Parker Chronicle May 9, 2024

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Police union blasts sheri , county

A local police union has accused Sheri Darren Weekly and other Douglas County o cials of engaging in unfair labor practices during an e ort to unionize the sheri ’s o ce.

e accusations come as the union — the local Fraternal Order of Police branch — canceled an election that would have al-

lowed sheri ’s o ce employees to choose to be represented by the union.

e union indicated that it may try to reschedule the election in the coming months.

“Despite recent events, we remain committed to moving forward with this important initiative,” the FOP branch wrote on its Facebook page, adding: “We decided that going forward would not be prudent because we believe that

the Sheri and the County have committed multiple unfair labor practices under Colorado Law.”

e union did not respond to requests for comment from the Douglas County News-Press.

Undersheri David Walcher took issue with the union’s characterization of the sheri ’s o ce, saying leaders “didn’t intimidate or ‘interfere’ with anyone or anything.”

Our newsroom wants to know what matters to you this election year

One month ago, newsrooms across the state, including ours, launched an ambitious project: invite the people of Colorado to tell us what they want politicians to talk about in this election, and use their answers to help guide the stories we tell.

So far, more than 3,100 people from around the state have responded to that call and lled out the Voter Voices survey. About 100 of the respondents are readers of Colorado Community Media’s two dozen metro area newspapers. What should candidates for public ofce focus on this year?

“ eir integrity, work ethic, and vision for our country or the entity they will be representing,” said Mindy Mohr, a reader from Arvada. Mohr listed “democracy and good government” as a top concern, with abortion and the economy/ cost of living as important issues as well. e Coloradans who lled out our survey so far make it clear they want politicians to discuss issues like the environment, housing a ordability, immigration, health care and education.

In Walsh, on the southeastern plains, a shortage of health care workers is a driving concern for Rita Hetrick. She runs the long-term care facility in the town of roughly 540 people. Instead of drawing on a local workforce, she relies on pricey sta ng agencies. “We don’t have a stream of cash that’s just available when you’re a small, rural facility.” Hetrick told Voter Voices that state and federal regulations exacerbate the problem and it’s something she wants to see politicians tackle.

Many have also written about their concerns for our democracy itself.

“I want candidates to discuss wholesale reform of our country’s and Colorado’s constitution,” wrote Juan Manuel

VOLUME 22 | ISSUE 22 WEEK OF MAY 9, 2024 FREE VOICES: 14 | LIFE: 16 | CALENDAR: 19 | PUZZLES: 24 PARKERCHRONICLE.NET • A PUBLICATION OF COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
A sign marks the Douglas County Sheri ’s O ce at the Robert A. Christensen Justice Center near Castle Rock, pictured in February.
SEE ALLEGATIONS, P8
PHOTO BY ELLIS ARNOLD
SEE SURVEY, P9

How harmonica helps a lung transplant recipient

A weekly gathering of harmonica players is more than just music for Dean Hutto. It’s a reminder he was given a second chance at life.

Nearly 10 years ago, Hutto, 64 and a Highlands Ranch resident, received a double lung transplant at UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital.

“ at was something that was pretty shocking,’ said Hutto.

A respiratory therapist recommended he join the group, the Harmonicats, at the hospital as part of his recovery. A music lover, Hutto gave it a try.  e group is made up of those who have gone through pulmonary rehabilitation for lung complications. ey exercise their lungs every Tuesday and the gathering has also become a support group.

“Every person that’s in the group appreciates the fact that it’s kind of a brother, sisterhood,” Hutto said.

Originally hosted by a retired respiratory therapist, Hutto has led

the group since the pandemic.

“ e gift that I received is just absolutely incredible,” said Hutto. He is also a Donor Alliance advocate volunteer.

In 2010, Hutto tore his achilles while playing softball. During rehabilitation, Hutto’s therapists noticed he was having di culty breathing. ey suggested he see a doctor.

Hutto didn’t think much of it and thought it was spring allergies and visited his allergist, who told him to get a chest x-ray. His doctor later called and said, “I don’t like what I see.”

A biopsy revealed he had Interstitial Lung Disease.

“ at’s where the fast journey started,” said Hutto.

Interstitial Lung Disease is an umbrella term for a large group of diseases that cause scarring, also known as brosis, of the lungs and in turn, cause sti ness in the lungs, making it harder to breath and get oxygen into the bloodstream, according to the American Lung Association.

SPEAK OUT!

Often, by the time symptoms ap-

pear, lung damage is already substantial and people can develop life threatening complications.

In 2012, the day before anksgiving, he included something else to be thankful for, he was added to the transplant list.

e University of Colorado’s Hospital’s organ transplant team performed 40 lung transplants in all of 2022.

Hutto’s recovery began with 102 staples in his chest and says it’s “an ongoing process” with a daily medication regime.

“You’re trading one big problem out for a lot of little ones,” said Hutto.

Despite the challenges, Hutto says he enjoys sharing his story and hopes to bring awareness to what the nonpro t Donor Alliance does.

Donor Alliance facilitates organ and tissue donation for transplantation in Colorado and most of Wyoming. Nearly 1,300 people are currently waiting for a lifesaving organ transplant and thousands of others are waiting for a tissue transplant.

Last year, more than 300 donors across Colorado and Wyoming provided more than 900 organ transplants and about 1,700 tissue donors

provided more than 100,000 tissue grafts, Heather Burke, spokesperson for Donor Alliance, said.

Anyone can register to be an organ, eye or tissue donor when they say “yes” the next time they obtain or renew their driver license/state ID. People can also register at DonateLifeColorado.org.

“When you get the little heart with the “y” on your driver’s license, it has a very big impact because one person can save up to eight lives through organ donation and save and heal up to 75 lives through tissue donation,” said Burke. “It’s really powerful and we always encourage people to discuss their decision with their family.”

Although National Donate a Life Month was in April, Hutto continues to celebrate the gift he received, encouraging others to register and celebrate the donors and their families. Hutto doesn’t know his donor family but wants them to know they have made a big impact on his and his family’s lives.

“ ings I’ve been able to see that I know I would not have been able to be here for,” said Hutto. “My grandson being born last February and two of my boys getting married.”

May May 9, 2024 2
TAKE OUR ELECTION SURVEY! Help tell our news reporters and editors which issues to focus on in 2024. It only takes a minute. Thank you!
Dean Hutto stands with his wife. Hutto, a Highlands Ranch resident, has become a Donor Alliance advocate volunteer after he received a double lung transplant in 2014. Hutto is celebrating his 10th anniversary in September 2024 and encourages others to register to be an organ, eye and tissue donor. COURTESY OF HEATHER BURKE

Zillow Rolls Out a Home ‘Touring Agreement’ That Doesn’t Comply With Colorado Law

Ever since the March 15th announcement by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) that it had reached a settlement on the massive litigation against it regarding buyer agent commissions, brokers and brokerages have been trying to figure out how they can get buyers to sign an agreement of the type required by that settlement.

Such an agreement would have to provide for payment by buyers of the broker working on their behalf, and that agreement would have to be signed before an agent could show the buyer any homes for sale.

with whom I shared Zillow’s agreement last week.

First, since it has not been approved by the Colorado Real Estate Commission (CREC), Zillow’s form can only be used by brokers if it has been prepared by that broker’s own lawyer. Second, it does not contain the required definitions of working relationships.

I asked Waters what new or changed contracts the Division is working on to comply with the provisions of the NAR settlement, and she replied as follows:

Zillow, which is now a brokerage, not merely a real estate listing site, thinks it has produced an agreement which satisfies that requirement and that buyers would be happy to sign. The essence of it is that it is non-exclusive, lasts only seven days, and does not commit the buyer to paying anything.

Although the “Touring Agreement” is copyrighted, the April 30th blog post by Zillow’s Chief Industry Development Officer, Errol Samuelson, states that “we’re making it available for use to the entire residential real estate industry.”

Above right I have reproduced the one-page agreement, omitting only the non-discrimination clause and the signature lines.

In the blog post, Samuelson acknowledged that “the form of this agreement will vary by state, [but] we’re calling on the industry to adopt a non-exclusive, limited-duration agreement for the initial tours conducted by an agent with a prospective buyer.”

Indeed the form does not comply with Colorado state law in two respects, according to Marcia Waters, who heads the Division of Real Estate at the Colorado Department of Regulatory Affairs,

“It is our position that the NAR settlement doesn't require any changes to our forms. With that said, the Forms Committee is working on some possible revisions to the listing contracts, the contract to buy and sell and the brokerage disclosure to buyer to provide further clarification about compensation. Those revisions will be considered by the Real Estate Commission at their nonrulemaking hearing for the forms in June.” That meeting is at 9 a.m. on June 4th. The requirements established by the NAR settlement are now set to take effect on August 17th.

I like the concept of Zillow’s proposed touring agreement, since the NAR settlement only specifies “an agreement.” Having sent it to the Division of Real Estate and also to Frascona, Joiner, Goodman & Greenstein, PC, the law firm which serves Golden Real Estate and hundreds of other brokerages with legal forms not among those mandated by the CREC, I’m hopeful that one or the other of them will produce a “showing agreement” that we can use.

NAR Releases Additional Rules Pursuant to Settlement

Heretofore, the only guidance brokers had regarding the NAR settlement was that the MLS could no longer display an offer of co-op compensation for listings and that brokers could not show listings to a buyer with first executing a written agreement with that buyer.

Last week we were advised of some additional rules that the MLSs need to follow. Here are the key takeaways.

MLSs may not “create, facilitate, or support any non-MLS mechanism (including by providing listing information to an internet aggregator’s website for such purpose)” that includes “offers of compensation to buyer brokers or other buyer representatives.”

New Homes Can Have Inspection Issues, Too

This will be a good year, I believe, for the developers and builders of new homes. There’s a decent supply, you can choose between spec homes that are already built, or design a home to your specifications if you are not in a rush.

You won’t have to deal with bidding wars, but you also won’t be able to negotiate a price reduction. It’s “list price only” with builders.

Also, you can hire a buyer’s agent, such as my broker associates or me, who will be paid by the builder, so you don’t have to pay for professional representation. Too many buyers of new homes end up regretting that they bought from a builder’s salesperson and didn’t have a professional on their side. The builder’s agent is working for the builder and not in your best interest.

lutely must invest in the cost of a professional home inspector. We have an inspector on our team, Jim Camp, who has decades of experience inspecting new homes for buyers. We recommend him exclusively. New construction is permitted and must pass county or city inspection, but, based on the kinds of defects that Jim has found in new homes, we worry that these inspections can be too cursory.

Without such an document agreeable to buyers, we can expect that buyers will only call listing agents to see listed homes. That scenario would serve neither the industry nor the public. Jim Smith

MLS data may not be used “directly or indirectly” to create a platform containing offer of compensation, and, if that is done, the MLS must terminate the access to the MLS and MLS data by the offending broker or brokerage.

Virtually every brokerage has its own website on which MLS listings are displayed. These websites must not, with or without MLS support, filter the display of listings to exclude individual listings based on the level of compensation offered or to exclude listings by specific brokerages or specific listing agents within a brokerage.

Another mistake buyers make is to think that because a home is new, it doesn’t need to be inspected. You abso-

Jim likes to do a 2-phase inspection. The first inspection would be at the rough-in or pre-drywall stage, and the second or final inspection would be prior to the buyer’s final walk-through with the builder.

As when buying an existing home, money spent on inspections is money well spent, because you might uncover hidden defects, from sewer to attic, that could cost you much more later on.

Call me with your questions.

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Bus assault case spurs preemptive changes in policies

Douglas County School District is proactively changing its bus monitoring policies in response to allegations that a former Littleton School District paraprofessional harmed children with disabilities as they rode the bus.

e district said it will begin randomly checking video feeds from transportation for special education students, as well as have sta speak with students on a random basis about their experiences taking thirdparty transportation.

“We are making improvements as a result of the Littleton situation,”

Chief Operations O cer Rich Cosgrove said at a recent board meeting.

In April, former Littleton Public Schools employee Kiarra Jones, 29,

was charged with third degree assault against a juvenile, a felony. Jones is also alleged to have beat other students who are autistic and non-verbal. Englewood police, the charging agency, continues to investigate the case to see if other children were harmed and if more charges are warranted.

Video footage from March 18 shows Jones on a bus with a student whom she appears to strike multiple times.

