To celebrate a week’s worth of performances, students and sta took time to walk around Dublin before going to Taylors ree Rock for an evening lled with traditional Irish entertainment.
“ e last night’s dinner and entertainment was truly memorable and had the entire group up and out of their seats and dancing and singing along,” said Farmer.
Snowpack is peaking higher than usual
Spring floods a concern
BY SHANNON MULLANE THE COLORADO SUNColorado’s snow season is nearing its typical peak with above-average snowpack, and water o cials are beginning to worry about ooding and gauging potential reservoir releases. But in some places, the snow just keeps coming.
Each year, April marks the point in the season when the snowpack starts to reach its peak as temperatures warm and spring runo begins. It’s also an important point for water o cials, water users and even emergency managers: How high the snow piles up is a key indicator of water supply for the next year, but how fast it melts can have big impacts on ooding and seasonal irrigation.
“We do anticipate high water,” said Sgt. Todd Wheeler, emergency management coordinator for Mo at County in northwestern Colorado. “Will it be higher than normal? at remains to be seen.”

In the Colorado River Basin, which supplies water to 40 million people spread across seven Western states and 30 Native American tribes, the snowpack was above average as it reached its seasonal peak.
In the Upper Colorado Region, which includes Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming and Utah, the snowpack usually peaks around April 8, and on ursday, it was about 160% of the median from 1991 to 2020, according to Natural Resources Conservation Service data. It was even nearing the highest snowpack recorded since 1986.
e Lower Colorado Region, which includes Arizona, California and Nevada, was at 446% of the historical median as of ursday.
e above-average snow is welcome news for the parched basin, which is facing its worst drought in 1,200 years. However the basin’s two largest reservoirs, Lake Mead and Lake Powell, will need to see this kind of snowfall for multiple years to recover from the impacts of prolonged drought and overuse, experts say. e water levels at Lake Mead are even projected to fall further this year, according to the Bureau of Reclamation.
“While this year has been really good news in terms of above-average snowpack and above-average stream ows into Lake Powell over the summer, it’s not enough to totally re ll those reservoirs or even get them back to normal,” said Peter Goble, a climatologist with the Colorado Climate Center at Colorado State University.
e seasonal peak refers to the snow-water equivalent — the amount of liquid water in snow — in the snowpack. e peaks vary regionally and year to year, and the data can be sparse for elevations higher than 11,000 feet and lower than 9,000 because of the distribution of data collection stations, called SNOTEL sites, Goble said.
In Colorado, the snowpack has already passed its historical peak in southern basins, including the Upper Rio Grande, Arkansas and the combined San Miguel-DoloresAnimas-San Juan basin. Northern basins, like the Yampa-White, Gunnison, Colorado main stem, North Platte and South Platte, will peak this weekend or later this month. at means more winter storms might roll through — and help add to the water supply — but they will balance out with spring runo as temperatures warm.
“ at’s not to say that the moisture that falls after peak snowpack isn’t important,” Goble said. “In fact, it is really important, what happens in
late April and May, in terms of the overall runo that we get. But I think you’ll probably see our numbers
Western Slope river basins, which feed the Colorado River, were all reporting above-average snowpack Wednesday. e snowpack in the Upper Rio Grande basin, which usually peaks April 2, was at 135% of the historical median, according to
In southwestern Colorado, the combined San Miguel-DoloresAnimas-San Juan basin blasted past its historical median this season, reporting the highest snowpack in the state at about 180%. e basin typically peaks April 2 with a snowwater equivalent of 18.1 inches. is year, the basin reported 31.5 inches, which is half an inch lower than the maximum recorded between 1987 and 2022.
“In the modern SNOTEL observation era, we’re right on the doorstep of a record,” Goble said. “I’m not sure if we’re going to get there … but we’re going to get darn close to a new, modern era snowpack record in the San Juan combined basin.” e region has been hit hard by the drought in recent years, and water o cials, farmers, ranchers and other water users are enthusiastic about the deep snowpack.
For Ken Curtis, general manager of the Dolores Water Conservancy District, the plentiful snowpack means that the local reservoir will ll, and the district is even starting to plan a managed release for rafters and ecological purposes, he said.
Montezuma County emergency manager Jim Spratlen said the high snowpack could also mean ooding as rivers swell in May and June. Spratlen’s team was already updating emergency planning resources online and handing out sandbags to people in the towns of Dolores and Mancos in early April as a precautionary measure.
“Basically, we prepare for everything,” he said. “We prepare for the worst and hope for the best.”


