Parker Chronicle 041422

Page 1

Week of April 14, 2022

FREE

DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO

A publication of

ParkerChronicle.net

INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 14 | LIFE: PAGE 16 | CALENDAR: PAGE 19 | SPORTS: PAGE 30

Diana DeGette and other lawmakers grill oil executives

VOLUME 20 | ISSUE 20

Parker council approves new, interactive budget Budget book has links, videos, maps and more BY ELLIOTT WENZLER EWENZLER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

“If the price of gas is driven by the global market, why is the price of oil coming down but the price at the pump is still near record highs? If it’s an issue of supply and demand, wouldn’t that be reflected in the global price of oil as well?” DeGette asked. “Something doesn’t add up.” Oil executives and Democrats, including DeGette, spar over the

Parker residents interested in learning more about where the town’s money goes now have a new tool: an interactive budget complete with videos, links, photos and maps. The town’s $129 million budget is broken down into six sections over 455 pages. “A new focus in the book is to draw people in, to make it more than just a book of numbers,” said Kim Singdahlsen with the finance department. The budget was unanimously approved during an April 4 meeting where Singdahlsen presented the document’s various features to the town council. Throughout the budget book there are links to help navigate readers to different sections of the book. The budget detail section is the biggest portion of the book and provides five-year histories, goals, an explanation of variances between previous years, accomplishments, goals and a list of full-time positions for each department. Other sections include a budget overview; a long-range plan, which

SEE GAS, P6

SEE BUDGET, P5

A gas pump at a station in Littleton. Gasoline prices have spiked in 2022. BY CAITLYN KIM COLORADO PUBLIC RADIO

In Washington, it was a contentious time on Capitol Hill April 6, as six oil and gas executives faced questions from lawmakers about the high cost of gasoline. Democrats focused on the fact companies are making record profits, while Republicans took aim at President Joe Biden’s energy policies.

BEST OF THE BEST

Colorado Congresswoman Diana DeGette chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s oversight panel, which held the hearing. She said high gas prices are constraining “constituents’ budgets and their patience.” As she spoke, DeGette displayed a chart behind her showing the price of crude oil going up and down, even as the price of gas has risen and stayed high, despite crude prices starting to drop.

PHOTO BY ROBERT TANN

VOTE NOW! ParkerChronicle.net


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.