
20 minute read
COVID pushed Colorado nonprofits to their limits
Leaders stayed, money did not
BY MONTE WHALEY THE COLORADO SUN
Colorado nonpro ts took a beating during the COVID-19 pandemic, bleeding volunteers and employees who were either forced to stay home or were terri ed of leaving their homes for fear they would get infected by the virus.
“We had older and retired volunteers who had to stay home because they were the most vulnerable to the virus,” said Dayna Scott, executive director of Broom eld FISH, a nonpro t providing help with food and housing. “ ere were real fears about death. No one knew what was going to happen day to day.” e rapid turnaround needed to keep things running at FISH burned out many sta members, Scott said. “For some people it was the breaking point. e turnover was brutal.”
Local food banks that help feed and clothe low-income and homeless people were hit especially hard. Grocery store shelves emptied almost overnight and businesses and food banks, including FISH, shuttered for more than a year. Nonpro ts had to pivot, sometimes in 24 hours, to hand out groceries and other donated staples to clients driving through their parking lots.
Scott said she and her remaining sta stayed clear-eyed about FISH’s mission. ey continued to help resi- dents with rental and other nancial assistance and distributed food to families. In 2022, 12,553 people were served, up from 12,190 in 2021 and about 12,000 in 2020 a big jump from the 7,057 helped in 2018.
“We knew what we had to do,” said Scott, who shares her narrow o ce with a sleepy dog named Sami.
Scott manages a $6.6 million budget, seven paid sta ers and 30 community partnerships while bringing in corporate donors and steering clients to legal and housing help. Feeding families is a top priority for Scott and her sta , and in 2021, FISH distributed 1.5 million pounds of food to hungry people in Broom eld.
She brushes o the notion that she could earn a heftier paycheck if she used her skills for a big business. “I was never a corporate person,” Scott said. “I like to think I do more good by keeping 100 people from starving to death at the end of the day.”
State and local nonpro t o cials say they don’t know exactly how many sta members and volunteers they lost during the worst of the COVID pandemic. Marc Cowell, executive director of Outreach United Resource Center in Longmont, said although few of his peers left during COVID, there is little doubt COVID bludgeoned the nonpro t.
“I can state that COVID-19 did take a very heavy toll on myself and most of my colleagues,” he said.
To ght burnout during and after the worst of the pandemic, the OUR Center stressed a work-life balance to allow sta ers plenty of time to get away and be with friends and family, Cowell said.
“ at goes a long way in helping retain not only executives but managers, and front-line personnel,” said Cowell, who heads OUR Center’s e orts to help people in the St. Vrain Valley get basic services like food and to help pay the rent.
Cowell typically logs more than 50 hours a week as executive director, but takes time in the spring to indulge in one of his passions: coaching baseball at Holy Family High School in Broom eld. Coaching helps restore his energy for his fulltime job. “It’s nice to be able to take multiple days o at di erent times throughout the year to recharge my batteries.”
He said the state’s nonpro t staers took COVID’s best shot and stubbornly bounced back to deliver goods and services to friends and neighbors hit hard by the virus.
“At the end of the day it is about our mission and helping the community that keeps us coming back,” Cowell said.
Jobless for a year, Broom eld resident Dave Wallace pushes a shopping cart through the narrow aisles of FISH’s 12,500-square-foot marketplace for staples like bread, butter, fresh fruit and vegetables. Almost all the items are donated by local grocery stores and businesses. Wallace is looking for work in the restaurant industry, but until he gets a steady paycheck he depends on weekly visits to FISH to keep his own kitchen stocked.
“I am glad FISH is here, thank God. What they do is incredible,” Wallace said in January. “ ey help people like me out but they don’t make me feel bad about it. I don’t know what this community would do without them.”
Now aid groups are preparing the loss of pandemic-related support e long and uncertain days and nights fueled by fears of the pandemic are mostly over for Scott and other nonpro t leaders. But now the state’s 20,000 nonpro ts face an even taller task of bridging the gap left by vanishing pandemic-era federal and state funds for shelter and food, said Paul Lhevine, president and CEO of the Colorado Nonpro t Association.
Colorado’s Emergency Rental Assistance Program, which distributed more than $300 million to 36,000 households, is ending this year, nonpro t directors say. Emergency allotments of Colorado Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, are also ending this month.
