April 2023 Founded in 1975 LifeOnCapHill.com KITCHEN AT THE DENVER ZOO How greenhouses feed the animals P12 SEED TO SOUL Colorado’s Tocabe helps feed Indian Country P14 BOOK NOOK Including a history of Denver schools P8 ALL ABOUT CHILDREN Denver’s Día del Niño P7
Elvis Cinemas
Elvis Cinemas announced in March that all three of its locations had closed.
e Colorado movie theater chain was locally-owned and had three locations in the metro area: Arvada, Littleton and southeast Denver at 7400 E. Hampden Ave. in Ti any Plaza.
Elvis Cinemas was known for o ering premium movies at a lower ticket price than the national chains. It served the community for 23 years, according to its website.
Logo courtesy of the Elvis Cinemas website.
Luca
Luca, Chef Frank Bonanno’s second restaurant, celebrated its 20th anniversary in March. Named after his son — who turned 21 — Luca restaurant o ers rustic Italian fare through a seasonal menu.
Luca, 711 Grant St. in Denver’s Capitol Hill, is one of 10 Bonanno Concepts restaurants. To learn more, visit bonannoconcepts.com.
Courtesy logo.
Brooks Floral & Co.
Brooks Floral & Co. owner Kaitlin Christenson celebrated the year anniversary of opening her South Broadway studio in April.
e studio is located at 1489
S. Broadway, which borders Denver’s Platt Park and Overland neighborhoods. It is not a retail space, but Christenson hosts a variety of workshops and other related events there.
e business got its start in October 2021. Christenson was inspired to open the business following the death of her brother, Brooks, who died unexpectedly from COVID at age 36 in June 2021.
“His lose inspired my healing journey through oral design and I continue to share that healing with others through intimate ower workshops — ` ower therapy’ — at my studio,” Christenson said.
In addition to the workshops, Brooks Floral & Co. o ers a variety of oral services — including wedding oral design — and the mobile Brooks Bloom Bar, which is customizable and can be booked for all sorts of events including baby showers, graduation parties and business events.
Visit the Brooks Floral & Co. website at BrooksFloralCo.com to learn more about upcoming workshops or to set up a oral consultation.
e Holmes are a husband-and-wife team and said it is rewarding to operate an independently owned and operated pharmacy.
It o ers that “old pharmacy feel the way it used to be, when the pharmacist knew everybody and how to take care of them,” Chris Holmes said. “We get the opportunity to do that in a big city, which is rare today.”
Capitol Heights Pharmacy have a grandfathered license, which allows the Holmes to operate as both a drug store, which o ers a variety of over-the-counter health and personal care products, and a liquor store. Capitol Heights Pharmacy also provides a number of services that includes immunizations, medication therapy management sessions, travel vaccinations, prescription re lls and more. Its audiology clinic opened ve years ago, and the Holmes have plans to expand some of its services, such as additional testing and diagnostics for ailments and viruses — u, COVID, cholesterol and diabetes, for example.
To learn more about Capitol Heights Pharmacy, visit chprx.com.
Capitol Heights Pharmacy is co-owned by Kristin and Chris Holmes, a husband-and-wife team who are celebrating the 10-year anniversary of owning the pharmacy this April. Courtesy photo.
Girl Scout DreamLab
Girl Scouts of Colorado has become the rst in the nation to open a Girl Scout DreamLab. e grand opening took place on March 12 at the new facility located at 63 N. Quebec St. in Denver’s Lowry Field neighborhood.
e Girl Scout DreamLab is designed to be a destination space and elevate the Girl Scout experience. It will host one-of-a-kind programming, badge workshops and Family Fun Days, and will be available for Girl Scout troops to reserve for meetings and activities. e facility boasts innovative spaces where girls have the opportunity to try new experiences such as STEM projects, podcasting, performing on stage or climbing a bouldering wall.
“At Girl Scouts, we are building the leaders of tomorrow,” said Leanna Clark, CEO of Girl Scouts of Colorado. “Giving troops access to the resources available at the Girl Scout DreamLab will allow us to continue to further
Jack’s on Pearl Jack’s on Pearl, 1475 S. Pearl St. in Denver’s Platt Park neighborhood, had its oneyear anniversary in late March.
e restaurant is a modern American steakhouse that featuring a wood- red grill. e building has two levels with a dining room on both levels that each o er a distinct dining experience.
To learn more, visit jacksonpearldenver.com. Courtesy logo.
Capitol Heights Pharmacy is April, Chris and Kristin Holmes are celebrating the 10-year anniversary as owners of the Capitol Heights Pharmacy.
Capitol Heights Pharmacy, located at 1200 Madison St. in Denver’s Congress Park neighborhood, originally opened in 1881. It boasts the state’s pharmacy license No. 30.
Denver’s Cleo Parker Robinson Dance is one of organizations part of e International Association of Blacks in Dance, which received a National Medal of Arts from the National Endowment for the Arts.
“ e National Medal of Arts is the highest award the federal government gives to artists and arts patrons,” states a news release. It is awarded “to individuals or groups who deserve special recognition by reason of their outstanding contributions to the excellence, growth, support and availability of the arts in the United States.”
President Joe Biden presented the award on March 21 at the White House. e IABD is one of 12 recipients of the recognition. e others are Judith Francisca Baca, Fred Eychaner, Jose Feliciano, Mindy Kaling, Gladys Knight, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Antonio Martorell-Cardona, Joan Shigekawa, Bruce Springsteen, Vera Wang and e Billie Holiday eatre.
Cleo Parker Robinson, founder and artistic director of Cleo Parker Robinson Dance, 119 Park Ave. W. in Denver’s Five Points neighborhood, attended the ceremony as a founding member of IABD. Parker Robinson was joined by Ann M. Williams, founder of the Dallas Black Dance eatre; Joan Myers Brown, founder of Philadanco! in Philadelphia; Lula Washington, founder of Lula Washington Dance eatre and Debbie Blunden-Diggs, artistic director of Dayton Con-
April 1, 2023 2 Life on Capitol Hill
Cleo Parker Robinson Dance
SEE NEW OPENINGS, P3 SEE NONPROFIT, P3
NONPROFIT
temporary Dance Company.
“I was able to celebrate my excitement with a few dance steps inside the White House in 2023 with my sisters-in-dance, and meet so many incredible Americans,” Parker Robinson said in a news release. “Our IABD mission has been not only to fund Black dance companies, but to develop and support career opportunities for dancers of color. To be recognized for our collective lifetime careers honors the cultural icons who uplifted us (for) generations in their legacy of art.”
To learn more about the IABD, visit iabdassociation.org. To learn more about Cleo Parker Robinson Dance, visit cleoparkerdance.org.
Founders of e International Association of Blacks in Dance gather for a photo with the National Medal of Arts award which was presented during a ceremony on March 21 at the White House. Denver’s Cleo Parker Robinson is pictured fourth from left. Courtesy photo.