Jones has been red from Littleton Public Schools. Meanwhile, parents in the district recently called for the resignation of Superintendent Todd Lambert during an April meeting of the district’s board of education.

paraprofessional,

Cosgrove said the district is making changes to its contracts with third-party providers of transportation services to students to try and prevent harm. He added that contractors already face background checks and safety requirements as district provided transportation.

In a statement from the district, spokesperson Paula Hans said the random video checks will allow the district to “promptly identify any issues and ensure strict compliance with safety guidelines.”

For buses that don’t have video surveillance, Hans said district sta will conduct unannounced interviews with students.

Man shot when driving at police

A driver was treated for a gunshot wound after Englewood police ofcers red at a vehicle being driven toward them at the start of what became a pursuit down Santa Fe Drive.

e pursuit ended with a car crash and a man and woman in custody, according to an Englewood Police Department media release.

Around 11:12 a.m. on April 29, ofcers were at 3325 S. Santa Fe Drive, which is the location of a new storage facility in Englewood, “investigating a suspicious incident report involving” David Sonsalla and a woman, police said in a release Monday afternoon.

“While attempting to contact the involved parties, the driver did not comply with the o cer’s orders and instead drove directly at the ocers, who red their duty weapons in self-defense,” the release said. “It was unknown at that time if o cers struck the driver or not.”

Sonsalla and the woman drove

southbound on Santa Fe Drive, thus starting a pursuit involving other Englewood o cers.

“During the end of the pursuit, the vehicle drove the wrong way, going southbound in northbound lanes until it crashed into two vehicles at Mineral Avenue, sending two people to the hospital with minor injuries,” the press release said.  Sonsalla was taken to the hospital with a gunshot wound, was released from the hospital and will be taken to the Arapahoe County Detention Facility.

“Charges will be nalized as the investigation is completed,” Sonsalla said. “ e female was taken into custody at the original scene and will also be transported to the Arapahoe County Detention Facility on unrelated warrants.”

Englewood police said this is an active investigation and the 18th Judicial District Critical Incident Response Team is investigating the o cer-involved shooting.

“Due to these investigations, no further information is available at this time,” the release said.

May May 9, 2024 4
A former Littleton Public Schools bus Kiarra Jones, was arrested and charged with Crimes Against At-Risk Adult/Juvenile - Third Degree Assault. SHUTTERSTOCK PHOTO

Bill to ban seclusion in Colorado schools defeated

Despite testimony that one Colorado lawmaker called “horrifying,” a bill to ban the practice of shutting students alone inside rooms was defeated at the state Capitol.

State Rep. Regina English, a Colorado Springs Democrat and the main sponsor of House Bill 1167, asked last week that her fellow lawmakers postpone the bill inde nitely, e ectively defeating it.

With just days left in this year’s legislative session, English said the bill was experiencing too much last-minute pushback from defenders of the practice known as seclusion.

ough English didn’t name names, a handful of school district and special education administrators had defended the practice to lawmakers in a hearing last month. e administrators

described seclusion as a “last resort” measure that is sometimes necessary. English pledged to introduce a new bill banning seclusion next year.

“It is my mission to make sure Colorado is the ninth state in the nation to ban this horri c practice used against our students,” she told the House Education Committee in April. e committee voted unanimously to defeat the bill. Several lawmakers said they were voting against the bill reluctantly and only at the sponsor’s request. ey praised English for her courage and said they agreed that seclusion is wrong.

“ e testimony we heard was horrifying,” said Rep. Barbara McLachlan, a Durango Democrat and chair of the House Education Committee. Seclusion, she said, “shouldn’t ever be happening.”

Under current law, Colorado schools are allowed to seclude students in

rooms with the door closed. Sta must monitor students through a window or by video camera. Seclusion rooms must be “free of injurious items” and cannot otherwise be used for storage, custodial, or o ce space.

Students are often placed in seclusion because of their behavior. Available state data shows that young students with disabilities are disproportionately secluded.

English said a case at a popular Denver middle school called McAuli e International School spurred her to sponsor the bill. An investigation by Denver Public Schools found that McAuli e sta were placing students in seclusion without proper supervision. A former Denver school board member told lawmakers that the seclusion room at McAuli e “reminded me of a prison.”

e former board member, Auon’tai Anderson, was among the parents

and elected o cials who testi ed last month in favor of the bill to ban seclusion. e most emotional testimony came from mothers who said their children with disabilities had been secluded.

e mothers spoke about how their children soiled themselves inside seclusion rooms because they were so scared and how, even years later, their kids had nightmares and post-traumatic stress disorder.

Parents said they were unaware their children were being secluded, in part because the schools didn’t use the word seclusion. Instead, schools referred to the rooms in which their children were shut inside by innocuous names like “the relaxation room” and “the opportunity room.”

Chalkbeat is a nonpro t news site covering educational change in public schools.

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Cute Pets

CONTEST

Sgt. Michael Brian Du y ‘had a bright future ahead’

Whether it was being a father, a son or serving his community as a law enforcement o cer, Michael Brian Du y was passionate in everything he did. Exemplifying dedication and integrity throughout his life is just one of the many ways those closest to Du y describe the sergeant with the Douglas County Sheri ’s O ce.

“We just want to say how proud we are of Michael,” his parents Kevin and Christine Du y told the Highlands Ranch Herald. “He was a wonderful son, brother, father and a dedicated o cer.”

Du y, 43, passed away in his home on the morning of April 18 while recovering from a heart attack. A memorial was held in Parker last week.

“Mike’s passing is a tremendous loss for our entire community,” Sheri Darren Weekly said in a statement.

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A 22-year veteran of the department, many knew him as “Mike,” and his warmth and zest for life touched everyone he encountered.  e blond-haired and blue eyed Du y was born in Denver and spent his entire life calling Colorado home. He grew up in Castle Rock and graduated from Douglas County High School.

Du y had a passion for sports, playing football and baseball. Coached by his father and uncle, he was the quarterback for his football team. His baseball teammates nicknamed him “ ash” because he was the fastest runner on the team.

Du y’s father, Chief Kevin Du y, has been with the Douglas County Sheri ’s O ce for over 35 years and Du y followed in his fathers footsteps.

Du y got his start with the sheri ’s o ce in 2002, working in detentions. He moved to patrol in 2003 before becoming a detective, working in the Special Victims Unit and the Major Crimes/Person Crimes Unit.

“He was one of the best investigators I’d ever seen,” said Weekly. “He also took great pride in nding truth and bringing justice for victims. His career was on the rise, and he had a bright future ahead of him.”

Sgt. Michael Brian Du y was with the Douglas County Sheri ’s O ce for over two decades, working in detentions, patrol and as a detective.

Du y was promoted to corporal in 2019 and rose to the rank of sergeant in 2021. en in 2023, he transferred to Internal A airs.

His colleagues, friends and family are mourning the loss of Du y, whose camaraderie left a lasting impression on all those around him.

“Life was a puzzle that he knew how to solve,” Du y’s sister, Jami, said in a statement. “He walked through his life with certainty, logic, love and compassion.”

Du y leaves behind his 14-yearold daughter, Lyndy, and “his best bro,” 11 year-old son Connor, who will miss “the best dad in the whole world.”

In his obituary, it says Du y’s serious nature was overruled by the joys of fatherhood, “where he would sing loudly, wrestled gently and laugh without restraint and love unconditionally.”

Du y is also survived by Lyndy and Connor’s mom, Milly Wells, their grandma, “Moppy” Wendy Martin, and his large, loving family.

“We also want to thank the department, county and the community for all the love and support given to our family during these tragic times,” said Kevin and Christine.

May May 9, 2024 6
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COURTESY OF THE DOUGLAS COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

The Denver North Star’s print edition publishes mid-month. The G.E.S. Gazette can toggle between English and Spanish.

SHUTTERSTOCK IMAGE

Two Denver publications join Colorado Community Media

ity, we knew they would be in good hands at CCM,” he said.

Colorado Community Media — made up of 23 publications serving cities and towns in the Denver metro area — is expanding.

e Denver North Star and the G.E.S. Gazette, established in 2019 and 2021 as free monthly publications and digital products, are joining the portfolio. e National Trust for Local News, Colorado Community Media’s parent company, completed the acquisition of those titles on May 1.

e monthly North Star is Denver’s largest neighborhood publication, and the G.E.S. Gazette, which transitioned to digital-only earlier this year, is a bilingual community publication serving the Globeville and Elyria-Swansea neighborhoods. ey are in close geographic proximity to other publications operated by CCM, including the Washington Park Pro le and Life on Capitol Hill.  e publications were owned and operated by David Sabados and his wife, Emma Donahue, and were founded in response to a lack of community media in North Denver, Sabados said. He told the Colorado Community Media sta during a meeting that when they began looking for a buyer for the publications about a year ago, CCM immediately seemed like the right t.

“We took a long look at Denver’s and the state’s media landscape of hyperlocal publications and ended up where we started: when we thought about who we trusted to keep the papers’ community feel and ensure their long-term viabil-

Sabados and Donahue will serve as advisers to aid in the transition. Editor Kathryn White and others involved with the North Star and Gazette also will continue working with the CCM operation.

“I’ve long been a fan of the Denver North Star and the G.E.S. Gazette, and what David and his team have done for that community,” Colorado Community Media Publisher Linda Shapley said. “I’m thrilled to take the baton and do what I can to make those publications even stronger.”

e plan is to soon merge the websites for the North Star and Gazette into Colorado Community Media’s site, which serves as the home for all of CCM’s two dozen titles — including the Arvada Press, Golden Transcript, Parker Chronicle and Littleton Independent, among others.

e acquisition of the G.E.S. Gazette is Colorado Community Media’s second publication serving Spanish-speaking audiences. CCM launched its rst bilingual news product in January — La Ciudad, a newsletter in Spanish and English that primarily serves Commerce City. According to the Pew Research Center, 21% of the nation’s 65 million Hispanic adults get their news in Spanish.

e National Trust for Local News, a nonpro t dedicated to acquiring, transforming and conserving local newspapers, bought Colorado Community Media in 2021. In fact, May 1 also was the three-year anniversary of that acquisition.

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Jane Withers, Denver’s famed ‘Hub Cap Annie,’ dies in Littleton

“Hub Cap Annie” was once a xture on Denver’s East Colfax Avenue.

It was the alter ego of Jane Withers, known for donning a Viking-style costume — a headdress, horns and long gold braids.

“Who would wear that costume if they didn’t have a sense of humor? I think that’s what I liked about her,” said Chris Stieler, a volunteer at the Littleton nursing home where Withers lived her nal days.

Withers, in her 80s, died on April 25, leaving behind a lively story and a legacy of local fame and redemption.

“She’s di erent from anyone I’ve ever met. She always had a story to tell, but she was always concerned about others,” Stieler said, describing her as “crazy, feisty, wild — but de nitely a caring person.”

Born in Cleveland and raised in Florida, Withers headed to Denver after getting permission to open a Hub Cap Annie store as a franchise, Stieler said. e business sold used hubcaps for cars back when many cars were equipped with the covers for wheels. Her store arrived in the

ALLEGATIONS

“I personally had dozens of employees reach out to me to thank the sheri ’s o ce for helping them understand the situation,” Walcher told the News-Press.

Commissioner George Teal, one of the county’s three elected leaders, said the county’s actions were legally reviewed.

“Everything we did was reviewed by our attorney prior to doing it to make sure we were not in violation of either state or federal labor laws,” Teal told the News-Press.

‘Sharing our opinions’

Parker Chronicle

A legal newspaper of general circulation in Parker, Colorado, the Chronicle is published weekly on Thursday by Colorado Community Media, 115 Wilcox St., Suite 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104.

Send address change to: Parker Chronicle, 750 W. Hampden Ave., Suite 225, Englewood, CO 80110

Union representation of the sheri ’s o ce could enable employees to negotiate salaries, bene ts and other aspects of their jobs through collective bargaining.

In a document, the local union branch, FOP Lodge 47, alleged that the sheri has “bombarded employees with emails containing illegal and misleading statements” about the FOP while “using county resources and email addresses.”

e document, posted by the FOP on Facebook, also accuses county Commissioners Teal, Abe Laydon and Lora

omas of creating a YouTube video us-

Mile High City in the early 1980s, where she operated the business until 2008, becoming well-known along the way.

