
7 minute read
The Crown Jewel of concerts
Denver Philharmonic Orchestra celebrates its 75th anniversary
BY BRUCE GOLDBERG SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
Oldies but goodies, indeed.
e Denver Philharmonic Orchestra is celebrating its 75th anniversary this year, and it is planning a jubilant throwback concert.
“We’ve been operating continuously for 75 years and putting on wonderful concerts for the community for all those years,” said
Lawrence Golan, DPO’s conductor since 2013. “ is particular concert is the culmination of our 75th anniversary, basically a re-creation of May 18, 1948, which was our rst concert.” e 75th anniversary Crown Jewel program takes place on May 25 on the Antonia Brico Stage at Central Presbyterian Church, 1660 Sherman St., in Denver.
The renowned Antonia Brico
By the time she had settled in Denver, Antonia Brico had conducted professional orchestras in Europe and the U.S., including the Berlin Philharmonic and New York Philharmonic.
According to the DPO’s website, Brico saw a “need for a classical music venue to showcase the talents of local, classically trained musicians ‘with no place to play.’” She founded the DPO as the Denver Businessmen’s Orchestra in 1948. Brico, who lived from 1902-1989, continued to conduct the DPO until her retirement in the 1980s. Today, she is the namesake of the stage that the DPO performs on.
Same music, di erent eras
Golan plans to boost the nostalgia quotient of the Crown Jewel concert with performances from
SEE ORCHESTRA, P4
SMALL STAGES, BIG ACTS Bars host talent on

Delta Dental of Colorado Foundation, one of the largest funders of oral health initiatives in the state, said it’s granting a total of nearly $5 million to four colleges to help them expand existing dental hygiene programs or start new ones from scratch — all with the goal of addressing workforce shortages and diversifying the profession.
e grants, split among Front Range Community College, Community College of Denver, Colorado Mountain College and Pikes Peak State College, will be distributed in installments over the next four years. e colleges were selected in part because of their diverse student populations, said Adeeb Khan, executive director of Delta Dental of Colorado Foundation.
e grants will help establish dental hygiene programs at Front Range Community College, Colorado Mountain College and Pikes Peak State College by 2025 and will expand the number of seats available to students in an existing dental hygiene program at Community College of Denver starting this fall.
SEE DENTAL, P2 e three public colleges that currently o er dental hygiene programs in the state have a total of 75 seats for students who want to become dental hygienists. e new grants aim to double the state’s capacity to train dental hygienists in programs that usually last two to three years.
“Two years ago, we made a fundamental decision to deepen our commitment to oral health equity by investing with an expectation of long-term outcomes,” Khan said. “ e investments we’re celebrating today will ensure that Colorado has the ability to address oral health care workforce shortages by expanding our capacity to train dental hygienists and also providing more pathways for diverse populations.”
Delta Dental of Colorado Foundation leaders announced the grants at a time when the number of dental hygienists continues to dwindle and the industry struggles to meet the needs of Colorado’s growing population. Coloradans won’t see a drastic change in the number of dental hygienists for a few years, but Delta Dental leaders said the grants are essential to eventually closing the gap. e grants are o ered to schools that already have a commitment to diversifying their student population. Attracting, educating and retaining dental hygienists who are people of color, and those who speak multiple languages, for example, can help achieve racial balance between dental providers and their patients, increase access to care and create oral health equity.
Higher education o cials recently gathered with Gov. Jared Polis, at a Denver coworking space for health care professionals to announce the distribution of the grants.
At the event, Polis said, the dental industry is not the only profession navigating a workforce shortage in Colorado. Last year, the state created e Care Forward Colorado Program to address shortages in health care jobs. e program provides a free education to students interested in becoming certi ed nursing assistants, emergency medical technicians, pharmacy technicians, phlebotomy technicians, medical assistants or dental assistants, he said.
Since the program was implemented, more than 1,400 Coloradans have gone through the program, and there has been a 20% to 30% increase in the number of people seeking certi cation to work in those professions, Polis said.

Now, with the new grants from Delta Dental of Colorado Foundation, many more students will have the opportunity to train for careers in dental hygiene to help ll the gaps the state has, said Polis, who has made addressing workforce shortages part of his gubernatorial agenda. e number of dental hygiene po- sitions needed will grow by 35% by the end of this year with about 650 openings remaining every year, said Joe Garcia, chancellor of the Colorado community college system, who spoke at the event.
