Englewood Herald 0131

Page 1

75 CENTS

January 31, 2019

ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO

A publication of

special edition financial pages inside this issue!

Englewood graduation rates show strong growth EHS number soars upward; Colorado’s Finest continues to rise BY ELLIS ARNOLD EARNOLD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

through Friday, the same days as before. The expansion of hours comes as the city tries to foster more activity in the corridor between city hall and the medical district, covering Englewood’s commercial core. A more accessible schedule for businesses on Broadway and employees in the hospital area is part of the effort, according to Dan Poremba, Englewood’s chief redevelopment officer.

Englewood High School leaped forward so much it covered its losses from last year and then some, posting an 11 percentage-point gain in its graduation rate in just one school year, according to numbers from the Colorado Department of Education. Colorado’s Finest High School of Choice also showed improvement, putting up a 2 percentage-point gain that continued its trend of growth over the last nine years. “This is very encouraging news for our community and a testament to the work of our students, teachers and school leaders,” said Wendy Rubin, superintendent for Englewood Schools, in a news release. “Nevertheless, our work is never finished, and we need to make sure that the number of our graduates continues to climb.” EHS’ four-year graduation rate clocked in at 80.2 percent for the 201718 school year, putting it nearly on par with the state’s average four-year rate, 80.7 percent. It’s a large turnaround from the previous school year, when EHS’ rate of 68.8 percent represented a nearly 7 percentage-point drop from the 2015-16 school year.

SEE TROLLEY, P7

SEE GRADUATION, P18

Rolando De Souza, a driver for the Englewood Trolley, explains on Jan. 22 the features of the bus route. De Souza, 66, has driven for the Trolley — formerly known as the Art Shuttle — since 2012. ELLIS ARNOLD

Free trolley expands hours Bus carries riders between city hall, downtown, medical district BY ELLIS ARNOLD EARNOLD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

If you’ve ever seen the unmistakably artsy, pastel-colored bus rolling through the heart of town, you’ve seen the Englewood Trolley. The free service, once known as

the Art Shuttle, used to run from 6:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. — it now rolls through 8 p.m. The trolley arrives about every 20 minutes at 19 stops starting at the Englewood Civic Center — where city offices and the library sit — and takes riders to places like Walmart, King Soopers, the downtown block of South Broadway, the Malley Senior Recreation Center, and Craig Hospital and Swedish Medical Center. The civic center stop is a stone’s throw from the RTD Englewood light rail station. The trolley runs Monday

PERIODICAL

DID YOU KNOW INSIDE

The median sales price of a singlefamily home in Englewood in 2018 increased by 8.9 percent over the previous year to $415,000.

Source: Denver Metro Association of Realtors

VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 19 | SPORTS: PAGE 21

EnglewoodHerald.net

VOLUME 98 | ISSUE 50


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