She boasted degrees in psychology and nursing from the University of Florida and worked as a registered nurse, but wanted to “start a di erent life, I believe,” Stieler said.

Her move west saw her grow enamored with hubcaps.

Stieler, who met Withers nine years ago, once said to her: “If I asked you what the hubcap looked like for a 1964 Plymouth, would you be able to tell me?

“And she was able to,” Stieler said.

Her business life took a seedy turn, dealing in stolen hubcaps, Stieler said.

at included getting them “o of cars in the parking lot of Mile High Stadium during Broncos’ games,” Withers was quoted as saying in Car and Driver magazine. After police raided her store in a sting operation, she was charged with a felony and convicted, the magazine wrote.

But she pushed on. And she began using her experiences to inspire others, becoming a motivational speaker and making it a point to hire employees who needed mentoring and a second chance, according to the LEADER magazine from

ing public funds “designed to intimidate and mislead voters about the collective bargaining process and the election.”

at’s an apparent reference to a commissioners’ video message released in March, where the commissioners argued that unionizing would hamper the interests of sheri ’s employees and the public.

In response to the accusation, Teal said o cials used resources allocated to the commissioners’ communications budget to make the video.

“Sharing our opinions is what the people of Douglas County expect from us and we wanted to inform them about the collective bargaining petition,” Teal said. “All of which is allowed under Colorado and federal labor laws by the way.”

e FOP also alleged that the county hired outside attorneys to conduct “antiunion” meetings.

Walcher pushed back on the idea that o cials’ actions were improper.

“We attempted to educate our employees so that they could make informed decisions. is included training that the majority of our deputies and sergeants attended,” Walcher said.

e document is labeled for the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment.

e department con rmed that the FOP’s document was led but declined to provide a copy of it to

Life Care, the nursing home company that housed her in recent years.

“I think she always wanted to redeem herself in a sense,” Stieler said. “She sure made up her mind that she was going to be a bene t and help other people.”

She was one of the founders of the Colorado Women’s Chamber of Commerce, and photos show her with former o cials — U.S. senators, Denver Mayor Federico Peña and Colorado governors, Stieler said.

Even when she would slip into confusion amid dementia in her later years, she “would still think she was going to give a lecture that evening, even up to last week,” Stieler said the day after she passed.

“I just thought that was interesting that that was in the forefront of her mind,” Stieler added.

At the Life Care Center of Littleton where she lived and had many friends, Withers will be missed.

Stieler, a 72-year-old former real-estate agent, remembers Withers’ irreverent comments and what people around her called “Jane-isms,” Stieler said.

“She’s one of a kind,” Stieler said. “And I’ll miss her sense of humor and her stories and just spending time with her.”

the News-Press, citing that it regards a pending matter.

County’s accusation

e county has also argued that the FOP misled employees, leading them to believe the sheri supported unionization e orts when he did not.

“ is trickery by the union caused many employees to sign their names in support of a union because they were falsely led to believe Sheri Weekly supported it,” Teal alleged in the commissioners’ video message.

e sheri ’s o ce provided the NewsPress the letter that Teal apparently referred to.

“In the spirit of transparency and support, I met with Sheri Weekly to share the survey results and discuss our proposed course of action. Sheri Weekly expressed his continued support for us and the FOP,” said the letter, signed as “president” of the local FOP branch.

Deborah Takahara, spokesperson for the sheri ’s o ce, reiterated Teal’s concern that the statement was misleading, saying that “employees have expressed confusion about the sheri ’s stance.” Teal had expressed concern that “unionization will endanger public safety” and argued that FOP “politics” could push deputies out of the sheri ’s o ce.

May May 9, 2024 8
FROM PAGE 1

Ramirez Anzures of Denver. “We need to overhaul them to incorporate reforms like more seats, instantruno elections, robust publiclynanced elections, and proportional representation.”

We’re also asking how much condence people have in elections, both how they are conducted in Colorado, and around the country. e people responding so far are telling us they have great faith in our state’s election system, but a lot more doubt about whether the election will be conducted fairly nationwide.

e Voter Voices survey is being conducted by 60 newsrooms statewide from Fort Collins to Pueblo, Salida and Alamosa and from Sterling and Kiowa to Grand Junction, Durango and Nucla.

As Regan Tuttle, owner and editor of the San Miguel Basin Forum, put it: “My community is very remote and rural. ey tend to feel that nobody listens. I felt the survey would

give them a chance to speak and feel heard …”

e project is led by the nonpro t Colorado News Collaborative (COLab) and CPR.

e survey will remain open through this year’s election campaigning, as newsrooms continue to record their communities’ priorities and present what we learn to our readers and listeners.

e goal is not only to respond to what Coloradans statewide and locally say matters to them in our election reporting, but also to challenge candidates to respond directly to voter priorities and concerns.

We invite you not just to ll out the Voter Voices survey, but also to pass it on; share the link with others you know whose opinions we should hear. Colorado Community Media and its two dozen newspapers across the Denver are participating.

You can take the survey at: https://modules.wearehearken. com/cpr/embed/11600/share

9 May 9, 2024
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Littleton
Westminster resident Janice Barker drops her ballot in the collection box outside of the Motor Vehicle o ce last year on Nov. 7, Election Day. PHOTO BY SCOTT TAYLOR
SURVEY

Female student team creates device with goal of averting wildlife crashes

ey may not have their licenses yet, but four young STEM School Highlands Ranch high schoolers are working to eliminate one of the worst fears for Colorado drivers: hitting wildlife.

e all-female student team, who call themselves STEM’s Rubber Duckies, have designed an infrared device that can detect wildlife and alert drivers. e idea stemmed from a love for animals and a passion to increase safety for everyone on the road.

“Just with our interesting approaches that our teenage minds can create, we are able to innovate in ways that aren’t seen before and nd solutions that haven’t been found before and create our own impact,” sophomore Bri Scoville said.

e team competed in the “Samsung Solve For Tomorrow” contest where they became state nalists. Sophomore Siddhi Singh, who started the team, said the Rubber Duckies didn’t think they were going to make it that far because they came into the competition late.

As the team advanced, they won thousands of dollars in Samsung gear to help them with their project. Although they didn’t advance to the

national nals, the Colorado team have until next March to continue working on their device.

“I wouldn’t necessarily say that we failed,” freshman Robyn Ballheim said. “Because we don’t really fail until we give up and I think if we keep pursuing this as far as we can, we’re gonna get there eventually.”

Initially, the device was planned to repel wildlife away from cars by emitting a sound with a cost e ective, sustainable and accurate animal detection and driver alert system. rough their research process, the team found that sound didn’t do much to deter animals.

So, the team switched to a driver-awareness system. ey programmed a sensor to track motion to trigger a warning light. ey then implemented a more intricate algorithm that clumped speci c temperature data to track animal heat motion with a special camera and calculate if it was getting closer or further from the road.

With arti cial intelligence rapidly progressing, the team used that to their advantage.

“We basically decided to implement a blacklist system,” said Singh. “Whatever it would detect, if it doesn’t match what the IR camera is

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With the help of their computer science teacher, four young high schoolers from STEM School Highlands Ranch designed a device to detect wildlife and protect drivers from collisions and became state winners in the Samsung Solve For Tomorrow competition. PHOTO BY HALEY LENA SEE STEM TEAM, P11

STEM TEAM

inputting, it would basically blacklist it so it wouldn’t be caught up by the main camera.”

As the team spoke to di erent sources, many raised doubts. e doubts were centered around real concerns, such as snow or fog obstructing the view of animals, but Dhriti Sinha, a sophomore, said it only pushed the team to look at new perspectives and adapt to changes.

Singh believes a contributing factor to the team’s success was the fact teammates were able to collaborate with one another and were open to pivoting their thinking.

“If you really believe in a problem and you really believe in making a

di erence, you have to be willing to adapt,” said Ballheim.

Computer science teacher Tylor Chacon, who sponsors the project, said wildlife-vehicle collisions are hurting both animals and people and it’s a problem that is taken on by governments and large corporations.

“We didn’t realize how big of an issue it was until we got the chance to talk to CDOT,” said Chacon.

CDOT is the Colorado Department of Transportation. Singh learned from CDOT that wildlife-vehicle collisions are a top concern.

In 2022, CDOT’s annual roadkill report recorded 7,338 animal deaths throughout the entire state. In region one, which includes Douglas County, there were 778 reported deaths. And, in Douglas County alone, there were 179 deer hit.

One of CDOT’s environmental managers told the team that these kinds of collisions cost Coloradoans up to $80 million every year.

As the team further developed their device, it looked at Tesla’s open patents that focus on how Teslas detect objects to detect objects.

“With our system, we would essentially identify problem areas in the photo by cross referencing our heat data, the distance data and the object tracking, and using AI to classify it and if all that data checks out, then we can say there’s an accurate chance that an animal is moving into your eld of view,” said Chacon. e team strapped all the components of their device onto a remote control car and with permission of the school’s therapy dog, Daisy, put the device to the test. As the device approached Daisy, a sound alerted

the driver.

Looking ahead, Scoville said the team would like to use LiDAR – Light Detection and Ranging technology – because it can detect distance as well as a FlIR thermography camera.

Aimed at lessening the burden on the state, the team said the device could be put in vehicles. For current cars, a micro controller connected to the speaker would receive signals transmitted from the camera. For future cars, it would utilize the same algorithm, but use existing car technologies for cost reduction and sustainability.

“Once we can show some accurate results with raw data, we want to start lobbying to see if the government would adopt our technology and maybe even if regulators would require that technology in future cars,” said Chacon.

11 May 9, 2024
FROM PAGE 10

The picture of happiness

Elizabeth photographer helps capture moments worth keeping

Kimberly Schlichting, of Elizabeth, proudly marks her 15-year milestone as the owner of rough Your Eyes Photography, her hometown portrait studio.

For Kimberly, photography is not merely a profession but the realization of a lifelong passion. “I’ve loved photography all my life,” she said, reminiscing about her formative years spent in the darkroom of her high school, where the process of lm development ignited her creative spirit. “I really loved being in

the darkroom and developing the lm I’d just shot. Watching images come to life on paper was the best feeling.”

After graduating from high school, Kimberly delved into the world of professional photography at a highend studio. During the busy holiday season, she found her schedule overly crowded with families being booked for sessions in very short amounts of time.

“I realized that with the investment people were making into their legacies with their portraits that it was completely ridiculous to only spend ve minutes with each family,” she said.

It was during this time she knew she wanted to one day open her own portrait studio to give families the time and treatment they deserved. “I wanted to get to know the people

I was photographing, build that relationship and be a part of the best memories in their lives and celebrate them along the way.”

Today, Kimberly’s expertise is recognized by her peers, as she holds memberships in organizations such as the Professional Photographers of America (PPA) and the Professional Photographers Guild of Colorado Springs (PPGCS). She has served in multiple board positions with the PPGCS and is currently the organization’s membership director.

Her dedication is evident in her educational accolades, including the Educational Fellowship of Photography through the PPGCS, ongoing studies for her master’s of photography through PPA and a merit earned through the International Print Competition (IPC) with the PPA.

Beyond her studio, Kimberly shares her extensive knowledge, of-

fering courses in both smartphone photography and basic photography for kids.

With a keen eye for detail and a genuine passion for preserving memories, Kimberly nds immense joy in photographing families, especially those with pets and children.

“Kids are so fun and innocent,” she mused. “ ey aren’t jaded yet and are just honest and brilliant. I get to be a kid again when I photograph them.” As a dog lover, Kimberly delights in incorporating family pets into her shoots and is often accompanied by her own furry friends during editing sessions.

Headshots and branding sessions for entrepreneurs and small business owners is a niche Kimberly also thoroughly enjoys. “I love helping them put their best foot forward, coming up with what they want their

May May 9, 2024 12
Elizabeth resident Kimberly Schlichting is the owner/photographer at Through Your Eyes Photography, a local business marking 15 years since it opened. PHOTO COURTESY OF KIMBERLY SCHLICHTING
SEE PHOTOGRAPHER, P13

clients to see when looking at their images. I love seeing their personality and passion come to life and shine through from their sessions to their nal portfolio.”

Inspired by the local community, Kimberly draws from both newcomers seeking connection and longtime residents with stories to share. “I love meeting new people,” she says, “I love the rst responders and the eclectic group of business owners. I love our local events where everyone can enjoy themselves. I also love how we all come together when times are tough and when there are people in need.”

