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Daughter died in 2020 from fentanyl poisoning

When Patti Lujan sees butter ies, she thinks of her daughter, Lauren, who passed away in 2020 at the age of 18.

A senior at Littleton High School at the time, Lauren died from fentanyl poisoning after taking a counterfeit Percocet she got through the social media app Snapchat.

As Lujan continues to cope with the loss of her daughter, she has now joined a legal ght against Snapchat, which she believes is partly responsible for her daughter’s death.

She is among nine families nationwide participating in a wrongful death lawsuit led by the Social Media Victims Law Center against Snap Inc., the parent company of Snapchat.

“I know she would want me to do this. She’d want me to get involved in this lawsuit and ght, and so I’m doing it,” Lujan said.

SEE LAWSUIT, P6

County approves first read of camping ban ordinance

With little discussion and uni ed agreement, the Douglas County Commission approved the rst reading of an ordinance to limit public camping and prohibit temporary structures on public property.

With the initial approval, Garcia said the ordinance will now proceed to a second reading on June 20 where the commission is expected to take a nal vote. At that point, Garcia said it will become law 30 days later.

County Attorney Je Garcia said, “ e goal of the ordinance as it’s been presented is to prohibit camping on public property without written permission by the county unless no other shelter is available. In addition, it limits the erection of temporary structures on county property without written permission from the county.” ose in violation of the ordinance can face a $1,000 ne.

“ e goal of the ordinance is to provide for public health, safety, and wellbeing. Especially for those using our county property and to assist those seeking shelter to nd safe and appropriate shelter,” Garcia said.

Garcia is con dent the camping ban will hold up to possible legal challenges given court rulings in a case involving the City of Boulder.

Last year, the American Civil Liberties Union, or ACLU, led a lawsuit against the City of Boulder, claiming the city’s camping ban, which had been in place since 1980, violates provisions of the Colorado Constitution. ose opposed to camping bans say they are cruel and unusual punishment because the homeless being cited do not always have access to indoor shelters.

Garcia said the ordinance, which was developed through the Douglas County Homeless Initiative, addresses many of the issues raised in the Boulder lawsuit, including the constitutional right to access public property and whether there is an unalienable right to rest in public places.

SEE COUNTY, P5

VOLUME 22 | ISSUE 15 WEEK OF JUNE 1, 2023 FREE VOICES: 12 | LIFE: 14 | CALENDAR: 17 | SPORTS: 22 LONETREEVOICE.NET • A PUBLICATION OF COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
Littleton High School student Lauren Lujan, 18, passed away in 2020 from fentanyl poisoning. COURTESY OF PATTI LUJAN

Highlands Ranch honors fallen service members

As American ags were placed at graves across the nation, local residents gathered at the Highlands Ranch Veterans Monument on Memorial Day to honor fallen service members and pay tribute to all veterans.

David Simonson, a Highlands Ranch Metro District board member and Army veteran, welcomed the crowd and paid respects to the three Highlands Ranch residents who were killed in action while serving the United States armed

forces on the memorial dedication stone. ey are Army Sta Sgt. Christopher Falkel, Sgt. John Stiles and Cpl. Max Donahue.

Simonson recognized those in attendance who have lost a family member who served in the United States armed forces.

Tim Ralph, chaplain of the Douglas County Sheri ’s O ce, then led the event in the invocation.

Retired U.S. Navy Captain and Highlands Ranch Metro District board member Andy Jones spoke about the signi cance of Memorial Day. Born out of the Civil War, the holiday is to honor all men and

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women who have lost their lives during military service.

e National Moment of Remembrance Act became law in December of 2000, which asks Americans to pause at 3 p.m. for one minute.

“ e moment is not meant to replace traditional Memorial Day events, rather it is an act of national unity in which all Americans, alone or with family and friends, honor those who died in the service of the United States Armed Forces in all wars,” said Jones.

Retired U.S. Marine o cer and state Rep. Robert Marshall, D-Highlands Ranch, shared the origins

of the poppy as a remembrance symbol, dating to a September 1920 designation by the American Legion.

Following Je Emanuel of the Highlands Ranch Concert Band playing taps, members of the Highlands Ranch American Legion Post 1260 raised the American ag to full sta .  ere was then a moment of silence.

With Boy Scout Troop 873 members behind him, Silas Wagner led the crowd in the Pledge of Allegiance and Jay Allen played “Amazing Grace” on the bagpipes.

Election will fill 14 vacant delegate seats

Highlands Ranch Community Association residents who are not represented by a delegate will receive election notices in late May and early June for the Highlands Ranch Community Association Second Delegate Election.

e Highlands Ranch Community Association is divided into 95 Delegate Districts. Each district has a delegate and the upcoming election will ll 14 vacant seats.

Meeting monthly, delegates discuss updates and upcoming projects for the community. ey also vote on association bylaw amendments, the annual budget and the governing document outlining the association’s structure.

A rst round of delegate elections in April marked a milestone for the association elections. for the rst time, the elections were held through an online voting format called Election Buddy. e vendor sent voting members a postcard with a secure code that can be accessed online or through a QR code.

In that election, the associa-

tion welcomed three new and 21 returning delegates. Each will serve a two-year term.

e Second Delegate Election will also be held through Election Buddy. Voters can also mail ballots in or drop them o .

“ is unique voting ID has increased election security and ensured voter information is protected and anonymous,” the association said in a press release. “With electronic voting now available, it has made reaching our quorum requirements more accessible and faster.”

e association has announced 12 districts have a candidate and only two non-sub-associationappointed districts are projected to remain empty.

Voting for the vacant districts will run through Friday, June 16. All ballots must be returned by June 16 and online voting closes at 5 p.m.  Delegates who are elected will be noti ed and will join the monthly Board and Delegate meeting on June 20 at 6 p.m.

An example of the postcard the association is sending to voters is provided on the Highlands Ranch Community Association website.

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Drawing inspiration from Fleetwood Mac and Little Big Town, this country music group performs original music alongside songs they’ve written for artists such as George Strait, Lee Brice, and Sister Hazel. Andy Jones, Highlands Ranch Metro District board member and retired U.S. Navy captain, speaks about the significance of Memorial Day. David Simonson, Highlands Ranch Metro District board member and Army veteran, speaks at the Highlands Ranch Veterans Monument for the Memorial Day Service. PHOTOS BY HALEY LENA Members of the Highlands Ranch American Legion Post 1260 raise the American flag to full sta .
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County joins lawsuit against state over Prop. HH

On the same day Gov. Jared Polis signed Senate Bill 303, Douglas County Commissioners announced they will be joining a lawsuit to challenge the measure that looks to put Proposition HH on the November ballot, asking voters to approve a plan Democrats say will slow the increase in property taxes.

As property owners statewide are facing up to 50% tax increases, Democrats introduced Senate Bill 303 three days before the 2023 legislative session ended. With no public discussion and little debate, the bill passed the Democrat-controlled House and Senate and was signed by Polis.

Passing SB23-303 allows the state to place what is known as Proposition HH on the November ballot.

e measure asks voters to approve taking a portion of the TABOR surplus, or the state tax refunds citizens receive, and divert it for at least 10 years to homeowners and commercial property owners to keep property taxes lower.

Before Polis could even put ink to paper to sign the bill, legal challenges were led. e lawsuit challenging the proposition was led by Advance Colorado and by Steven Ward, who also serves as a member

of the Englewood City Council.

e county announced on May 24 that it would be joining the original lawsuit. e primary focus of the legal challenge is the subject of the ballot measure, which plainti s claim violates the state’s single subject and “clear title” statutes.

According to the Douglas County announcement, commissioners believe the bill should be declared void and unconstitutional, precluding its implementation and enforcement; or, as an alternative, that the ballot title should be corrected “to provide a clear, detailed, and politically neutral explanation of its contents.”

“Any way you slice it, SB23-303 and Proposition HH do not prevent residential property owners in Douglas County from experiencing what will be the largest property tax increase in state history,” said Board of Commissioners Chair Abe Laydon.

e commissioners believe the title of the bill is misleading and does not clearly express the subject of the ballot measure.

At question is what exactly residents are voting on in November. While Democrats say the 10-year pause on TABOR will provide property tax relief, opponents say it will decrease the mandated state tax refund residents receive from revenue

surpluses.

Commissioner George Teal said selling this ballot item as “property tax relief” while sending TABOR refunds to fund state government and making long-term changes to the TABOR formula while failing to specify that the state surplus is being used to “unnecessarily”  back ll local taxing authorities is “misleading.”

Commissioner Lora omas said pushing Proposition HH in the “11th hour” of the legislative session without the contribution or approval from the local governments it directly a ects does not x the property tax issues.

omas said it simply takes away TABOR refunds, which are the “last remaining bit of tax relief” citizens have.

“Speci cally, the bill and ballot titles both fail to include any numbers concerning the property tax assessment rates and do not clearly inform voters that the property tax assessment reduction is minimal,” commissioners said in the provided statement.

Douglas County commissioners agree that Colorado law and precedent require that voters be informed of signi cant changes to law and of relevant numbers when they are asked to vote on a ballot measure.

To keep citizens informed, the county is planning to hold a series of town hall meetings. With the dates to be determined, residents can learn more about upcoming events by visiting the website at douglas. co.us and search live town halls; or call the board at 303-660-7401.

TURN TO THE COLORADO SUN FOR NEWS ACROSS THE STATE

The Colorado Sun is a journalist-owned, award-winning news outlet that strives to cover all of Colorado so that our state — our community — can better understand itself.

In this way, The Sun contributes to a more vibrant, informed and whole Colorado.

The Sun, launched in 2018, is committed to fact-based, in-depth and nonpartisan journalism. It covers everything

from politics and culture to the outdoor industry and education.

Now, The Colorado Sun co-owns this and other Colorado Community Media newspapers as a partner in the Colorado News Conservancy. The Sun is CCM’s partner for statewide news.

For Colorado Sun stories, opinions and more, and to support The Sun’s misssion as a member or subscriber, visit coloradosun.com.

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“We have crafted the ordinance to avoid those areas that have been found and treated negatively by the (Boulder lawsuit),” Garcia said. “We are already doing exactly what the court has asked us to do and we are following the court’s direction to provide for our community’s safety.”

Commissioner Abe Laydon, who spoke in favor of the bill, said, the ordinance will continue to build on the hard work of the Douglas County Homeless initiative.

“When you look at cities like Seattle, Portland, and San Francisco where rampant camping is allowed to persist at the expense of taxpayers and the business community – there is sort of a blind eye that’s turned to those sorts of encampments,” he said. “I’m really proud of the elected o cials in Douglas County, my colleagues and mayors and council members in municipalities that have uniformly supported this campaign.”

More discussion will be held on June 20.

ABOUT LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

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Are you prepared for wildfires?

It only takes one spark to change your life forever. Thankfully, it takes only seconds to sign up for free emergency notifications, ensuring that you will be in the know if a wildfire is happening near you. Sign up today at douglas.co.us/CodeRed

Is yard work on your to-do list?

Warmer weather is ahead, and you can drop off any tree limbs, shrubs or brush that you need to dispose of for free every Saturday through October at Douglas County’s Slash-Mulch site. For more information, visit douglas.co.us and search for Slash Mulch.

Skip the trip!

Motor vehicle services

just a click away

Renew your driver license or motor vehicle registration and more from the convenience of your smartphone, tablet, desktop or laptop. You can also renew vehicle registrations at six local grocery store MVExpress kiosk locations. Find information at DouglasDrives.com

• Publication of any given letter is at our discretion. Letters are published as space is available.

• We will edit letters for clarity, grammar, punctuation and length and write headlines (titles) for letters at our discretion.

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CSU Extension is helping Douglas County residents learn to grow vegetable gardens while planting extra to share with local food banks and community members in need. Longtime gardeners or first-time planters can get info at GrowandGiveColorado.org

Live Town Hall meetings

Did you know Douglas County offers Live Town Hall meetings, inviting you to engage in the local issues of importance to you and your neighbors? Register at douglas.co.us/townhall to ensure you are contacted about all future Live Town Halls. Join online or by phone and listen to community conversations, ask questions and hear responses from experts.

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5 June 1, 2023 Visit douglas.co.us
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COUNTY
Douglas County hosted a town hall about homelessness last year. FILE PHOTO An example of a roadway sign in Douglas County sits at a Feb. 9 news conference that discussed homelessness, displaying a phone number for the county’s homelessness response team: 303-660-7301. Douglas County’s Homeless Engagement, Assistance and Resource Team helps connect the unhoused in Douglas with services. PHOTO BY ELLIS ARNOLD

‘It’s time for me to speak up’

Sitting in her home in Centennial, surrounded by photos of her daughter, Lujan described Lauren’s many talents, from her beautiful singing voice to her athletic skills.

“People always say, you know, someone lit up a room. She really did,” Lujan said. “I feel blessed that she was in my life, even for a short time. She taught me a lot.”

Lauren lived with the mentality that she could accomplish whatever she put her mind to, her mom said.

“One of the greatest things about Lauren is she just — she had such a big heart,” Lujan said. “She was amazing because she found the beauty in everything.”

On March 29, 2020, Lauren was on spring break and staying at her father’s house, according to the lawsuit. She left the house for a few hours, which is when her parents thought she met up with someone, whom she communicated with via Snapchat, to get the painkiller Percocet.

The next morning, on March 30, Lujan was working in her office, which is near Lauren’s father’s house. She remembered getting a phone call from Lauren’s father, who said he did not think Lauren was breathing and that she was dead.

Lujan went to the house, where she saw paramedics and an ambulance.

“They wouldn’t let me in. So, I’m trying to, like, storm into the house to get to her and they wouldn’t let me in, which was horrible. And then I followed the ambulance to the hospital,” she said.

“Supposedly, she was alive when she went to the hospital,” Lujan recalled. “They kept coming in and telling me, ‘OK, well, we got a heartbeat.’ And it was like, ‘It’s really faint.’ And yeah — nightmare.”

According to the lawsuit, the Percocet that Lauren took was a pill laced with fentanyl. Lauren died from fentanyl poisoning on March 30.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse explains on its website that when people overdose on fentanyl, their breathing can slow or stop, which decreases the amount of oxygen reaching the brain and can lead to death.

Song for Charlie is a national nonprofit that raises awareness about fake pills made of fentanyl. It argues that when someone dies after taking a fake pill made of fentanyl, these deaths should be classified as “poisoning” rather than “overdose” because the person did not know what they were ingesting.

It took Lujan a long time to find out what had happened, she said.

“I don’t know if it was six months later, or nine months, or a year

later, really, when I finally read the autopsy report and realized it was fentanyl, and that she took one Percocet and it was laced,” Lujan said.

“I didn’t really think much more about it because the grief and the sorrow is overwhelming. And for me, not thinking about it, not dealing with it, was my defense mechanism,” she said. “I was just trying to deal with, you know, coping with the loss of my daughter.”