As of April 6, projections from the Colorado Basin River Forecast Center indicated that three areas of the Western Slope, in Mo att, Routt and Gunnison counties, are already more than 50% likely to see ooding.
Higher, northern elevations are still seeing new snow, and spring
runo is weeks away; however, emergency managers in those areas are also preparing for the spring runo .

ey’re taking precautionary steps, like clearing ditches and culverts, holding planning meetings, running high-water public service announcements and monitoring ow-rates and areas prone to ooding. ey’re also watching weather forecasts for signs of prolonged warming, higher nighttime temperatures and duston-snow events, all of which can speed melting.
e Gunnison County snowpack was well above average according to SNOTEL data, said Scott Morrill, the county’s emergency manager.
“What the Snotel data does not re ect is the mid and low elevation snow levels/water content,” he said in an email to e Colorado Sun. “As of a couple weeks ago, readings at all of the low/mid elevation sites were very high, with some of them at historic highs.”



e Gunnison and Yampa-White basins were at 161% and 146% of their historical medians, respectively, as of Wednesday. Both will pass their usual seasonal peaks this weekend. e Colorado main stem, which was 132% of its historical median Wednesday, usually peaks around April 14.
In Routt County, particularly north of Steamboat Springs, conditions are similar to 2011 which was a big ood year, said David DeMorat, emergency operations director.

“It all depends on how quickly it melts. at’ll be a key thing,” he said. Before the spring runo heightens in coming weeks, the key for community members is to contact their local emergency management o ces and sign up for their alert systems, Spratlen said.
“To us, that is one of the biggest things that the public really needs to do, and then they will be noti ed if something’s going on,” he said. “ ey’re going to be very aware of it, whether it’s a law enforcement issue, a ood, a re evacuation, or whatever.” is story is from e Colorado Sun, a journalist-owned news outlet based in Denver and covering the state. For more, and to support e Colorado Sun, visit coloradosun.com. e Colorado Sun is a partner in the Colorado News Conservancy, owner of Colorado Community Media.







































































Valor Christian girls drop close contest against Broomfield
Highlands Ranch school is ranked 2nd



Broom eld struck quickly at the start of both halves on April 8 and downed Valor Christian, 2-1, in a battle between the nation’s and state’s top girls soccer teams.

“We have to be ready to play,” said Valor coach Brian Schultz. “It was di cult for us. It’s di cult as the girls aren’t used to coming from behind. at was new to us.”
Broom eld, top-ranked in the CHSAANow.com April 3 poll, improved to 6-0 this season while second-ranked Valor fell to 3-1-1 for the young season.


Coach Jim Davidson’s Broom eld team is ranked third nationally in the latest United Soccer Coaches poll while Valor of Highlands Ranch was ninth.
Broom eld controlled possession for a majority of the game but it was the two quick goals by University of Denver commit Michaela McGowan that turned out out to be the di erence.
McGowan scored just over four minutes into the game to give Broom eld an early lead. And then she rebounded a goal into the the net in the rst minute of the second half to push the visitors ahead 2-0.
Davidson said his team talked about how good they play early in the game and during the late stages of a half.
Schultz applauded the way his team kept playing despite the de cit but Valor had trouble generating many shots on goal against the stout Broom eld defense.
Jo See, Valor’s leading scorer, scored on a penalty kick with 2:15 remaining in the contest to cut into the lead but the team could never mount another threat.

Valor starts play in the 5A Je erson County League on April 11 and Schultz pointed out that it will be tough with games against teams that received votes in the CHSAA poll, such as Columbine, Arvada West, Ralston Valley and Chateld.