“ e work in the nonpro t sector is critical now more than ever,” Lhevine said. “ ere are gaps that remain to be lled.” e overall trend toward paying men more in executive slots is also mirrored in the nonpro t world, he said. For every dollar that a male executive director makes, a female executive director makes 82 cents, according to the Colorado Nonpro t Association’s 2021 salary survey. On average, female executives collect a yearly $111,152 salary while male executives pull in $132,227, according to the survey.
Broom eld FISH was started 60 years ago in a church basement by six women who wanted to provide food and clothing to the city’s poor, Scott said.

Women volunteers have always been the prime drivers behind many nonpro ts, but the tendency to pay them less is a main reason why nonpro t executives aren’t compensated as well as their for-pro t business counterparts, Lhevine said.
Scott makes about $100,000, only a fraction of what someone is paid for comparable work in a corporation, she said.
Lhevine said compensation for nonpro t leaders was a trend set decades ago.
“Most nonpro ts were created at a place and time on the backs of volunteers and driven by women,” Lhevine said. “ is is a major issue and we have to do a better job of nding a way to pay professionals a fair wage.” e estimated total pay for an executive director for a business in Denver is $240,568, according to the employment website Glassdoor. e median pay for a CEO in Denver is $404,153. e association’s survey states that many nonpro ts o er employees bonuses and ex time schedules and are generous with time o to compensate for long work hours. Some provided bonuses to employees to acknowledge their work during COVID-19, the survey reported. Most were 3% or less of the employee’s salary.

Nonpro ts greatly bene t from a workforce that will not back down from a challenge, including entering the post-COVID era, Lhevine said.
“Nonpro ts are mission-driven,” he said. “ e people who work there are not going to back down, even now. Nonpro ts are lled with people who have a passion for their work and they have a need to address the needs of their community.” e Colorado Family Resource Center Association — which includes nonpro ts like FISH — only lost about 20% of its member executive directors, said Scott, who has been with FISH for nearly eight years and is not surprised at the lack of turnover among nonpro t leaders. is is low turnover considering the responsibilities of running a nonpro t during a major pandemic, she said.
But Scott is not surprised that so many local directors stuck around.
“We love the mission, and now it’s a new one,” she said. “We will have to scramble to get donations and other help for our organizations now that these other programs are waning.”
Alice Sueltenfuss said her job as executive director of Hope for Longmont, which provides shelter and other aid for people who are homeless, is devoted to the constant chase for funding.
“In the nonpro t world, it’s all about grants, corporate sponsors and the amounts given by donors,” Sueltenfuss said via email. “Fundraising helps, of course, but recurring donors help nonpro ts the most.”


Terrapin, a marijuana dispensary in Longmont, is one of Hope’s most reliable donors, giving $10,000 a year to the nonpro t. Terrapin spokesman Peter Marcus said via email that Hope is one of several nonpro ts that fall into the company’s various corporate responsibility goals.
“Homelessness is one factor that can result from a cycle created through disproportionate cannabis prohibition and incarceration,” Marcus said. “Hope ts nicely with our mission to end the war on drugs and make whole those who were harmed.”
Sueltenfuss retired after 32 years of being a school administrator and was drawn into the nonpro t world knowing she would not come close to making as much as before.
“Working to help homeless indi- viduals become self-su cient has given me rewards that are not easily compared,” she said. “Yes, I don’t make the yearly income I did even 10 years ago, but I chose this profession with a nonpro t for reasons other than nancial. You don’t become an administrator of a nonprofit for the money; it’s the cause.” e same notion motivated Mike Lutz, who left his job as a civil engineer with the city of Louisville in 2008 to work at Broom eld FISH.

Lutz said he wanted to make some changes in his life and made the leap into the nonpro t world after seeing some men unloading a truck at the FISH headquarters.
“I asked them if they needed some help and I jumped right in,” Lutz said. “It just seemed the ideal place and time for me.” e job is especially important to him since he grew up in Broom eld and sees how FISH helps his longtime friends and neighbors.
He started as a volunteer and eventually became the organization’s food operations manager. Lutz hustles around FISH’s marketplace to make sure shelves are stocked with food donated by community and corporate groups.
Lutz also coordinates daily with grocery stores in Broom eld and Westminster to collect donations, including fresh fruits and vegetables.
“I don’t know of another job where I can wake up and can’t wait to get to work,” Lutz said. “I know the money is not great. But here I feel like I am making a di erence.”