A year ago, Lujan began wondering what happened with the police investigation. She contacted the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office and spoke with someone who essentially said, “‘Once we realized it was (Snapchat), there was nothing more we could do,’” she recalled.

At that moment, she felt emotionally overwhelmed and was unable to think straight, she said.

“And so, I just let it go,” she said.

But then a friend told her it was time “to get angry about this,” Lujan recalled

One day, Lujan’s friend mentioned she heard on the news about the Social Media Victims Law Center and a lawsuit against Snapchat. Lujan did some research and reached out to the center

“I feel like it’s just time for me to not sit back anymore,” Lujan said. “It’s time for me to speak up.”

“I kind of look at it like she was murdered. And I’m upset because Snapchat doesn’t seem to do anything,” she said. “I almost feel like these drug dealers are protected behind Snapchat.”

The fight against Snapchat

The wrongful death lawsuit alleges that Snapchat created an environment that allows drug dealers to “operate in a manner that directly contributed to the deaths of nine minors and young adults,” according to a Social Media Victims Law Center news release.

The nine minors and young adults are Lauren Lujan, Moses “Malik” Majekodunmi, Juan Jiménez Trujillo, Cole Brown, Michael Leonardi, Dylan Moore, Kevin Andrew Hutchings, Jaylen Penix and Allie Higdon.

Each of these individuals died after taking fentanyl-laced pills and/or edibles purchased from drug dealers connected to them by Snapchat, according to the news release.

“I want to be really clear — we don’t condone the sale of prescription drugs outside of a doctor’s prescription. We also understand that young people make bad decisions. They don’t deserve to die for it,” said Matthew Bergman, founding attorney of the Social Media Victims Law Center.

A wrongful death lawsuit alleges that a person lost their life as the result of the misconduct of another, Bergman said.

“In this case, the negligent and

June 1, 2023 6
Lauren Lujan smiling with her mother, Patti Lujan.
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Lauren Lujan as a young child with her mother, Patti Lujan. PHOTOS COURTESY OF PATTI LUJAN

unreasonably dangerous design of the Snapchat platform,” he said.

He noted that it does not mean there are no other factors at play, and while he acknowledges people should not use prescription drugs without a prescription, “that doesn’t mean that they needed to die for it.”

“And that doesn’t mean that it’s appropriate to absolve Snapchat of its responsibility for contributing to the situation that led to the child’s death,” he said.

The lawsuit alleges that Snapchat’s platform “purposefully obstructs parental supervision” and “enables (drug) dealers to locate and access nearby minors and young adults,” per the news release.

Bergman said Snapchat provides people the opportunity to commit a crime knowing that the evidence is destroyed after the crime is committed, since Snapchat automatically deletes messages.

“The disappearing message feature allows drug dealers to actually put a menu or a smorgasbord of drugs online, knowing that the evidence of their crime will … disappear,” Bergman said. “The only benefit of the disappearing messages is to perpetrate crimes.”

Bergman noted Snapchat also has a geolocating feature, also called a “Snap map,” that allows users to share their location with one another. This feature allows for drugs to be delivered “like DoorDash or Uber Eats,” he said.

A third feature that Bergman said “unnecessarily facilitates young people hiding, forever, evidence of their solicitation of drug dealers” is Snapchat’s “my eyes only” feature, which allows for users to hide content behind a passcode on the app.

“They have made (an) intentional decision to not change the architecture of their platform, presumably because one of the appeals of the platform is to encourage kids to evade parental responsibility,” he said about Snapchat. “They’ve decided to not implement readily available design modifications because it reduces engagement, and their profits are tied to engagement.”

The lawsuit’s prayer for relief, meaning the damages and other remedies it is seeking, includes requests for punitive damages, loss of future income and earning capacity of each of the nine people, and monetary and emotional damages suffered by plaintiffs.

“This is not a case that is about the money. These families have suffered the worst loss that anybody can imagine,” Bergman said. “If through these efforts, we can prevent one family from going through this loss … then it’s worth it.”

The relationship between fentanyl and social media

At least every other day, the Social Media Victims Law Center hears from another parent who lost a child to fentanyl, Bergman said.

“I can’t tell you how horrible it is to get all of these calls,” he said.

“We have 70 cases filed involving children who have died of fentanyl.”

Bergman urges parents to have open discussions with their children about the risk of fentanyllaced drugs.

“It’s a hard discussion to have because no kid is ever gonna want to admit to their parent that they might be tempted to use Oxy or Percocet or something like that,” he said. “But I think you need to have the kind of discussion and

relationship with your kids so that they understand that they can die from this … and that the prospect of getting drugs online from a stranger is not worth the risk.”

“As opposed to just saying, ‘Don’t ever do this,’ saying, ‘If you — I hope you never do it, but if you do, don’t do it this way,’” he added.

According to the United States Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), fentanyl is involved in more deaths of U.S. citizens under the age of 50 than any other cause of death.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment found that the state’s total number of drug overdose deaths due to synthetic opioids mentioning fentanyl increased from 540 deaths in 2020 to 912 deaths in 2021, repre-

senting an increase of nearly 69%.

As reported by Bloomberg in January, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is examining Snapchat’s role in fentanyl poisoning deaths.

Bergman said the Social Media Victims Law Center only has one case where Snapchat was not the conduit through which the fentanyl-contaminated drugs were obtained.

“The fentanyl phenomenon appears to be a Snapchat-only problem, arising from the unique design of the Snapchat platform,” he said.

Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser released a report in March highlighting how social media platforms are used for illicit drug activity.

In the report, it notes that online access to illicit drugs is a “wholeof-Internet” challenge, as drug sellers are often active on multiple social media platforms.

The report describes the challenges that social media platforms like Snapchat may present to law enforcement investigations, given the “disappearing content.”

“When platforms intentionally tout features like near-immediate deletion of communication exchanges and short retention periods of data held on the platforms’ servers, it puts law enforcement at an extreme disadvantage when investigating those using the platforms for illegal activities like selling drugs,” said Cmdr. Nick Goldberger of the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office in a news release.

The report also mentions the Social Media Victims Law Center’s civil lawsuits against Snap Inc.

“This is, by any fair estimation, cutting-edge litigation. And it is unclear how this is all going to come out because we’re the first firm to do it,” Bergman said. “We have no illusions that this is an easy fight. And we have every expectation that Snapchat is going to fight every step of the way.”

Snapchat’s response

In an emailed statement to Colorado Community Media, a Snap Inc. spokesperson wrote, “While we can’t comment specifically on active litigation, we can share all the progress we have made in this area.

“We use cutting-edge technology to help us proactively find and shut down drug dealers’ accounts. We block search results for drug-related terms, redirecting Snapchatters to resources from experts about the dangers of fentanyl.

“We continually expand our support for law enforcement investigations helping them bring dealers to justice, and we work closely with experts to share patterns of dealers’ activities across platforms to more quickly identify and stop illegal behavior.

“We will continue to do every-

7 June 1, 2023
Lauren Lujan was a senior at Littleton High School in 2020.
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PHOTO COURTESY OF PATTI LUJAN

LAWSUIT

thing we can to tackle this epidemic, including by working with other tech companies, public health agencies, law enforcement, families and nonpro ts.”

According to the statement from Snap Inc., Snapchat has a new in-app parental tool, called Family Center, so parents can see all the friends their teens are communicating with on Snapchat and report any accounts for investigation.

ere has also been a decline in community-reported content related to drug sales, per the statement. Snap Inc. said in September 2021, more than 23% of drug-related reports from Snapchat users contained content speci cally related to sales. As of December 2022, it was 3.3%.

In the statement, Snap Inc. said it preserves and discloses data in response to valid legal requests. e company published a statement in January on how it works with law enforcement authorities.

On May 9, which was National Fentanyl Awareness Day, the company said on its website that it has been working with senators on legislation, speci cally the Cooper

Davis Act, that would create a legal framework for tech companies to share information about drugs with law enforcement.

Hoping for change

Bergman said the Social Media Victims Law Center’s purpose is to “address the carnage that social media has in icted on young people, not only in the United States but around the world.”

He pointed to the increased rates of mental health issues and suicide. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), rates of depression and anxiety among young people have increased over time.

Suicide rates increased roughly 36% between 2000 and 2021, and suicide was the second leading cause of death for people ages 10-14 and 20-34 in 2021, per the CDC.   e National Alliance on Mental Illness said on its website that research has shown people who spend more time on social media and less time interacting with others have an increased risk of feeling anxious and depressed. It notes, however, that it is di cult to know if spending time online actually causes anxiety and depression.

One of the allegations in the lawsuit is that Snapchat is designed to be addictive to minors.

“Social media is not going to go away. It’s going to be part of our lives for generations, but it doesn’t have to be as dangerous as it is,” Bergman said. “What I hope is that the companies will change how they design their platforms, and that they’re safer.”

Patti Lujan hopes that with this lawsuit, Snapchat will change its ways, if not go away completely. She said the platform allows criminals to hide, and she wants it to change so that messages and posts do not disappear.

“I’m hoping that they change their platform completely so these things are not hidden, and that if something happens, at least we can nd the person responsible,” she said.  She wants parents to talk with their kids about what can happen on Snapchat.

“I really want to make parents aware of what’s happening, because … I was just so naive to all of it,” she said. “It just never even entered my mind that this could be going on.”

Lujan hopes to educate people about the fentanyl crisis and the importance of not taking substances that came from unknown places.

“I’m just hoping some other parents … see this and maybe it can save someone else’s life,” she said. “It’s what Lauren would want me to do.”

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FROM PAGE 7
Lauren Lujan had many talents, from her beautiful singing voice to her athletic skills, her mother said. PHOTO PROVIDED BY PATTI LUJAN
9 June 1, 2023

Equity policy approved in split vote

Parents, students protest

Douglas County school board members approved changes to the district’s equity policy in a marathon nine-hour meeting on May 23.

e meeting started with a protest and board member Elizabeth Hanson resigning over concerns with the board’s direction.

e equity policy changes, mostly drafted by board president Mike Peterson and board member Christy Williams, passed by a 4-2 vote with Susan Meek and David Ray dissenting.

e updated policy includes an expanded de nition of diversity that includes identity, cognitive and instrumental diversities, as well as language outlining the purposes of the policy.

Expanding the de nition of diversity was the most contentious change to the equity policy with Meek and Ray arguing that it dilutes the original intent of the policy to address racism and bigotry in the district.

“Where do you stop,” Ray asked. “Let’s talk about social diversity, physical diversity, athletic diversity. I mean we could go on and on, but we’re losing sight of the reason for this policy.

e reason for this policy is that we are in a system that continues to marginalize

those who have been historically marginalized and that’s the problem.”

Meek noted that data from the 2021 Healthy Kids Colorado survey found 56% of Black students agreed they belong in schools compared to 71% of white students.

District data on discipline practices indicate 41% of Black students in Douglas County schools were disciplined in 2021-22 compared to 16% of white students.

However, the other boards members didn’t agree that adding to the de nition diluted the intention.

“I struggle to nd a reason why not to add more diversity if we’re including all students,” Williams said.

Board member Kaylee Winegar said she originally wanted to repeal and replace the policy because she doesn’t feel it’s necessary, but agreed the proposed changes are a good compromise after hearing from community members that it’s important to them.

“I think the revisions in

place keep the good and bring clarity and certainty to the concept that we, as a district, do not intend to elevate certain ideals and beliefs over others,” Winegar said.  Public commenters were split between those advocating to keep the original policy and those who wanted to repeal the policy but would settle for the proposed changes.

Peterson reiterated that the changes are mostly adding to the policy, not removing original language. He said that diversity, equity, inclusion policies may have good intent, but can be misimplemented, so his revisions are intended to prevent that.

“I think we’ve got (equity) pretty right in Douglas County, but we want to codify what ‘right’ means for Douglas County,” Peterson said.

e board was able to compromise on keeping language about the district implementing an “unbiased, culturally relevant, respon-

sive, and sustaining learning environment,” and not including elements of diversity such as learning preference or personality.

Board members agreed on outlining purposes of the policy, such as inclusive access to programs, differentiation of resources to help students acheive their potential and creating safe learning environments for all.

Denouncements of bullying, harassment, the promotion of speci c characteristics as superior or inferior and lowering standards or expectations for students were also added without issue.

ough the board worked to nd common ground on the revisions, Ray and Meek also took issue with the process, saying they felt there was a lack of transparency and not enough input from equity experts.

Meek noted the District Accountability Committee approved a resolution asking the board to delay the changes and seek more feedback. Ray tried to postpone the changes by one year, but his motion failed 4-2.

Superintendent Erin Kane presented her implementation plan for the equity policy in April, which outlines how equity will apply to academics, student wellness, resource allocation, human resources and parent engagement.

Protest before meeting

Leading up to the board

meeting, around 50 students, parents and community members gathered outside the district building to protest the district’s response to reported racism happening at Castle Rock Middle School, where eighth grader Jeramiah Ganzy has been a victim of racial slurs in school and through social media.

Douglas County mom Melissa Sutherland organized the protest with her son Glenn, a sophomore at Douglas County High School, after hearing Jeramiah’s story.

Outside the district building, Sutherland called on the district and school board to condemn and act on discrimination happening in schools.

“If the school district doesn’t start stepping up, then we’ll be out here every time,” Sutherland said.

Jeramiah and his family rallied alongside Sutherland, saying they appreciated seeing the support and hopes the district will begin taking steps to educate students about diversity and enforce consequences for discrimination.

During the board meeting, Kane made a statement addressing the protest, apologizing for the Ganzy family having to experience racial slurs. She said multiple students were suspended in response to the reports.

“Racism in any form is unacceptable at DCSD and a direct policy violation,” Kane said.