Re ecting on the evolution of photography over the years, Kimberly acknowledges the impact of technological advancements, from the rise of cell phones to the recent strides in AI. Yet, amidst these changes, the enduring appeal of professional portraits remains constant. While sel es and snapshots may abound, Kimberly nds that families still want the tangible beauty of family portraits to adorn their walls and to pass down through generations. Kimberly sees each session as an opportunity to celebrate the love, laughter and legacies that de ne a family’s history.

For Kimberly, each session is an opportunity to capture the magic of life’s eeting moments — the laughter of children, the bond between generations, and the undeniable love shared within a family.

PHOTOGRAPHER Please

Despite the challenges posed by the area’s growth, Kimberly nds solace in witnessing the next generation’s desire to put down roots and contribute to their hometown’s legacy. “I love seeing kids that grew up here wanting to stay here,” she said. “ ey’re wanting to buy a home and start a business in the town they are from.”

It’s these moments, frozen in time through her lens, that continue to inspire and fuel her passion for photography, ensuring that every image tells a story worth preserving for a lifetime.

rough Your Eyes Photography is located at 276 E Kiowa Ave #600 in Elizabeth and more information can be found at tyephoto.com.

13 May 9, 2024
A pet portrait taken by Kimberly Schlichting, owner/photographer at Through Your Eyes Photography in Elizabeth.
FROM PAGE 12
PHOTO COURTESY OF KIMBERLY SCHLICHTING
support these amazing local businesses

Adaptation and resetting expectations

Change is an inevitable part of life. From personal growth to professional development, we constantly encounter situations that require us to pivot, adapt and course correct. Whether it’s shifting market trends, evolving technologies or unforeseen challenges, the ability to recognize when change is necessary and adjust our approach accordingly is essential for success.

At the core of this ability lies the human mind’s remarkable capacity to perceive change and understand its implications. Our brains are wired to detect patterns, anticipate shifts and respond to new information. is innate cognitive ability allows us to recognize when our current strategies or approaches are no longer effective and when it’s time to pivot. One of the key aspects of navigating change is knowing when to pivot. It requires a willingness to let go of old habits, beliefs or strategies that may no longer serve us. is can be a daunting prospect, as it often involves stepping into the unknown and embracing uncertainty. However, it is precisely this willingness to

WINNING

embrace change that enables us to adapt and thrive in dynamic environments. Course correction is essential when navigating change. It involves making minor adjustments to our trajectory to stay on course towards our goals. Just as a pilot constantly adjusts the plane’s heading to reach its destination, we must be willing to reassess our approach and make necessary tweaks along the way. is requires humility, selfawareness, and a willingness to learn from our mistakes.

Modifying our approach is often necessary when faced with change. What worked in the past may no longer be e ective in the current landscape. erefore, we must be open to experimenting with new strategies, methodologies or techniques to achieve our objectives. is exibility and adaptability are critical for success in today’s rapidly changing world.

However, perhaps the most challenging aspect of navigating change is resetting our expectations. Change often disrupts our preconceived notions, plans or timelines, forcing us to recalibrate our expectations accordingly. is can be a humbling experience, as it requires us to acknowledge that things may not always go as planned and that setbacks and delays are a natural part of the process.

Resetting expectations also involves managing our mindset and emotions. It’s easy to feel discouraged or frustrated when faced with unexpected obstacles or setbacks. However, maintaining a positive attitude and focusing on the opportunities that change presents can help us stay resilient and motivated in the face of adversity.

E ective change management requires clear communication and transparency. Leaders must communicate openly with their teams about the reasons for change, the desired outcomes and the steps required to achieve them. is helps build trust, alignment and buy-in among team members, fostering a culture of collaboration and resilience.

Navigating change requires a combination of exibility, adaptability and resilience. It involves recognizing when change is necessary, pivoting as needed, course correcting along the way and modifying our approach as circumstances evolve. It requires resetting our expectations and managing our mindset and emotions e ectively. By embracing change as an opportunity for growth and learning, we can navigate even the most challenging of circumstances with con dence and resilience.

How have any recent changes in your life reshaped the way that you see yourself changing or growing? I would love to hear your story at gotonorton@gmail.com, and when we can embrace and adapt as needed to the changes around us, 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.

Miners Alley shows ‘The Full Monty’

Hearing the name “ e Full Monty” probably conjures up a very speci c set of images for most people. Namely, six men whom you wouldn’t think of as strippers doing just that. And to be honest, it’s not like the story isn’t about that.

But as Nick Sugar, director of the musical version at Miners Alley Performing Arts Center, explains it, stripping is by no means the only thing the show is about.

“ ere are several journeys going on in this show — not just the men, but the women who have been there alongside them the whole time,” he said. “People are going to show up expecting one thing and they’re going to leave saying, ‘I didn’t see that coming.’”

“It really does touch on a lot of social issues in a sneaky way,” added David Nehls, music director. “It

COMING ATTRACTIONS

deals with the way see ourselves as men, homophobia, misogyny and body image.”

“ e Full Monty” runs at Miners Alley, 1100 Miners Alley in Golden, through Sunday, June 2. Performances are at 7:30 p.m. ursday through Saturday and 2 p.m. on Sunday. e show is rated R and recommended for audiences 18-years-old and older.

Based on the 1997 British lm, this musical version has been Americanized and takes place in Bu alo, New York. It follows six unemployed steelworkers who need to make some money fast, so they decide to put on a one-night-only strip

show. e cast includes Rory Pierce, Annie Dwyer, Alejandro Roldan and Kelly Alayne Dwyer.

e show is the rst musical in Miners Alley’s new location and it’s the perfect place for this show, which features live musicians playing all the music written by David Yazbek.

“ ere are live, professional musicians playing what audiences are hearing and these guys work so hard,” Sugar said. “It takes a village to put a production like this on and everyone has come through to gure out how to best do this on the new stage. We just couldn’t do the show with the integrity the script calls for in the old space.”

e musical numbers might be the show-stoppers, but the book, written by Terrence McNally, gives every character a true personality of their own and allows them to grow

as the show unfolds.

“It’s great seeing people come together in adverse situations, which is something we can all relate to now,” Nehls said. “I think the stage show has more heart than the lm.” Get tickets for the musical at https://minersalley.com/shows/ the-full-monty/.

Arvada director hosts Colorado Film Premiere Arvada resident Christopher Fitzpatrick, the director, editor and producer of the independent music documentary “Oklahoma Breakdown,” is hosting the Colorado premiere of the documentary at the Landmark Mayan eatre, 110 N. Broadway in Denver. e event will begin at 6:30 p.m. on ursday, May 16, followed by a concert by Mike

May May 9, 2024 14 VOICES LOCAL
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Clarke Reader

Douglas County Garden Club — grow with us!

Whether you are a Master Gardener, a fairly experienced gardener, or want to learn the basics, the Douglas County Garden Club (DCGC) offers education, service opportunities, and fun. Guests are invited to attend monthly meetings and new members are welcome.

e annual DCGC Plant Sale is scheduled for Saturday, June 9 at Festival Park from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Annuals, perennials, herbs, vegetables, house plants, and container gardens will be available for purchase. Funds from this sale will be used for educational programs and community service projects.

e club generally meets the rst Tuesday afternoon each month from 1-3 pm at a location in Douglas County such as the library in Castle Rock, Castle Pines or Parker. Meetings feature a well-quali ed speaker or special activity. Topics have included caring for houseplants, sustainable landscaping, ower show designs, water gardening, composting, and the use of medicinal herbs. ere is time for gardening questions

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Support Calvarese is year’s CD4 election provides a unique opportunity for us to move forward in Congress. With Ken Buck’s resignation, we can gain support in Congress for items important to those of us that live in CD4. ese include:

and answers.

e club service projects allow members to use gardening skills while contributing to the community. e ower containers outside the Help and Hope Center and the Castle Rock Museum are planted and maintained by the club. Members also work the community garden at Glover Park in Castle Rock and volunteer at the Colorado Agricultural Leadership Foundation (CALF) at Lowell Ranch, south of downtown Castle Rock. Volunteers help maintain the beautiful owers outside AdventHealth Castle Rock.

ere are also social outings called Out and About. ese include garden tours, restaurant and picnic lunches, trips to garden centers, outings to the Denver Botanical Gardens, and more.

Annual dues are $25. Collected funds are used in part to host speakers, support state and national garden clubs, and beautify Douglas County. For additional information and program topics go to www. douglascountygardenclub.org. We dig Douglas County!

Support for a tax structure that can provide the funds for infrastructure improvements, a ordable health care that doesn’t bankrupt middleclass families when needs arise, and brings jobs back to the U.S. Trisha Calvarese will work to bring these bene ts to our district. We have seen over the past year that allowing politicians to make health care decisions for citizens is intolerable. Trisha understands that abortion is health care, and she will work to bring decisions back to the patient, the doctor, and to those that are close to them.

BAUMGARTNER

OBITUARIES

Carol Ann (Santoro) Baumgartner

June 6, 1940 - April 26, 2024

Carol Ann (Santoro) Baumgartner, 83, of Parker, Colorado, passed away peacefully amongst family and friends on Friday, April 26, 2024. Born on June 5, 1940, in Waterbury, Connecticut, Carol was the daughter of the late Leonard Santoro and Gilda Santoro (Mastrantuone).

Carol married Gerald (Jerry) O. Baumgartner on September 2, 1967, and had two children, Je rey and Jennifer.

Carol and her family moved to Colorado in 1971. After moving to the Parker area in 1976, Carol’s career centered on the town, which has developed into a vital suburb south of Denver that is now home to more than 67,000 residents.

After serving as a town volunteer for a year, Carol was appointed as Parker’s rst fulltime employee, as the Town Clerk, when the town was incorporated in 1981. She served in that role until her retirement more than

POWELL

four decades later.

In addition to her dedication to the Town of Parker, Carol was passionate about her beloved family. She enjoyed taking care of the household’s many cats, loved to join her family for summer sojourns to Waterbury and to Green Hill Beach, Rhode Island, and relished taking frequent trips “up the hill.”

Carol is survived by her husband, Jerry; two children, Je rey Baumgartner and Jennifer Eschelbacher; three grandchildren, Rachel Eschelbacher and Jack & Benjamin Baumgartner; and her brother, Vito (Billy) Santoro.

A Celebration of Life for Carol was held Wednesday, May 8, 2024, from 1 p.m. – 4 p.m. at the Pace Center in Parker (20000 Pikes Peak Avenue, Parker, Colorado, 80138)

In lieu of owers, donations may be made to the Denver Dumb Friends League (https://www.dd .org/donation-center/).

Gary W. Powell

December 9, 1940 - April 17, 2024

Gary Powell of Centennial died peacefully at home on April 17, 2024.

have access to adequate and clean water.

Finally, we are the rst generation where our grandchildren will not be able to own a home. Home ownership provides most families the funds necessary to live comfortably in retirement. Trisha will work to correct this. Further, she will work to strengthen Social Security and Medicare so they will be there when we need them.

Trisha has the background, Washington experience, and drive to lead CD4 forward and make democracy work for all of us.

CD4 depends critically on access to clean water for both farming and our developing communities. Trisha will work tirelessly to ensure we

John Christensen, Highlands Ranch

Conservatives, consider Calvarese I have been inspired by recent letters describing why it may not make sense to elect a Republican to Congress from Congressional District 4 (Douglas County and the Eastern Plains). One more reason is that

SJAASTAD

For complete obituary, visit sbmortuary.com/obituary/Gary-Powell

Barbara Louise Sjaastad October 30, 1931 - April 24, 2024

SJAASTAD, BARBARA LOUISE nee MENGES, 92, passed away on April 24, 2024, at Pine Grove Crossing Assisted Living in Parker, CO. She is survived by her three children, Sara, David (Beth), and Don (Betsy); ve grandchildren, Christian (Jennifer), Kevin (Brittany), Dan (Courtney), Emma, and Grace; and four great-grandchildren. She is predeceased by her husband, Gerald Don Sjaastad (Jerry), of 57 years whom she married at the Upper Dublin Lutheran Church in Ambler, PA, in 1952.