Mercy Housing Inc.
Mercy Housing Inc. announced in late February that Denver Housing Authority selected its proposal to build an intergenerational, a ordable housing and health center to serve the American Indian and Alaskan Native communities.
e development will be located at 901 Navajo St. in Denver’s La Alma-Lincoln Park neighborhood. DHA will provide a 99-year ground lease for the development.
Mercy Housing Inc. is a national a ordable housing nonpro t headquartered in Denver. It will collaborate with Native American Housing Circle — a coalition of Native-led and Native-serving organizations — on the project to design the development and create culturally appropriate programs and services.
e tentative start of construction for is summer 2024. Once complete, the new a ordable and supportive community will provide residences for about 187 households and will be open to those who earn 30-60% of the area median income. A health clinic
NEW OPENINGS
FROM PAGE 2
our mission through this new way of experiencing Girl Scouts. We are so excited to pave the way for the future of Girl Scouts.”
e Denver Girl Scout DreamLab was funded in part through a partnership with Girl Scouts of the USA. It is
April 1, 2023
FROM PAGE 2
BY BRUCE GOLDBERG SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
It seems so long ago, but there was a time that Jewish people and Black people banded together to help push the nation’s civil rights agenda across the nish line.
But that was in the 1960s. Today, the two groups barely seem to know each other and relations are hindered by mistrust, misunderstanding and anger from both communities. It comes during a period of white supremacists increasing attacks — physical and through social media — against both groups.
Still, if Denver’s Caren Press has her way, the two groups gradually will move closer via the organization she recently formed, called “ e Denver Dialogue: A Conversation Between Denver Blacks and Jews.”
Press was spurred to action after hearing the anti-Semitic attacks by Kanye West a few months ago.
After a preliminary meeting a few months ago at a Montbello barber shop, the second gathering drew more than 100 people to George Washington High School’s library on March 15.
e group conducted a frank talk about the tensions between the two communities and how to close that gap.
“We want to address some of the issues between the two groups and see if there is a way both can work together to combat white supremacy,” said Press, a retired attorney. “ is grassroots movement is not controlled by any church, synagogue, school district or advocacy group. It’s our communities coming together with no agenda other than understanding, reconciliation and combining to ght the white nationalists that want to destroy us both.”
White nationalist groups send out a steady stream of fake news lies, and anti-Semitic and racist material and tropes.
“ is group ( e Denver Dia-
EASTER SUNDAY
logue) would like to begin a dialogue and see if the relationship can be repaired to at least work together to ght this common adversary,” Press said.
e March 15 event was a breakthrough, and some attendees suggested not only more gatherings, but also some with a social bent, such as a barbecue. ere was a frankness, as some Jewish attendees said they didn’t know any Black people, and some Black attendees said the same about Jews.
e gathering not only enabled people to learn about others, but also helped debunk some of the supremacists’ messages.
Israel’s relations with Palestine was a hot topic on March 15 — and some of the Black attendees were interested to learn that not all Jews felt the same way about Israel’s actions. Jews in attendance learned that some Black people were horried by what West had to say. at can help open some doors.
Join us for celebratory Easter worship, a message of hope for seekers and believers alike, a children’s flower procession, and joyful organ, choir, and brass music. Receive a free photograph of your family taken in front of our resurrection cross of flowers. Fully accessible. Nursery care is provided.
Sunday, April 9 at 10:30am Central Presbyterian Church
“Anti-Semitism is a real thing,” said Evan Weissman, an activist with Warm Cookies of the Revolution and one of the two guest speakers on March 15. “For a lot of White Jews in the Denver area, it’s not something that’s felt in the same ways as systemic institutional prejudice is. Speaking for White Jewish folk: We need to be involved in racial justice e orts all the time, not just when it a ects Jews in a more direct way.”
eo Wilson, a Black man who is the executive director and lead facilitator with ShopTalk Live Inc., was the event’s other speaker.
“I don’t operate from a hopeful frame,” he said. “ is is what is nec-
to build this bridge. We can’t move forward unless we understand that this is what we have in common.”
Wilson has been involved in improving relations between African immigrants and Black Americans.
In summary, Press said, “It’s a waste to ght amongst ourselves. We’re putting energy into not trusting others. ere are people that want to annihilate both. It’s dumb; we should be helping each other.
April 1, 2023 4 Life on Capitol Hill
Evan Weissman, an artist and social activist, speaks at The Denver Dialogue: A Conversation Between Denver Blacks and Jews event on March 15.
Theo Wilson, an author and social justice leader, listens to Evan Weissman, an artist and social activist, speak on March 15. The two participated in The Denver Dialogue: A Conversation Between Denver Blacks and Jews event on March 15.
PHOTOS BY DAHLIA LINKOW
New grassroots movement gets the conversation started between Blacks and Jews
To learn more about The Denver Dialogue, contact Caren Press at carenpress@gmail.com.
Life on Capitol Hill 5 April 1, 2023 Celebrating 10 years of ownership by our head pharmacist Kristin! To all our loyal customers THANK YOU SO MUCH! “Great, friendly neighborhood Pharmacy and convenient store! Love the sta and the pharmacy is quick, medications always in stock. Highly recommend!” “I have been visiting Capitol Heights for years and love the all the friendly faces, reasonable prices, and ease of having a place like this in the neighborhood.” “I can always count on great customer service with CH pharmacy. The selection of local products and convenience keep me coming back.” If you are not filling your prescriptions with your neighborhood pharmacy it’s time to give us a try! Call to transfer (303) 388-3679 Did you know we have a full service hearing clinic o ering comprehensive hearing testing and treatment services including the new category of OTC hearing aids? Call for an appointment (303) 872-7302 We have a new expanded spirits selection and the same great wine and beer selection. New pricing strategy o ering LOWER PRICES on wine, beer, and spirits for you! 1200 Madison St, Denver, CO 80206 • www.chprx.com • Call us at 303-388-3679 Pharmacy Hours: Mon-Fri: 9a.m.-7p.m. · Sat: 10a.m.-3p.m. · Sun: Closed Liquor Store Hours: Mon-Sat: 9a.m.-10p.m. · Sun: 10a.m.-8p.m.
Parkinson’s slows life down, but doesn’t stop a family’s love
FROM THE EDITOR
My dad is one of the smartest people I know. He attended a technical school and, in the 1980s, turned that into a small business repairing stereos, TVs, VCRs, and, later, computers. If it could be tinkered with, my dad could x it, and his skills were so in need that they provided for our family when I was growing up.
It was my mom and dad’s dream to raise a family in the mountains. ey accomplished this dream. My dad sold his business, we uprooted from our home in Arkansas and moved to a mountain home in Colorado. I was in the fourth grade.
Sometimes it’s hard for me to remember that my dad has Parkinson’s disease. He was diagnosed about 12 years ago.