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Melissa Sutherland, left, and her son Glenn stand with Jeramiah Ganzy and his mom Lacey at the Douglas County School District building on May 23. PHOTO BY MCKENNA HARFORD

Thu 6/08

Morning Wave: Beginner to Inter‐mediate and Club Athletes 11-13s @ 8am / $80

Elevation Volleyball Club, 12987 E Adam Aircraft Drive, Englewood. 720-524-4136

Afternoon Wave: 14-18u Club Team

Athletes @ 11:30am / $80

Elevation Volleyball Club, 12987 E Adam Aircraft Drive, Englewood. 720-524-4136

Kids’ Zone: How Does Your Garden Grow? (3-7 yrs) June @ 3pm

Parker Recreation Center, 17301 E Lincoln Ave., Parker

Featured

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Younger Than Neil @ 7pm

Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Engle‐wood

Dirty Side Down Band: Dirty Side Down @ Q's Pub @ 7pm

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Sun 6/11

SMARTER Goal Setting Class @ 2pm

Jun 11th - Jun 18th

Parker Fieldhouse, 18700 E Plaza Dr, Parker

High 'N' Dry: A Tribute to Def Leppard @ 6pm

Moe's Original BBQ, 3295 S Broadway, Englewood

Sat 6/10

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Tue 6/13

Intro to CAD (STEM Camp for middle school students) @ 7am / $125

Jun 13th - Jun 15th

Valor - Academic Building Basement, 3775 Grace Blvd, Highlands Ranch. 303-4713000

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Neil Z @ Earls Kitchen @ 6pm

Earls Kitchen + Bar, 8335 Park Meadows Center Dr, Lone Tree

Fri 6/09

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Eric Golden @ 2pm

Downtown Parker, 19501 Main‐street, Parker

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Matt Skinner Band @ 3pm Private Event, Highlands Ranch

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Ghostland Observatory @ 7pm Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Englewood

Wed 6/14

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Anavrin's Day: Tailgate Tavern during Parker Days @ 3:30pm

Tailgate Tavern & Grill, 19552 Mainstreet, Parker

Hot Like Wasabi: HLW at Viewhouse @ 7:30pm

ViewHouse Centennial, 7101 S Clinton St, Centennial

Five Iron Frenzy @ 7pm Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Englewood

Dwight Yoakam: Levitt Pavilion Denver @ 6pm

Levitt Pavilion Denver, 1380 W Florida Ave, Denver

Mon 6/12

Football Skill Positions Speciality Camp @ 7:30am / $179

Jun 12th - Jun 13th

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DJ Rockstar Aaron: Forbidden Bingo Wednesdays - 'Bout Time Pub & Grub @ 7pm

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Thu 6/15

Ryan Chrys & The Rough Cuts: Lone Tree Summer Concert @ 5pm Sweetwater Park, 8300-1/2 Sweet Water Rd, Lone Tree

Fuego en Concierto @ 8pm / Free Stampede, 2430 South Havana, Aurora

11 June 1, 2023
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This week, our newspaper featured a story reporter Tayler Shaw worked on over several months. is story tells the heartbreaking story of a teenager who died after allegedly buying drugs laced with fentanyl through Snapchat.

No real control FROM

THE EDITOR

Let’s get past the quick-reaction stu right away. No, the 18-year-old should not have been online looking for opioids. No one is saying she should have. What this story delves into is the fact that she DID NOT deserve to die from it.

Now, a pilot national case is moving forward — a program has taken the heartbreaking stories of nine families and led a lawsuit against Snapchat.

Snapchat is the perfect example of how sneaky social platforms can be. When posts expire and are deleted not long after you post — how can anyone not think this is not an invitation for the bad guys?

As a parent of a teenage girl and growing boys — I am constantly living in a reality that you never really gain control.

While they protest — my children are told they are not allowed on either Snapchat or TikTok. I am not excited about Facebook or Instagram, but I do feel a little more secure in my abilities to monitor my daughter’s behavior and teach my 9-year-old son who is now dabbling in the two approved platforms in our house.

ere are programs for parents out there such as Bark. is service helps a parent track a child’s behavior on their phones and tablets. Using it, I have been noti ed when my daughter is doing or saying questionable things.

When I interviewed the director of Bark earlier this year, I was told besides helping parents head o possible sexual predators, the services have also proven helpful in tipping o parents when their child is having suicidal thoughts.

But like most, Bark is not perfect. No service to police what your children are doing online is.

My daughter thinks I do not know but she does have or has had a Snapchat account. Our daughter has an editor/journalist for a mom and a cybersecurity expert for a dad. She had a bit of a disadvantage to other kids.

Humor aside — even with our skills, I know she skirts the rules. e temptation is too strong. When her friends are on TikTok and Snapchat – I can’t hold it against her that she wants to be.

But then I read the stories that are out there, including this week’s in-depth look from Tayler Shaw. Her story shows how easy it is to make shady deals on social media platforms. Her story shows just how little control our local authorities have.

After all, when a social platform has headquarters in New York or California — How can the Arapahoe County Sheri ’s O ce do anything? I am a little concerned with how little they have attempted to do in this case, but I do understand the obstacles.

Our own Attorney General Phil Weiser has said things are getting out of control with crime taking place through legal social platforms.

e problem, however, is until money become a focal point and these companies are having to pay a lot in legal fees and settlements — they really have no reason to do better for our kids, adults, and society.

elma Grimes is the south metro editor for Colorado Community Media.

LINDA SHAPLEY Publisher

lshapley@coloradocommunitymedia.com

MICHAEL DE YOANNA Editor-in-Chief michael@coloradocommunitymedia.com

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Question about cost

It has come to my attention that Abe Laydon, Douglas County commissioner, has registered for a seminar entitled “Senior Executives in State and Local Government” at the Harvard Ken-

nedy School. e cost of this seminar is $17,400, which is being charged to the General Fund.

Isn’t there a better use for this money?

A return to grace

WINNING

Listening to the conversation around a business dinner table, I found myself trying to stay away from the conversation as it began to center around what was wrong with society and basically the world in general. If you are a regular reader of this column, you know that I try and remove myself as quickly as possible from anything I perceive as negativity, and this conversation was devolving quickly in that direction.

Remaining quiet and checking my phone to try and avoid being drawn into the discussion didn’t quite work out the way I had hoped. Before I knew it, the group turned their attention to me and asked me what I thought. e good news is that I was already prepared with my

ERIN ADDENBROOKE Marketing Consultant eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com

AUDREY BROOKS Business Manager abrooks@coloradocommunitymedia.com

response, it’s my same response whenever I nd the people around me focusing on what is wrong with the world instead of what is right.

After placing my phone on the table, I looked around the table and one by one, I made eye contact with everyone before saying, “A return to grace.” I will share that whenever I give that response the rst reaction is usually confusion, followed by cynicism, and then possibly a little mocking, questioning my sincerity. Standing my ground, I made it a point to once again making eye contact with everyone before restating my position, “Yes, you all heard me correctly, a return to grace.”

Remaining silent once again, I waited for someone to ask me what it means to return to grace. And it never fails, someone will always ask me to elaborate on that statement.

SEE NORTON, P13

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Lone Tree Voice
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Thelma Grimes

South Suburban board members sworn in

Pam Eller and Ken Lucas o cially

served on the board from 2010 until 2018, won the district’s May 2 election.

“I’m just really excited to be back

was sworn in.

Lucas said he was happy to be elected to a four-year term after his last term, which was only three.

of Dave Lawful, who passed away suddenly in May.

Jim Taylor reached his term limit and his fellow board members expressed that he will be missed.

“Jim, thank you,” said Barrett. “Schools are better, city’s better and South Suburban’s better for your dedication and your work. We appreciate it, those of us who have lived here a long time, we see it every day and we thank you from our deepest hearts for everything you’ve contributed … I’ve enjoyed sitting next to you for ve years and I hope some of that’s rubbed o on me.”

At the May 24 board meeting, the four sitting members voted for Pye, Barrett and Lucas to remain in their roles as chair, secretary and treasurer, respectively. ey voted for Pam Eller to ll the vacant role of vice chair.

we would expect when we screw up. I haven’t met the person, the company, the politician, or anyone else who hasn’t screwed up royally. And I include myself among the elite when it comes to making mistakes, I am pretty sure I am close to the top, if not at the top, when it comes to screwing up.

Are society and the world at large teetering on the precipice of total chaos and anarchy? OK, maybe that is a little dramatic, but then again maybe not. Are there people whose actions and words are driving us crazy? Absolutely. Do we sit stunned as we read or watch the news, wondering, “What idiot thought that was a good idea?” Or maybe we just let the anger and resentment fester inside of us until it reaches a boiling point or creates an ulcer. And then we share our outrage with anyone who will listen. And even if there is no one to listen, we go on a rant on social media, posting our anger and frustration, continuing to carrying the weight of what’s wrong with the world on our shoulders.

A return to grace means that instead of playing the blame game, we play the love and forgiveness game. I

My opinion and position are that I would rather live under the spirit of love and forgiveness as opposed to harboring anger, resentment, and frustration relative to the things that I have absolutely no control over. And if you still disagree with me, or think I am a bit too naïve, then maybe this can be your rst attempt at o ering me some grace. Will society ever be perfect? No. Will people ever be without fault? No. Will the world ever get back to what the majority of us would call normal? Maybe, maybe not. But wouldn’t it be a better place if we all gured how to o er love and forgiveness instead of spite and hostility? As always, I would love to hear your story at gotonorton@ gmail.com, and when we can truly make that leap towards a return to grace, it really will be a better than good life.

Michael Norton is an author, a personal and professional coach, consultant, trainer, encourager and motivator of individuals and businesses, working with organizations and associations across multiple industries.

13 June 1, 2023 In Loving Place an Obituary for Your Loved One. Memory 303-566-4100 obituaries@coloradocommunitymedia.com Self placement available online at HighlandsRanchHerald.net LoneTreeVoice.net circulation 225,
From left, Susan Pye, Ken Lucas, Pam Eller, Jim Taylor and Pete Barrett smile at the swearing-in of newly-elected board members Lucas and Eller. PHOTO BY NINA JOSS

Private dog park site gaining pup-ularity

Since Elle Ritt started renting her Wheat Ridge yard to fellow dog owners in November, she’s hosted birthday parties for pups, pooch photoshoots and doggie play groups almost every weekend.

Ritt is one of dozens of renters in the Denver metro area on a website called Sni Spot, which links people interested in sharing their yard with local dog owners who want a private fenced area to let their pups o -leash. rough Sni Spot, renters set an hourly rate per dog and time slot availability for users to book.

With two older dogs who need less exercise, Ritt said she wanted to let other dogs take advantage of her large yard and, so far, there has been no shortage of demand.

“It’s just mindblowing how frequently it’s used,” she said.

Ritt said a majority of her visitors don’t have their own yards and prefer to avoid public dog parks because of reactive or sensitive pups. e site allows users to tailor their search to t needs like a taller fence height or not having other dogs or animals visible.

Dr. Rebecca Ruch-Gallie, a 23-year veterinarian at Colorado State University’s Community Practice clinic, said the uncontrolled nature of dog parks leads to risks like ghts and disease transmission, which is why she typically recommends other ways to exercise dogs, such as daycare or private yard time.

In addition to walks and playtime, RuchGallie said some dogs need to run and all dogs bene t from exploring new routes and places.

Ruch-Gallie said she will sometimes take her pups on what she calls a “sni -ari.”

“ ey take in the world much di erently than we do, so give them those di erent scents to pick up and opportunities to see and smell di erent things,” she said. “Sometimes they just want to go, go, go and get their energy out and other times they just want to meander and take the sni s in.”

Mike Rieber, who has been renting his fenced pasture in Parker since October, said one of the best perks of sharing his yard is seeing how excited pups get to check out new scents and release their energy.

“ ey call it a Sni Spot and I never really understood how important that was to a dog, but that’s the rst thing they all do when they get here is smell everything,” Rieber said. “Especially with the repeat dogs, as soon as their paws hit the ground, boy, they’re o .”

Ritt’s experience has been similar, she said, adding that Sni Spot has been mutually bene cial, not just for the dogs, but also the humans. She’s received multiple thank you notes from visitors and attests that catching glimpses of visitors always makes her smile.

“It’s so cute to peek in the backyard and see grown men laying on their stomachs taking pictures of their puppies,” Ritt said.

Another Sni Spot user, Lyndsey Leach, who

rents her Lakewood backyard, agreed. Leach lost her own pooch three years ago but remains an avid dog-lover.  “It’s so nice when they’re comfortable and running around,” she said. “I’m always happy when they’re happy.” None of the three renters report issues with destroyed yards, rude users, neighbor complaints or unruly animals.

In addition to the positive mental health benefits, Leach said renting her yard is a convenient passive income and gives her the flexibility to be away from home if needed. Leach estimates that since she started in January, she’s had about 50 visitors and made around $400.

“I don’t really have any expenses associated with it, other than eaten tennis balls,” she joked.

Rieber said he didn’t originally think he would make much money from the app but has been happy with the extra cash. He noted the demand is only picking up in the warmer months, though he got a fair share of visitors during the winter as well.

“We’re not trying to maximize our revenue, we’re doing this more as a service for young people that have dogs and need a place that’s private,” he said.

For Ritt, her most recent month was her most successful, cashing in over $1,000, and before that, she averaged a few hundred dollars monthly.

“One of our dogs has had a ton of health issues, so it’s like SniffSpot funds her care,” Ritt said. “It truly has been a notable supplemental income.”

To learn more, visit sniffspot.com.

June 1, 2023 14
SEE DOG PARK PHOTOS, P15 LIFE LOCAL

DOG PARK PHOTOS

15 June 1, 2023
Furry friends Finn and Mellie enjoy a sunny afternoon at a Sni Spot in Aurora. Dog owners can rent yards by the hour to let their canines release their energy in a safe and controlled environment. Bailey, an Australian Cattle Dog, runs around Mike Rieber’s pasture in Parker. Rieber joined Sni Spot to provide a service to dog owners who don’t have yards or want to avoid dog parks. A doggie play group poses in Elle Ritt’s Lakewood yard, which she rents to other dog owners through a website and app called Sni Spot. Ritt said sharing her yard benefits everyone involved. PHOTOS COURTESY OF SNIFFSPOT

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Hampden Hall, on the second oor of the Englewood Civic Center, was lled on May 20 with fans of classical guitar who came to hear internationally recognized artist Ana Vidović perform works by Bach, Giuliani, Mangore, Scarlatti and Sor. e Peabody Institute graduate, who lives in Baltimore, is from the small town of Karlovac in Croatia, where her father was a bass guitarist who performed nationwide with his band in his youth.

Vidović started playing guitar at age 5 in her hometown near the capital of Zagreb. She was in a local music show at 7 and began performing internationally at 11.

She was admitted to Zagreb’s Academy of Music and studied with Istvan Roner until she graduated. Her reputation grew quickly in Europe and she was then invited by internationally famous Manuel Barrueccos to study at Baltimore’s famed Peabody Conservatory, where she graduated in 2003. She continues to make her home in Baltimore.

Vidović has performed throughout the U.S. and at major international performance venues in Austin, Boston, Cleveland, Dallas, Dayton, NYC, San Francisco, Australia, Japan, London, Brussels, Budapest, Salzburg, Vienna, Santa Fe and many more locations and has

recorded six CDs. Summer performances include the Colorado Music Festival and Lake Tahoe. She is teaching online master classes from Athens, Greece, where she will perform and teach through 2023. Live performances were important in the 2021-22 season, as well as the current year. ere is a Vidović DVD, called “Guitar Artistry in Concert,” which includes music by Torroba, Piazolla and Pierre Bensusan Sergiio Assad, Stanley Myers, Villa-Lobos and Agustin Barrios Mangore, and “Guitar Virtuoso,” a performance of works by Bach, Torroba, Paganini and Walton.

