1-Color
April 11, 2014
75 cents Arapahoe County, Colorado | Volume 94, Issue 8 A publication of
englewoodherald.net
Students get new required course Class in financial literacy needed for graduation By Tom Munds
tmunds@coloradocommunitymedia.com
Rich Kempel operates a power saw as his children Terran, 6, and Eliza, 4, help him do volunteer work April 5 at the Charles Hay World School garden. About 30 volunteers got together to do preliminary work on the plots to start preparing them for planting. Photos by Tom Munds
Volunteers prepare Hay garden Parents, residents work to get garden ready for planting By Tom Munds
tmunds@coloradocommunitymedia.com The whine of a power saw blended with the hum of conversation as about 30 volunteers did preliminary work on the garden at Charles Hay World School. “A lot of the focus today is building the wooden borders on the garden plots,” said Cindy Shattuck, garden coordinator. “There is a lot of work to be done and we plan to be out here again April 12 at 10 a.m.” This is the third year for the Hay garden. Shattuck said the garden has helped get more people from the neighborhood involved and brought more attention to the school. For example Heather Martin had 13 members of her University of Denver writing class at the garden April 5 to help fulfill their community service requirement for the class. Shattuck said taht in addtion to being used in the school’s curriculum, the garden also grows its share of vegetables. The students pick and use the produce that ripens before school is out for the summer. Then parent volunteers continue to tend the garden when school is out. “We water and weed the plots and, when the time comes, harvest the produce,” Shattuck said. “The volunteers can take home produce they can use plus we have extra produce to donate to the WellFed program to feed needy families and (give) to Café 180.” Hannah LeCount, international baccalaureate coordinator, said its nice to see the garden is part of the curriculum.
The Englewood School Board has unanimously approved expanding graduation requirements for high school students, requiring them to take a course titled “Personal Financial Literacy.” Karen Brofft, assistant Englewood school superintendent, told the board April 1 that the request to add the course was to help students have the financial knowledge to manage money successfully. “The addition of the course also is needed to equip our seniors with the knowledge they will need when they take the Temporary Colorado Assessment Program in social studies starting next school year,” she said. “We recommend students be required to take the course in their sophomore year. The information they learn will be reinforced in the required economics course.” Class continues on Page 7
Flushing is on tap Jenny Young and her daughter Riley clear the debris out of one of the Charles Hay World School garden plots as part of the volunteer work day on April 5. “We incorporate the garden into our lesson plans at all grade levels,” she said. “Students learn about the soil, how plants grow and the produce is used in our cooking classes.” She said kindergartners also learn how plants grow from their bean necklaces. “The necklace is a small plastic bag with a bean resting on a moist cotton ball,” LeCount said. “The child’s body heat helps the bean to sprout so they can see it develop.” Volunteer Amelia Shattuck, 7, is a Hay student and she said she likes the garden, “It is fun to work in the garden and I like planting stuff,” she said. “Then we water it and watch the plants grow. It is really cool to see the plants come up out
of the ground. It’s also fun to pick vegetables and I think the fact I helped grow them makes them taste better than vegetables from the store.”
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Volunteers did a variety of jobs at the Charles Hay World School garden. Teams will return April 12 to continue preparing the garden for planting.
Annual project to remove sediments planned April 14-18 By Tom Munds
tmunds@coloradocommunitymedia.com Flushing all the city’s water mains the week starting April 14 requires Englewood Utility Department employees to work from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m opening fire hydrants for short periods of time. The flushing is done by shutting off valves to isolate a block-long section of the main and opening the fire hydrant attached to that section of the main. The water rushes out of the hydrant at about 1,500 cubic feet per minute. Usually, the hydrant is allowed to run for about five minutes so the rush of water flushes out the mineral deposits that accumulated in the water mains during the fall and winter when water flow is low. However, this year the flushing will be done as quickly and efficiently as possible because of the dry conditions over the past couple years. Because of the nature of the project that has crews moving from block to block as quickly as possible, crews cannot notify residents when work will be Flushing continues on Page 7