Barbara was born in 1931 to Elmer and Louise Menges in Philadelphia, PA, and attended the Germantown Friends school until H.S. graduation in 1949. She attended Hood College until graduation in 1955 with a degree in History & Political Science. She later earned her Master’s degree in Education

at Colorado College. She began her lifelong career of teaching in 1958 at Douglas Valley Elementary School on the Air Force Academy. Her favorite grade to teach was 3rd grade. In the years near the end of her teaching career, she mentored new teachers just nishing their training.

Following her husband’s Air Force career moves, Barbara lived in many locations throughout the United States. She was an active member and leader of the Elbert Woman’s Club as well as the Elbert Presbyterian Church while living on her ranch in Elbert County, Colorado.

A private graveside service will be held at the United States Air Force Academy. In lieu of owers, memorial contributions may be sent to the Elbert Presbyterian Church or the Ambler Symphony.

15 May 9, 2024
Place an Obituary for Your Loved One.303-566-4100
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How Cinderella City shaped the modern mall

escribed as a “city under a roof” by devoted amateur historian Josh Goldstein, Cinderella City in Englewood was once one of the largest and most innovative shopping malls in the country.

Created by developer Gerri Von Frellick, Cinderella City opened for business in 1968 and was mostly demolished in 1998. Its history, though short and controversial, helped shape the foundation of the modern mall.

“I think it was well known in the

mall and shopping center industry that Cinderella City was more than a mall, and that was seen by a lot of different people, and who knows how that was taken by generations of urban planners and architects and developers,” said Goldstein, who works as an architectural software engineer.

“ ere were a lot of good and bad things from this mall that we should take as lessons.”

The history

Jack Bu ngton, program director for supply chain management at the University of Denver, said the evolution of American shopping malls began after World War II.

“A highway system was built in the United States and people started moving out in the suburbs and then the rst generation of malls came about, which were strip malls,” Buington said.

In the 1970s and 1980s, a timespan during which Cinderella City was operating, the more traditional style of malls came into the picture.

“Instead of being a strip, it was a single facility, typically cornerstoned by a big department store like JCPenney or something like that,” Bu ngton said.

Goldstein said it took eight years to actually open Cinderella City, as it replaced Englewood’s “beloved city park” and many residents didn’t see a need for a massive shopping center.

Once opened, however, in the rst half of its life, Cinderella City, or “New Englewood,” was a bustling enclosed metropolis.

Divided by color into ve sub-malls so it would be easy to navigate, the space was essentially a rainbow of activity and amenities, some unique to the times, including a large event space, grand fountain, hundreds of

retail shops, o ce space, a massive parking deck and more.

“Cinderella City encapsulated the idea that a mall could be more than a shopping center,” Goldstein said. “It was the biggest mall Von Frellick had built and I think for just a little bit it was the biggest mall in the country, possibly the world.”

Goldstein said the project was also very community-focused as it had outposts of the Englewood Police Department, re department and high school and it featured permanent handprints and busts of locals who helped make the project a reality.

“So it did really well and it did make the splash and impact that was intended,” Goldstein said. “It really made it feel like it was for the community by the community.”

May May 9, 2024 16
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Goldstein said by 1974, the mall accounted for 52% of Englewood’s revenue.

“ ere’s a funnel of stores and activity from Broadway into the shopping center and I think this is when it became evident that they may have created a monster,” Goldstein said.

By the 1980s, despite an attempt at saving the structure that had some minor success, Cinderella City would fall into decay and disrepair due to years of maintenance neglect, competitors and changing times.

Goldstein said the event space was changed, the fountain was removed, retailers began to leave, o ce space was left vacant, the massive parking deck crumbled and crime at the mall increased.

“ ey made a monster,” Goldstein said. “ ey made this thing that was so big and it’s great when you rst build it, but then 10 years down the line, where’s the money going to come from to maintain the repair and replace?”

Bu ngton said in the late 1990s and early 2000s, large stores like Walmart started replacing the traditional mall because it was one store that could o er almost everything at lower prices in a singular location.

In 1998, after discussion and redevelopment plans, Cinderella City was mostly demolished, except for the part that became Englewood’s city hall, and eventually transformed into a transit-oriented development.

Goldstein was driving by with his parents and became interested in the history of the project.

“ ey spoke of it so fondly and I couldn’t quite rationalize the discrepancies between what I was seeing outside the window, which was just absolute destruction and sadness and a big empty hulk where you could see into its innards, and then what they were telling me how amazing, and colorful and fun and enjoyable the mall was in the 1970s,” Goldstein said.

It was Cinderella City that actually inspired Goldstein to go into the architectural software industry.

In 2024, nearly 26 years after its demise, the only structure left standing from Cinderella City is the three-story Englewood Civic Center.

Goldstein said this building was a department store attached to the once massive mall.

‘Paradoxically behind the times’

“(Cinderella City) was ahead of its time and it did do good things for the community, but it also in other ways was paradoxically behind the times and did bad things for the community,” Goldstein said.

It cost millions of dollars for the city to demolish the mall and over the years, the area has seen redevelopment but not at the scale of Cinderella City during its heyday, Goldstein said.

“At the time local governments didn’t really know how to handle this, but I think the City of Englewood was faced with a pretty unprecedented situation,” Goldstein said.

Cinderella City was one of the rst

“I think it was a precursor to a lot of other malls that have since fallen,” Goldstein said.

He said Cinderella City wasn’t a sustainable project. It was shaped like an M and had many levels so it could properly t on its property. However, Goldstein said this was an issue for long-term evolution.

“To some degree, Cinderella City wasn’t going to redesign itself out of its own problems because it was inherently a problematic layout and design,” he said.

However, Goldstein said, some aspects of the mall were positive and innovative measures that are seen in modern trends.

e biggest feature was Cinderella City’s Cinder Alley, which was a connection of pathways to various small shops where up-and-coming artists or crafters could sell their goods.

“I think the mixed-use part of it and the community-oriented part of it and the hyper-local part of it are good lessons to take away,” he said. “I am unsurprised that that is a trend and probably always will be a trend, and Cinderella City just happened to get there rst.”

ese days, Bu ngton said malls are all about experience and how to engage consumers.

“If we talk about today, malls are becoming these multipurpose experiential models where there is more of a community,” Bu ngton said.

He explained a big factor into the future of what a mall-type facility looks like now is commercial real estate.  ere are di erent types of real estate including o ce, retail and

industrial, said Bu ngton, who explained that numbers are down for these separately.

“So what a lot of these commercial real estate developers are trying to do is to try to manage these vacancies to make things multipurpose,” Bu ngton said.

Continued impact

Goldstein spent years researching the Cinderella City project and for the last few years has worked to create an immersive digital exhibit featuring the project, which will be in the Englewood Historic Preservation Society’s new museum.  e exhibit will feature a simulation Goldstein has created to pay homage to the project that inspired his career and passion.

“ e simulation is Cinderella City in two di erent eras,” he said. “So, Cinderella City as it appeared in 1968 and the other time period is 1988… You can time travel and you can see what that very same spot looks like 20 years in the future.”

Goldstein said he really wanted to feature the two lives of Cinderella City in both the simulation and the museum exhibit.

As of press deadlines, the museum was slated for a soft opening on May 4.

“(It’s) the life it lived after it was built and the life it lived shortly before it died,” Goldstein said of his simulation.

Bu ngton said technology will inuence how future versions of malls will look for customers.

“ e new model has to be experiential,” Bu ngton said. “It really comes down to innovation.”

Parker Chronicle 17 May 9, 2024
PHOTO ON PREVIOUS PAGE: People walking around the Gold Mall in Cinderella City in the early 1970s. The Gold Mall was one of five sub malls that made up the vast structure of Cinderella City. COURTESY OF ENGLEWOOD
PUBLIC
LIBRARY A simulated representation of Gold Mall created by architectural software engineer Josh Goldstein. This image is similar to what viewers see when they participate in his simulation of Cinderella City.
FROM PAGE 16
COURTESY OF JOSH GOLDSTEIN
ODE

Hosty, the lm’s subject, at the Skylark Lounge, 140 S. Broadway. Fitzpatrick will also participate in a Q&A session after the movie.

According to provided information, Hosty “is a one-man band freak of nature who also tells jokes.” e lm delves into who the musician is and why he’s content out of the spotlight. It has won numerous lm festival awards since its premiere in 2022.

is should be a fascinating eve-

LETTERS

elected Republicans are abandoning their conservative values. Traditional conservative policies such small government, little regulation, low taxation, strong defense, family values, sexual morality and good character have been replaced by slavish loyalty to Donald Trump. e Republican Party is not going to return to its conservative roots without a resounding defeat to those Republicans who make loyalty

ning, so buy tickets at www.eventbrite.com.

Moms get the last laugh at Schoolhouse Theater

We’re all in pretty dire need of laughs these days, but moms especially could use a break and some hilarity in their lives. To that end, the Schoolhouse eater, 19650 Mainstreet in Parker, is hosting the Moms Unhinged Standup Comedy Show at 7 p.m. on ursday, May 16. e show will feature sets on a variety of topics, including motherhood, midlife crises, marriage, divorce and online dating. e performers will be Lisa Lane, Ashley N-g, Stacy

to a man more important than loyalty to principles. If you are a true conservative Republican, you can send that message by voting for Trisha Calvarese.

Salute to public service

Each year the president and Congress designate the rst full week of May as Public Service Recognition Week, and we are pleased to join the Board of Douglas County Commissioners in a resolution recognizing the work of our public servants from May 5-11. Americans are served every single

Pederson and headliner Janae Burris. is will be a hilarious night for all (yes, men are welcome to attend) as each performer brings their own perspective and humor to the stage. Buy tickets at https://parkerarts. org/.

Clarke’s Concert of the Week — Gary Clark Jr. at Red Rocks

When Texas’ Gary Clark Jr.  rst arrived on the music scene in the early 2010s, he was heralded as the savior of the blues guitar, a modernday scion of Jimi Hendrix. And while it’s clear that Clark Jr. will always have an a ection for the blues, his latest album, “JPEG Raw,” shows

day by public employees at the federal, state, county and city levels. ese servants do the work that keeps our communities thriving. Whether you’re renewing your driver’s license or vehicle registration, applying for a marriage license or passport, or voting or serving in an election — the 100 employees in the Douglas County O ce of Clerk and Recorder take pride in serving our citizens with excellence, integrity, efciency and innovation. In addition to honoring our sta ’s commitment to exemplary government service, we would like to thank the many partners we work with in Douglas County gov-

how wide-ranging his interests are. ere’s funk, hip-hop, R&B and classic rock all blended together in a heady brew only he could produce. In support of the album, Clark Jr. will be performing at Red Rocks, 18300 W. Alameda Parkway in Morrison, at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, May 13. He’ll be joined by the absolute powerhouse legend that is Mavis Staples. is promises to be a great night of live music, so get tickets at www.ticketmaster.com.

Clarke Reader’s column on culture appears on a weekly basis. He can be reached at Clarke.Reader@hotmail. com.

ernment, our local municipalities, law enforcement agencies, community organizations, fellow Colorado counties, and state and federal agencies. e dedication, support and collaboration between our employees and organizations create successful outcomes for the bene t of all communities. We are truly better together and invite all Coloradans to join us in this celebration of our devoted public servants.