Englewood Arts Presents is o ering three more summer concerts at 2 p.m. on Saturdays:

June 3: Piano duets by Jennie Liu and Kevin Rojas: (Bach: English Suite; Rimsky-Korsakov: “Sherezade: e Young Prince and Young Princess” and Beethoven: “Piano Sonata No. 21, “Waldstein.”)

June 24: Saxophone and piano. (Sergie Govorox, saxophone and Britta De Groot, piano.)

July 18: Violin sonatas: Susan Paik, violin, and Teddy Niedermaier, piano.

Planning for the next season is underway and we will list it when received. ese matinees are a really magical way to spend a Saturday afternoon. See Englewood Arts Presents at englewoodarts.org for information. Tickets are reasonably priced.

16 PRE S E N T S
Presented through special arrangement with Broadway Licensing. All Authorized Performance materials are also supplied by Broadway Licensing (broadwaylicensing.com). Croatian-born classical guitarist Ana Vidović, shown in a photo from her online media packet, performed on May 20 in Englewood’s Hampden Hall. COURTESY PHOTO

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Water Garden Society holds its annual sale

Siam purple and more — e Colorado Water Garden Society’s annual sale will be held at Hudson Gardens, 6115 South Santa Fe Drive, Littleton, on June 4. Opens at 9 a.m. and members will have hardy water lilies, such as the Siam purple, plus tropical water lilies, cannas, assorted aquatic plants and sta , with photos of what the plants will look like when they mature. Free admission, free parking. When I visited in previous years, the sale was over before noon, so plan an early arrival. See the online calendar at hudsongardens.org.

Preservation Celebration

Attendance was about 88 at Historic Littleton Inc.’s “Preservation Celebration” on May 18 in the handsome third- oor space at Shift Workspaces on Main Street in downtown Littleton. HLI o cers felt it was a major step forward in connecting business people with the more than 100 years of history in Littleton through photos, games, lecture and meeting new friends who are interested. See hlinc.org.

MOA

Museum of Outdoor Arts’ sculpture collection is displayed at Marjorie Park and Fiddler’s Green: Tour times, when guides will take visitors through both locations, are 10-11 a.m. at Marjorie Park and 1-2:30 p.m. Tickets are $10 adult nonmembers; $5 youth 5-20 years old. (SCFD Free Days: ird Monday through October.) Debut of eight new murals at Fiddler’s Green on concert dates: July 13, 27, Aug. 10, 24, Sept. 7, 21. June 8: Zikr Dance Ensemble (David Taylor). Food and drinks available. June 21: UnWine Wednesday with wine, beer, Hula Hoop performance, and re dance

5.30

by Ana Cruz of Elevated Circus. 6331 S. Fiddler’s Green Circle, Greenwood Village. See website for more: moaonline.org.

Butteflies

Butter ies at Chat eld. Denver Botanic Gardens at Chat eld Arboretum, open daily until 3 p.m. 11500 Roxborough Park Road, Littleton. 303-791-7275. Explore Chat eld State Park as well. Take a picnic. Entrance ticketed. See botanicgardens.org.

Indigo Exhibition

Indigo Exhibition, workshops at Denver Botanic Gardens. AugustSeptember, various dates. See website for dates, information. More later. See botanicgardens.org.

5.30 5.25

Concours d’Elegance

Reminder — June 4: “Concours d’Elegance and Exotic Sports Car Show” on June 4 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the Arapahoe Community College West Lawn. Admission: $10. Under 12, free. Dreams of splendor! See coloradoconcours.org.

Cherry Creek Theatre

Cherry Creek eatre performance at the Jewish Community Center, 350 S. Dahlia St., Denver. Free parking. “ e Headliners” by Je rey Neuman, Directed by Nick Sugar. Music direction: David Nehls. See cherrycreektheatre.org.

Denver Art Museum

Denver Art Museum will unveil reimagined new Hamilton Build-

ing collection galleries on May 14, reopening its African Arts, Modern and Contemporary Art and Arts of Oceana collections on May 14. Gallery labels and wall text will appear in English and Spanish.

Curtis Center

Curtis Center for the Arts, 2349 E. Orchard Road, Greenwood Village, will hold the 19th Annual Pastel Exhibition through July 1. Admission free Open 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. See greenwoodvillage. com/curtis.

Curious Theatre

Curious eatre announces a new season: Number 26, More soon. See curioustheatre.org.

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Local lawmakers dish on 2023 legislative session

MCKENNA HARFORD MHARFORD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

With more than 600 bills introduced in the Colorado statehouse this year, Douglas County’s representatives stayed busy throughout the 2023 legislative session.

All four of the county’s representatives, Rep. Brandi Bradley, R-Douglas County, Rep. Lisa Frizell, RCastle Rock, Rep. Anthony Hartsook (R-Parker) and Rep. Bob Marshall, D-Highlands Ranch, were rst-year legislators who all together passed 24 bills.

Here’s a look at what each legislator did:

Rep. Bob Marshall

As the only Democrat from Douglas County, Marshall introduced legislation for veterans’ issues, teacher pay, increasing county commissioner numbers, and restricting law enforcement from political activities in uniform.

Marshall said he’s proud to have been able to shepherd a bill that will expand property tax exemption for veterans with disabilities.

“ at was kind of a lay-up once I brought it up,” Marshall said. “To me, it was about equity and respect.”

He also highlighted that he fought for a budget supplement that would fund veterans’ groups that honor fallen soldiers with things like ags for their families.

“We rolled the (joint budget committee), which I didn’t realize was such a big thing,” Marshall said.

Of his introduced legislation, Marshall said he is disappointed that his bills to provide a teacher stipend for classroom supplies, to increase county commissioner boards in large counties from three to ve seats, and to restrict uniformed law enforcement from participating in certain political activities were not successful this session.

“I didn’t realize how hard a lot of this stu is,” he said. “With hindsight and now knowing how the whole process works, I’m actually pretty impressed with what I did.”

Marshall said he plans to bring the law enforcement and county commissioner bills, or something similar, back to the statehouse next session. He added that he’s considering bringing legislation to align metro district election schedules with state elections.

Rep. Brandi Bradley

Legislation sponsored by Bradley ranged from healthcare bills, such as prohibiting minors from COVID vaccines without parental consent and requiring higher education facilities to keep epi-pens on hand, to land use and education.

Bradley said her biggest accomplishments regarding legislation this year were passing bills to allow Chat eld State Park to collect use fees to maintain water quality, put epi-pens in higher education facilities, and prohibition on selling over-the-counter diet pills to people under 18.

She also highlighted a bill that will address child support payments.

“We passed some great bipartisan legislation,” Bradley said.

As a member of the minority party in the statehouse, Bradley said one of her biggest frustrations this session is the budgeting priorities.

“ e most disappointing thing is the way we spend money and we don’t put toward the people who need it the most, like our teachers and our kids,” she said.

Of her legislation that was not successful this year, Bradley said she had really hoped to pass her bills preventing minors from getting the COVID vaccine without parental consent, and to restrict trans athletes from competing as their identi ed gender.

However, she said she doesn’t plan to bring the bills back next year.

One bill that Bradley does plan to retry focuses on preventing certain foreign governments, such as China and Russia, from owning farmland or water rights. She said other legislation she’s considering for the next session looks at school safety and mental health.

“How can we as a state look at funding (school resource o cers) in every school and getting better mental health resources in our schools,” Bradley said.

Rep. Lisa Frizell

With a background as Douglas County’s former assessor, Frizell sponsored several bills aimed at property tax reduction and a ordable housing, as well as some legislation on healthcare and education.

Two of Frizell’s successful bills will allow municipalities and counties to reduce their property tax rates to provide homeowners with some relief and creates property tax exemptions for nonpro t organizations purchasing land for a ordable housing.

“I’m very proud of (the tax exemption) because we did a lot of stakeholding on that,” Frizell said, adding that she worked with Habitat for Humanity and community land trusts. “I would love to see us really launch o of this and have more conversation in the House and the Senate.”

However, Frizell also introduced legislation that would have capped this year’s property tax increase, but the bill didn’t pass because of different plans from Gov. Jared Polis to address skyrocketing property taxes this year.

“I’m disappointed the majority party did not take my property tax bill seriously,” she said. “ is is something that we should have come together on. is is a bipartisan issue.”

Next year, Frizell hopes to build on her a ordable housing success and introduce legislation to incentivize special districts, like school and re

districts, to o er land for a ordable housing projects.

She said she doesn’t currently plan to bring back any of her failed bills from this session.

Rep. Anthony Hartsook

Hartsook introduced legislation targeting healthcare, small businesses, and veterans in his rst session.  When he re ects on his e orts, Hartsook said he’s proud of passing bills that will require health insurance to cover prosthetic devices for recreational use and to lower healthcare fees for small businesses.

“In the military, I was used to seeing veterans who lost limbs in combat have both a work prosthetic and an activity one and the fact that that wasn’t available to kids was dumbfounding to me,” he said. “So I was very proud to sponsor that legislation and help kids get out there and live life and have fun.”

One bill he sponsored this year that Hartsook plans to bring back would limit the governor’s executive authority powers in an emergency, such as during the covid pandemic.

“If the governor thinks (a situation) is so bad then he should call the legislature back into session and tell us to nd a solution and then we could do our jobs representing the people,” he said.

Another bill Hartsook would like to re-introduce would require health insurance to cover biomarker testing to help patients determine treatment.

Hartsook said he’s considering other legislation around healthcare fees in the future but wants to allow for market adjustment to this year’s changes rst.

June 1, 2023 20
9, 2023 | 12 P.M. – 1 P.M
Visit uchealth.org/communitymeeting to attend the event.
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Longs Peak Hospital, Broomfield Hospital, University of Colorado Hospital, Highlands Ranch Hospital Community Health Benefit Public Meeting
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Longs Peak Hospital, Broomfield Hospital, University of Colorado Hospital and Highlands Ranch Hospital are hosting a public meeting to share information about how the hospitals are supporting the
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When times get tough, Littleton’s Dawg Nation has a goal to heal

On a typical Wednesday morning at Edge Ice Arena in Littleton, skates cut into a sparkling, freshly cleaned sheet of ice. Patrick Donnelly is standing on the bench spitting blood because his wisdom teeth were pulled the day prior. But he wouldn’t miss supporting his friends and teammates at a practice. Not for pulled teeth. Not for the mid-March snowstorm. And certainly not for his heart condition.

Hockey players have a toughness to them, but Donnelly and the rest of his crew of amateurs, all part of the Dawg Nation Hockey Foundation, aren’t afraid to share what’s in their hearts with the world.

Donnelly is here for hockey as much as he is for the community the players have built around it.

Dawg Nation started with a pass of a hat among friends more than a decade ago. Since then, the men’s league hockey team has evolved into an organization that has given away more than $4 million to those who need it most.

It all began in 2009 when the Dawgs were just 15 friends who loved playing hockey together. en, in the span of just nine days that February, three of them were diagnosed with cancer.

“Each time I would pass my hat around the room and we would go see Danny or Dave or Andy in the hospital,” Dawg Nation founder and CEO Marty Richardson said. “It wasn’t that we gave them 250 bucks, but it was the fact that they have buddies that had their back.”

All three won their battles.

About a year later, Jack Kelly, a fourth member of the Dawgs, would come down with an autoimmune disease. In six months, Kelly was gone. Richardson spoke at his funeral, and it was the rst time he had lost a close friend.

“I told his three daughters, ‘I want to do something in your dad’s honor,’” Richardson added. “‘I don’t know what it is, but I want to do something.’”

Eight months later, in 2011, Dawg Nation Hockey Foundation was born. Nobody was sure, including Richardson, what it would grow to be.

“We started Dawg Nation, and what

it was designed for was [that] we can’t be the only team in the whole area that needs help or has players that need help,” Richardson said. “So we put on a [hockey] tournament to help a couple of guys, and then we put on a golf tournament, and we put on a comedy night, and all of these di erent things in that rst year.”

After that, it just kept growing and growing.

Along the way, Donnelly found Dawg Nation. Or, rather, Dawg Nation found him. About 10 years ago, Donnelly was diagnosed with congestive heart failure.

He was forced to quit his job and moved back into his parents basement because of his heart. But he found a new calling: becoming an operations manager at Dawg Nation.

He fought his heart condition with medicine at rst, but as time went on, it worsened and his heart was too far gone for the medicine to help. Doctors installed a pump in his left ventricle to keep him alive by circulating blood to his body.

He was also put on a heart transplant list, but was OK with the pump because it worked.

“I was implanted with this LVAD and all of a sudden I had a new lease on life. So I decided to get back in shape,” Donnelly said. “One day I got a wild hair to put on my skates and go get on the ice. It was just so obvious that that’s what I should be doing to stay in shape.”

Donnelly would keep getting on the ice while also learning his limits of how hard he could push his body. He decided as long as he has warm blood in his body, he’ll spend his time on the cold ice he loves.

As Richardson said, Donnelly, who relied on the team for support as he rst hit the ice, now thrives on helping others.

“He all of a sudden was in a position not to accept, but to give,” Richardson said.

Or, as Donnelly said, “I use what’s left of my heart to help people.”

Recently, Dawg Nation made their way up to Minnesota. A family was in need of help, and the Dawgs responded. ey were there for Ethan Glynn, a

three-sport athlete in hockey, baseball and football. Some would call Glynn a superstar bound for the pros. But just 11 plays into his freshman high school football season, his life changed on a routine tackle. In one moment, Glynn became a paraplegic.

A pond hockey tournament was organized, and Glynn and his family had $81,000 to help navigate the bills, thanks not only to Dawg Nation, but the wider community that supports their mission.

Sarah Karr, who lives in Parker, Colorado is another Dawg Nation member uplifted by the community.

Karr was diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer that spread to her liver and given a year to live.

“Luckily, I’m giving it one heck of a run for its money,” Karr said.

Karr is one of the regulars that hits the ice in Littleton, despite what life is throwing at her.

“It just gives me this high for like the rest of the week,” Karr said. “It’s like I have a whole team behind me supporting me.”

At the rink, Karr is never without a smile. She resonates with friendliness and loves to talk with everyone who is skating, usually causing her to be one of the last players to leave the arena as everyone is clearing out.

Recently, Karr went to a Colorado Avalanche game with Dawg Nation. Team legend and now President of Hockey Operations Joe Sakic spent an entire period in a suite talking with Karr and everyone else, listening to all the stories about how hockey can heal.

Richardson re ects on what the organization has grown into. It is constantly planning, giving, helping families and communities, he said.

“We didn’t envision that we would be tied into [helping] handicapped children and adults and veterans and blind hockey players,” Richardson said. “No one, including myself, could have seen this, and last year alone we were able to hand out checks around $900,000 in one year.”

And, thanks to people like Donnelly, di erences are being made on the ice. e early-morning ice time Dawg Nation gets can be a bit daunting, but

one person drives the rest to be there: Van Stone.