State football championships
e 4A and 5A CHSAA state football championship games will be held at Canvas Stadium in Fort Collins next season as the CHSAA announced a partnership with Colorado State University.
e 3A state title game will move to Canvas Stadium in 2024-25 and all three games will be played the same day.
e underbowl in Pueblo will be the site for the 2023 state title football game.
Empower Field at Mile High has hosted the 5A/4A football championship contests since 2005. e contract with the Denver Broncos and Colorado Sports Hall of Fame ended at the conclusion of the 2022-23 school year.



CHSAA Commissioner Mike Krueger said it was di cult to leave Empower Field but the move to Fort Collins could be bene cial.
“I believe it is a strength when we recognize the diversity in our state and acknowledge that our kids come from all over,” he said. “Bringing this championship event to Fort Collins continues our
Vista golfer stays positive
Abby Aeschleman is medalist at season’s second tourney
BY JIM BENTON SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIAAbby Aeschleman, a senior at Mountain Vista high school, has tucked a positive attitude into her golf bag so far this season.
Aeschleman fashioned a 3-underpar 69 to take medalist honors at the Continental League’s second tournament of the season on April 4 at South Suburban golf course
She was pleased with her playing, noting: “I made some good putts.”
She made four birdies on the front nine and was 5-under-par after 11 holes. She bogeyed the 12th and 13th holes but recovered with pars on the nal ve holes.

“I just try to stay postitive and not be negative,” Aeschleman explained. ‘I don’t know how to explain it but I always just try to think about the good stu . Like if there is water, I’ll ignore it and think it’s going to go on the green or in the hole. I like to be super con dent.








“I just try to think about the next shot and what I can do with that.You never know, you can make a great shot and turn a bad hole around.”
Mountain Vista coach Ray Bikulcius was not surprised by Aeschleman’s 69 at South Suburban.
“She created a plan for the course during our practice round and she was very committed to that plan,” he said. “Her course demeanor was excellent all day. As a coach I don’t know if she is under par or 10 over.
I’m so proud of her commitment to make the team better and as captain it starts with her.”
e start of the girls golf season can be tough because of the spring weather and the lack of time to be outside playing golf during the winter.
“I worked a lot over the winter indoors and did a lot of things with coach but it is so hard to get outside with the weather,” said Aeschleman.
“It is de nitely a disadvantage to be playing in the spring instead of the fall (like high school boys).



“I just try to focus and try to keep it simple like hitting balls on the range and don’t try to overcomplicate it.”
Aeschleman was fourth last year at the state tournament and has high hopes for this season’s CHSAA state championships.
“My goal this year is to win state,” she aditted. “I’m excited for that. You have to treat state the same. A tournament is a tournament whether it be at state, so you have to kind of have the right mindset.
“I would say my putting is the biggest improvement in my game. I’ve always been pretty good tee to green but once I get on the green my putting has alwys let me down. is year I’ve worked really hard and try to make those putts.”
Besides Aeschleman, sophomore Ashleigh Wilson of Rock Canyon had a 1-under-par 71 at the April 4 league tourney.Rock Canyon’s Ashley Chang red a 76 and Brooke Hudson of Chaparral carded a 79.
Rock Canyon took team honors in the league’s second meet wirh a 325 total to edge Mountain Vista (328) and Legend (350).
e orts to build upon that strength.”
e Colorado Sports Hall of Fame released gures from the 18-year agreement with the CHSAA to help host the games.
All the game day expenses were