Sheri Davis, Douglas County Clerk and Recorder

Codie Winslow, Chief Deputy Clerk and Recorder

May May 9, 2024 18
FROM PAGE 14
READER
FROM PAGE 15
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Thu 5/09

Ty Segall @ 6pm

Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Englewood

Syrup @ 7pm

Herman's Hideaway, 1578 S Broadway, Denver

Fri 5/10

Daniella Katzir Music: Denver

Ukefest 2024 @ 6pm

Swallow Hill Music, 71 E Yale Ave, Denver

Malcolm Todd @ 6pm

Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Engle‐wood

Rotating Tap Comedy:

Comedy Night @ Chain Reaction Brewing Company @ 7pm

Chain Reaction Brewing Com‐pany, 902 S Lipan St, Denver

Inspector @ 9pm

Stampede, 2430 S Havana St, Aurora

Sat 5/11

Grant Livingston @ 6pm

Toley’s on the Creek, 16728 E Smoky Hill Rd Suite 11C, Centennial

Electric Whiskey Experiment @ 7pm

Donny Benet @ 8pm

Gothic Theatre, Englewood

Donny Benét @ 8pm

Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Engle‐wood

Sun 5/12

Demun Jones Music: Private "Demun Jones' Meet n' Greet @ 4pm

Wild Goose Saloon, Parker

Wed 5/15

Last Train To Juarez: The Englewood Tavern - Englewood, CO w/ Tom McElvain @ 5pm

The Englewood Tavern, 4386 S Broadway, Englewood

Slow Crush @ 6pm

Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Engle‐wood

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

Bout Time Pub & Grub, 3580 S Platte River Dr A, Sheridan

Thu 5/16

Making Movies w/Fruta Brutal @ 6pm

Swallow Hill Music, 71 E Yale Ave, Denver

Southall @ 6:30pm

Gothic Theatre, 3263 S Broadway, Engle‐wood

Tom Mcelvain Music: Private Party @ 6pm

Green�elds Pool & Sports Bar, 3355 S Yarrow St E101, Lakewood

Private Party, Castle Rock

Mon 5/13

Crestone Peak Ages 13-14 - 2024

League Session #2 @ 3:30pm / $350 May 13th - Jun 29th

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

Modern Swing Mondays 2024 @ 6pm / $10

Stampede, Aurora

Tue 5/14

Starving Wolves @ 7pm

Moe's Original BBQ, 3295 S Broadway, Englewood

AVIATIONS: Englewood, CO @ 7pm

Moe's Original BBQ, 3295 S Broadway, Englewood

ers.

19 May 9, 2024
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Colorado’s two largest energy co-ops break from Xcel

e sources of electrons owing into about 290,000 suburban and rural homes and businesses on the Front Range are about to change. And while refrigerators will still hum and lights shine, it marks a new chapter in how Coloradans get their electricity.

e state’s two largest cooperatives, Sedalia-based CORE Electric Cooperative and Brighton-based United Power, are each poised to leave their long-time power suppliers and strike out on their own in the growing merchant power market.

“United and CORE and a few others are large enough where we can contract with utility-scale resources where the prices are driven down,” said Chris Hildred, power supply director for CORE, formerly the Intermountain Rural Electric Association.

“ is is about local control andnancial independence,” said Mark Gabriel, United Power’s CEO.

e rst big step comes as United Power, which serves about 300,000 people in an area from Commerce City through Adams and Weld counties, leaves the Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association.

CORE, serving more than 375,000 residents in parts of 11 counties from west of Colorado Springs to east of Denver, is set to nish its contract with Xcel Energy at the end of 2025.

“ e arrival of inexpensive utilityscale solar and the arrival of inexpensive utility-scale batteries has changed the landscape for co-ops,”

said Seth Feaster, an energy data analyst with the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.

“ e great thing about solar is coops scale it to their needs,” Feaster said. “ ey can keep it local and they don’t need a big coal plant in another state anymore.”

Rural cooperatives traditionally bought their electricity wholesale in bulk from large generation and transmission associations, created to serve the co-ops, or an investorowned utility, like Xcel Energy. ose purchases account for 60% to 70% of the cooperatives’ budgets.

But with more independent power suppliers and the opportunity to build their own smaller-scale projects, cooperatives have more options, said Robin Lunt, chief strategy o cer at Guzman Energy, a power wholesaler, which has been instrumental in the departure of several co-ops from Tri-State.

“ ere’s increasing opportunity for the distribution utilities to look at the market and decide how they want to design their power supply and customize it to the community they serve,” Lunt said.

Guzman will supply United Power with about a third of its energy needs in a 15-year contract when the co-op leaves Tri-State.

e departures come with risks as the cooperatives now must strike a series of contracts with di erent providers for power to replace that single source with large generation and transmission resources.

At its April 3 annual meeting, TriState CEO Duane Highley outlined

the association’s investments to provide 5,300 megawatts of generation for its member co-ops spread across Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico.

“ is is real reliability; this portfolio cannot be matched,” Highley told the meeting. “It is a hedge against market prices. … We know there’s going be less and less surplus capacity, and it’s going be a time of greater stress on the grid.”

e departing cooperatives also are leaving power providers regulated by state and federal agencies for less transparent private operators, TriState spokesman Lee Boughey said.

“ e risk has always been there,” CORE’s Hildred said, pointing out that Xcel Energy has passed on costs it has incurred and is undertaking big projects — including a $2 billion Power Pathway transmission line and a proposed $15 billion clean energy plan — which will end up in customers’ bills.

“We will have control based on market prices our members are exposed to rather than the decision Xcel makes over which we have very little in uence,” Hildred said For United Power, Tri-State posed two problems. As its largest member, representing about 20% of its revenue, United Power was carrying a disproportionate amount of the association’s overhead, in essence subsidizing smaller co-ops.

“ ese cross-subsidies have to stop,” Gabriel said.

Second, Tri-State’s 50-year con-

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tracts require its cooperatives to buy 95% of their electricity from Tri-State thwarting local power projects.

Other cooperatives have chafed at these restrictions with two already having left — the Kit Carson Electric Cooperative, in Taos, New Mexico, and Delta Montrose Energy Association in southwestern Colorado.

Tri-State has responded by developing more renewable generation, which will reach 70% of its total by 2030, and by developing a contract that will enable co-ops to develop their own power projects.

Still, when United Power leaves, so will the Northwest Rural Public Power District, in Hay Springs, Nebraska. Mountain Parks Electric, in Granby, will leave in 2025 with a 20-year contract with Guzman Energy. Durangobased La Plata Electric Association also voted in March to leave Tri-State. e departures trim Tri-State to 38 members and cut the association’s revenues by more than 25%.

United and Tri-State clashed over plans for a local co-op battery project and now that it is leaving, has embarked on projects such as a oating solar array on the Fort Lupton water treatment plant reservoir.

“We are going hyperlocal,” Gabriel said, trying to line up projects in or close to United Power’s service territory.

As for the risks of the new business model — United Power has signed 23 power purchase and battery agreements, including one to buy wholesale power from Tri-State — Gabriel said it is up to the cooperative to manage that through its contracts.

“ ere have to be guarantees that electricity is provided … one way or another,” Gabriel said. e co-op is requiring some contractors to post bonds.

So, what do the new power supplies look like?

e centerpiece of CORE’s plan is a 20-year contract with Invenergy, a multinational power project developer, to provide electricity, including 400 megawatts of new solar and wind energy and 100 megawatts of battery storage, backed up by 300 MW of existing natural gas resources starting in 2026.

CORE is partnering with another co-op, Glenwood Springs-based Holy Cross Energy on a new 75-megawatt solar array in Arapahoe County. e cooperative also signed a contract with Onward Energy for extra natural gas- red generation.

“We are contracting for individual resources of 350 MW in total wind, 200 MW of new solar on top of 190 MW existing, and looking to add batteries in the system in a year or two,” Hildred said.

CORE also owns a 25% share in Xcel Energy’s 750 MW Comanche 3 coal- red plant “for as long as it lasts,” Hildred said. Comanche 3 is slated to close at the end of 2030.

Will this ll the co-ops needs? Hildred said the system’s historic peak load is 650 MW. e portfolio it has assembled with a maximum — so-called nameplate capacity — output of nearly 1,500 MW, although wind and solar being intermittent operate below their nameplate capacity.

“Once everything is online, we believe we are set until 2030 and 2031,” Hildred said. “When Comanche closes we will need to add some renewables and some more will be needed past 2031 due to ongoing growth.”

To ll its needs United has a portfolio of more than two dozen of its own generation and storage assets and contracts, including ones with the Western Area Power Authority for hydropower and an agreement with Xcel Energy to take some renewable power.

Among its contracts are agreements for approximately 230 MW of solar and 300 MW of other renewables and 440 MW of natural gas.

One 25-year agreement is with Whetstone Power for the output from its 30 MW Solar of Alamosa project starting in May. “ at solar is going to come to us from the San Luis Valley over an Xcel transmission line and go right into a battery,” Gabriel said.

Under another 25-year agreement United Power will get the electricity from a 150 MW solar installation being built in Morgan County by NextEra Energy Resources.

To help handle the generation assets United Power has hired e En-

ergy Authority, a Jacksonville, Florida-based nonpro t company that manages and aggregates electricity loads for public power providers.

In all, the cooperative has put together about 1,300 MW of nameplate generation to meet a peak load of about 650 MW and an o -peak demand of about 400 MW.

One of the other issues United Power and Tri-State batted over was the size of the exit fee the cooperative would have to pay to buyout its long-term contract. Tri-State’s initial gure was $1.6 billion. e cooperative’s estimated exit fee was between $200 million and $300 million.

After four years of sparring before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which oversees Tri-State, the commission set a formula for calculating exit fees. Using that formula, Tri-State put the net exit fee at $627 million.

e cooperative is still challenging part of the calculation, Gabriel said, but has a funding agreement in place for the $627 million.

Gabriel said that while the aim is for rates to stabilize over time and then trend down, the exit will have an impact raising rates 9.5%, for a $12 to $14 increase a month for a residential customer.

“It is the price of local control,” Gabriel said. “It is the price of freedom.” is story was printed through a news sharing agreement with e Colorado Sun, a journalist-owned nonpro t based in Denver that covers the state.

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FROM PAGE 20 XCEL

Creative guild makes plans in Elbert County

Several dynamic and motivated Elbert County community members, led by Cynthia ye, have founded a nonpro t organization for area artists. e group, still in its nascency, recently decided on Elbert County Artists Guild (ECAG) as its name. ye, pronounced “tee,” tried starting a group in Elizabeth in 2022 but the timing wasn’t right. Now everything has fallen into place. e group hopes to provide community outreach, promote artists, o er classes, and advocate for their members.

“We hope ECAG will be the means to revitalize the vibrant art community Elizabeth had in the 1970s and expand it to the whole county and surrounding area,” ye said. “Elbert County will bene t from ECAG’s events and programs enriching the community and assisting to pro-

Art of the country

mote and preserve Elbert County’s rural and ranch lifestyle.”

“Elbert County and the surrounding rural area need to showcase the talents of its citizens,” ECAG member Dan Kelly said. “By having this art organization people, can create, interact and display their passion for the arts. is covers many di erent areas, such as painting, drawing, weaving, photography, sculpture and much more.”

e Guild is networking and using connections to make inroads in the community and get involved. Several community partnerships and opportunities for shows or collaborations are already in the works.

ye spoke to Elizabeth School

District Superintendent Dan Snowberger about utilizing space at the old Frontier High School. e space could be used for meetings, art shows, or classes. ECAG hopes to partner with local school districts or the home-school community on art programs that will enrich their children’s education.

ye said when her children were little she would set up arts and crafts

on her kitchen table for them and their friends. She said “... kids not only learned many skills working with various mediums and materials, but also how to work together, share ideas, appreciate everyone’s unique style, respectfully critique others’ works … is experience showed me the importance of arts in children.”

e group supported the Elizabeth High School art department by encouraging members to attend an EHS student art show on April 29 and wants to develop a mentorship program between high school students who want to pursue a career in art and local artists.

e Artists Guild also has an existing working relationship with the Pines & Plains Library District. e library already displays the work of three artists who have attended ECAG meetings. ye and Kelly met with the director of the Elizabeth

Library to discuss library art shows and possibly a community mural. Kelly, a self-professed library supporter, said “the connection with the library is gold” and expressed excitement about the collaboration. ECAG aims to partner with e Carriage Shoppes to showcase and sell art at their existing July 4 event. Flourish Aveda Spa & Salon has also reached out to the group about participating in a Saturday Farmers Market in Centennial. ye says ECAG will bene t the area by providing a sense of cultural understanding and identity. Elbert County’s values and agricultural lifestyle will be expressed at events and programs and ECAG’s art will re ect the Elbert County way of life. Art will be displayed publicly and programs will be open to all, with the goal of bringing the community together.