About 95% of students who attend community colleges in Colorado remain in the state after they graduate, he said. And nearly half of all students of color involved in higher education are also educated in Colorado’s community colleges, he said.
“ ese are often the students who have been overlooked or who haven’t been able to access higher education opportunities in Colorado, and yet, they are the fastest growing demographic in our state,” he said. “We’ve got to start to serve them and we’ve got to rely on them because they’re going to serve us. We cannot meet our workforce needs or gaps without doing a better job of educating underrepresented populations.” e data highlights a disconnect that needs to be resolved, and a lack of diversity in the workforce is a signi cant part of the problem that should be swiftly addressed, Delta Dental leaders said.
Since September 2020, employment of dental hygienists has steadily declined and may continue to dwindle without swift and immediate interventions, according to the American Dental Hygienists’ Association and the American Dental Association’s Health Policy Institute.
A March 2022 poll by the Health Policy Institute found almost 34% of dental practices were actively recruiting dental hygienists. More than 80% of dental practices that responded to the poll said it was “extremely challenging” or “very challenging” to recruit dental hygienists.
Delta Dental Foundation leaders o ered funding to schools that are able to continue fundraising to handle any remaining costs associated with expanding or starting new dental hygiene programs.
Projections show that by 2045, people of color will make up the majority of the U.S. population for the rst time. And as demographics of the U.S. population continue to shift, a diverse and culturally competent workforce will become more crucial than ever.
Research shows patients are more trusting of health care providers who share their race or ethnicity. But the demographics of the dental workforce don’t match the makeup of the U.S. population. A 2020 Health Policy Institute poll showed less than 10% of dentists were Black, Hispanic or Latino in 2020, while those groups made up more than 30% of the U.S. population, according to the Health Policy Institute.
In Colorado in 2019, 81% of Black people had insurance, meaning they collectively had more coverage than any other racial group in the state. However, only 56% of Black Coloradans visited a dental professional that year, meaning they were the least likely to visit a dentist when compared with all other racial groups, according to the 2019 Colorado Health Access Survey.
For example, Black dentists are about twice as likely to accept Medicaid compared with white dentists, according to the Health Policy Institute poll. If the profession remains overwhelmingly white, patients with Medicaid will continue struggling to access oral health care, as they have for decades.
Creating more dental hygiene programs in Colorado that include a more diverse student population will increase access to oral health care and could reduce oral health inequities that have persisted for many Coloradans of color and for people living in rural and urban parts of the state, Delta Dental leaders said. e expansion of the programs is especially vital, more than two years after the COVID-19 pandemic shut down the oral health care system for 10 or 11 weeks in Colorado, which was followed by apprehension and fear about visiting dental o ces among patients and providers, a trend that caused some hygienists to leave the profession altogether or retire early, Khan said.
Now, with the new grants, the dental profession has another chance at reviving the dental hygiene industry. e Colorado schools selected to receive grants got their rst payments in November, Khan said, and will receive another installment sometime this week.
Lance Bolton, president of Pikes Peak State College, said the funding will help school leaders develop a new dental hygiene program that will open in fall of 2025. e number of students accepted will depend on formulas determined during the upcoming accreditation process and the number of faculty available to teach. e new program will most likely be able to accommodate 30 students, he said.
“We don’t have a dental hygiene program,” he said. “Starting one is incredibly expensive. It requires us to hire a faculty member for approximately two years before we even enroll our rst student to build the curriculum, get the program accredited and get ready to start. It also requires a very signi cant investment in dental equipment. So the Delta Dental gift absolutely catalyzed the initiation of this program. We wouldn’t be here without that.” ere is no dental hygiene program o ered in the Pikes Peak region, he said, meaning local dentists
Pikes Peak State College leaders plan to develop curriculum based on existing dental hygiene programs at other Colorado colleges, Bolton said. irty percent of the seats in the dental hygiene program will be reserved for students graduating from the school’s dental assistant program, where about 75% of students are minorities, he said. at strategy will help train students who are underrepresented in the dental industry and hopefully encourage them to work in Colorado, he said.
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