Stone su ered a traumatic brain injury in 2018. He now faces a slew of struggles, whether it is speech, motor skills, or navigating everyday life. He was told by doctors that he would never be able to play hockey again, but he wasn’t ready to give up. Stone, with the help of the Dawgs, proved those doctors wrong.

“ is is one of the only places he can go where he is just one of the guys,” Donnelly said.

While dealing with his own struggles, Donnelly will still go out of his way to help others. It’s bigger than one person, he explained.

“What we created was a place where you can go when you know you want to help,” Richardson said.

And Dawg Nation isn’t nished either. ere is a bigger goal still on the horizon: a $64 million arena with three sheets of ice that anyone — disabled or not — can access. It would be one of the only facilities like it in the country. is is still years in the making, but the group is determined to see it through. A place where Dawg Nation can call home. Where players can go to escape the hard times and enjoy the game that brings them all together. Somewhere where people like Richardson and Donnelly can go to positively a ect the lives of hundreds who need to be uplifted.

As of February, Donnelly was moved up to number one on the heart transplants list.

For a month and a half, all he could do was wait with the Dawg Nation family behind him. In April, he got the call he was waiting for. e next morning he was in the hospital. Donnelly got his heart.

“I can’t wait to slide him the puck and watch that one-timer hit the back of the net for the rst time with his new heart,” Richardson said with a smile. For more information about Dawg Nation and how you can help, visit https://www.dawgnation.org/ . is story via University of Colorado Boulder News Corps, part of a collaboration in spring of 2023 with Colorado Community Media.

21 June 1, 2023 Greenwood Village To advertise your place of worship in this section, call Erin at 303-566-4074 or email eaddenbrooke@ColoradoCommunityMedia.com Serving the Southeast Denver area Call or check our website for information on services and social events! www.cbsdenver.org 303-505-9236 Congregation Beth Shalom Serving the southeast Denver area Castle Rock/Franktown WORLD MISSION CHURCH (KOREAN CHURCH) 7249 E. Park Dr. Franktown, CO TIME: 10:30 PM PHONE: 303-688-1004 ENGLISH TRANSLATION EVERYONE IS WELCOME! Sunday Services - 10:00 a.m. Meditation before service - 9:30 a.m. Cimarron Middle School 12130 Canterberry Pkwy, Parker, CO 80138 www.CSLParker.org • (303) 805-9890 Parker Parker
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Vista lacrosse beats Valor for state crown

have something going pretty well here at Mountain Vista.”

In recent years and matchups, the Mountain Vista boys lacrosse team has been at its best when the moment has been bigger, the stakes higher and the odds unfavorable.

On May 22, on the state’s biggest stage — at a packed Peter Barton Lacrosse Stadium at the University of Denver, the site of the Class 5A state championship game — Vista reached into its bag one last time for 2023 and pulled out yet another gem.

Despite being kicked into a three-goal hole in the early moments of the second quarter, Mountain Vista’s Golden Eagles rallied behind masterful goalie play and a collective grit to beat Valor Christian 10-8 in what was an all-Highlands Ranch title bout.

Never mind that Vista was the 5-seed in the tournament and going up against Colorado’s top-ranked squad and the second-best team in America.

Never mind that Vista lost 10-4 to the Valor Eagles less than two months ago in the

regular season.

Never mind that the Golden Eagles nished in fourth place out of nine teams in 5A League #3.

Do mind that Vista paid no attention to all the pregame stats and storylines and delivered a big performance in

the biggest of moments.

“Two (state championships) in three years. Not too bad,” Vista coach Matthew Plitnick said of his Golden Eagles, who as a 4-seed upset No. 2 Valor in an overtime thriller for the 2021 state title as well. “I think we

When asked if the win means a little more since it came at the expense of Valor, which is located less than three miles up the road from Vista, Plitnick said: “(Beating a school) that has a bunch of kids in district who went there as opposed to here?

Yeah, we’re the kings of Highlands Ranch.”

After a state tournament that spanned 12 days and began with 24 teams, the Golden Eagles are now the kings of Colorado, too.

But securing the scepter and sash didn’t come easy — Vista had to get past fourth-seeded Legend (6-5 Golden Eagles win) and No. 1 seed and seven-time state champion Cherry Creek (1211 Vista win) to reach the title game. rough it all, the Golden Eagles found a way to win — and keep winning.

“We put in so much work since the fall,” senior goalie Brant Ward said. “We knew we were the best team in the

Drone soccer players compete in South Korea

In Incheon, South Korea, ying orbs whistle, buzz and clash in the air in an e ort to glide through hoops for points. If you’ve ever seen Harry Potter, it’s a lot like a remote-controlled, electric version of Quidditch.

e increasingly popular sport is drone soccer. Students representing Westminster High School traveled for an international battle of aerospace skill in the FIDA World Drone Soccer Championships, which hosted more than a dozen international teams between May 17-20.

Four students from WHS paired up with four SkyBlazers from Cherry Creek —who nished second nationally in 2023. ey make up the U.S. National Team. e hybrid team ofColoradans nished thirdin Incheon in what is essentially the World Cup of drone soccer.

Recently, the team hosted South Korean players for a friendly competition at the Colorado Convention Center. But when the championships kicked o in South Korea, the friendliness faded and things got real.

“As you’re preparing for the matches, it’s kind of friendly because everyone is trying to help each other out, especially if you don’t have the right supplies at the right time,” said Helen Tran, a WHS junior and keeper for the U.S. National Team. “But once you’re on that oor, and about to face them, it’s really competitive and it’s like ‘We’re on opposite sides right now. You’re my enemy.’”

Drone soccer is the only educational robotics competition that is also an internationally sanctioned team sport by the World Air Sports Federation.

Here’s how it works: two teams of ve players compete against one another at the same time. Each team

has a keeper, a striker, and three defenders. e idea is to protect your own goal and y the striker into the other team’s hoop to score.

But students don’t just y the drones. ey must build, repair, and maintain them. ere are three three-minute sets, two out of three seals a victory. Between sets, there is a three-to- ve-minute period for modifying and repairing any potential damage.

the international stage, and WHS has been growing its program for three years.

“ e goal is to build aerospace programs and career pathways using this fun sport as an introduction program,” Sanders said.

ing. “I’m interested in doing aerospace engineering [also]. I never expected to go to South Korea, I just wanted to get involved in ying drones.”

ey’re kind of like a Formula 1 team working really well together,” Kyle Sanders, vice president of development for U.S. Drone Soccer, said. “It’s really the communication and teamwork that you see in professional aviation, working on airplanes or preparing for operations.”

e sport is just now gaining traction outside of South Korea, Sanders said, where it’s been popular since 2015. But slowly, other countries are coming along. e U.S. National Team is only in its rst competitive year on

Lottie Wilson, the career and technical education advisor at WHS, called it the gami cation of aerospace education.“ ey’re building them. ey’re programming them. ey’re engineering them. ey’re doing it all,” Wilson said. “It’s denitely getting kids hooked into aerospace education through gami cation.”

It’s been a surreal experience for the students, who can polish their skills and meet new people in a fun, brand new environment that’s loved drone soccer for years.

“I hope I get to keep doing this. It’s really fun,” said senior Luis Lechuga, who is attending Metropolitan State University in the fall to study mechanical engineer-

Lechuga and the other seniors in Incheon opted to miss their own graduation to make the trip. Being able to share this experience with like-minded students from all over the world has opened new ways of thinking about aviation and aerospace science, Tran said, and they’ve picked up some tricks from the Korean players along the way.

“I’m able to learn how to communicate, especially with a language barrier. We’re still able to communicate and share ideas with each other, and basically improve together,” Tran said. “It’s a really good and bene cial way to network. I’ve been able to befriend them through this shared passion, and so it’s just really cool.”

June 1, 2023 22 SPORTS LOCAL
The Mountain Vista boys lacrosse team hoists the championship plaque after beating Valor Christian 10-8 in the Class 5A state title game May 22 at the University of Denver’s Peter Barton Lacrosse Stadium. PHOTO BY ALEX K.W. SCHULTZ
‘Kings of Highlands Ranch’ is coach’s claim for team
DRONES, P23
SEE

LACROSSE

state, and we proved it tonight.”

Ward’s nine-save night was a big reason why the Golden Eagles (16-3) came out on top. After letting four shots sneak past him in the opening quarter, which put Vista at a quick 4-1 disadvantage, Ward was a completely di erent shot blocker the rest of the way.

Valor (17-2) scored just once in the second quarter and Ward pitched a shutout in the third. Meanwhile, Vista scored seven times over the second and third periods — three goals from Joel Palasz, two from Ethan Pearson, and one each from Dawson Long and Brady Brown — to turn a three-goal de cit into an 8-5 lead.

“He was the player of the game for us,” Plitnick said of Ward, who will take his lacrosse talents to Sacred Heart University in Connecticut. “He was seeing the ball beautifully — the low shots, the high shots, everything.

DRONES

FROM PAGE 22

Since the program’s inception at WHS, interest has been through the roof, Robbie Ferguson said. Ferguson is the aerospace teacher and drone soccer coach at WHS.

“My students ask to come to practice. ey ask for extra practices all the time,” Ferguson said. “ ey really enjoy being a part of the team and everything that comes with it.”

Much of the program is graduating this year, Ferguson said, but fortunately the middle school interest is already signi cant, and continues to grow. Orchard Park Academy in Westminster is in its rst year of its drone soccer program.

e Pumas didn’t waste any time.

He was the player of the game, no question about it. It was impressive.”

Palasz scored twice more in the fourth quarter to put the nishing touches on a ve-goal night.

In the game’s nal seven minutes, Valor’s Blake Ham scored two goals and Baden Brown added another, but the damage done by Vista in the third period was simply too much for the Eagles to overcome.

“We stayed composed. at’s what it’s all about,” Palaz, who is also set to play lacrosse at Sacred Heart, said of what it took for Vista to come back after Valor had seized all the early momentum. “We knew what we were capable of doing and we did it. We just had to play the ball that we know how to play and that we’ve been coached to play. We did and it worked out.”

Long scored Vista’s lone goal in the rst quarter.

For Valor, Ham scored a team-high three goals, Brown had two, and Luke Alread, Christian Eframo and Rush LaSelle each tallied one. Star goalie Buck Cunningham recorded four saves while Kyle Green had one.

Orchard Park nished rst among middle school programs in nationals this past season, and nished fourth overall, beating even the WHS team. Recently, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis visited Orchard Park for a visit and lesson in aerospace acrobatics.

e future of drone soccer is bright, particularly along the Front Range. Experienced middle school students will be ready to step in and contribute right away at the high school level. e natural interest in the sport sparks a furious work ethic, and the results show it.

“I’m super proud of them. ey work really hard. ey work really well together, so that’s amazing. ey’ve just come a long way in the last couple weeks,” Ferguson said.

“ e interest level is just huge. Once you get them in, they’re hooked.”

23 June 1, 2023 PLAYING! THANKS for Answers Solution © 2016 King Features Synd., Inc.
FROM PAGE 22

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LEGITIMATE WORK AT HOME No Sales, no Investment, No Risk, Free training, Free website. Contact Susan at 303-646-4171 or fill out form at www.wisechoice4u.com

Visa Technology & Operations LLC

Has an opening for Staff Systems Engineer (multiple openings) (REF59908M) in Highlands Ranch, CO. Job duties include: Design, develop and maintain scalable, distributed, multi-threaded applications. Build automated tests and enable continuous delivery of the platform components. Position reports to the Highlands Ranch, Colorado office and may allow for partial telecommuting. The estimated salary range for a new hire into this position is $139,984.00 USD to $177,800.00 USD. Salary may vary depending on job-related factors which may include knowledge, skills, experience, and location. In addition, this position may be eligible for an annual bonus and equity. Visa has a comprehensive benefits package for which this position is eligible that includes Medical, Dental, Vision, 401(k), Employee Stock Purchase Program, FSH/HSA, Life Insurance, Paid Time off and Wellness Programs. Qualified applicants should apply by emailing resume to careersus@visa.com. Must reference job code: REF59908M

Help Wanted

Speech Language Aide and/or Occupational Therapy Aides

East Central BOCES is seeking a Speech Language Aide and/or Occupational Therapy Aides for the 2023-24 School Year!

Duties include picking up students from class, monitoring students during virtual instruction, and returning them to class. Training will be provided. The salary range is $15 - $18 per hour, depending on experience. 32 hours per week. Mileage reimbursed for travel between schools. Location of schools TBA. Questions, please contact Tracy at 719-775-2342 ext. 101 or tracyg@ecboces.org. To apply for this position, please visit our website ecboces.org and click on the “Jobs” page, click on the job you are interested in & then click on the grey button “Apply Online”, located at the bottom of the job listing. EOE

CUSTODIAN (Part Time)

$20/hour

This position involves 10 to 15 hours of work per week (usually Monday, Wednesday and Saturday) with some of that time during early evening hours. Specific start and end times and days of the week may vary depending upon the schedule of events for that week so flexibility is required. Contact personnel@fpcl. org for a detailed position description and employment application.

First Presbyterian Church of Littleton 1609 W. Littleton Blvd. Littleton CO 80120

CLASSIFIED AD SALES

303-566-4100

classifieds@coloradocommunitymedia.com

SERVICE DIRECTORY ADS

Contact Erin, 303-566-4074

eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com

Help Wanted

DEADLINES

CLASSIFIED LINE ADS:

MONDAY, 5 P.M.

SERVICE DIRECTORY:

THURSDAY, 5 P.M.

LEGALS: THURSDAY, 3 P.M.

Seeking Tech Coordinator part-time position in Parker. Proficient in video, graphics, music and streaming software. Includes online + in person weekly/monthly meetings and in-person set-up/production for Sunday worship service. $21-$23/hr for approx 8 hours/wk.

Contact voice@prairieuu.org

Help Wanted

Early Childhood Special Education Teacher

Openings for Maternity Leave

Coverage

Full/Part-Time opening located in Bennett and surrounding schools and; Full/Part-Time opening in the Limon and surrounding schools. Starting August 7th and ending November 10th. The salary range $13,530 to $16,302 for 62 days of work dependent on experience. Itinerant position working in the preschool setting providing direct and indirect services to students.