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From left, Dan Kelly, Aviars Tobiss and Cynthia Thye at the close of the April 18 meeting of the Elbert County Artists Guild. The community has shown an interest and each meeting has been well-attended. PHOTO BY NICKY QUINBY SEE ARTIST GUILD, P31
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CAREERS

Help Wanted

School Psychologist or Intern

Full-Time School Psychologist or Intern to join our dynamic, multi-disciplinary team of professionals for the 202324 school year - School Districts East of Limon Area Requirements: Educational Specialist (Ed.S.), Colorado certified. Provide PreK12 intervention including assessment, development of IEP’s & consultation services. Competitive salaries: ED.S $57,800$66,200 & Intern $53,590$59,550, both commensurate upon experience. Excellent benefits including dental, vision, and medical insurance. Flexible scheduling with the opportunity to complete some work at home. May also be eligible for loan forgiveness. Flexible schedule. Use of a car or mileage reimbursement. Questions contact Tracy (719) 775-2342, ext. 101. 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 green button “Apply Online”, located at the bottom of the job listing. EOE

Help Wanted

Teacher of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing East Central BOCES is seeking a Part-Time 3 day a week Teacher of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing for the 2024-2025 school year. Salary Range- $27,750$32,790 for 112 days dependent on experiences and education. Hold or be able to attain a Colorado Teaching License with an endorsement as a Special Education Specialist- Deaf/ Hard of Hearing required. Complete assessments, attend IEP meetings, provide direct and indirect special education services. Excellent benefits including access to a company vehicle or mileage reimbursement and fully paid health insurance, including vision and dental. May be eligible for loan forgiveness program. Flexible scheduling with the opportunity to complete some work from home. 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 green button “Apply Online”, located at the bottom of the job listing.

Questions contact Tracy at (719) 775-2342, ext. 101. EOE

Help Wanted

Speech-Language Pathologist

Remote or in person FT or part time SpeechLanguage Pathologist or SLPA Positions Available for the 2024-2025 school year. Open to School Internships. No Contract Agencies. Able to provide supervision for CFY hours. Join our dynamic, multi-disciplinary team of professionals for the 202425 school year. Complete assessments, attend IEP meetings, provide direct services and indirect services for students in PreK-12th grades. Competitive salaries: SLP - $50,450-$56,050 & SLPA- BA $41,000- $46,600 based on 186 day contract. Salaries given are based on a full-year contract. Salary commensurate upon experience. May also be eligible for loan forgiveness! Excellent benefits, including full health benefits & mileage reimbursement. For in person providers there is flexible scheduling with the opportunity to complete some work at home.

Questions contact Tracy at (719) 775-2342, ext. 101. 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 green button “Apply Online”, located at the bottom of the job listing. EOE

Help Wanted

Eng 3, SW Dev & EngSDET – Comcast Cable Comm, LLC, Englewood, CO. Write+edit auto test code that allows for repetbl, relibl test soln to test wide funct of prdcts & sw. Reqs: Bach or forgn equiv in CS, Engin or rltd; 2y exp write & edit auto test code use JavaScript; test prdctn sys prfrmnc use JMeter; mntor & enhnc prfrmnc of HLS & MPEG-DASH vid stream; use GitHub for srce ctrl; mntor & enhnc NW prfrmnc of IPTV Domain; & 1y implmnt, test, & auto advncd IP vid techs use Python & GoLang; mng Unix srvrs; id & create advncd app mntor use Splunk; dsgn cntainr use Docker & Kubernetes; use Appium or Selenium for test autmtn; anlyz mtrcs & data trends use Prometheus; use Influx DB, MySQL, MemSQL, & MongoDB; graph data sets & trends use Grafana; use Java for test autmtn; wrk w/ CI/CD tools incl Concourse & Jenkins; apply dsgn pttrns; track, monitor, & report dfcts use Jira; use Helm charts; id & create mntor dash use Elastic Search; use Apache httpd; use CableLabs ESAM & ESNI; prfrm dynamic ad insrtn use SCTE stand, incl SCTE 35, & 130, & VAST. Sal: $72,259-$140k/yr. Ben: https://jobs.comcast.com/lifeat-comcast/benefits. Apply to: Job_Candidates@comcast.co m Ref Job ID#3222. App window: 30 days (+/- depend on # appls).

Do you love being a part of your local community helping businesses grow? If you like to talk to people we want to talk to you!

We are currently hiring for a local Marketing Engagement Specialist in the Golden area!

25 May 9, 2024
Help Wanted Classifieds Continues Next Page
Please send resume to eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com
DEADLINES:CLASSIFIED LINE ADS: FRIDAY, 12 P.M. SERVICE DIRECTORY: WEDNESDAY, 5 P.M. LEGALS: TUESDAY 5 P.M. SERVICE DIRECTORY ADS AND CLASSIFIED LINE ADS Contact Erin Addenbrooke, 303-566-4074 eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com .com/Classifieds

MARKETPLACE

Misc. Notices

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!

Miscellaneous

!!OLD GUITARS WANTED!!

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Split & Delivered $450 a cord Stacking $50 Call 303-647-2475 or 720-323-2173

Lawn & Garden

Professional lawn service: Fertilization, weed control, seeding, aeration & mosquito control. Call now for a free quote. Ask about our first application special! 1-833606-6777

Health & Beauty

VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS!

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Medical

Attention oxygen therapy users! Discover oxygen therapy that moves with you with Inogen Portable Oxygen Concentrators. Free information kit. 1-866-4779045

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Get DISH Satellite TV + Internet! Free Install, Free HD-DVR Upgrade, 80,000 On-Demand Movies, Plus Limited Time Up To $600 In Gift Cards. Call Today! 1-866-479-1516

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CallDIRECTV1-888-725-0897

INVESTMENTOPPORTUNITYONLINEAUCTION: 5/1-5/31Bar&GrillwithBreweryEquipment.126N. 3rdStreetDouglas,Wyoming.10,900SFRetail TURN-KEYOPERATION!SaleInfo:800-536-1401,X 401.Auctionsinternational.com-PromoCode: WESTBID24

Miscellaneous

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! 1-833399-3595

PortableOxygenConcentrator. MaybeCovered byMedicare! Reclaimindependeceandmobilitywith thecompactdesignandlong-lasting batteryofInogenOne. FreeInformationKit! Call:844-823-0293

FREEHIGHSPEEDINTERNET

FreeHighSpeedInternetforthosethatqualify. Govermentprogramforrecipientsofselectprograms incl.Medicaid,SNAP,HousingAssistance,WIC, VeteransPension,SurvivorBenefit,Lifeline,Tribal. 15GBInternetservice.Bonusoffer:Androidtablet FREEwithone-time$20copay.FreeShipping& Handling. CallMaxsipTelecomToday:1-866-654-9429

Donate Your Car to Veterans Today! Help and Support our Veterans. Fast - FREE pick up. 100% tax deductible. Call 1-800-2450398

Office or Commercial Space for Rent

Two Offices ~ Available Immediately Great Location and Prices!

NEW CONSTRUCTION!

• One month FREE with the signing of a new one-year lease!!

• 1,000 sq. ft office. $2,500 per month.

• Be the 1st to rent one of these great spaces!

Offices are located next to: Cleary Building Corp: 755 Crossroads Circle, Elizabeth, Colorado Contact 303-660-0420 or 800-373-5550

(970)215-6860 www.puppylovedoodles.com

May May 9, 2024 26
Merchandise Firewood
Pets Dogs Doodle Puppies Golden Doodles and Bernedoodles Home-Raised Heath Tested and Guaranteed Standard and Mini Size available Schedule a visit today!
Wanted
Transportation Wanted Chunky’s Towing 720-560-6763
BUYORSELL ASSOCIATEBROKER erin@oldcountryre.com OLDCOUNTRYRE.COM 303-917-7870 ErinAddenbrooke THEOLDCOUNTRY REALESTATEGROUPLLC Real Estate Brokers REAL ESTATE & RENTAL Colorado StatewideNetwork DIRECTV PORTABLEOXYGEN INVESTMENTOPPORTUNITY
Service Directory Continues Next Page
Commercial Property/Rent
Rentals

Reasonablerates "SmallJobsOK!"