paid by the Hall of Fame in exchange for 100% of the ticket revenue. e CHSAA was guaranteed no less than $60,00 for each event. Net revenues for the Hall of Fame were donated to youth sport organizations in Colorado.
Largest attendance at the state title games was in 2021 when 15,952 people watched the games. e gross revenue in 2021 was $244,995.
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PUBLIC NOTICES
Public Notices call Sheree 303.566.4088
Legals
Public Trustees
COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION
CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0038-2023
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On January 27, 2023, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Julian Martinez
Original Beneficiary(ies)
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR EVERETT FINANCIAL, INC. DBA SUPREME LENDING, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt COLORADO HOUSING AND FINANCE AUTHORITY
Date of Deed of Trust
December 20, 2021
County of Recording Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
December 22, 2021
Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.)
E1192008
Original Principal Amount
$400,118.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$395,972.48
Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
SEE ATTACHED LEGAL DESCRIPTION
APN #: 207719108018
Also known by street and number as: 4381 W Ponds Cir, Littleton, CO 80123.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 05/31/2023, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication: 4/6/2023
Last Publication: 5/4/2023
Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER
DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
DATE: 01/27/2023
Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) repre
Alison L Berry #34531
N. April Winecki #34861
David R. Doughty #40042
Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592
Lynn M. Janeway #15592 Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990
Attorney File # 23-029154
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. ©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015
due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
SEE ATTACHED LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Also known by street and number as: 5720 S Lowell Blvd, Littleton, CO 80123.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 05/10/2023, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication: 3/16/2023
Last Publication: 4/13/2023
Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
DATE: 01/10/2023
Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Alison L Berry #34531
N. April Winecki #34861
David R. Doughty #40042
Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592
Lynn M. Janeway #15592
Janeway Law Firm, P.C.
9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood,
LEFT BANK CONDOMINIUMS, ACCORDING TO THE CONDOMINIUM MAP OF THE LEFT BANK CONDOMINIUMS FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO RECORDED JANUARY 24, 1972, UNDER RECEPTION NO.1269988 AND THE AMENDED AND RESTATED CONDOMINIUM DECLARATION FOR THE LEFT BANK CONDOMINIUMS RECORDED JUNE 19, 2017 UNDER RECEPTION NO. D7068337, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO. APN #: 032072326
Legal Notice No. 0017-2023
First Publication: 3/16/2023
Last Publication: 4/13/2023
Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0030-2023
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On January 24, 2023, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Cheryl L Humphrey and Monte E Humphrey
Original Beneficiary(ies)
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for Pacific Republic Mortgage Corporation, a California Corporation
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
PennyMac Loan Services, LLC
Date of Deed of Trust
September 24, 2003
County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust October 02, 2003
Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.)
B3216993 Book: n/a Page:
Original Principal Amount $129,173.00
Outstanding Principal Balance $81,972.89
Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
LOTS 23 AND 24, BLOCK 28, SOUTH BROADWAY HEIGHTS, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
Also known by street and number as:
4298 South Grant Street, Englewood, CO 80113.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
If applicable, a description of any changes to the deed of trust described in the notice of election and demand pursuant to affidavit as allowed by statutes: C.R.S.§ 38-35-109(5) LEGAL DESCRIPTION HAS BEEN CORRECTED BY SCRIVENER'S AFFIDAVIT RECORDED 4/13/2012 AT RECEPTION NO. D2040501 IN THE RECORDS OF ARAPAHOE COUNTY.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 05/24/2023, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
DATE: 01/24/2023 Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: Alexis R. Abercrombie #56722
216 16th Street, Suite 1210, Denver, CO 80202 (720) 259-6710
Attorney File # 17CO00183-5
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015
Legal Notice NO. 0030-2023
First Publication: 3/30/2023
Last Publication: 4/27/2023
Name of Publication: Littleton Independent COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION
CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0048-2023
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On February 3, 2023, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s) RICHARD LEE
Original Beneficiary(ies)
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION
SYSTEMS, INC. ACTING SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR ROCKET MORTGAGE, LLC, FKA QUICKEN
LOANS, LLC
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
ROCKET MORTGAGE, LLC
F/K/A QUICKEN LOANS, LLC
Date of Deed of Trust
October 15, 2021
County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
October 25, 2021
Recording Information
(Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.)
E1162731
Original Principal Amount
$380,730.00
Outstanding Principal Balance $374,537.32
Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
LOT 140, HIGHLAND VIEW, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
Also known by street and number as:
2607 E NICHOLS CIR, CENTENNIAL, CO 80122-3425.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/07/2023, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication: 4/13/2023
Last Publication: 5/11/2023
Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER
DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF
INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES EN-
TITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
DATE: 02/03/2023
Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Anna Johnston #51978
Ryan Bourgeois #51088
Joseph D. DeGiorgio #45557
Randall M. Chin #31149
Barrett, Frappier & Weisserman, LLP 1391 Speer Boulevard, Suite 700, Denver, CO 80204 (303) 350-3711
Attorney File # 00000009711995
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Re-
NO. 0035-2023 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
January 27, 2023, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records. Original Grantor(s) Proctor G Ducharm II and Patti A Ducharm
Beneficiary(ies)
Manhattan Mortgage Corp.
Holder of Evidence of Debt Nationstar Mortgage LLC
Date of Deed of Trust December 17, 2003 County of Recording Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
January 02, 2004
Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) B4000523
Original Principal Amount $136,000.00
Outstanding Principal Balance $127,244.17
Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations thereof
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY LOCATED IN THE COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO, TO WIT: LOT 20, APPLE ORCHARD MANORS.
Also known by street and number as: 6638 South Arapahoe Dr, Littleton, CO 80120.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 05/31/2023, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication: 4/6/2023
Last Publication: 5/4/2023
Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER
DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
DATE: 01/27/2023 Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Erin Croke #46557
Steven Bellanti #48306
Holly Shilliday #24423 Ilene Dell'Acqua #31755 McCarthy & Holthus LLP 7700 E Arapahoe Road, Suite 230, Centennial, CO 80112 (877) 369-6122 Attorney File # CO-23-951091-LL
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015
Legal Notice NO. 0035-2023
First Publication: 4/6/2023
Last Publication: 5/4/2023
Name of Publication: Littleton Independent COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION
CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0050-2023
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On February 3, 2023, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described
below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Alice M Sullivan
Original Beneficiary(ies)
U.S. Bank National Association
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
Date of Deed of Trust
December 27, 2013
County of Recording Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
February 10, 2014
Recording Information
(Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.)
D4010923 Book: N/A Page:
Original Principal Amount
$100,000.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$77,372.49
Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
LOT 1, BLOCK 7, VISTA VERDE ESTATES FILING NO. 2, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
Also known by street and number as:
7000 S Penrose Ct, Centennial, CO 80122.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 06/07/2023, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication: 4/13/2023
Last Publication: 5/11/2023
Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
DATE: 02/03/2023
Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: Michael Westerberg, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Alexis R. Abercrombie #56722
David W Drake #43315
Scott D. Toebben #19011
Denver, CO 80202 (720) 259-6710
File # 23CO00003-1
©Public
Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised
opportunity to be heard concerning the Petition for the above-described inclusion into the Public Improvement District in accordance with the provisions of Section 30-20-520, Colorado Revised Statutes. All persons having objections to this Petition may appear at this public hearing and show cause why the Petition should not be granted. The hearing will be held in the East Hearing Room, Arapahoe County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado.
