Week of March 24, 2022
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DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO
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INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 17 | SPORTS: PAGE 24
VOLUME 21 | ISSUE 5
Lawyer responds to Douglas County School Board questions about Sunshine Laws A motion to dismiss the lawsuit is still being debated in court filings BY JESSICA GIBBS JGIBBS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
And in Arvada, Angela Marriott was alarmed by the way people on Nextdoor pounced on any conservative sentiment, especially against masks, and was exasperated pretty much every time she watched the news. “I would turn on the news and just be enraged within minutes, watching our police being abused, properties being
An attorney involved in the lawsuit alleging Douglas County School Board members violated open meetings law has responded to some directors who said they are confused about how to comply with a judge’s order prohibiting serial meetings. The letter came amid ongoing efforts to dismiss the lawsuit, and ahead of what could become a months-long court dispute. In a letter to the board, open government attorney Steve Zansberg said he contacted the board’s legal representation in the lawsuit at Hall and Evans, a Denver law firm, after observing directors’ March 11 special meeting, where some board members said they wanted more clarity about a preliminary injunction in the case. Douglas County resident Robert Marshall sued the board in February alleging majority Directors Mike Peterson, Becky Myers, Christy Williams and Kaylee Winegar broke open meetings law by using a chain of private, one-on-one meeting to discuss removing then Superintendent Corey Wise. As a result of those discussions, Peterson and Williams met with Wise on Jan. 28 and asked him to retire or resign and said a board majority was prepared to remove him if he did not. On March 9, Judge Jeffrey K. Holmes
SEE LIBERTY GIRLS, P8
SEE SCHOOLS, P6
Being a part of the Liberty Girls fosters friendship and support, said one member. “In the beginning, I felt kind of lost. You’re coming out of 2020 feeling really isolated and feeling alone. And then when we got together last March, we were all just crying. ... It’s much easier to tackle politics as a group, and to discern together. That really has brought us together and made this a group of action.” PHOTO BY OLIVIA SUN/THE COLORADO SUN VIA REPORT FOR AMERICA
Fed-up conservatives started organizing Now they’re winning — and they don’t plan to stop BY JENNIFER BROWN THE COLORADO SUN
Loveland grandmother Mickie Nuffer grew more concerned by the day as she watched people
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on television shouting about “defunding the police” and later, in her own county, when businesses required proof of vaccination to enter. In Highlands Ranch, mom and former teacher’s aide Donna Jo Tompkins was growing increasingly frustrated with mask mandates, last-minute school quarantines and the latest curriculum controversy: critical race theory.
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