27 May 9, 2024 SERVICE DIRECTORY Service Directory Continues Next Page A/C Serving the Front Range since 1955 Furnaces • Boilers • Water Heaters Rooftop HVAC • Mobile Furnaces Commercial • Residential Install • Repair • Replace Free Estimates • 720-327-9214 Residential and Commercial Install • Repair • Replace 720-327-9214 AC, Furnace and Boiler Specials NEW REFRIGERATION TECH NOW ON BOARD Serving the Front Range since 1955 Buildings 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! Carpet/Flooring HARDWOOD , ... FOOTPRINTS F1oors. floors Impressions. today for a free estimate! 720-344-0939 FOOTPRINTSFLOORS COM HARDWOOD, TILE, BACKSPLASHES & LAMINATES Great Floors. Great Impressions. 720-344-0939 | FOOTPRINTSFLOORS.COM Call today for a free estimate! 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 Concrete/Paving Shawnsconcrete.com • (970)819-6427 shawnstampedconcrete@gmail.com •Concrete sealing. Industrial Grade •Epoxy coating. Industrial Grade. •Stamped patio restorations Bid per job •Ask about our referral discount, also discounts over 1,500 sq. ft. •Concrete Crack Sealing Has Your Concrete Lost Its Shine? AllPhasesofFlatWorkby T.M.CONCRETE Driveways,Sidewalks,Patios Tear-outs,stamped&colored concrete.Qualitywork,Lic./Ins. Reasonablerates "SmallJobsOK!"
AllPhasesofFlatWorkby T.M.CONCRETE
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303-514-7364 tmconcrete.net All Phases of Flat Work by T.M. CONCRETE Driveways, Sidewalks, Patios, Tear-outs, stamped & colored concrete. Quality work, Lic./Ins. Reasonable rates. “Small Jobs OK!” 303-514-7364 | coloradoconcretepro.com 303-888-7595 • All Concrete • Tear Out • Patios • Driveways • Curb & Gutter • Walls • Anything Concrete Construction Schneider Construction LLC 30 years of experience in residential remodeling and new construction services! Decks and Patios Kitchens Bathrooms And more! 303-880-5445 www.schneiderconstruction.net 30 years of experience in residential remodeling and new construction services! Decks and Patios • Kitchens Bathrooms • And more! 303-880-5445 • schneiderconstruction.net Deck/Patio • Roofing • Siding • Gutters • Insurance Claims 303-805-7800 www.1wayroofer.com InbusinessinColorado25Years •Decks •Roofing •Siding •Gutters In business in Colorado 30 Years 303-805-7800 www.1wayroofing.com 303-501-3264 WE DO ALL DECK & FENCE REPAIRS CALL US FOR AN ESTIMATE SAND/WASH/STAIN 15% OFF! www.coloradodeckandfence.com codeckandfencepro@gmail.com TOP NOTCH RESTORATION! CO DECK & FENCE PRO’S DECKS BEST PRICES 30+ years experience Clem: 303-973-6991 FREE ESTIMATES
303-514-7364 tmconcrete.net
Driveways,Sidewalks,Patios Tear-outs,stamped&colored
May 9, 2024 28 SERVICE DIRECTORY Service Directory Continues Next Page Drywall Sheetrock & Drywall Framing Specialist EPA Certified Painter, Interior/Exterior Demolition • Insured 7+ Years Experience! Home Improvement Room Builders® LLC. Toll Free 866-552-6987 Cell: 646-825-1716 © 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 Ed 720-328-5039 Estate Planning WILLS AND TRUSTS Call now to schedule a no cost appointment 720.772.7565 • dawn@kewpclaw.com Fence Services Cowboy Fencing is a full service residental fencing company installing fences in Colorado for 28 years. Great fences make great neighbors. Low rates. Free estimates. 720-364-5270 Handyman 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 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 HANDYMAN Repairs • Install Fixtures, Appliance • Plumbing Electrical • Expert Tile • Kitchen/ Bath Remodel • Decks 35 yrs. experience • Licensed, Insured • References Wes 720-697-3290 DESPAIN’S HOME SOLUTIONS Solving All your Remodeling & Repair Problems – Just Ask! DEPENDABLE, RELIABLE SERVICE Over 30 Years Experience Licensed & Insured Eric DeSpain 303-840-1874 HVAC MAKE SURE YOU’RE READY FOR THE UPCOMING SEASON! $49.99 FURNACE INSPECTION WITH CO DETECTION Call and schedule today - 303.909.2018 CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER OFFERS. IS YOUR FURNACE 10 YEARS OLD OR OLDER? Landscaping/Nurseries Landscaping & Tree Service •Landscaping •Sprinkler Service •Stump Grinding •Tree Removal •Rock and Mulch • Tree Trimming J & M Landscaping & Tree Service Call 720-582-5950 Jmlandservices8@gmail.com Registered & Insured • Free Estimates Landscape & Concrete Landscaping • Yard Cleanup • Sod Concrete • Sprinklers Tree Trimming/Cutting Planting Fertilization • Retaining Walls • Flagstone Fencing • Gutter Cleaning Power Raking • Aerating 720-436-6158 Lawn/Garden Services Landscape & Garden Sod, Rock, Mulch, Retaining Walls, Sprinklers, Sprinkler Repair, Flagstone, Fence Repair, Fertilize, Aeration, Yard Clean-Ups, Shrub Trimming/Removal, Rock Removal, Weed Control and Much More! Text or Call 720-982-9155 lawnservice9155@gmail.com CONTINENTAL INC. Commercial and Residential Lawn Maintenance Call for a FREE quote Mow - Edge - Trim Aeration & Fertilization Sprinkler Repair 720-283-2155 Continental8270@yahoo.com
29 May 9, 2024 SERVICE DIRECTORY Service Directory Continues Next Page Lawn/Garden Services Alpine Landscape Management Weekly Mowing, Power Raking, Aerate, Fertilize, Spring Clean-up, Trim Bushes & Small Trees, Senior Discounts 720-329-9732 SPRING/SUMMER: Landscaping, Tree & Shrub Trimming/Removal, Aeration, Sod, Edging, Rock, Mulch, Flagstone, Weekly Mowing, Deck/Fence Install/Repair, Power Washing. Colorado Lawn Care Licensed & Insured scottcindy4242@gmail.com 720-202-9975 Painting Helpful Ace Hardware Pro Painters is a residential painting company which specializes in exterior and interior painting. Our core values are honesty, integrity, service, quality and beauty and our focus is on delivering an outstanding customer experience. We currently include a full color consult, test pints and a detailed walkthrough with all of our paint jobs. Give us a call to set up a free estimate! (720) 432-6125 helpfulacehardwarepropainters.com • Benjamin Moore Paints • Labor and Materials Warranty • Free Estimates • Color Consultation Included • Kind/Highly Communicative Staff Painting 720-328-2572 C AL LTODAY FO R YOU RFRE E QUOTE Residential Experts We paint over 800 Homes Per Year No Deposit Ever Satisfaction Guaranteed Residential Experts We paint over 800 Homes Per Year. No Deposit Ever Satisfaction Guaranteed. 5 year, 7 year and 9 year 720-328-2572 innovativepaintingllc.com • HONEST PRICING • • FREE ESTIMATES • We will match any written estimate! No job too small or too big! Contact JR 720-984-5360 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 Dan’s Painting Interior & Exterior Painting & Remodeling • 30 Years Experience •Family Owned •Insured & Bonded •Wallpaper Removal •Drywall Repair •Gutters & Carpentry •Tile & Plumbing •Residential & Commercial 720-628-1199 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! Commercial/Residential For all your plumbing needs • Water Heaters • Plumbing Parts SENIOR DISCOUNTS www.frontrangeplumbing.com Front Range Plumbing 303.451.1971 • Water Heaters • Plumbing Parts • Senior & Active Military Discounts frontrangeplumbing.com info@frontrangeplumbing.com Commercial/Residential • For all your plumbing needs • Drain Cleaning Specialist • Camera & Sewer Repairs • 35 years experience DIRTY JOBS DONE DIRT CHEAP Call for a free phone quote 720-308-6696 • Plumbing Repairs • Open 24/7 • After 5:30 pm emergency calls Roofing/Gutters - Gutter cleaning /gutter covers available now - We are 100% Local & Have Great References - Roo ng • Siding • Paint • Windows • Gutters Have a Hail Damaged Roof? - Call Dave Vaughn 720-427-7422 - davegoldenspikeroo ng@gmail.com
May 9, 2024 30 SERVICE DIRECTORY Roofing/Gutters 303-770-7663 www.ValorRoofandSolar.com Local Company Veteran Owned Integrity Focused VOTED BEST ROOFING COMPANY Complimentary Roof Inspections 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 Solar 303-647-3173 www.ValorRoofandSolar.com Residential and Commercial SOLAR SYSTEMS 303-770-7663 www.ValorRoofandSolar.com SOLAR SYSTEMS Residential and Commercial Tile ANYTHING TILE • Marble • Repairs • Granite Counter Tops Remodeling is my specialty! Call now for free estimate (303) 646-0140 Tile Premier Tile and Stone Tile installation services All types of tile installations | Kitchens, bathrooms and more Large and small jobs welcome | 20+ years of experience Quality installation services 720-331-6400 Tree Service Continental Inc. Tree and Shrub Trimming CALL FOR A FREE QUOTE 720-283-2155Stump 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 with coupon A-1 Stump Removal Stump grinding specialist ABE’S TREE & SHRUB CARE Abraham Spilsbury, Owner/Operator Certi ed Arborist Licensed & Insured Veteran Phone: 720-283-8226 Cell: 720-979-3888 •Pruning •Removals •Stump Grinding •Shrub Maintenance •Free Estimates Windows Insulated Vinyl & Steel Siding Soffit & Fascia • Metal, Wraps • Siding Repairs Owner: Samuel G. Fry 720.731.8789 SIDING & WINDOWS • LIFETIME OF EXPERIENCE 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 HARDWOOD , ... FOOTPRINTS Great F1oors. floors Great Impressions. Call today for a free estimate! 720-344-0939 WWW FOOTPRINTSFLOORS COM HARDWOOD, TILE, BACKSPLASHES & LAMINATES Great Floors. Great Impressions. 720-344-0939 | FOOTPRINTSFLOORS.COM Call today for a free estimate! Tree Service

ARTIST GUILD

At a recent meeting, the group agreed on a Mission Statement. It reads: “A nonpro t art organization open to all community members in Elbert County Colorado and surrounding area. It is an organization where community individuals across all generations can realize and express their creative potential. is will be done through quality arts educational programming, lectures, gallery shows, exhibitions, concerts, festivals, and events that promote area artists and celebrate Elbert County’s rural culture and agriculture history. Programs would be inclusive of but not limited to music, sculpture, painting, ber art, literature, architecture, performing, and lm.”

Board members were recently selected:

• Cynthia ye, founder and president

• Dr. Tracie Keesee, secretary and volunteer director

• Cynthia Garcia McBride, trea-

surer

• Courtney Tice, education and exhibit director

• Angela Andreson, creative writing director

ECAG will charge $40 for individual memberships with options available for nonpro t organizations and various supporter levels. ey are currently putting together a competition to design a logo. e winner and prize will be announced at an upcoming event, to be determined.

ye’s website notes that she is an Elizabeth resident and a ne artist, portraitist and instructor. She works mostly in pastels and acrylics but also creates works in mixed media. She begins her creative process with prayer, with the goal to communicate the heart and mind of God as it relates to a subject.

Check social media or email for more speci cs about upcoming meeting locations and Zoom options:

For more information about the Elbert County Artists Guild, email elbertcountyartistsguild@gmail. com or nd the group on Facebook at “Elbert County Artists Guild,” tinyurl.com/bdzhwu6m.

adoption of the Resolutions to Amend the 2023 Budget and Adopt the 2024 Budget, inspect and file or register any objections thereto.

SPRING VALLEY METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 5

By /s/AJ Beckman, Secretary

Legal Notice No. ECN 1502

Publication: May 9, 2024

Publication: May 9, 2024

OF VACANCIES

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE SPRING VALLEY

5

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, and particularly to the electors of the Spring Valley Metropolitan District No. 5 of Elbert County, Colorado.

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to Section 32-1-808, C.R.S., that vacancies currently exists on the board of directors of the Spring Valley Metropolitan District No. 5 (“District”).

31 May 9, 2024
A group photo of those who attended the Elbert County Artists Guild meeting at The Carriage Shoppes on April 18. The call went out to Elizabeth-area artists and supporters of the arts to attend. PHOTO BY NICKY QUINBY
FROM PAGE 22
Public Notices www.ColoradoCommunityMedia.com/Public-Notices Public Notices call Sheree 303.566.4088 legals@coloradocommunitymedia.com PUBLIC NOTICES Legals Metro Districts Budget Hearings Public Notice SPRING VALLEY METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 5 NOTICE CONCERNING 2023 BUDGET AMENDMENT AND PROPOSED 2024 BUDGET NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all interested parties that the necessity has arisen to amend the Spring Valley Metropolitan District No. 5 (“District”) 2023 Budget and that proposed 2024 Budget have been submitted to the Board of Directors of the District; and that copies of the proposed Amended 2023 Budget and 2024 Budget have been filed at the District's offices, 405 Urban Street, Suite 310, Lakewood, Colorado, where the same is open for public inspection; and that adoption of Resolutions Amending the 2023 Budget and Adopting the 2024 Budget will be considered at a public hearing of the Board of Directors of the District to be held on Thursday, May 16, 2024, at 4:00 P.M. via Zoom Meeting and can be joined through the directions below: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/7636703470 Phone Number: (720) 707-2699 Meeting ID: 763 670 3470 Passcode: press # Any elector within the District may, at any time prior to the final
Last
Publisher:
News Public Notice NOTICE
First
Elbert County
ON
METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO.
Any qualified, eligible elector of the District interested in filling such vacancies and serving on the board of directors should file a Letter of Interest with the board on or before the close of business on May 19, 2024. Letters of Interest are available and can be obtained from the Spring Valley Metropolitan District No. 5, c/o AJ Beckman at Public Alliance LLC, 405 Urban Street, Suite 310, Lakewood, Colorado 80228, (720) 213-6621. SPRING VALLEY METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 5 By:/s/ AJ Beckman, Secretary Legal Notice No. ECN 1503 First Publication: May 9, 2024 Last Publication: May 9, 2024 Publisher: Elbert County News Name Changes PUBLIC NOTICE Public Notice of Petition for Change of Name Public notice is given on April 19, 2024, that a Petition for a Change of Name of an adult has been filed with the Elbert County Court. The Petition requests that the name of Amy Lynn Isaacs be changed to Amie Lynn Isaacs Case No.: 24 C 38 By: Judge Palmer Boyette Legal Notice No. ECN 1501 First Publication: May 9, 2024 Last Publication: May 23, 2024 Publisher: Elbert County News ### Parker | Elbert Legals May 9, 2024 * 1 Elbert Legals Your Community Connector to Boundless Rewards We are community.

PARKER’S FAVORITE WEEKEND!

Shopping H FOOD H EXHIBITS H MUSIC H RIDES H FAMILY FUN

FUN THINGS TO DO:

• Enjoy your Favorite Festival Food

• Shopping Marketplace

• Music on Four Stages

• Street Performers

• Carnival Rides for the Whole Family

• Free Kids Crafts

• Silent Disco – Dance, Dance, Dance!

• Get Dizzy in a Water Bubble

• Bungy Jumping

• Jump and Slide on the In atables

• Nurf Terf Battles (Nurf version of Paintball)

AIR ACADEMY CREDIT UNION

EAST MUSIC Stage – Live Music ALL Day

Friday 8 pm – 10 pm Sisters of Rock

Saturday 8 pm – 10 pm

Shelvis and the Roustabouts

Sunday 6:30 pm – 8 pm

Ryan Chrys & the Rough Cuts

THURSDAY, JUNE 13 1 pm – 10:30 pm: Carnival Only

FRIDAY, JUNE 14 Fri 1 pm – 10:30: Carnival Fri 4 pm – 10:30 pm: Fesival

SATURDAY, JUNE 15

Sat 10 am – 10:30 pm

SUNDAY, JUNE 16

Sun 10 am – 8:30 pm

MAIN STAGE – Live Music ALL Day HEADLINERS:

Friday, June 14 presented by 8:00 pm – 10:30 pm: Kory Brunson Band

Saturday, June 15 presented by 8:30 pm – 10:30 pm: Wash Park Band

Sunday, June 16 presented by 5:30 pm – 8:30 pm: That Eighties Band

THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS:

CARNIVAL RIDES & GAMES: presented by

BUY DISCOUNTED UNLIMITED CARNIVAL RIDE WRISTBANDS ONLINE

Single-Day Unlimited Carnival Rides: $35 each

Good any one day during the festival

Sold online through 12 noon Wed. June 12

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.

CORE ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE Community Stage – Entertainment ALL Day supported by Allegro Music ®

May May 9, 2024 32
parkerdaysfestival.com Parker Days Festival is brought to you by the Parker Area Chamber of Commerce Foundation
JUNE 13-16, 2024
FREE ADMISSION
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