CDE Licensed ECSE preferred but may accept CDE substitute license. Mileage is reimbursed between schools. Questions contact Tracy at (719) 775-2342, ext. 101 or email tracyg@ecboces.org

To apply for this position, please visit our website ecboces.org and click on the “Jobs” page, click on the job you are interested in & then click on the grey button “Apply Online”, located at the bottom of the job listing. EOE

Help Wanted

Visa USA Inc., a Visa Inc Company, currently has an opening for Software Engineer – Sr. Consultant level (multiple openings) (REF59339U) in Highlands Ranch, CO. Job duties include: design and develop API based applications using Java, utilizing spring framework. Design, develop, document, and implement new functionality, as well as build enhancements, modifications, and corrections to existing software. Position reports to the Employer’s Highlands Ranch, CO office and may allow for partial telecommuting. The estimated salary range for a new hire into this position is $139,984.00 USD to $193,500.00 USD. Salary may vary depending on job-related factors which may include knowledge, skills, experience, and location. In addition, this position may be eligible for an annual bonus and equity. Visa has a comprehensive benefits package for which this position is eligible that includes Medical, Dental, Vision, 401(k), Employee Stock Purchase Program, FSH/HSA, Life Insurance, Paid Time off and Wellness Programs. Qualified applicants should apply by emailing resume to careersus@visa.com. Must reference job code: REF59339U

June 1, 2023 24
COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA REAL ESTATE TO ADVERTISE REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS CALL 303-566-4100
CLASSIFIEDS

COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA

CLASSIFIEDS

Market Place

Misc. Notices

COMMUNITY SHREDDING DAY

BRING YOUR DOCUMENTS

June 10th

SATURDAY, 10AM – 1PM ON SITE UNLIMITED PROFESSIONAL SHREDDING

1400 S. University Blvd

St. Michael & All Angels’ CHURCH

PARKING LOT behind the church

$7.00 / banker box or $25/car trunk load/ pick-ups negotiable

TELL YOUR FRIENDS

WIDOWED MEN AND WOMEN OF AMERICA.

A social club offering many exciting activities and life long friendships. Social hours for all areas of Metro Denver. Visit Widowedamerica.org for details In your area!

Garage Sales

Garage Sale

On alley between 517 Cantrell Street and Front Street 9am 4pm

Friday and Saturday June 2nd and June 3rd

HUGE COMMUNITY

GARAGE SALE

(up to 86 garages)

at the St. Andrews at Plum Creek community, located in Castle Rock, CO. The sale will be held on Friday and Saturday 16 and 17 of June 2023, from 8:00 am to 2:00 pm each day. Follow your GPS to 3123 Newport Circle for the center of the community. The homes are located on Mount Royal Drive, Newport Circle and Compass Circle. From Exit 181 (Plum Creek Parkway) off of I-25 follow the signs to Mount Royal Drive. A full range of items will be on sale from appliances to baby clothes.

50+ HOMES

HIGHLANDS 460 NEIGHBORHOOD

Fri & Sat, June 2 & 3 S Colorado Blvd & E County Line Rd Centennial 80122

Maps Available

Garage Sales

Save the Date!

Gigantic Garage Sale in the Pradera Golf Community Subdivision

Friday & Saturday, June 9th and 10th 8am-4pm

Numerous homeowners in the Pradera community will be participating in this event

Major cross streets into Pradera are Bayou Gulch and Parker Road, Parker 80134 Call Dotson Skaggs, Kentwood Company, 303-909-9350 for more information.

Merchandise Antiques & Collectibles

Health & Beauty

VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS!

50 Generic Pills SPECIAL $99.00 100% guaranteed. 24/7 CALL NOW! 888-445-5928 Hablamos Espanol

VIAGRA Stop Paying High Pharmacy Prices! Generic Viagra or Cialis 80 Tablets only $89 Ship-ping Included. Call now 888-203-0881

Medical

Attention oxygen therapy users! Inogen One G4 is capable of full 24/7 oxygen delivery. Only 2.8 pounds. Free info kit. Call 877-929-9587

Miscellaneous

MobileHelp, America’s premier mobile medical alert system. Whether you’re home or away. For safety & peace of mind. No long term contracts! Free brochure! 1-888489-3936

DISH TV $64.99 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR included, Free Voice remote. Some Restrictions apply. Promo Expires 1/31/24. 1-866-479-1516.

Old Crows Antiques featuring The Root Beer Bar An Antique destination in Littleton Colorado Join us on Memory Lane. Something for everyone. Visit us for store info Instagram: @oldcrowsantiques www.facebook.com/ oldcrowsantiques www.oldcrows antiques.com 303-973-8648

Firewood

MARKETPLACE

Split & Delivered $450 a cord

Stacking $50 Call 303-647-2475 or 720-323-2173

Switch & save up to $250/yr on talk, text & data. No contract or hidden fees. Unlimited talk & text with flexible data plans. Premium nationwide coverage. 100% U.S. based service. Call 1-855-903-3048

Free high speed internet if qualified. Govt. pgm for recipients of select pgms incl. Medicaid, SNAP, Housing Assistance, WIC, Veterans Pension, Survivor Benefits, Lifeline, Tribal. 15 GB internet. Android tablet free w/one-time $20 copay. Free shipping. Call Maxsip Telecom! 1-833-758-3892

Eliminate gutter cleaning forever! LeafFilter, the most advanced debrisblocking gutter protection. Schedule free LeafFilter estimate today. 20% off Entire Purchase. 10% Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1-833-6101936

Prepare for power outages today with a GENERAC home standby generator $0 Down + Low Monthly Pmt Request a free Quote. Call before the next power outage:

1-855-948-6176

BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Affordable prices - No payments for 18 months!

Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 855-761-1725

CLASSIFIED AD SALES 303-566-4100

classifieds@coloradocommunitymedia.com

SERVICE DIRECTORY ADS

Contact Erin, 303-566-4074 eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com

DEADLINES

CLASSIFIED LINE ADS: MONDAY, 5 P.M.

SERVICE DIRECTORY: THURSDAY, 5 P.M.

LEGALS: THURSDAY, 3 P.M.

Colorado Statewide Network

To place a 25-word COSCAN Network ad in 91 Colorado newspapers for only $300, contact your local newspaper or email Colorado Press Association Network at rtoledo@colopress.net

PORTABLE OXYGEN DIRECTV

DIRECTV, New 2-Year Price Guarantee. The Most live MLB Games this season, 200 +channels and over 45,000 on-demand titles.

$84.99/mo for 24 months with CHOICE Package. Some restrictions apply. Call DIRECTV 1-888-725-0897

AMERIGLIDE

Don't let the stairs limit your mobility! Discover the ideal solution for anyone who struggles on the stairs, is concerned about a fall or wants to regain access to their entire home. Call AmeriGlide today! 1-877-418-1883

Miscellaneous

HughesNet – Finally, super-fast internet no matter where you live. 25 Mbps just $59.99/mo! Unlimited Data is Here. Stream Video. Bundle TV & Internet. Free Installation. Call 866-499-0141

DIRECTV Stream - Carries the most local MLB Games! Choice Package $89.99/mo for 12 mos Stream on 20 devices at once. HBO Max included for 3 mos (w/Choice Package or higher.) No contract or hidden fees! Some restrictions apply. Call IVS 1-866-859-0405

Inflation is at 40 year highs

Interest rates are way up. Credit Cards. Medical Bills. Car Loans. Do you have $10k or more in debt? Call National Debt Relief to find out how to pay off your debt for significantly less than what you owe! Free quote: 1-877-592-3616

Are you a pet owner? Do you want to get up to 100% back on vet bills? Physicians Mutual Insurance Company has pet coverage that can help! Call 1-844-774-0206 to get a free quote or visit insurebarkmeow. com/ads

Scrap Metal, Batteries, Appliances, Wiring, Scrap Plumbing/Heating, Cars/Parts, Clean out Garages/Yards, Rake, Yard work done w/chainsaw, Certified Auto Mechanical / Body Work & paint available

Also can do inside or outside cleaning 303-647-2475 / 720-323-2173

Portable Oxygen Concentrator. May be Covered by Medicare! Reclaim independece and mobility with the compact design and long-lasting battery of Inogen One.

Free Information Kit!

Call: 844-823-0293

FREE HIGH SPEED INTERNET

Free High Speed Internet for those that qualify. Goverment program for recipients of select programs incl. Medicaid, SNAP, Housing Assistance, WIC, Veterans Pension, Survivor Benefit, Lifeline, Tribal. 15GB Internet service. Bonus offer: Android tablet FREE with onetime $20 copay. Free Shipping & Handling. Call MaxsipTelecom Today: 1-866-654-9429

Miscellaneous

Safe Step. North America’s #1 Walk-in tub. Comprehensive lifetime warranty. Top-of-the-line installation and service.

Now featuring our free shower package & $1600 off - limited time! Financing available. 1-855-4171306

Caring for an aging loved one? Wondering about options like seniorliving communities and in-home care? Caring.com’s Family Advisors help take the guesswork out of senior care for your family. Free, noobligation consult: 1-855-759-1407

Pets

Dogs

Doodle Puppies Golden Doodles and Bernedoodles

Home-Raised Heath Tested and Guaranteed Standard and Mini Size available Schedule a visit today! (970)215-6860 www.puppylovedoodles.com

