Denver Herald Dispatch February 8, 2024

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Serving the community since 1926

WEEK OF FEBRUARY 8, 2024

VOLUME 97 | ISSUE 10

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DENVER LOOKS TO ESTABLISH COMPREHENSIVE HOMELESSNESS SOLUTIONS

as Denver Mayor Mike Johnston’s senior advisor on homelessness resolution. “We don’t believe that people should have to sleep on the streets of our city, and so we’re going to continue to do everything we can to bring people indoors, and then help get them into long term permanent housing outcomes.” SEE SOLUTIONS, P2

SEE ADUS, P16

COURTESY OF DENVER’S DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING STABILITY

House1000 goal was met by the new year but efforts to transition people into permanent housing, prevent future homelessness are ramping up Two weeks after the City of Denver’s House1000 initiative ended — which aimed to get at least 1,000 unhoused individuals into shelter by the end of 2023 — Denver experienced some of its coldest temperatures in the past century. Between Jan. 12 and 16, the low hit negative 19, and adding in the

wind chill, made it feel as cold as negative 30. At these temperatures, frostbite can set in within 30 minutes and hypothermia risks rise dramatically. For someone experiencing street homelessness, a freezing weekend like that can be deadly. “We’re just completely thrilled that (more) people are not having to stay outside in the cold,” said Cole Chandler, who serves

VOICES: 10 | LIFE: 12 | CALENDAR:15

BY BRIAN EASON AND JESSE PAUL THE COLORADO SUN

Single-family homeowners in the most populous parts of Colorado would be allowed to build accessory dwelling units on their properties under a bill introduced in late January in the legislature aiming to override local zoning rules in areas that currently prohibit them. House Bill 1152 is the first of several marquee bills that Democrats at the Capitol, in partnership with Gov. Jared Polis, are expected to introduce this year that would target city and county land use regulations in an effort to tackle Colorado’s affordable housing crisis. A similar push last year ended in a political dumpster fire for the governor when he tried to pack an array of changes into one measure that ultimately failed after weeks of animosity between him and local leaders. In 2024, Polis plans to pursue the same policy changes, albeit through bite-sized pieces of legislation — the first of which is the accessory dwelling units bill introduced Tuesday. Accessory dwelling units, also called ADUs, granny flats or casitas, are secondary residences that are either attached or adjacent to single-family homes. They’re often rented out or used for visiting family members and have long been seen as a way to boost Colorado’s housing stock and drive down the cost of living. Homeowners also rent them out to tourists as short-term vacation rentals. Research by Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored housing corporation, has found that ADUs are far more affordable than apartments and standalone housing units, but local prohibitions have limited their proliferation in all but a handful of places across the country.

The Clara Brown Commons is an affordable housing development in the Cole neighborhood that opened in January.

BY NATALIE KERR SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA

Dems launch second attempt to allow more ADUs

DENVERHERALD.NET • A PUBLICATION OF COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA

PEOPLE MOVER PEOPLE

Meet the faces that make DIA’s trains run P12


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Denver Herald Dispatch February 8, 2024 by Colorado Community Media - Issuu