Littleton Independent 0827

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August 27, 2020

ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO

A publication of

LittletonIndependent.net

VOLUME 75 | ISSUE 44

Looming Littleton schools cuts spur request for tax hike Guy Grace stands in the Littleton Public Schools security office. Grace retired after more than 30 years working in the district’s security department. COURTESY PHOTO

Littleton schools security director rides off Guy Grace looks back on decades of lives saved, trauma endured BY DAVID GILBERT DGILBERT@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Guy Grace is trying to get used to waking up to silence.

For years, Grace, the longtime director of security for Littleton Public Schools, personally responded to every “Safe2Tell” alert the district received. Many times, it was a latenight call about a student in crisis, on the verge of suicide or overdose. “We were saving lives,” Grace said. “But it destroyed my sleep. Three nights a week, I was lucky to sleep an hour.” Grace, 53, quietly retired from LPS

over the summer, after more than 30 years on the job. In early August, he awoke for the first time in his new home, on eight acres outside Green River, Wyoming. “I wasn’t unhappy with my job,” Grace said. “I realized time was fleeting. My wife and I are getting older. I’m watching my kids grow up. We’ve always dreamed of going somewhere

BY DAVID GILBERT DGILBERT@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Littleton voters could be asked to decide on a sales tax increase

next year, part of efforts to address what city officials call a crisis in the city’s capital projects fund. The capital projects fund is the portion of the city budget that pays for road projects, vehicle fleets including police cars, street maintenance, construction and upgrades to city-owned buildings and other infrastructure costs. The fund has three primary sources of revenue: building use

INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 10 | LIFE: PAGE 12 | SPORTS: PAGE 16

BY DAVID GILBERT DGILBERT@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

taxes largely imposed on construction projects, gasoline taxes, and an annual transfer from the city’s general fund arranged after the city disbanded its fire department in 2018. City fees account for a small minority of the fund. The fund has been a headache for city officials for years, as it has failed to meet a growing list of

Littleton Public Schools will ask voters to approve a property tax increase this fall, hoping to stave off what district officials call “catastrophic” cuts to the district as a result of budget shortfalls caused by the novel coronavirus pandemic. The district will ask voters in November to approve a mill levy override that aims to raise $12 million in its first year, hoping to offset slashed state funding and increased expenses related to the pandemic If the measure doesn’t pass, district officials say, LPS could face cuts beginning in 2021 including laying off more than 180 employees, increasing class sizes, slashing funding for mental health and Ewert security services, cutting teacher pay, and eliminating programs including Options High School, Village Preschool, and career and technical education programs. “We can’t fix this by reducing a few budget items,” Superintendent Brian

SEE CITY, P24

SEE CUTS, P8

SEE GRACE, P6

City eyes sales-tax request to address capital projects Road construction, infrastructure funding in dire need, officials say

District says ‘catastrophic’ outlook won’t be relieved by state


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