In many ways, he is the same Mr. Fixit. But in other ways, he is not. It’s the little things. e day I moved into my new condo, as a rst-time homebuyer this past fall, I thought nothing of it when asking my dad to bring his tools so he could change the front door lock. I thought this would be an easy chore for him while everyone else carried the heavy moving boxes up and down the stairs. at he remembered the tools is a win given his Parkinson’s. But my mom discreetly told me that he wouldn’t be able to change the lock —
because of the cognitive skills he has lost over the years to the disease. And, thinking back, it’s possible that she brought the tools for him, though I didn’t ask.
Again, it’s the little things that don’t seem to matter at the time, but add up, in retrospect, and show how much my dad has changed.
Parkinson’s disease is a progressive and degenerative brain disorder that a ects a person’s muscle movement. But it is so much more than a movement disorder. e disease itself is not necessarily fatal, but complications can be serious and it can greatly diminish quality of life. Along with the motor, or movement, symptoms, there are many other symptoms. People with Parkinson’s can develop mood disorders, such as depression, anxiety, apathy and irritability. ere’s also dementia, an issue that a ects not just my dad, but our whole family.
ings have become slower year by year in the 12 years since my dad’s diagnosis. at doesn’t mean the decline has been steady or that family life has ground to a halt. I’m thankful that for many years my dad could still do almost everything. Now, it’s just life at a much slower pace and nothing that we, as a family, can’t manage with a little patience.
One example: family celebrations and gettogethers. It takes him longer to unwrap a gift. So, now I am conscious about making sure there’s not
Spring is coming - join us as a community scientist
After the cold and wet winter we’ve been experiencing in Denver, I know everyone is looking forward to spring. As the days grow longer and warmer, we all start looking for the telltale signs that spring is arriving — birds chirping, trees lea ng out, lilac buds, bulbs emerging out of the damp soil. As you observe nature around you, why not start taking pictures, recording your observations and contributing to large projects as a community scientist? April is the perfect month to join community science e orts across the globe.
At the Denver Botanic Gardens, we seek to connect people with plants. Our scientists are particularly interested in studying patterns and processes of biodiversity. One way we do this is through community science (also known as citizen science) initiatives such as the Denver EcoFlora project. ese initiatives allow participants to connect with plants by making observations of biodiversity patterns in their environment. EcoFlora is based on the traditional ora concept, a list or inventory of plants in a given area or period of time. e eco in EcoFlora represents going beyond a traditional ora and encompassing the study of urban ecosystems. We run the Denver EcoFlora project on the iNaturalist platform where we engage the community in documenting plants living in the Denver metro area. Our goal is to document all plants living in the seven county metro area (Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Broom eld, Denver, Douglas and Je erson counties) using the iNaturalist app. Why? You may ask.
Well, understanding the ora of an area is the best way to protect it.
As part of the EcoFlora project, we send out monthly challenges called EcoQuests to engage participants in documenting a speci c species, group of plants or theme.
April’s EcoQuest has two parts: the rst is focused on some of the rst owers to emerge in spring, the pasque owers (Pulsatilla nutalliana). en, starting April 28, a global competition begins with the start of the City Nature Challenge
LINDA SHAPLEY Publisher lshapley@coloradocommunitymedia.com
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- a challenge to document the most biodiversity within cities. Using the iNaturalist app, you can make observations of any wild organism: plant, bird, insect, fungi. Observations made between April 28 and May 1 count towards the competition. Last year, we had nearly 400 participants observe more than 600 species. Our goal is to surpass those numbers this year. And, if the wet winter unfolds into a sunny spring, we just might be able to do it. Many local partners are organizing hikes or bioblitzes during the City Nature Challenge. Check our website (botanicgardens. org/science-research/citizen-science-programs/ city-nature-challenge) for details on events and how to register.
You can contribute to scienti c studies by downloading the iNaturalist app and using it to take photos of the nature around you. We encourage you to get outside, feel the sun on your face and contribute to science while you’re out there.
Denver Botanic Gardens Citizen Science projects: botanicgardens.org/science-research/ citizen-science-programs
Denver EcoFlora project: inaturalist.org/projects/denver-eco ora-project
Denver Botanic Gardens City Nature Challenge information: Denver-Boulder Metro City Nature Challenge: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/ city-nature-challenge-2023-denver-bouldermetro
Columnists & Guest Commentaries
Columnist opinions are not necessarily those of Life in Cap Hill. We welcome letters to the editor. Please include your full name, address and the best number to reach you by telephone. Email letters to csteadman@coloradocommunitymedia.com
Deadline 5 p.m. on the 20th of each month for the following month’s paper.
April 1, 2023 6 Life on Capitol Hill
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Christy Steadman
This purple flower is the pasque flower of the April EcoFlora challenge.
PHOTO BY SCOTT DRESSEL-MARTIN
Jennifer Neale is the director of research and conservation for the Denver Botanic Gardens
Celebrating children
STAFF REPORT
Día del Niño, or Children’s Day, is a celebration that originated in Mexico. Today, it is also celebrated in many communities across the U.S.
“ is day recognizes children, pays homage to their importance in society and endorses their wellbeing,” states a news release from the Mexican Cultural Center.
e Mexican Cultural Center is putting on its ninth annual Día del Niño this year, with opportunities to celebrate through activities and Science and Cultural Facilities District (SCFD) Free Days throughout April. Some of these organizations include the Cly ord Still Museum, Colorado Symphony, Denver Botanic Gardens, Denver Center for the Performing Arts, Denver Public Library and Denver Zoo.
A highlighted event is Día del Niño at Denver Museum of Nature and Science, which takes place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 30. is day will o er free entry and a variety of family-friendly activities. Another is the Día del Niño Celebration at the Denver Art Museum, which takes place from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 30. is event will include free entry, a variety of live entertainment and performances, and the Denver Preschool Program will be bringing guest readers to read the book, “How Do Dinosaurs Go to School?” by Jane Yolen, in both English and Spanish.
“We are delighted to honor one of Mexico’s traditional holidays celebrating Day of Children,” said Jesse Martinez, executive director of the Mexican Cultural Center. “ ese activities are a great way for the community to come together to celebrate and honor children, and where parents to be a kid too.”
To learn more about this year’s Día del Niño events, visit mccdenver.org/dia-del-nino.
EDITOR
too much tape securing the paper or too many ribbons to untie.
Parkinson’s is weird because some changes in my dad happened slowly while others seemed to come about all of a sudden.
For instance, ve years ago, my dad could still take the family out for a day of boating on Chat eld Reservoir. And, just one year ago, he was driving his truck with no problems. Today, my dad cannot do those things. He cannot walk up stairs alone.
Falling is one of the more serious complications of the disease. Falls can be fatal if they happen at the wrong time in the wrong place, like on a staircase or slipping on ice somewhere on the ve-and-a-half acre property in Bailey where my parents live.
He did experience a couple of falls this winter. Both were serious enough that they required hospitalization and surgery, followed by weeks of rehab in a nursing home.