A school project by Sharin Oliver’s son led her to volunteer for FISH in 2009. She liked the neighborly atmosphere at FISH and stayed on to become operations manager.
Oliver had been a management consultant out of college and then a stay-at-home mom. FISH became her calling.
“FISH makes Broom eld a smaller place, and I like that,” Oliver said.
“My son once told me ‘Mom, you want to feed the world.’”
“Yeah,” she said, “I guess I do.” 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.
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District Court, City & County of Denver, Colorado 1437 Bannock Street, Room 256 Denver, CO 80202
Plaintiff(s)/Petitioner(s): Kenny A. Tadolini v. Defendant(s)/Respondent(s): ROSALYNE E. MCDONALD; and all unknown persons who claim any interest in the subject matter of this action.
Address: R. Scott Fitzke, #35293 Fitzke Law, LLC
4 West Dry Creek Circle, Ste. 100 Littleton, CO 80120
Phone #: (303) 285-4470
Fax #: (303) 285-4379
E-mail: scott@fitzkelaw.net
Atty Reg No : 35293
Case Number: 2023CV030343 Division 209
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO
TO THE ABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANT(S):
You are hereby summoned and required to appear and defend against the claims of the complaint [petition] filed with the court in this action, by filing with the clerk of this court an answer or other response. You are required to file your answer or other response within 35 days after the service of this summons upon you. Service of this summons shall be complete on the day of the last publication. A copy of the complaint [petition] may be obtained from the clerk of the court.
If you fail to file your answer or other response to the complaint [petition] in writing within 35 days after the date of the last publication, judgment by default may be rendered against you by the court for the relief demanded in the complaint [petition] without further notice.
This is an action: to Quiet Title the title of the
Plaintiff in and to the real property situate in the City and County of Denver, State of Colorado, and more particularly described as follows:
A strip of land 6-inches wide located in the South One-half (S ½) of Lot Five (5), Block One (1), Sundine Subdivision, City and County of Denver, State of Colorado
Dated: January 31, 2023
/s/ R. Scott Fitzke (Original signature on file)
Attorney for Plaintiff(s)/Petitioner(s)
R.Scott Fitzke, #35293
Legal Notice No. 82066
First Publication: February 16, 2023
Last Publication: March 16, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch
Misc. Private Legals
Public Notice
SYNOPSIS OF ANNUAL STATEMENT FOR PUBLICATION
Required pursuant to §10-3-109(1), C.R.S FOR YEAR 2021
FAILURE TO FILE THIS FORM BY MARCH 1 WILL RESULT IN PENALTIES PURSUANT TO §10-3-109(3), C.R.S.:
If any annual report or statement from any entity regulated by the Division of Insurance is not filed by the date specified by law or by rules and regulations of the commissioner, the commissioner may assess a penalty of up to one hundred dollars per day for each day after the date an annual statement or report is due from any such entity
Corporate Name: MotivHealth Insurance Company
NAIC Number: 15743
Address: 10421 South Jordan Gateway, Suite 300 South Jordan, Utah 84095
Assets $44,864,039
Liabilities $38,265,860
Capital and Surplus/ Policyholder Surplus $6,598,179
DIVISION OF INSURANCE CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
THIS IS TO CERTIFY that the MotivHealth Insurance Company, organized under the laws of Utah, subject to its Articles of Incorporation or other fundamental organizational documents and in consideration of its compliance with the laws of Colorado, is hereby licensed to transact business as a Life for the Accident and Health lines of business insurance company, as provided by the Insurance Laws of Colorado, as amended, so long as the insurer continues to conform to the authority granted by its Certificate and its corporate articles, or its Certificate is otherwise revoked, canceled or suspended.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand at the City and County of Denver this first day of March 2023.
Michael Conway
Commissioner of Insurance
Legal Notice No. 82087
First Publication: February 23, 2023
Last Publication: March 16, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch Public Notice
SYNOPSIS OF ANNUAL STATEMENT FOR PUBLICATION
Required pursuant to §10-3-109(1), C.R.S FOR YEAR 2022
FAILURE TO FILE THIS FORM BY MARCH 1 WILL RESULT IN PENALTIES PURSUANT TO §10-3-109(3), C.R.S.:
If any annual report or statement from any entity regulated by the Division of Insurance is not filed by the date specified by law or by rules and regulations of the commissioner, the commissioner may assess a penalty of up to one hundred dollars per day for each day after the date an annual statement or report is due from any such entity.