25 June 1, 2023 TO ADVERTISE CALL 303-566-4100
June 1, 2023 26 Carpet/Flooring HARDWOOD , ... FOOTPRINTS Great F1oors. floors Great Impressions. Call today for a free estimate! 720-344-0939 WWW FOOTPRINTSFLOORS COM TILE BACKSPLASHES & LAMINATES Cleaning A BROOM AND A BUCKET Quality Clean at Unmatched Value Your favorite house cleaners are now also your carpet cleaners CALL US TODAY! 303-667-3536 abroomandabucket.com abroomandbucket@gmail.com Concrete/Paving All Phases of Flat Work by T M CONCRETE veways, Sidewalks, Patios ar-outs, stamped & colored ncrete Quality work, Lic /Ins asonable rates Small Jobs OK!" 303-514-7364 tmconcrete net All Phases of Flat Work by T.M. CONCRETE iveways, Sidewalks, Patios ar-outs, stamped & colored ncrete. Quality work, Lic./Ins. Reasonable rates "Small Jobs OK!" 303-514-7364 tmconcrete net 303-888-7595 •All Concrete •Tear Out •Patios •Driveways •Curb & Gutter •Walls •Anything Concrete PRO FORM CONCRETE CALL FOR AN ESTIMATE 303-888-7755 We do driveways, garage floors, walkways, front porches, steps, back patios, and always provide free estimates. Fully insured, local and perform quality work. Deck/Patio FREE ESTIMATES BEST PRICES 30+ years experience Clem: 303-973-6991 Bathrooms Bathroom Remodeling Made Easy! Call us today, for a free design consultation. 303-997-4763 www.BuildABath.net Heating/Air Conditioning Serving the Front Range since 1955 Furnaces • Boilers • Water Heaters Rooftop HVAC • Mobile Furnaces Commercial • Residential Install • Repair • Replace Free Estimates • 720-327-9214 AC, Furnace and Boiler Specials Serving the Front Range since 1955 Residential • Install • Repair • Replace Concrete & Asphalt - tear out, replace & repair Free Estimates • 720-327-9214 Buildings, Metal OUTLET CORP. METALBUILDING 303.948.2038 METALBUILDINGOUTLET.COM · SHOPS & GARAGES · EQUIPMENT STORAGE · SELF STORAGE · BARNS & AGRICULTURAL BUILDINGS · EQUESTRIAN FACILITIES · COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS · AND MORE... LOCAL BUILDINGS FOR 30+ YEARS! CLASSIFIEDS COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA DEADLINES CLASSIFIED LINE ADS: MONDAY, 5 P.M. SERVICE DIRECTORY: THURSDAY, 5 P.M. LEGALS: THURSDAY, 3 P.M. CLASSIFIED AD SALES 303-566-4100 classifieds@coloradocommunitymedia.com SERVICE DIRECTORY ADS Contact Erin, 303-566-4074 eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com SERVICE DIRECTORY Cleaning Weekly • Bi-Weekly • Monthly Move-In • Move-Out FREE ESTIMATES Call Today: 720-225-7176 ProMaidsInc@yahoo.com PROMAID CLEANING Licensed with excellent references Heating/Air Conditioning 5 Star Customer Rating Repair, Maintenance and Installation Heating - Air Conditioning - Heat Pumps - IAQ emporiahomeservices.com 303.909.2018 5 Star Customer Rating Repair, Maintenance and Installation Heating - Air Conditioning - Heat Pumps - IAQ emporiahomeservices.com 303.909.2018 Deck/Patio Visit - DECKTEC.COM Call - 303.277.1550 Email - mail@decktec.com Contact Us Today! Re-New or Create New Bring Back the WOW! EASYAvailable!Payments • Hail Damage Restoration • Clean/Sand/Stain • Custom Paint/Stain • Remodel/Repair/Replace Scan the QR code to visit DeckTec.com Let DeckTec SERVICE DIRECTORY CONTINUES NEXT PAGE Assistant Karen Earhart Assistant Custom Assist How Can I Help? 303-345-4045 karen.earhart60@yahoo.com “Just Throw It Out There”
27 June 1, 2023 Deck/Patio WE DO ALL DECK & FENCE REPAIRS CALL US FOR A FREE ESTIMATE SAND/WASH/STAIN 15% OFF! www.coloradodeckandfence.com codeckandfencepro@gmail.com 303-501-3264 UTDOOR ESIGNS, INC “Specializing in Composite Redwood and Cedar Construction for Over 30 Years” • Decks • Fences • Stairs • Overhangs • 303-471-2323 Drywall A PATCH TO MATCH Drywall Repair Specialist • Home Renovation and Remodel • 30 years Experience • Insured • Satisfaction Guaranteed Highly rated & screened contractor by Home Advisor & Angies list Call Ed 720-328-5039 Fence Services Cowboy Fencing is a full service fence & gate company installing fences in Colorado for 23 years. Residential/Commercial/ Farm & Ranch Fencing Low rates, Free estimates Scott, Owner - 720-364-5270 6 Handyman HANDYMAN Repairs Install Fixtures, Appliances Plumbing, Electrical Expert Tile Kitchen/ Bath Remodel Decks 35 yrs. experience Licensed, Insured References. Contact info: Wes 720-697-3290 Handyman DeSpain’s HOME SOLUTIONS DEPENDABLE, RELIABLE SERVICE Over 30 Years Experience Licensed & Insured Solving All your Remodeling & Repair Problems – Just Ask! Eric DeSpain 303-840-1874 TM HOME REPAIRS & REMODELING • Drywall • Painting • Tile • Trim • Doors • Painting • Decks • Bath Remodel • Kitchen Remodels • Basements & Much More! We Never Mark Up Materials Saving you 25%-35% All Work Guaranteed • A+ BBB Rated Call Today for a FREE ESTIMATE 303-427-2955 “HONEY-DO’S DONE… THAT YOUR HONEY DON’T DO.” JIM 303.818.6319 — SMALL JOBS INSIDE AND OUT — INSURED! Hauling Service Cut Rate Hauling Trash / Rubbish / Debris and Junk Removal Rubin (720)434-8042 Kerwin (720) 519-5559 Professional and Reliable Year Round Service Landscaping/Nurseries &Landscape Concrete 720-436-6158 Landscaping • Yard Cleanup • Sod Concrete • Sprinklers • Fertilization Tree Trimming/Cutting • Planting Retaining Walls • Flagstone Fencing • Gutter Cleaning Power Raking • Aerating Landscaping & Tree Service • Landscaping • Sprinkler Service • Stump Grinding • Tree Removal • Rock and Mulch • Tree Trimming Registered & Insured • Free Estimates J & M Landscaping & Tree Service Call 720-582-5950 Jmlandservices8@gmail.com Lawn/Garden Services SPRING/SUMMER: Landscaping - Tree/Hedge Trimming Shrub Removal - Aeration - Sod Edging - River Rock - Mulch Weekly Mowing - Power Washing – Deck/Fence Install/Repair Colorado Lawn Care scottcindy4242@gmail.com Commercial – Residential 720-202-9975 Licensed/Insured Alpine Landscape Management Weekly Mowing, Power Raking, Aerate, Fertilize, Spring Clean-up, Trim Bushes & Small Trees, Senior Discounts 720-329-9732 Lawn/Garden Services LAWN SERVICES C.Y. FREE ESTIMATES   SIZE OF YARD MOW & TRIM MULCH & TRIM AERATION POWER RAKING SMALL $25 $25 $30 $75 MEDIUM $30-$35 $30-$35 $35-$40 $90-$105 LARGE $40$40$45$120I don’t take the grass or leaves away, but I do supply my own bags. RAKING LEAVES  FERTILIZING I have all my own equipment. In business since 1991. CHRIS YOAKAM 303-745-7676 Serving Highlands Ranch, Lone Tree, Parker and Centennial Landscape & Garden Sod, Rock, Mulch, Retaining Walls, Sprinklers, Sprinkler Repair, Flagstone, Fence Repair, Power Rake, Fertilize, Aeration, Yard Clean-Ups, Shrub Trimming/Removal, Rock Removal, Weed Control, Trash Hauling and Much More! 720-982-9155 lawnservice9155@gmail.com Painting DANIEL’S PAINTING exterior • interior residential repaints Re-caulk all home complete prime all caulked areas / replace any damaged boards/ popcorn removal drywall and texture repair/fences and decks/insured and bonded 720-301-0442 720-328-2572 C AL L TO DAY FO R YOU R F R E E Q U OT E www.innovativepaintingllc com 35% O Residential Exper ts All Int. & Ex t. We paint over 800 Homes Per Year No Deposit Ever Satisfaction Guaranteed 5 year, 7 year and 9 year Exterior Warranties 2 Yr. Interior Warranty Licensed & Insured up to $2 Million Locally Owned and Operated In business for 29 years Free Color Consulting & Samples Residential Experts Lawn/Garden Services Mow – Edge - Trim Aeration & Fertilization Sprinkler Repair CONTINENTAL INC. Commercial and Residential Lawn Maintenance 720-283-2155 Continental8270@yahoo.com Call for a FREE quote Painting CLASSIFIEDS COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA DEADLINES CLASSIFIED LINE ADS: MONDAY, 5 P.M. SERVICE DIRECTORY: THURSDAY, 5 P.M. LEGALS: THURSDAY, 3 P.M. CLASSIFIED AD SALES 303-566-4100 classifieds@coloradocommunitymedia.com SERVICE DIRECTORY ADS Contact Erin, 303-566-4074 eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com
DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY CONTINUES NEXT PAGE
SERVICE
June 1, 2023 28 Painting Dan’s Painting
Painting Interior & Exterior Painting & Remodeling • 26 Years Experience • Family Owned • Insured & Bonded • Wallpaper Removal • Drywall Repair • Gutters & Carpentry • Tile & Plumbing • Residential & Commercial 720-628-1199 Call Dan Today! L.S. PAINTING, Inc. • Stain and Renew Custom Handrails • Custom Interior & Exterior • Residential & Commercial Painting • Paint Kitchen Cabinets • Free Estimates - Insured • 30 Years Serving Metro Denver • Satisfaction Guaranteed Littleton Based & Family Owned 303-948-9287 LS@LSPaintinginc.com www.lspaintinginc.com A+ Rating BBB Plumbing Residential: Hot Water Heat • Forced Air Water Heaters • Kitchens • Baths Service Repair • Sprinkler Repair ANCHOR PLUMBING (303) 961-3485 Licenced & Insured Plumbing DIRTY JOBS Done Dirt Cheap Call for a free phone quote 720-308-6696 Drain Cleaning Specialist Camera & Sewer Repairs Plumbing Repairs 24/7 - 35 yrs experience No extra charge for weekends Plumb-Crazy, LLC. “We’re Crazy About Plumbing” ALAN ATTWOOD, Master Plumber PH: 303-472-8217 FX: 303-688-8821 CUSTOM HOMES • REMODEL FINISHED BASEMENTS SERVICE AND REPAIR Licensed • Insured PLUMBING & SPRINKLERS Free Instant Phone Quote Repair or Replace: Faucets, Sprinklers, Toilets, Sinks, Disposals, Water Heaters, Gas Lines, Broken Pipes, Spigots/ Hosebibs, Water Pressure Regulator, Ice Maker, Drain Cleaning, Dishwasher Instl , for coupons go to vertecservices com CALL Vertec 303-371-3828 Roofing/Gutters DEPENDABLE ROOF AND GUTTER REPAIR Repairs are all I do! Wind Damage & Fix Leaks Gutter repair/cleaning 40 years experience FREE Estimates (720)209-4589 Tile ANYTHING TILE ● Marble ● Repairs ● Granite Counter Tops Remodeling is my specialty! Call now for free estimate (303) 646-0140 omas Flooring & Tile • All Types of Tile • • Granite-Ceramic • • Porcelain • • Natural Stone •Vinyl • •Bathroom Remodel• 32 Years Experience • Work Warranty 303-781-4919 FREE Estimates Tree Service ABE’S TREE & SHRUB CARE Abraham Spilsbury Owner/Operator • Pruning • Removals • Shrub Maintenance • FreeEstimates 720.283 8226 • C:720.979 3888 aspilsbury@msn com Certified Arborist,Insured, Littleton Resident Stump grinding specialist A-1 Stump Removal Most stumps $75.00 and up $55 Minimum. Free estimates. Licensed & Insured. 41 years experience. Terry 303-424-7357 Corey 720-949-8373 A father and son team! Call or Text 10% off when coupon presented Solar 303-647-3173 www.ValorRoofandSolar.com Residential and Commercial SOLAR SYSTEMS 303-770-7663 Siding & Windows Siding & Windows Siding Repairs • Hail Damage Repairs Insulated Vinyl and Steel Siding Free Estimates • Call Sam 720.731.8789 CLASSIFIEDS
COMMUNITY
DEADLINES CLASSIFIED LINE ADS: MONDAY, 5 P.M. SERVICE DIRECTORY: THURSDAY, 5 P.M. LEGALS: THURSDAY, 3 P.M. CLASSIFIED AD SALES 303-566-4100 classifieds@coloradocommunitymedia.com SERVICE DIRECTORY ADS Contact Erin, 303-566-4074 eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com SERVICE DIRECTORY Roofing www.ValorRoofandSolar.com 303-770-7663 Plumbing I am a Master Plumber that has 15 years of experience, licensed and insured, and trying to get my own business up and going. I would be grateful for the opportunity to earn your business, to help a Colorado Native business grow. Mountain Men Plumbing has been around for almost two years now! www.MountainMenPlumbing.com Or give a call to (720) 328-8440! CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Call Today! 303-566-4100
Dan’s
COLORADO
MEDIA

Douglas County schools raise $650,000 for wishes

ree-year-old Titus, who has lymphoma, has a wish. He wants to meet Lightning McQueen, the smiling red stock car from the animated lm, “Cars.”

So, students and sta at Ponderosa High School decided to spend a week “Racing to Titus’ Wish.”

e highlight was when a spotlight shined on Titus riding into an assembly hall on Lightning McQueen with his family behind him.

It was part of Wish Week for the school and nine other Douglas County School District schools that participated in making dreams of everything from seeing the wonders of Hawaii to celebrating basketball heroes come true. Over the course of the last ve months, the schools raised a combined $650,000 for Make-A-Wish Colorado. at’s enough funds to grant 87 wishes for children like Titus with critical illnesses.

Ponderosa’s tally was $42,000, which can grant six wishes.

Each of the schools gave a child and their family a week they will never forget lled with love and support.

At Chaparral High School, participating for a 10th year, 7-year-old

Aria, who has congenital heart disease, wanted to meet Princess Jasmine from Disney’s “Aladdin.” Aria wore her own purple princess dress as she met a handful of princesses in front of a make-shift princess castle at the school.

Students and sta of Chaparral High School donated $115,000.

Mountain Vista High School in Highlands Ranch donated $198,000. Mountain Vista turned the assembly into a fashion show for their wish kid, 8-year-old Lucy, who has been diagnosed with kidney disease. Lucy was given the fashion show experience with hair and makeup, out t changes and a runway.

Highlands Ranch High School helped 9-year-old Becket’s wish of going to Lake Powell come true. Students and sta donated a total of $37,000.

With his own throne to sit on and a golden crown to wear, Douglas County High School students celebrated 11-year-old Carlos, whose wish is to go to the Virgin Islands. e school donated $35,000.

Legend High School put on a memorable week for 10-year-old Andrew who attends a Legend High School feeder school. Andrew has neuromuscular disorder and his wish is to go to Disney World. e school donated $132,000.

wish kid for Rock Canyon High School is a fan of the Charlotte Hornets and wants to meet his favorite NBA player, the popular “RC” letters were painted to represent the NBA team. rough wish week events, the

make the wish of 13-year-old Angel

emony. Sky View Academy donated $15,000.

Renaissance Secondary School donated $4,000 to help Matthew, a 15-year-old with leukemia, reach his wish of going to Hawaii.

29 June 1, 2023
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Mountain Vista’s featured wish kid Lucy under an “I Love Lucy” sign. COURTESY OF MAKE-A-WISH COLORADO

Public Notices call Sheree 303.566.4088

Legals

To Whom It May Concern: On 3/30/2023 11:43:00

AM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County.

Original Grantor: LEE ANN KNUTSON

Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. ACTING SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR NATIONAL MORTGAGE CENTER DBA PRICELINEMORTGAGE

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: LOANCARE, LLC

Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 5/30/2000

Recording Date of DOT: 6/7/2000

Reception No. of DOT: 00039182

DOT Recorded in Douglas County.

Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $163,500.00

Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $96,961.61

Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust.

Legal Description of Real Property:

LOT 22, HIGHLANDS RANCH FILING NO. 101-A, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO.

Which has the address of:

9778 S. Bucknell Way, Highlands Ranch, CO 80126

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, July 26, 2023, at the Public Trustee’s office, Philip S Miller Building Hearing Room, 100 Third Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

First Publication: 6/1/2023

Last Publication: 6/29/2023

Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Dated: 3/30/2023

DAVID GILL DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

RYAN BOURGEOIS

Colorado Registration #: 51088 1391 Speer Boulevard, Suite 700 , DENVER, COLORADO 80204

Phone #: (303) 350-3711

Fax #:

Attorney File #: 00000009763855

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE

DATES on the Public Trustee website: https://www. douglas.co.us/public-trustee/

Legal Notice No. 2023-0062

K. SCOTT Original Beneficiary: WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.

PM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County.

Original Grantor: Brian C. Reseigh and Rebecca M. Reseigh

Original Beneficiary: Red Rocks Credit Union

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: Red Rocks Credit Union Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 5/12/2022

Recording Date of DOT: 5/31/2022

Reception No. of DOT: 2022038604

DOT Recorded in Douglas County.

Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt:

$150,000.00

Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $147,646.74

Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: the failure to make timely payments required under said Deed of Trust and the Evidence of Debt secured thereby

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: Wilmington

Savings Fund Society, FSB, as trustee of Stanwich

Mortgage Loan Trust I

Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 12/17/2015

Recording Date of DOT: 12/18/2015

Reception No. of DOT: 2015090262

DOT Recorded in Douglas County.

Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt:

$181,649.00

Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $158,785.59

Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust.

Building Code, 2021 International Building Code Appendix C, 2021 International Residential Code, 2021 International Residential Code Appendix AM, 2021 International Mechanical Code, 2021 International Fuel Gas Code, 2021 International Plumbing Code, 2021 International Plumbing Code Appendix E, 2018 International Energy Conservation Code, and the 2023 National Electrical Code, as amended.

For more specific information, call Korby Lintz, Chief Building Official, Douglas County Building Division at 303-660-7497.

Legal Notice No.: 945402

First Publication: May 18, 2023

Last Publication: June 8, 2023

Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

Bids and Settlements

Public Notice

Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Borrower's failure to make timely payments as required under the Evidence of Debt and Deed of Trust.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust.

Legal Description of Real Property: A PARCEL OF LAND SITUATED IN THE STATE OF COLORADO, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, WITH A STREET LOCATION ADDRESS OF 9562 PINEBROOK ST; HIGHLANDS RANCH, CO 80130-

3778 CURRENTLY OWNED BY VICKI K SCOTT HAVING A TAX IDENTIFICATION NUMBER OF 0342753 AND FURTHER DESCRIBED AS LOT

11 BLK 1 HIGHLANDS RANCH # 69A 0.149 AM/L

Which has the address of: 9562 Pinebrook St, Highlands Ranch, CO 80130

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, July 12, 2023, at the Public Trustee’s office, Philip S Miller Building Hearing Room, 100 Third Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

First Publication: 5/18/2023

Last Publication: 6/15/2023

Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Dated: 3/15/2023

DAVID GILL

DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

ALISON L. BERRY Colorado Registration #: 34531 9800 S. MERIDIAN BLVD. SUITE 400, ENGLEWOOD, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (303) 706-9990

Fax #: (303) 706-9994

Attorney File #: 23-029451

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: https:// www.douglas.co.us/public-trustee/

Legal Notice No. 2023-0052

First Publication: 5/18/2023

Last Publication: 6/15/2023

Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Ranch

The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust.

Legal Description of Real Property:

LOT 165, HIGHLANDS RANCH FILING NO. 120-C, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO.

Which has the address of:

10004 Heywood Street, Highlands Ranch, CO 80130

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, July 19, 2023, at the Public Trustee’s office, Philip S Miller Building Hearing Room, 100 Third Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

First Publication: 5/25/2023

Last Publication: 6/22/2023

Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Dated: 3/27/2023

DAVID GILL

DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

DEANNE R. STODDEN

Colorado Registration #: 33214 1550 WEWATTA STREET SUITE 710, DENVER, COLORADO 80202 Phone #: 303.623.1800 Fax #: 303.623.0552

Attorney File #: 12126.0025

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: https:// www.douglas.co.us/public-trustee/

Legal Notice No. 2023-0060

First Publication: 5/25/2023

Last Publication: 6/22/2023

Publisher: Douglas County News Press

PUBLIC NOTICE

Highlands Ranch NOTICE OF SALE

Public Trustee Sale No. 2023-0063

To Whom It May Concern: On 4/3/2023 3:44:00 PM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County.