During one of our visits in the nursing home, in the metro area, my dad said he’s doing OK. en he said, “I want to be closer to the mountains.” I told him he needs to try to remember not to fall so he could be at home in the mountains again.
Now he has a walker, but his Parkinson’s makes him forget that he needs to use it. e dementia seems to be coming faster. So, it’s a cycle:
he tries to get up out of his chair and walk somewhere and somebody, usually my mother, has to stop him or he likely falls again. Falling is now part of my dad’s life – and our family’s.
It is still unknown why or how people develop Parkinson’s. Research on the causes and e orts to lessen the severity are making progress. According to the Parkinson’s Foundation, “scientists believe a combination of genetic and environmental factors” are to blame. Still, there is no cure for Parkinson’s. I like to think that someday there will be one. Science is already going in the right direction, with rst-of-its-kind surgeries already developed and being perfected, and new movement-based therapies that directly target the parts of the brain that help people with Parkinson’s gain control of their movement.
If a big breakthrough on Parkinson’s comes, it probably will not be in time for my dad, maybe not even for me if I ever develop the disease. I hold hope for the possibility for big improvements, or even a cure, in the lifetimes of my nieces or their children.
Awareness months o er us all a time for re ection. ey give people hope and motivate them and, perhaps most importantly, create the opportunity to share knowledge and personal stories, like mine and my dad’s.
April is Parkinson’s Awareness Month. It also happens that it is the month of my dad’s birthday. We’ll all get together, I’m sure. In my mom and dad’s mountain home.
Life on Capitol Hill 7 April 1, 2023 (855) 862-1917 Take the guesswork out of senior care, call a Caring Family Advisor today. Call today! (855) 862-1917 Caring.com’s trusted Family Advisors help match seniors with the right senior living solution for their needs. love
FROM PAGE 6
A child enjoys an activity during a previous year’s Día del Niño at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science.
PHOTO BY CHRIS SCHNEIDER
Día del Niño events take place throughout April
HIGHLIGHTING DENVER AUTHORS
Christy Steadman | csteadman@coloradocommunitymedia.com
Anthony Garcia
Denverite Julie Federico has been a school counselor for more than 20 years. is experience has provided her with a gift of being able to break down di cult societal topics into a preschooler’s language.
“I don’t have all the answers,” Federico said, “but I’m willing to start the dialogue.”
Federico got started writing her children’s books in 2007. Since then, she has written a number of books for infants to pre-teens on a variety of topics that include anger control, domestic violence, school safety and friendship.
e books can serve as a tool for parents to start a conversation between them and their children, Federico said. ey o er emotional intelligence, Federico said.
Many of “the problems discussed in the books can be resolved when you talk about them,” Federico said. “If you can start with the younger generation, we can start to make a di erence.”
Her latest book came out in May 2021 and has two titles: “Blackness is Creative” and “God Made Me Black Because He’s Creative.” It is intended for preschoolers and elementary children.
An author’s note in the book states: “As a child’s rst book on race relations, I wanted to begin the conversation in an age-appropriate manner. is book will get the conversation started, but requires further study as kids get older … Ideally, you will have many conversations with your child about race over the years … When we can teach a community of 2-year-olds to identify and de ne discrimination, we are onto signi cant societal change.”
Q&A WITH JULIE FEDERICO
In your opinion, why is it important to have conversations about important social topics when children are young?
Colorado native and Denverite Anthony Garcia specializes in telling the stories of the voices who are often not heard.
“All my books have that theme,” he said. “I write the stories of the little voices.”
Garcia’s latest book, “Alien Expatriates,” was published in December last year. It is ction based in reality, following the story of iTalli, a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals immigration recipient from Denver, and Nephy, a giant from another planet.
It’s “a love story from a man’s point of view,” Garcia said. “It’s funny, but also deals with serious topics such as deportation.”
e two are aliens and form a special friendship as Nephy tries to comprehend an earthling’s profound feelings of love.
“ e interplay of both aliens brings in the love passages of famous writers as Pablo Neruda, Isabel Allende, GarciaMarquez, Luis Borges and Garcia Lorca to share the deep felt passages of a denition of love from both aliens on the run from authorities,” Garcia said.
e story tells of an enticing relationship in a coming-of-age scenario. It includes some sci- knowledge, which Garcia shared to provide an insight of, perhaps, what aliens from another planet possess in their capabilities.
It’s “a fun prose,” Garcia said.
Q&A WITH ANTHONY GARCIA
In what ways do you think Denver readers will connect with “Alien Expatriates?”
e tale of iTalli, who laments the loss of his girlfriend and his journey being sent back to Puebla, Mexico, is common for many Mexican alien expatriates who are sent back involuntarily.
Nephy. the epitome of an educated American expatriate, is also on the run from the ‘men-in-shades’ authorities and question his true reason to be on this
Back in 1970, local author, historian and Denver native Phil Goodstein had his rst written work published. It was a letter to the editor in “Newsweek.”
“ at inspired me to keep going,” said Goodstein, whose works often delve into local questions.
Today, roughly 30 books later, Goodstein has completed the third part of a trilogy, “ e History of Denver Public Schools.”
“You can’t avoid schools,” Goodstein said. “ ey take in a crucial part of the society.”
Yet, what exactly is a school, Goodstein asked. Are they job training centers? Do they serve as babysitters? Are they penal institutions?
“Nobody has the certain answer,” Goodstein said.
Goodstein’s trilogy looks at about 160 years of DPS. Each is a separate volume and includes many illustrations. It is not necessary to read them in order.
e rst book, “ e Denver School Book,” which came out in 2019, looks at the origins of the school district and spans the following century – 1859 to 1967.
Published in 2020, the second book, “ e Denver School Bussing Wars,” examines 1967 to 1995 and the district’s e ort to desegregate schools through bussing.
e third book was published in September last year and is called “Schools for a New Century. From 1995 to 2020, it explores the rise of charter schools, school choice and the preschool program.
DPS re ects the values of Denver, Goodstein said.
And, he added, “they’re a focal point for education across the state.”
Q&A WITH PHIL GOODSTEIN
What inspired you to write about Denver
April 1, 2023 8 Life on Capitol Hill
Julie Federico
Phil Goodstein
SEE FEDERICO, P9 SEE GARCIA, P9 SEE GOODSTEIN, P9
HIGHLIGHTING DENVER AUTHORS
Christy Steadman | csteadman@coloradocommunitymedia.com
GOODSTEIN
Public Schools for the trilogy?
e schools are part of the community. Indeed, they are forced on the population. Schemers and dreamers have focused on them in trying to shape society. ey are constantly in the news. But nobody had done a retrospection on exactly what Denver Public Schools is, its achievements, and why it is always at the center of controversy.
Filling this void is the main objective of “ e History of Denver Public Schools.”
Goading from people who have been active in the schools as board members, concerned parents and volunteers helped push me to write the volumes.