Corporate Name: ACE Life Insurance Company
NAIC Number: 60348
Address: 10 Exchange Place, 13th Floor Jersey City, NJ 07302
Assets: $ 36,543,884
Liabilities: $ 28,154,119
Capital and Surplus/Policyholder Surplus: $8,322,709
DIVISION OF INSURANCE CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: THIS IS TO CERTIFY that the ACE Life Insurance Company, organized under the laws of Connecticut, subject to its Articles of Incorporation or other fundamental organizational documents and in consideration of its compliance with the laws of Colorado, is hereby licensed to transact business as a Life insurance company, as provided by the Insurance Laws of Colorado, as amended, so long as the insurer continues to conform to the authority granted by its Certificate and its corporate articles, or its Certificate is otherwise revoked, canceled or suspended.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the official seal of my office to be affixed at the City and County of Denver this first day of March 2023.
Michael Conway Commissioner of Insurance
Legal Notice No. 82115
First Publication: March 9, 2022
Last Publication: March 30, 2022
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch Public Notice
SYNOPSIS OF ANNUAL STATEMENT FOR PUBLICATION
Required pursuant to §10-3-109(1), C.R.S FOR YEAR 2022
FAILURE TO FILE THIS FORM BY MARCH 1 WILL RESULT IN PENALTIES PURSUANT TO §10-3-109(3), C.R.S.:
If any annual report or statement from any entity regulated by the Division of Insurance is not filed by the date specified by law or by rules and regulations of the commissioner, the commissioner may assess a penalty of up to one hundred dollars per day for each day after the date an annual statement or report is due from any such entity.
Corporate Name: Securian Casualty Company
NAIC Number: 10054 Address: 400 Robert Street North St. Paul, MN 55101-2098
Assets: $ 619,793,783
Liabilities: $ 430,230,562 Capital and Surplus/Policyholder Surplus: $189,563,221
DIVISION OF INSURANCE CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: THIS IS TO CERTIFY that the Securian Casualty Company, organized under the laws of Minnesota, subject to its Articles of Incorporation or other fundamental organizational documents and in consideration of its compliance with the laws of Colorado, is hereby licensed to transact business as a Property & Casualty insurance company, as provided by the Insurance Laws of Colorado, as amended, so long as the insurer continues to conform to the authority granted by its Certificate and its corporate articles, or its Certificate is otherwise revoked, canceled or suspended.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the official seal of my office to be affixed at the City and County of Denver this first day of March 2023.
Legal Notice No. 82086
First Publication: February 23, 2022
Last Publication: March 16, 2022
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch
Storage Liens/Vehicle Titles
Public Notice Broncos Towing, 303-722-3555 (office) will be applying for title to the following vehicles, abandoned.
1)2021 Kia Forte Blue 270608
2)2008 VM Boat Trailer 032694
3)2007 Blue Water Boat 00G708
4)2014 Top Hat Trailer 138091
5)1996 Glastron Boat 1215802
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Legal Notice No. 82067
First Publication: February 16, 2023
Last Publication: March 9, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch
Notice to Creditors
Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Mae L. Wadkins, aka Mae Lizzie Gunn Wadkins, aka Mae L. Gunn Wadkins, aka Mae L. Gunn, aka Mae Wadkins, Deceased Case Number: 2023PR30190
All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before July 10, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Nadya Vecchiet-Lambert, Esq. on behalf of Da’Phne D. Gunn, Personal Representative 6855 S. Havana St. Ste 370, Centennial, CO 80112
Legal Notice No. 82113
First Publication: March 9, 2023
Last Publication: March 23, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of SAILA E. CONSALVI, ALSO KNOWN AS SAILA ELINA CONSALVI, AKA SAILA CONSALVI, AKA SAILA ELINA HANNINEN CONSALVI, AND SAILA HANNINEN, Deceased Case Number 23 PR 30066
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the PROBATE COURT OF CITY AND COUNTY OF DENVER, COLORADO, on or before July 4, 2023 or the claims may be forever barred.
James V. Consalvi, Personal Representative 1126 S. Gaylord Street Denver, CO 80210
Legal Notice No. 82103
First Publication: March 2, 2023
Last Publication: March 16, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch
Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of RONALD WOOD, JR., Deceased
Case Number: 2023PR30095'
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative (KIMBERLY RUDDELL, Ruddell & Associates Ltd.) or to DENVER PROBATE COURT (1437 Bannock Street, Denver, CO 80202) on or before July 9, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
/s/ Leona Hauschild
LEONA HAUSCHILD, Esq.
