Littleton Independent 0408

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April 8, 2021

ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO

A publication of

LittletonIndependent.net

VOLUME 76 | ISSUE 24

Metro area may see patchwork of restrictions State to let local agencies decide COVID restrictions; plans unclear in many areas COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA STAFF

dations in the face of a years-long slide in enrollment numbers, which district officials say is driven by high housing prices placing Littleton out of reach of young families. Both Moody and East elementaries have fallen below 300 students in recent years, which district officials say makes it hard to provide comprehensive programming and places a strain on staffing resources.

As state public health officials prepare to step back and let local health agencies decide what coronavirus restrictions to enact going forward, it’s unclear what the resulting landscape of policies will look like in the Denver metro area — and how broad the differences among them may be. The latest changes to Colorado’s system of restrictions — dubbed “dial 3.0” — took effect on March 24, making it easier for counties to move into level green, the least restrictive of the dial’s six levels. Dial 3.0 also removed most restrictions in level green altogether and relaxed limits for certain businesses in other counties. The state’s color-coded dial is the set of restrictions counties must follow based on the local spread of the virus. The system affects capacity at restaurants, other businesses, indoor and outdoor events, and other settings. Colorado originally implemented the dial on Sept. 15. After several months that saw changes to the dial system, that chapter of Colorado’s pandemic policy is coming to a close.

SEE EAST, P10

SEE RESTRICTIONS, P11

Littleton Public Schools will close East Elementary in northeast Littleton in coming years, the school board decided on March 30. The school, which serves a disproportionately high immigrant and low-income population, will merge with a new school on the Moody Elementary campus. The closure is one of several LPS is considering in the face of declining enrollment driven by high PHOTO BY DAVID GILBERT housing prices.

Littleton school board votes to close East Elementary North Littleton school will merge with Moody; more consolidations on way amid falling enrollment BY DAVID GILBERT DGILBERT@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Littleton Public Schools will consolidate East and Moody elemen-

tary schools into a new building on the Moody Elementary campus, the school board decided unanimously on March 30. The decision means East Elementary, near Broadway and Orchard Road, will close in coming years, with plans to open the new school building at Moody, at Windermere Street and Weaver Avenue, by fall 2023. The move comes as Littleton Public Schools looks at a wave of elementary and preschool consoli-

INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 17 | SPORTS: PAGE 23

A PROFILE OF PREP SPORTS ATHLETE

Volleyball player brings passion to the game P23


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