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May 27, 2021
ELBERT COUNTY, COLORADO
A publication of
ElbertCountyNews.net
VOLUME 126 | ISSUE 15
Elizabeth High to welcome international students Program is seeking host families for school year starting this fall BY CHANCY J. GATLIN-ANDERSON SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
Homes are selling quickly at the Independence subdivision.
Road 13 will be expanded to four lanes in the future when traffic counts necessitate it. In response, one local resident exclaimed: “Don’t you even dream of coming after my land!” On the Elbert County Citizens Facebook page, other local residents share similar sentiments regarding the new development. “Developments should only be allowed to grow as fast as the overall infrastructure of the area they are in,” said Elizabeth resident Rachel Medley Oswald. “Roads, schools, and public services should be funded and fixed to match the influx of residents into these areas.” Generally, it seems that a large segment of residents have reservations about the new expansive residential developments in the area. The Elbert County manager, however, sees the developments as
Elizabeth High School is welcoming new international foreign exchange students for the 2021-2022 school year. The program is called Education First (EF) High School Exchange Year and welcomes students between the ages of 15 and 18 from 13 countries around the world who will live in the U.S. for either one semester or a full school year. The program is a nonprofit corporation designated by the U.S. Department of State to operate a J-1 (cultural and educational opportunities) student exchange program. EF brings more students to the U.S. each year than any other high school exchange program. Since 1979, the organization has connected more than 100,000 international students with caring host families across the United States. The biggest struggle for the program is finding welcoming and exciting host families for the foreign exchange students. “We have so many students. It is just a matter of getting that dream match for the host family,” said Katie Klossner, international exchange coordinator for EF. “Host families get to tell me what types of personalities, hobbies, and country preference they want in their foreign exchange student, and then I find the perfect match.”
SEE INDEPENDENCE, P5
SEE EXCHANGE, P5
PHOTO BY CHANCY J. GATLIN-ANDERSON
Independence meeting brings out questions Zoom event describes plans for infrastructure, homesites BY CHANCY J. GATLIN-ANDERSON SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
The Independence residential development north of Elizabeth, originally approved in 2010, has been a point of contention for local residents, sparking heated conversation and concerns about the well-being of Elbert County. The representatives of the Independence development held a community Zoom meeting on April 29, outlining infrastructure improvements, homesites, and amenity construction. The representatives were met with a slew of questions and concerns, mostly directed toward road construction and how it will im-
pact the community and nearby landowners. According to the Independence presentation, Delbert Road is being extended as a part of the Independence neighborhood. Elbert County is requiring the expansion of Delbert Road from Hilltop Road to Singing Hills Road. Other improvements include accelerations/deceleration lanes added on Hilltop Road at the community entrance. “Our team has been coordinating transportation improvements with Elbert County staff and the county’s consulting team, KimleyHorn and Associates Inc.,” said the Independence representative. When an anonymous attendee asked about the general future of road construction around the development, the representatives said that the West Elbert County Transportation Plan indicates that Hilltop Road, Singing Hills Road, Delbert Road and County
INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 10 | LIFE: PAGE 12 | CALENDAR: PAGE 13
MIX IT UP DJs, live entertainers ready for prom season
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