Attorney for Personal Representative 1801 California Street, Suite 2400 Denver, CO 80202
Legal Notice No. 82116
First Publication: March 9, 2023
Last Publication: March 23, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO CREDITORS of Dennis M. Lanphier Sr. Deceased Case Number: 2022PR514
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before July 9, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of JEAN DORIS WOLFE, aka JEAN D. WOLFE, aka JEAN WOLFE, Deceased Case Number: 2023PR30098
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before July 2, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Karen Herrmann, Personal Representative c/o 3i Law, LLC 2000 S. Colorado Blvd. Tower 1, Suite 10000 Denver, CO 80222
Legal Notice No. 82108
First Publication: March 2, 2023
Last Publication: March 16, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Debra K. Patterson, aka Debra Kim Patterson, and Debra Patterson, Deceased Case Number: 2022PR31641
All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before July 2, 2023 , or the claims may be forever barred.
Sharon E. Brown, Personal Representative c/o Pearman Law Firm 4195 Wadsworth Blvd Wheat Ridge, CO 80033
Legal Notice No. 82110
First Publication: March 2, 2023
Last Publication: March 16, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Merrill Howe Leavitt, a/k/a Merrill H. Leavitt, a/k/a Merrill Leavitt, Deceased Case Number: 2023PR030119
All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before June 23, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Catherine A. Short Personal Representative c/o Janine A. Guillen, Esq. Guillen DeGeorge, LLP 9222 Teddy Lane Lone Tree, CO 80124
Legal Notice No. 82091
First Publication: February 23, 2023
Last Publication: March 9, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch
Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Kathy Plato, aka Kathy Cook Plato, aka Kathy Plato Cook, aka Kathy Cook, Deceased Case Number: 2023PR030065
All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before June 23, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Allen R. Cook, Personal Representative c/o Janine A. Guillen, Esq. 9222 Teddy Lane Lone Tree, CO 80124
Legal Notice No. 82090
First Publication: February 23, 2023
Last Publication: March 9, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch
Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Corrine Louise Loseke, Deceased
Case Number: 2023 PR 64
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before July 2, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Jessica H. Catlin, Attorney for Personal Rep. Hurth, Sisk & Blakemore, LLP 4860 Riverbend Road 301 Boulder, CO 80301
Legal Notice No. 82100
First Publication: March 2, 2023
Last Publication: March 16, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch
Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Joseph Francis Munson, AKA Joseph F. Munson, AKA Joseph Munson, Deceased Case Number: 2023PR30202
All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before July 3, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Kimberly Raemdonck, Esq. Attorney for Co-Personal Representatives, JoAnne Centineo Hann and Robert Carl Munson, 2485 W Main Street, Suite 200, Littleton, CO 80120
Legal Notice No. 82101
First Publication: March 2, 2023
Last Publication: March 16, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Ainslie R. O’Neil, Deceased Case Number 2023PR30054
All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before June 23, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
David F. Steinhoff, Esq., #9980 o/b/o Estate of Ainslie R. O’Neil 750 W. Hampden Ave., Suite 505 Englewood, CO 80110
Legal Notice No. 82088
First Publication: February 23, 2023
Last Publication: March 9, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Maria Bittler, Deceased Case Number: 2022 PR 21545
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before July 10, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Marlene Bittler Hewitt Personal Representative c/o Pearman Law Firm 4195 Wadsworth Blvd Wheat Ridge, CO 80033
Legal Notice No. 82111
First Publication: March 9, 2023
Last Publication: March 23, 2023 Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Kathryn Louise Barker, Deceased Case Number: 2022PR523
All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before July 2, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Mary Barker Sarlo Personal Representative c/o Rocky Mountain Elder Law 651 Garrison Street, Suite 240 Lakewood, CO 80215
Legal Notice No. 82104
First Publication: March 2, 2023
Last Publication: March 16, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch Public Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of: JOHN C. HOFFMANN, Deceased Case Number 2023PR30079
All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to Denver Probate Court of the City and County of Denver, Colorado on or before July 10, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
James O. Simpson Attorney for Personal Representative
P.O. Box 27014 Lakewood, Colorado 80227
Legal Notice No. 82102
First Publication: March 2, 2023
Last Publication: March 16, 2023
Publisher: Denver Herald-Dispatch Public Notice