Original Grantor: DARRIN LEE MARTIN Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS BENEFICIARY, AS NOMINEE FOR RENASANT BANK, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS

Legal Description of Real Property: BUILDING 9, UNIT 104, CANYON RANCH CONDOMINIUMS, IN ACCORDANCE WITH AND SUBJECT TO THE DECLARATION FOR CANYON RANCH CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., RECORDED ON DECEMBER 19, 1995 IN BOOK 1307 AT PAGE 260, ANNEXATION RECORDED MARCH 27, 1996 IN BOOK 1328 AT PAGE 1217 AND THE CONDOMINIUM MAP RECORDED ON DECEMBER 19, 1995 AS RECEPTION NO: 9560424 IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO.

Which has the address of: 8459 Little Rock Way Unit 104, Highlands Ranch, CO 80126

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, July 26, 2023, at the Public Trustee’s office, Philip S Miller Building Hearing Room, 100 Third Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

First Publication: 6/1/2023

Last Publication: 6/29/2023

Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Dated: 4/4/2023

DAVID GILL

DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

JENNIFER C. ROGERS Colorado Registration #: 34682 4530 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. 10 , LAS VEGAS, NEVADA 89119

Phone #: 877-353-2146

Fax #:

Attorney File #: 48074581

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: https:// www.douglas.co.us/public-trustee/

Legal Notice No. 2023-0063

First Publication: 6/1/2023

Last Publication: 6/29/2023

Publisher: Douglas County News Press City and County

Notice

PUBLIC HEARING

A public hearing will be held on June 13, 2023, at 2:30 p.m. before the Douglas County Board of County Commissioners , in the Commissioners Hearing Room, 100 Third Street, Castle Rock, CO. The hearings are for the proposed adoption of Building Codes: 2021 International

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL (RFP) #018-23 VOLUNTARY ACCIDENT AND CRITICAL ILLNESS

The Department of Human Resources of Douglas County Government, hereinafter referred to as the County, respectfully requests proposals from responsible and highly-qualified insurance companies offering voluntary accident and critical illness policies.

The RFP documents may be reviewed and/or printed from the Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System website at www.rockymountainbidsystem.com.

RFP documents are not available for purchase from Douglas County Government and can only be accessed from the above-mentioned website. All RFP responses are due on Tuesday, June 27, 2023 at 4:00pm. It is the sole responsibility of the respondent to see that their proposal response is received on time. Proposals will not be considered which are received after the time stated.

Douglas County Government reserves the right to reject any and all proposals, to waive formalities, informalities, or irregularities contained in a said proposal and furthermore, to award a contract for items herein, either in whole or in part, if it is deemed to be in the best interest of the County to do so. Additionally, we reserve the right to negotiate optional items/services with the successful vendor.

Please direct any questions concerning this RFP to Carolyn Riggs, Purchasing Supervisor, 303-6607434, criggs@douglas.co.us, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding holidays.

Legal Notice No. 945514

First Publication: June 1, 2023

Last Publication: June 1, 2023

Publisher: Douglas County News-Press Public Notice

INVITATION FOR BID (IFB)

#021-23

COMMERCIAL CONVEYOR DISHWASHER

The Department of Facilities, Fleet and Emergency Support Services of Douglas County Government, hereinafter referred to as the County, respectfully requests bids from responsible and qualified companies for the purchase and installation of a new commercial conveyor dishwasher.

The IFB documents may be reviewed and/or printed from the Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System website at www.rockymountainbidsystem.com.

IFB documents are not available for purchase from Douglas County Government and can only be accessed from the above-mentioned website. While the IFB documents are available electronically, Douglas County cannot accept electronic bid responses.

Bid responses shall be submitted in a sealed envelope plainly marked “IFB No. 021-23, Commercial Conveyor Dishwasher” and mailed or hand-carried to the address shown below prior to the due date and time. Electronic and/or faxed bid responses will not be accepted. Bids will be received until 3:00pm on Tuesday, June 20, 2023 by the Douglas County Finance Department, Purchasing Division, 100 Third Street, Suite 130, Castle Rock, Colorado 80104. Bids will not be considered which are received after the time stated, and any bids so received will be returned unopened.

Douglas County Government reserves the right to reject any and all bids, to waive formalities, informalities, or irregularities contained in a said bid and furthermore, to award a contract for items herein, either in whole or in part, if it is deemed

June 1, 2023 30 Highlands Ranch Herald Legals June 1, 2023 * 1 www.ColoradoCommunityMedia.com/Notices
legals@coloradocommunitymedia.com PUBLIC NOTICES
Highlands
NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee
Public Trustees PUBLIC NOTICE
Ranch
Sale No. 2023-0062
PUBLIC NOTICE Highlands Ranch NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2023-0052 To Whom It May Concern: On 3/15/2023 10:28:00 AM the undersigned Public Trustee
Notice of Election and Demand
Deed of Trust
below
be
in Douglas County. Original Grantor: VICKI
Current
WELLS
Date of Deed of Trust (DOT):
Recording Date of DOT: 9/16/2008 Reception No. of DOT: 2008063555 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $75,000.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof:
First Publication: 6/1/2023 Last Publication: 6/29/2023 Publisher: Douglas County News Press
caused the
relating to the
described
to
recorded
Holder of Evidence of Debt:
FARGO BANK, N.A.
9/5/2008
$129,351.83
PUBLIC
Highlands
NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2023-0060 To Whom It May Concern: On 3/27/2023 1:17:00
NOTICE
NOTICE OF
Public

Meet the new Centennial homeless outreach liaison

As communities across Colorado grapple with how to best serve people experiencing homelessness, the City of Centennial has a new resource — a homeless outreach liaison.

Vanessa Gates was hired to the brand new position, which falls under Arapahoe County’s direction.

Gates, who started working in the role on March 13, introduced herself to the Centennial City Council on May 16, sharing updates on what she has worked on so far and the vision for her role.

“Our target population are going to be individuals and families who are experiencing homelessness and at-risk of becoming (homeless),” Gates said.

According to the presentation, Gates will collaborate with individuals and/or families facing homelessness and refer them to the appropriate resources or programs.

She will also provide navigation assistance to reduce barriers a ecting the individual or families’ access to resources.

“I’ll conduct eld outreach in areas with higher concentrations of calls regarding people experiencing homelessness. It’ll be from (the) Arapahoe County Sheri ’s department, local businesses and the city itself,” Gates said.

So far, Gates said she has visited three encampments in the city. One was at the Dry Creek RTD station across from the Jones District, another was at Cottonwood Creek, and the third at deKoevend Park, she said.

“To date, we have discovered some hot spots. So, one being I-25 and Dry Creek, High Line Canal, and Goodson Rec Center (and)

the deKoevend Park area,” Gates said.

District 1 Councilmember Candace Moon said, “I’m very happy that you’re on board. We’ve needed this homeless coordinator position for a long time. e areas you mentioned, two of them are in District 1. And we do see a lot of displaced people.”

e value of collaborating with other cities, including Englewood, Littleton and Sheridan, that are also working to lessen the impact of homelessness was highlighted during the meeting.

“ is is a community problem. It’s not just the City of Centennial,” Gates said. “We really have to come together and work at this.”

e Metro Denver Homeless Initiative’s 2022-2023

State of Homelessness report said the Homeless Management Information System showed 27,860 people accessed services related to homelessness between July 1, 2021, and June 30, 2022.

According to the report, the top causes of people experiencing homelessness are related to economic barriers, evictions, or familial challenges such as relationship issues.

Arapahoe County Commissioner Jessica CampbellSwanson said during a May 17 town hall that in Decem-

Public Notices

to be in the best interest of the County to do so. Additionally, we reserve the right to negotiate optional items/services with the successful bidder.

Please direct any questions concerning this IFB to Carolyn Riggs, Purchasing Supervisor, 303-6607434, criggs@douglas.co.us, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding holidays.

Legal Notice No. 945515

First Publication: June 1, 2023

Last Publication: June 1, 2023

Publisher: Douglas County News-Press Public Notice

them, saying, ‘I have a pamphlet, and I’m here to help.’ So really listening to the person and creating that space that they feel comfortable with me. And that might not happen, but I don’t give up very easily.”

Gates added that she would come back around and check in with the person, as well as make notes about their interests to help build a relationship.

“We’re people, and we’re mucky and messy,” she said. “So, it’s just gonna depend.”

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL (RFP) #024-23 RETIREMENT PLAN CONSULTING SERVICES

The Department of Human Resources in conjunction with the County Manager, hereinafter referred to as the County, respectfully requests proposals from responsible and qualified firms for the provision of retirement plan consulting services on the County’s 401(a) money purchase plans and 457 defined contribution plan.

The RFP documents may be reviewed and/or

ber 2022, Arapahoe County was No. 1 in evictions in the state.

“ at is not an award you want to win,” CampbellSwanson said. “ e number of our unhoused neighbors has doubled in the last two years.”

According to the agreement between Centennial and Arapahoe County, in 2022, the city expressed an interest in collaborating on the new homeless outreach position to provide assistance to unhoused people in Centennial and in areas of the county adjacent to the city.

e agreement explains Centennial agreed to provide annual funding for the position through 2025. e city will pay roughly $100,000 to the county per year.

Centennial also agreed to provide one-time funding of up to $40,000 for the purchase of a vehicle for Gates to use.

“We’re so thrilled to have this position lled and for the work that you’ll be doing,” said Councilmember Christine Sweetland.

Gates’ current projects include developing collateral and community contacts, conducting eld outreach and completing training. She said she is working with Arapahoe County on

printed from the Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System website at www.rockymountainbidsystem.com.

RFP documents are not available for purchase from Douglas County Government and can only be accessed from the above-mentioned website. While the RFP documents are available electronically, Douglas County cannot accept electronic proposal responses.

RFP responses will be received until 4:00 p.m. on Tuesday, June 27, 2023 by Douglas County Government, Finance Department, Purchasing Division, 100 Third Street, Suite 130, Castle Rock, Colorado 80104. Six (6) copies of your

creating a guide for her outreach, as well as working with law enforcement and community organizations that provide outreach to people experiencing homelessness.

“I’ve been collaborating with the city and, of course, our Arapahoe County Sheri ’s O ce to help resolve any complaints that they have received,” Gates said. “I will continue and have been doing outreach to local businesses, nonpro ts, community partners and our encampments.”

Sweetland said she’s heard people say that some people experiencing homelessness are resistant to accepting help.

“But I would assume that it’s a relationship building, because I don’t think I would take help from somebody that just came and gave me a pamphlet,” Sweetland said. “Can you kind of talk about, like, how many touches … outreach that you’ll have to do before you think that maybe help will be accepted and received?”

“ at is so true. And these folks also have been promised, time and time again, that ‘I’m here. I’m your case manager. I’m here to help,’ and it’s just a let down,” Gates responded. “So I’m another person coming to

proposal response must be submitted in a sealed envelope, plainly marked “Request for Proposal (RFP) #024-23, Retirement Plan Consulting Services”. Proposal responses will not be considered which are received after the time stated and any proposals so received will be returned unopened.

Douglas County Government reserves the right to reject any and all proposals, to waive formalities, informalities, or irregularities contained in a said proposal and furthermore, to award a contract for items herein, either in whole or in part, if it is deemed to be in the best interest of the County to do so. Additionally, we reserve the right to negotiate optional items/services with the suc-

Mayor Pro Tem Richard Holt asked if Gates has been introduced to the sheri ’s o ce co-responder program, to which she said she has.

“We’re still trying to gure out what communication looks like and when it’s appropriate,” she said.

Moon said she would appreciate updates from Gates on her progress, including information about what Gates may need.

“I’m happy you’re here, but I have real concerns about making sure that you have everything you need to do this job, because it’s huge,” she said.

Prior to starting this new role, Gates said she previously worked for the City of Lone Tree as its teen court coordinator.

She also worked for the Volunteers of America in a few di erent capacities, including as a case manager for adults experiencing chronic homelessness, as a service coordinator for a ordable housing and as a volunteer coordinator, she said.

“Another lifetime ago, I was an EMT (emergency medical technician) for 17 years,” she said. “I love people. I love talking to people and getting to know them. And this is a population that is really near and dear to my heart.”

cessful vendor.

Please direct any questions concerning this RFP to Carolyn Riggs, Purchasing Supervisor, 303-660-7434, criggs@douglas.co.us, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding holidays.

Legal Notice No. 945516

First Publication: June 1, 2023

Last Publication: June 1, 2023

Publisher: Douglas County News-Press ###

31 June 1, 2023
Legals June 1, 2023 * 2
Highlands Ranch Herald
Gates COURTESY PHOTO
‘I will continue and have been doing outreach to local businesses, nonprofits, community partners and our encampment.’
Vanessa Gates, City of Centennial homeless outreach liaison

JUNE

2023

Carnival Rides: Open Thursday, June 8 from 4:00 pm – 10:30 pm

Festival and Carnival Rides: Friday 4 pm – 10:30 pm

Saturday 10 am – 10:30 pm

Sunday 10 am – 8:30 pm

PARKER’S FAVORITE WEEKEND!

H FAMILY

Groove Mazda MAIN STAGE

– Live Music ALL Day HEADLINERS:

Friday, June 9 presented by 8:15 pm: Still They Ride (Journey Tribute Band)

Saturday, June 10 presented by 8:30 pm: Chris Daniels and The Kings

Sunday, June 11 presented by 5:15 pm: That Eighties Band

THANK

BUY DISCOUNTED UNLIMITED CARNIVAL RIDE WRISTBANDS ONLINE

Thursday Friends & Family Special

4 wristbands for $99

Only available for use on Thursday, June 8

Sold online through 12 noon Wed. May 31

Single-Day Unlimited Carnival Rides: $35 each

Good any one day during the festival

Sold online through 12 noon Wed. June 7

4-Day MEGA Unlimited Carnival Rides: $89 each

Good all 4 days of the festival

PURCHASE DURING THE FESTIVAL

Single-Day Unlimited Carnival Rides: $40 each

TICKETS FOR INDIVIDUAL RIDES

Food, Beverage & Ride Tickets may be purchased at Festival Ticket Booths.

Special Hotel o er from our host hotel, Holiday Inn – Parker – E470/Parker Rd Please

June 1, 2023 32
YOU TO OUR SPONSORS:
8-11,
CARNIVAL RIDES & GAMES: FREE
ADMISSION
H FOOD H EXHIBITS H MUSIC H RIDES
FUN parkerdaysfestival.com Parker Days Festival is brought to you by the Parker Area Chamber of Commerce Foundation
go to ParkerDaysFestival.com
click on Host Hotel tab for more details ®
presented by Stage
Shopping
and
CORE Electric Cooperative Community
supported by EAST MUSIC Stage SPECIALTY APPLIANCE CHEF DEMO STAGE

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