What do you hope people get out of reading any one or all three of “The History of Denver Public Schools” books?
Ideally, by reading the books, people will grasp the obvious: there are no magical education cures. As part of the commu-
FEDERICO
FROM PAGE 8
In the world we live in, children encounter difficult social topics at a very young age. Knowledge is power, please educate and protect your children.
On ‘Blackness is Creative.’
This generation is the last generation that will tolerate systemic racism. They won’t stand for it. I know this from the
nity, schools re ect the values, the hopes and the limitations of those with power and individuals valiantly trying to survive in a sometimes insane society. By grasping what the schools are and where they have been, people can work to shape them to blossom as places nurturing self-learning, critical thought, and commitment to nourishing people over pro ts and property.
Where to get the book
e History of Denver Public Schools trilogy — “Denver School Book,” “ e School Busing Wars” and “Schools for a New Century” — are available at many local bookstores. Among them are Capitol Hill Books, the Broadway Book Mall, West Side books and Tattered Cover.
What’s next?
e next book Goodstein is working on will explore cemetery history in the metro area, including the people who lay to rest in them. It is expected to be published in late 2023 or early 2024.
teenagers at the schools (she’s worked at). They’re vocal about wrongdoings.
What do you hope readers get out of your book/s?
I hope to give parents dialogue to use with their children when they discuss difficult topics. Some parents say nothing on these topics because they do not know what to say. I give parents the language to use with their children to open doors of communication and educate children.
planet. e play on words will entice readers to question who really is an expatriate.
What did you find most enjoyable about writing iTalli and Nephy’s story?
iTalli, in many ways, is a version of many DACA kids that are committed to being good citizen examples and make the most of their opportunity in this country. e rst-generation Mexican workers have demonstrated outstanding work ethic and accomplishments, and I wanted to demonstrate their virtues and abilities of success in the USA. I wanted to show with Nephy — while alien beings have been visiting our planet for eons — typically seek to avoid human
contact. But in this instance, a relationship-friendship was formed by two very di erent individuals, yet both aliens.
Where to get the book
All of Anthony Garcia’s books are available online. He also showcases his books, and is available for a meet-and-greet every First Friday at Denver’s Museo de las Americas, 861 Santa Fe Drive.
What’s next?
Garcia is working on a play version of his 2017 book, “Watili, the Native American Slave Heroine.” He is also working on a book about the coming together of spirituality and religion, inspired by his October 2022 completion of the Camino de Santiago, which is a pilgrimage of medieval origin. Its various routes all nish in northern Spain.
Where to get the book
All of Julie Federico’s books can be found on her website, juliefederico.com. Federico is also available to speak at parenting groups, schools, foster agencies and youth-serving organizations. Her contact information can be found on the website.
What’s next?
Federico has a couple of ideas for parenting books. Her ideas include tough parenting issues such as how to keep your kids and teens safe, and how to connect with your teen.
Life on Capitol Hill 9 April 1, 2023
FROM PAGE 8
GARCIA
FROM PAGE 8
Mile High Happenings is a monthly column featuring community events throughout Denver, highlighting events that take place in the central and central-south neighborhoods covered by the Washington Park Pro le and Life on Capitol Hill newspapers.
Event submissions from community members and organizations are welcome. Submissions should include brief details about the event and a photo
April 7-30
Kyle Banister: Memories from the Backseat
Time: Varies.
Location: RPO Framing & Gallery, 1588 S. Pearl St., Denver.
Cost: Free.
e “Memories from the Backseat” gallery exhibit, hosted by South Pearl Street’s RPO Framing & Gallery, will feature the work of local artist Kyle Banister. It is running in conjunction with “Oil and Aerosol,” featuring the work of Ian Rumley and Dane Olsen, at Hazel art bar, 1581 S Pearl St. For the First Friday exhibit opening, the GoGo Beat Girls will be performing several times from 6-9 p.m. April 7 at RPO Framing.
More information/reservations: Bob Platz, owner of RPO Framing & Gallery: 303-715-3828; bobplatz@yahoo. com
Courtesy Image
April 8
Denver
Philharmonic
Orchestra: Wild Wild West
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Antonia Brico Stage at Central Presbyterian Church, 1660 Sherman St., Denver.
Cost: Varies.
e Denver Philharmonic Orchestra welcomes Principal Guest Conductor Mark Mast for a Wild Wild West collection to include performances of Cecil E nger’s “Variations on a Cowboy Tune,” Tom Taylor’s “Big Basin Breakdown” and Johannes Brahms’ “Symphony No. 1.” Attendees are invited to the Denver Philharmonic Orchestra’s More than Music Pre-Concert Chat from 6:30-7 p.m. and post-concert reception with the musicians.
More information/reservations: denverphilharmonic. org
Image courtesy of the Denver Philharmonic Orchestra’s website.
or event logo.
Deadline is the 20th of each month for the event to be listed the following month. Cycle for the column’s listings will typically begin on the rst weekend of the month, depending on publication dates.
Submissions can be emailed to Christy Steadman at csteadman@coloradocommunitymedia.com.
April 7-9; April 14-15
Grapefruit Lab: Strange Bird, Queer Bird
Time: Varies.
Location: Buntport Theater, 717 Lipan St., Denver.
Cost: Name-your-own-price. is original show by Grapefruit Lab is an early-pandemic love story based on actual events. “Strange Bird, Queer Bird” tells the story of two queer people who manage to connect after only one face-to-face date before the world shuts down because of COVI-19. It denotes a hopeful tone in the personal and profound connections still happening between people despite forest res, uprisings in the streets, uncertainty and massive death.
April 8
Ballet Ariel: Firebird
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Elaine Wolf Theatre at the StaenbergLoup Jewish Community Center (JCC Denver), 350 S. Dahlia St.
Cost: Varies.
Performed to Stravinsky’s score, “Firebird” is the timeless tale of a prince and his princess and the beautiful rebird that rescues them from the torments of an evil magician and his nefarious goblins. Ballet Ariel’s production is
April 12-16
Denver Auto Show
Time: Varies.
Location: Colorado Convention Center, 700 14th St., Denver.
Cost: $16 adults, $8 children age 6-12, 5 and younger are free. Discounted tickets are o ered to seniors on April 12, active-duty military and veterans receive half-price tickets on April 13.
Getting its start in 1903, the Denver Auto Show is the third oldest show in the nation, following shows held in New York in 1900 and Chicago in 1901. is year’s event will feature more than 20 exhibits from premier automotive brands, as well as lifestyle vehicles such as custom camper van conversions, and will highlight electric vehicles. It will include an indoor test track and an outdoor rideand-drive event.
More information/reservations: denverautoshow.com Courtesy logo.
e April 9 performance is a fundraiser event for the Denver Actors Fund and has a suggested donation of $20.
More information/reservations: grapefruitlab.com/ shows/queer-bird (Cash and credit is also accepted at the door.)