The Petitioners are the owners of property proposed to be included into the Arapahoe County Water and Wastewater Public Improvement District. Additional information about the Petition is available in the Office of the Board of County Commissioners of Arapahoe County, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado.
Joan Lopez, Clerk to the Board
Legal Notice No. Arap 1176
First Publication: April 6, 2023
Last Publication: April 20, 2023
Publisher: Englewood Herald Littleton Independent and the Centennial Citizen Public Notice ARAPAHOE COUNTY NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING CASE NO. UASI22-001, TENDERFOOT PIPELINE EXPANSION / USE BY SPECIAL REVIEW WITH 1041 PERMIT
SPECIFIC DEVELOPMENT PLAN
PROPOSAL: The applicant, RealArchitecture LTD, on behalf of the property owner, Personal Warehouses LTD is proposing to develop a vacant four-acre lot, located at 7852 S. Wheeling Ct., in the Dove Valley Business Park development. The applicant is proposing four private warehouse / office buildings, consisting of 10 light industrial office warehouse units and 40 high-end personal warehouse units, for a total of 50 units. The proposed warehouse units are expected to be sold to individual purchasers for use for airconditioned storage.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on May 2, 2023, the Arapahoe County Planning Commission will hold a Public Hearing at 6:30 P.M., or as soon as possible thereafter at 6954 S Lima St., Arapahoe Room, Centennial, CO 80112; at which, all interested persons will be given an opportunity to be heard concerning the above-described SDP21005, Dove Valley Commerce Ctr / Specific Development Plan. The agenda will typically be posted by the Friday afternoon preceding the hearing and can be viewed on our website at https://arapahoe.legistar.com/Calendar. You can also listen to, or speak at, the meeting by calling 1-855-436-3656. To join the speaking queue, press *3 on the telephone keypad.
More information about this proposal is available at the offices of the Arapahoe County Public Works and Development Department, Planning Division, 6924 S Lima St., Centennial CO 80112 (please call ahead to schedule an appointment if you plan to walk-in), by calling 720-874-6650, or by emailing planning@arapahoegov.com during regular business hours (8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday).
Joan Lopez, Clerk to the Board
Legal Notice No. Arap 1179
First Publication: April 13, 2023
Last Publication: April 13, 2023
Publisher: Englewood Herald Littleton Independent and the Centennial Citizen
/s/ Barbara Setterlind, MMC, City Clerk
Legal Notice No. 531338-60338
First Publication: April 13, 2023
Last Publication: April 13, 2023
Publisher: Littleton Independent and the Centennial Citizen Public Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ARAPAHOE COUNTY WATER AND WASTEWATER PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT PETITION FOR INCLUSION
PROPOSAL: A petition for inclusion into the Arapahoe County Water and Wastewater Public Improvement District has been filed with the Board of County Commissioners of Arapahoe County, acting as the ex officio Board of Directors of the Arapahoe County Water and Wastewater Public Improvement District.
Petition Information: Name(s) of Petitioner(s): Mountain Plains Investment Corporation
Description of Property: Vermilion Creek – a portion of the NE1/4 & N1/2, SE1/4 of Sec.32 and NW1/4 & N1/2, SW1/4 of SEC.33, T5S, R66W, of the 6th PM, City of Centennial, County of Arapahoe
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on April 25, 2023 at 9:30 a.m., or as soon thereafter as the calendar of the Board of County Commissioners permits, the Board of County Commissioners of Arapahoe County, Colorado, acting as the ex officio Board of Directors of the Arapahoe County Water and Wastewater Public Improvement District, will hold a public hearing at which all interested persons and citizens will be given the
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on May 2, 2023
the Arapahoe County Planning Commission will hold a Public Hearing at 6:30 P.M., or as soon as possible thereafter at 6954 S Lima St., Arapahoe Room, Centennial, CO 80112; at which, all interested persons will be given an opportunity to be heard concerning the above-described Case No. UASI22-001, Tenderfoot Pipeline Expansion / Use By Special Review with 1041 Permit. The agenda will typically be posted by the Friday afternoon preceding the hearing and can be viewed on our website at https://arapahoe.legistar.com/Calendar.
You can also listen to, or speak at, the meeting by calling 1-855-436-3656. To join the speaking queue, press *3 on the telephone keypad.
More information about this proposal is available at the offices of the Arapahoe County Public Works and Development Department, Planning Division, 6924 S Lima St., Centennial CO 80112 (please call ahead to schedule an appointment if you plan to walk-in), by calling 720-874-6650, or by emailing planning@arapahoegov.com during regular business hours (8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday).
