Lone Tree Voice 042122

Page 1

Week of April 21, 2022

FREE

DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO

A publication of

LoneTreeVoice.net

INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 17 | SPORTS: PAGE 22

VOLUME 21 | ISSUE 9

Wise breaks silence, files complaint against DCSD Legal complaint alleges discrimination, retaliation and illegal firing BY JESSICA GIBBS JGIBBS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Corey Wise has broken his silence — and the ousted superintendent

has made a legal complaint against his former employers alleging retaliation, discrimination and that his infamous firing was illegal. The former Douglas County School District superintendent filed a “complaint of discrimination” on April 13 with the Colorado Civil Rights Division and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission — the agencies that can give formal approval for Wise to sue the district.

He claims the Douglas County School Board majority discriminated and retaliated against him because of his advocacy for the district’s educational equity policy and universal masking during the COVID-19 pandemic. Before he was terminated without cause on Feb. 4, Wise oversaw Colorado’s third-largest school district, serving 64,000 students in nearly 90 schools and employing more than

8,000 people. A new conservative board majority was elected in November 2021 and quickly began work to lift the district’s masking mandates and consider a repeal of the district’s educational equity policy, issues Wise had supported. The board majority of Mike Peterson, Becky Myers, Christy Williams SEE WISE, P6

Douglas County expands wildfire support EPA downgrades Colorado’s ozone as experts warn of warm, dry year problem to ‘severe’

BY ELLIOTT WENZLER EWENZLER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Douglas County will expand its use of aviation support for wildfires this year amid predictions of a summer season “warmer and drier” than average. In past seasons, the county has secured exclusive contracts for aerial wildfire support for two 45-day periods of the year with a break during monsoon season. This year, however, the office of emergency management requested 153 consecutive days. “Fire seasons are getting longer, drier. Monsoons are weaker. Drought has been pervasive, and we recognize that the risk doesn’t necessarily go away,” he said. “The fires we see these days do tend to be more destructive and create greater risk.” Douglas County will add the 60 additional days of exclusive-use aviation support for wildfires from June 1 through Oct. 31 after the contract was approved in an April 12 meeting. During his presentation,

Will force more cuts to pollution BY MICHAEL BOOTH THE COLORADO SUN

A plane drops fire retardant on the Chatridge 2 wildfire in Douglas County in 2020.

SEE WILDFIRE, P4

PHOTO BY TIM TONGE

SCIENCE OF TRAINING

A dog training method focused on communication

P14

The EPA has downgraded Colorado’s North Front Range ozone problem to “severe” from “serious,” a long-expected move that requires state and local officials to take stronger runs at cutting the health-damaging pollution. “The proposed reclassifications would require the State of Colorado to apply more stringent air quality measures to sources across the area,” an EPA release said, in announcing the proposed change after months of pressure from environmental advocates who said the deadlines to do so had already come and gone. SEE OZONE, P11

SAYING THANK YOU

Students recognize teachers who made an impact P2


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