Image courtesy of Grapefruit Lab.
an intriguing fusion of Michel Fokine’s original choreography and Artistic Director Ilena Norton’s reimagining of this ancient Slavic fairytale set in an enchanted, shadowy forest. More information/reservations: balletariel.org/ firebird
Image courtesy of Ballet Ariel.
April 13
Denver Paper Fashion Show
Time: 5:30 p.m. doors and cocktail hour, 7:30 p.m. runway show.
Location: Fillmore Auditorium, 1510 N. Clarkson St., Denver.
Cost: Tickets start at $25. Denver’s annual Paper Fashion Show features haute couture fashions made entirely from paper by Colorado-area designers. is year, more than 45 design teams will be featured on the runway. e event features a cocktail hour, the runway show, DJ Simone Says, and Ya Girl Cedes will emcee the event. It is a fundraiser for e ONE Club for Creativity, which is a multi-disciplinary nonpro t that promotes collaborative creative culture throughout Colorado’s Rocky Mountain Region. is year, 20% of the proceeds will bene t Downtown Aurora Visual Arts.
More information/reservations: paperfashionshow.com
Last year’s second place winner is a fashion titled Savoir Faire on Air, by designer/artist Julie Fletcher.
Photo by Blu Hartkopp.
April 1, 2023 10 Life on Capitol Hill
April 13-16
2023 Women+Film Festival
Time: Varies.
Location: Sie FilmCenter, 2510 E. Colfax Ave., Denver.
Cost: Festival passes: $75 for Denver Film members/$85 non-member; Individual film tickets: $15 for Denver Film members/$18 non-member.
e Women+Film Festival showcases documentaries, narratives, and short lms celebrating the best in women-centric programming. Additional festival events include receptions on opening night and closing night; a marketplace from noon to 5 p.m. April 15 that features local, womanowned businesses; and live Q&As with lmmakers.
More information/reservations: denverfilm.org.
“Judy Blume Forever” is one of the lms being shown at Denver Film’s Women+Film Festival. Courtesy of Prime Video.
April 15
April 22
April 13-16
XicanIndie FilmFest
Time: Varies.
Location: Su Teatro Cultural & Performing Arts Center, 721 Santa Fe Dr., Denver.
April 14
CSI: Regis Universitythe Toy Box Killer
Time: 6-9 p.m.
Location: Mountain View Room in St. Peter Claver, S.J. Hall at Regis University, 3333 Regis Blvd., Denver. Free parking is available in Lot 4 (enter via Lowell Boulevard between 52nd and 53rd avenues).
Cost: Free.
e Regis University Crime Scene Investigation Conference is presenting Jim Yontz,
DSST STEM & Creative Core Showcase
Time: 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Location: CSU Spur, 4817 National Western Dr., Denver. Free parking is available in Lot N at CSU Spur.
Cost: Free.
DSST Public Schools is a network of public, free charter schools serving middle and high school students in Denver and Aurora. is event is open to the public and will showcase the work of DSST students in STEM and Creative Core programs. e event will run open-house style. Attendees will be welcome to explore CSU Spur’s other attractions at their leisure.
More information/reservations: tinyurl. com/DSST-Showcase; audrey.holmes@ scienceandtech.org; greggory.cannady@ scienceandtech.org
Image courtesy of the event’s Facebook page.
May 6-7
Cinco de Mayo “Celebrate Culture” Festival
Time: All day.
Cost: Varies.
e Xicano Independent Filmmakers Festival (the XicanIndie Film Fest) is an annual four-day festival that highlights the artistry and experiences of the Latinx community in four areas: the Chicano Independent Filmmakers, Latino World Cinema, El Epoca de Oro (the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema) and Cine Mejicano.
More information/reservations: s uteatro.org; Teatro@suteatro.org; 303-296-0219
former deputy district attorney for New Mexico’s Sierra County. Yontz, who now works as a family law attorney in southern Colorado, will discuss his role prosecuting serial rapist and suspected serial killer David Parker Ray, aka the Toy Box Killer. is event is for mature audiences only. Its content will be explicit and is not suitable for children.
More information/reservations: regis.edu/signature-events/csi-regis Image courtesy of the CSI Regis program.
The Park People’s Earth Day Tree Sale
Time: Noon-2:00 p.m.
Location: City Park Greenhouse, 2500 E. 23rd Ave., Denver; and Sloan’s Lake Park, 5055 W. 17th Ave., Denver.
Cost: Tree prices range $50-$100. e Earth Day Tree Sale is a fundraiser sale to help support
April 26
Nate’s Night
Time: 8:30 p.m. concert; dinner specials begin at 5:30 p.m.
Location: Ophelia’s Electric Soapbox, 1215 20th St., Denver.
Cost: Concert tickets cost $25 general admission and $50 reserved; dinner separate.
Nate’s Night is a dinner and concert event that supports musical education for Colorado youth. All proceeds from dinner specials and concert tickets directly fund Nathan Yip Foundation projects. Proceeds have previously supported instrument donations in conjunction with the Future Arts Foundation, Swallow Hill’s summer music camp, and Inside the Orchestra. is year’s concert features Salmon Mountain, a collaboration of Adam Aijala
e Park People’s e orts to equitably build the urban forest. e Park People is a nonpro t that works with Denver communities to plant trees and improve parks for a healthy, resilient future. Its Denver Digs Trees program has provided more than 60,000 free and a ordable trees to Denver residents.
More information/reservations: TheParkPeople.org, 303722-6262, info@TheParkPeople.org
April 29
Capitol Hill Concerts: Edward W. Hardy
Time: 7 pm
Location: First Unitarian Society of Denver, 1400 N. Lafayette St.
and Ben Kaufman of Yonder Mountain String Band; Andy orn of Leftover Salmon; and special guest Bonnie Sims of Big Richard.
More information/reservations: Concert tickets: nathanyipfoundation.org; dinner reservations: opheliasdenver.com or 303-9938023 Courtesy logo.
Location: Civic Center Park, 101 W. 14th Ave., Denver.
Cost: Free. is annual community event is put on by NEWSED Community Development Corporation, a Denver-based nonpro t. is year’s event will feature three stages of
Cost: $20-$25 general admission. e Capitol Hill Concerts’ season nale will be a multi-genre concert (including classical, pop and original work) by composer/violinist Edward W. Hardy. Capitol Hill Concerts has a mission to o er high-caliber, musically-diverse, family-friendly concerts, while also supporting local nonpro ts. A portion of the proceeds from this show will bene t El Sistema Colorado. e concert will be livestreamed on YouTube for free but a donation is suggested.
More information/reservations: capitolhillconcerts.com
Photo courtesy of the Capitol Hill Concerts’ website.
a variety of live music, entertainment and dance; a parade; chihuahua races; taco eating contests; a lowrider car show; arts-andcrafts and food vendors; and more.
More information/reservations: cincodemayodenver.com Courtesy photo.