Joan Lopez, Clerk to the Board
Legal Notice No. Arap 1181
First Publication: April 13, 2023
Last Publication: April 13, 2023
Publisher: Englewood Herald Littleton Independent and the Centennial Citizen Public Notice ARAPAHOE COUNTY NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CASE NO. SDP21-005, DOVE VALLEY COMMERCE CTR /
PUBLIC NOTICE
Colorado law requires the county assessor to hear objections to real property classifications and valuations beginning May 1, 2023. Objections to the valuation or classification of real property must be postmarked, delivered, or presented in person to the county assessor’s office no later than June 8, 2023.
Colorado law requires the county assessor to begin hearing objections to personal property valuations no later than June 15, 2023. Objections to personal property valuations must be postmarked, delivered, or presented in person to the county assessor’s office no later than June 30, 2023. For additional information, contact the county assessor’s office at 303-795-4600.
PK Kaiser, County Assessor
Legal Notice No. Arap 1178
First Publication: April 13, 2023
Last Publication: April 13, 2023
Publisher: Englewood Herald Littleton Independent and the Centennial Citizen
Legal Notice No.: Arap 1181
First Publication: April 13, 2022
Last Publication: April 13, 2022
Public
Notice ARAPAHOE COUNTY NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT
If any citizen believes they have property in the possession of the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office that can be identified, and for which they can show proof of ownership associated with a written report that has been filed with the Sheriff’s Office prior to this announcement, can contact the evidence section of the Sheriff’s Office.
Joan Lopez, Clerk to the Board
Legal Notice No. Arap 1180
First Publication: April 13, 2023
Last Publication: April 13, 2023
Publisher: Englewood Herald Littleton Independent and the Centennial Citizen
Metropolitan Districts Public Notice NOTICE OF CANCELLATION OF ELECTION and CERTIFIED STATEMENT OF RESULTS
to be held on May 2, 2023 is hereby cancelled. The following candidates for the District are declared elected by acclamation: David Jordan Goldberg Until May 2027 Douglas S. Hatfield Until May 2027 Timothy O’Connor Until May 2027 The following offices remain vacant: VACANT May 2025 VACANT May 2025 /s/ Ashley B. Frisbie Designated Election Official Contact Person for District: Clint C. Waldron, Esq. WHITE BEAR ANKELE TANAKA & WALDRON Attorneys at Law 2154 E. Commons Avenue, Suite 2000 Centennial, Colorado 80122 (303) 858-1800 Legal Notice No. 51339-60339 First Publication: April 13, 2023 Last Publication: April 13, 2023 Publisher: Littleton Independent and the Centennial Citizen ## Public Notices Read the Legal Notices. You’ll be up to date each week! And all from your own home! Balancing Government Actions.... ....With your right to know! Legal Legal Notices Notices Balancing Government Actions.... ....With your right to know!
STATE OF COLORADO ) ) S.S. COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE)
Arapahoe County Warrants
CORRECT COPY OF THE LISTS OF COUNTY WARRANTS ALLOWED BY THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISIONERS AND THE COUNTY BOARD OF SOCIAL SERVICES UNDER THE DATES OF 03/01/2023 THROUGH 03/31/2023 DRAWN FROM THEIR RESPECTIVE FUNDS. IN WITNESS WHEREOF I HAVE HERE UNTO SET MY HAND AND SEAL OF THE SAID COUNTY AT LITTLETON THIS 04/03/2023. JOAN LOPEZ, CLERK TO THE BOARD
I, JOAN LOPEZ, COUNTY CLERK AND RECORDER AND EX OFFICIO CLERK TO THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS IN AND FOR THE COUNTY AND STATE AFORESAID, DO HEREBY CERTIFY THAT THE ABOVE AND FOREGOING IS A FULL, TRUE AND
Public Notices
Public Notices
The



IF THIS BILL PASSES IT WOULD:
• Remove the ability of homeowners associations to manage their own a airs.
• Eliminate covenant restrictions on accessory dwelling units and construction of additional dwelling units, unilaterally and without input.
• Require minimum density for areas within ½ mile of transit stations, impacting planned transit oriented development and existing neighborhoods.
• Additional density may be built with no parking requirements, tra c analysis, or coordination with water and sanitation districts - Imagine building a new development and not considering potential outcomes!
• No requirement for the State to provide opportunities for Public Hearings for projects that directly impact a property owner.
For additional information visit www.centennialco.gov/homerule

A single family home could redevelop into 6 separate dwelling units without any consideration of neighborhood character, parking requirements, water and sewer availability. There would be no requirement to engage with local residents or the City. Existing HOA and City regulations specific to residential land use and zoning would be disregarded. The State would effectively manage residential land use and zoning for our community.



best outcomes in Colorado come from cooperation and collaboration.
There’s another way to solving the housing crisis.