Life on Capitol Hill 11 April 1, 2023
Kswirl ice cream. Slowly and deliberately, he savored every bite.
Over at the zoo’s Tropical Discovery building, Rex, a rhinoceros iguana native to the Caribbean, munched his way through a special breed of spineless prickly pear cactus. Nearby, a shy, 40-pound capybara named Rebecca — a rodent native to Central and South America — couldn’t resist a fresh pile of water lettuce.
It was snack time at the Denver Zoo, courtesy of Production Manager Patrick Crowell and his two sta ers, Marcelle Condevaux and Keith Goode. Smiling, the three horticulturalists watched the animals polish o their greens. Crowell and his sta had grown these tropical plants in several designated City Park greenhouses, which serve as kitchen gardens for many of the zoo’s 3,000 animals. Whether it’s cardamom and ginger leaves, banana trees or hibiscus owers, the greenhouse sta enables zoo animals to eat local — even if they crave ora from across the globe. e gardeners also grow landscaping plants for animal enclosures, from tall stands of euphorbia cactus to sweet gum trees.
“We’re trying to grow as much as we can locally,” Crowell said, adding that “growing exotics can take quite a bit of research.”
April 1, 2023 12 Life on Capitol Hill
SEE ZOO, P13
Water lettuce grown at the zoo greenhouses sparks interest from Rebecca, a 40-pound capybara. The zoo horticulturalists also supply hardwood logs for Rebecca to gnaw, which keeps her front teeth from overgrowing.
Horticulturalist Patrick Crowell and his sta grow a special type of spineless prickly pear cactus just for Rex, a rhinoceros iguana native to the Dominican Republic. Rex is known for his friendly disposition and enjoys a good back scratch.
Kal, a 360-pound male gorilla at the Denver Zoo, savors a fresh banana leaf grown for him by zoo horticulturalists at the City Park greenhouses. PHOTOS BY TIM COLLINS
e greenhouse specialties are grown without pesticides, using recycled water. All of this saves money the zoo would otherwise spend importing tropical plants from Florida.
One greenhouse holds a grove of banana trees, which are especially useful, since every part of the plant can be used. Crowell said the fruit is fed to fruit bats while the oppy leaves are popular snacks for many animals, including sloths and smaller reptiles — as well as great apes. Elephants and rhinos chew the banana stalks, which increases their ber intake and acts as a natural toothbrush.
e production sta works closely with the zoo’s battery of veterinarians and nutritionists. Animal diets have come a long way since 1896 when the Denver Zoo began with a single caged bear cub, named Billy Bryan, in City Park. Although history does not record what Billy ate, it would probably make today’s zoo nutritionists shudder. ese days, animal diets are strictly controlled in order to keep them healthy. Often, that means adding the right vegetation.
“We get calls if an animal is ill,” Crowell said.
Many of the plants in
the zoo greenhouses have medicinal qualities. Crowell said that leaves from the ginger and cardamon plants help prevent heart problems in great apes. Colorful blue, green and yellow lorikeets — a small parrot from Australia — keep their feathers healthy by pecking at hibiscus owers. According
to Crowell, the pollen and nectar of these owers supply the birds with important amino acids.
Some plants are equally important to animals’ mental health. e Denver Zoo earned its accreditation from the Association of Zoos and Aquariums by taking animal well-being seriously
— and that requires plenty of the branches, twigs and leaves known as browse. Cuttings from a range of trees and shrubs, including willow, mulberry, and butter y bush, are important not just for nutrition but also to encourage natural activities like foraging. For example, Crowell said, Tun-
dra, the female grizzly bear, enjoys stripping and eating the leaves o hackberry branches while the zoo’s Mongolian horses prefer to chew bark o cottonwood logs. Elephants and primates like to exercise their teeth on bamboo stalks.
Several passive solar greenhouses known as hoop houses help extend the growing season for browse.
And whenever it’s time to prune trees and bushes in City Park, Crowell and his team are there, collecting boughs, twigs and leaves. Crowell also roams the zoo’s 80 acres, searching for under-utilized patches of dirt where he and his sta can grow additional browse in the summer months. Last year, they supplied more than 1,300 pounds of leafy trimmings to zoo denizens.
When the zoo’s urban farmers aren’t running loads of produce over to hungry zebras and gira es, they are searching for more ways to maximize every square foot of growing space. Even the rafters of the Tropical Discovery building are being put to use, with a hydroponic growing table that nourishes crops of collard greens. According to Crowell, many animals love nutrient-dense greens like collard and dandelion. Perhaps we humans should take a few dining cues from the zoo.
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FROM PAGE 12 ZOO
Zoo Production Manager Patrick Crowell, right, and Browse Specialist Keith Goode, left, harvest banana leaves for eager zoo diners, including sloths, smaller reptiles and apes.
PHOTO BY TIM COLLINS
Ben Jacobs, a member of Osage Nation, and Matt Chandra’s dream is to build a native peoples’ food supply chain.
And recently, this became a reality for them.
e two have been in the restaurant business for more than 25 years and are co-owners of Tocabe, an American Indian-speci c restaurant that has a
took a year and a half, but in January, they began production for the Directto-Tribe Ready Meal program.
“What we are providing (is) not just a meal,” Jacobs said. “It’s traditional, meaningful ingredients.”
It’s meant to bring joy, he added.
Jacobs’ name is rising nationally. He was appointed in March to President Biden’s Council on Sports, Fitness and Nutrition. e federal advisory committee that aims to promote healthy,
council, including basketball great Stephen Curry and his restaurateur wife, Ayesha Curry, former baseball player Ryan Howard and former women’s basketball player Tamika Catchings, among others.
A seed to soul program
Tocabe’s dedication to its cultural roots were cited along with Biden’s announcement. It has what it calls a seed to soul mission, meaning it aims to
create meals that support native people
enous Marketplace, which is an online store that has ingredients sourced from
aged at a facility in Greenwood Village Fort Trotten, North Dakota. As of early March, 4,400 meals were delivered and the next delivery in April will supply three months of food.
Once the meals are delivered, the Spirit Lake community has the freedom to distribute them as they see t. ere are no stipulations for eligibility or parameters limiting how the meals are distributed.
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COMMUNITY MEDIA
The food prepared for Tocabe’s Direct-to-Tribe Ready Meal program uses ingredients from Tocabe’s Indigenous Marketplace, such as the pictured native grains. PHOTO BY ADAM LARKEY SEE MISSION, P15
MISSION
“We are thrilled to provide the Spirit Lake community with access to healthy, traditional meals,” said Mary Greene Trottier, director of Spirit Lake Nation’s Food Distribution Program, in a news release.
So far, there has been a very positive response to the program, Jacobs said. He added that recently there was a family of eight living at Spirit Lake Nation that found themselves experiencing homelessness. e meals from Tocabe were used to support this family during their hard times. Upon learning this, Jacobs said it validated all their hard work. “ is is a situation where individuals would normally be given a loaf of bread, but instead, they were given a very speci c cultural meal – from native producers all over the country,” Jacobs said.
‘The makers and takers of our own future’
Food banks and the like support the donation of commodities or single, individual items that often lack nutritional value, such as processed foods like chips or white bread, Jacobs said.
e existing programs are great to get food to people who need it immediately, he added, but Tocabe wanted to build something sustainable, while also providing foods that are spiritually and nutritionally valuable.
Tocabe’s Direct-to-Tribe Ready Meal program is also groundbreaking because most federally-funded food programs don’t support full, prepared meals as a donation.
“ ere are no acceptable protocols on a federal level to provide a multi-com-
ponent meal,” said Jacobs. “To achieve this through a government program would have required so much time and so many voices, (and) eventually getting Congress involved.”
After going back and forth with the Agriculture Department and other food and nutrition services out of Washington, Jacobs and Chandra decided to nd an alternative.
“If we want to be the makers and takers of our own future, we need to do it ourselves,” said Jacobs. rough federal grant building with Spirit Lake Nation, and a 10-year friendship and partnership, the Directto-Tribe Ready Meal program came to be. While it is federally funded through grants, it is not part of the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations. Going this route also allows for more freedom, Jacobs said, because they are not con ned to speci c parameters,
as would have been the case if it were funded by an existing government program.
Food is more than just food
According to Jacobs, when indigenous people gather to feast, it is not just a time to nourish the body, it’s also a time to connect.
erefore, using culturally relevant foods and supporting tradition is a key proponent of the Direct-to-Tribe Ready Meal program.
Traditional food items include bison and sh, wild rice, tepary and pinto beans, maple syrup, and various corn meals including white, yellow, blue and red, Jacobs said. e prepared meals for the program have thus far been wild rice jambalaya with bison sausage, andouille sausage, chipotle bison chili with roasted sweet and purple potatoes, pumpkin butternut squash wheatberry risotto with roasted root vegetables, and green chili stew.
A closed loop system is program is designed to create a Native American infrastructure, Jacobs said. e prepared meal program is not only changing health, but also changing communities economically, by allowing dollars to stay within the tribes.
“Our work is not about, how do we solve for tomorrow, but, how do we solve for years from now,” he said. “We don’t just want a food economy, we need a nancial economy as well.”
Jacobs told of a recent bison purchase as an example of the ideal, closed loop.
e bison were purchased from Fred DuBray and Cheyenne River, then taken to Osage Nation in Oklahoma for processing. is meat was then used in the meals that were prepared for Spirit Lake
Nation, he said.
Tocabe will continue supporting communities of color and diverse communities, and uses a business model that does not devalue the time, e ort and commitment of food producers. For example, when it comes to purchasing ingredients, Jacobs said he does not negotiate. If Tocabe cannot a ord to pay a distributor the true value of what their product is worth, he will nd a way to raise the money to pay the desired value.
A community-driven
experience
Many other tribal nations are passed enroute to Spirit Lake Nation, including Pine Ridge, Rose Bud, Standing Rock and Cheyenne River. e pipe dream is to build channels to deliver along the plains and drop o meals for all of these Native people, Jacobs said.
Eventually, Tocabe hopes to expand to Oklahoma – where Osage Nation resides – and throughout the southwest.
For now, Jacobs invites everyone to celebrate alongside Tocabe through mindful meals: Eat with tradition, support your own well-being, and support local food production.
“ is is a community-driven experience. Learn about other cultures and celebrate our di erences because it’s important to know about all peoples’ cultural relevance,” Jacobs said. “If we can all inspire each other, we can live in a much better world.”
For those who want to support the Directto-Tribe Ready Meal program, there are opportunities to donate directly to the distribution on the Tocabe website or through a “buy two, give one” option at Tocabe’s Indigenous Marketplace. Learn more at tocabe.com.
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FROM PAGE 14
Chance Sports levels the playing field
New nonprofit o ers sports scholarships for low-income youth
BY BRUCE GOLDBERG SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
“Equal opportunity levels the playing eld.”
is is what is stated on the Chance Sports website to capture the new nonpro t’s sense of urgency about raising money so young Denver-area athletes can participate in more club sports, both locally and on the road.
“... and makes it about the talent not the success,” the website continues. “ e reason a kid doesn’t make it shouldn’t be because they don’t have the op-
State Sen. James Coleman, D-Denver, and former state Rep. Colin Larson, R-Je erson County, created Chance Sports in late 2022, with the goal of helping low-income families play on a club basis in basketball, football, volleyball, track and eld, cheer, eld hockey, soccer and more. ey formed the idea from when the two served together on an education committee at the state legisla-
ey joined up with the Daniels Fund, which gave Chance Sports $300,000 and pledged another $200,000 to encourage matching donations. e late cable pioneer Bill Daniels, a former Golden Gloves boxer, said that his sports participation drove his massive business success in the cable industry.
“It means more opportuni-
ties for our youth to compete at a high level because it’s more a ordable,” Coleman said.
“ ey’re really great kids, great athletes, and they’re committed and want to play but they can’t a ord it.”
Chance Sports debuted in late March. In the news conference, Denver Mayor Michael Hancock said the city would give at least $200,000 to the nonpro t to match the Daniels Fund. e money will come from the $12.5 million the city got from the Broncos sale.
Scholarships range from about $1,000 to about $3,000 per athlete, per year/season.
e new organization gave its rst scholarships this winter to Denver basketball players. Athletes in other sports will receive money later this year.
e average U.S. family pays about $900 each year for one child’s primary sport, taking into account equipment costs, monthly fees, participation fees and travel expenses.
Chance Sports “is designed to help increase participation and to help supplement the costs for travel, fees and equipment,” said Rodney Bates, who has coached the Lady Blackhawks girls’ basketball team for 14 years, and overall has 24 years as a coach.
“It allows young ladies in my program to have the opportunity to showcase their talent at a national level,” Bates said. “In some households, college is not
a conversation because of the costs. But because of their skill and being able to demonstrate this at a national level, they have a chance to get a scholarship and follow aspirations beyond sports. In the last 13 years, we’re talking about hundreds of young ladies playing year-round.”
His rst group of players were in the fourth grade when he formed the team. ey graduated from high school in 2020.
“We have about 15 young ladies that went to college,” Bates said. “We want to give them the tools they need to go to college. Competitive basketball is very expensive. If we can break down that cost, more participate and the more we’ll see them do something really positive.”
e bene ts? Larson pointed out that being involved in sports can help boost GPAs, can contribute to better mental and physical health, closer friendships, high rates of volunteerism and voting in later years.
ere’s talk about spreading the program throughout the state and eventually to other states.
“Our vision is to help out the kid that wants a chance to play,” Coleman said. “I know at some point we wanted to scale our organization, but do it right. Take care of home rst.”
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State Sen. James Coleman, D-Denver.
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