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September 17, 2020
ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO
A publication of
LittletonIndependent.net
VOLUME 75 | ISSUE 47
Multiple security levels safeguard ballots Process overseen by bipartisan teams; voters can track ballots Kathryn McEntire picks up leaves and trash amid the headstones at Fort Logan National Cemetery.
PHOTOS BY DAVID GILBERT
A day for those who ‘answered the call’ At Fort Logan National Cemetery, volunteers remember the fallen BY DAVID GILBERT DGILBERT@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Doug Robinson worked in the World Trade Center in the 1980s and 1990s, as a young hotshot at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter. Before moving west to Denver, he got to know Rick Rescorla, the company’s head of security and a British Army veteran. On Sept. 11, 2001, Rescorla led a column of evacuees down a stairwell of the Twin Towers. After the second plane hit, knocking out the power, panic exploded in the corridor as the lights went dark. Rescorla, at the head of the column, picked up a megaphone and began belting out the Cornish battle hymns of his youth. Many survivors said his singing kept them calm enough to escape. After escorting the group outside, Rescorla charged back into the building to look for survivors. He was
Volunteers unroll landscape matting over a bare spot on the lawn of Fort Logan National Cemetery. last seen sprinting up the 10th floor, megaphone in hand. Rescorla was on Robinson’s mind on Sept. 12. Robinson led volunteers from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints, together with a group from Catholic Charities led by Mark Hahn, as they cleaned up and beautified the grounds at Fort Logan National Cemetery in southwest Denver for the annual National Day
of Service and Remembrance. “There’s so much divisiveness lately, but we have more in common than we think,” Robinson said as he unrolled sod over a bare spot on Fort Logan’s lawn. “This is a day to honor people who gave their lives for others. People who answered the call when it came. It’s a solemn anniversary, but it’s a day to look past our differences and give back to each other.”
BY DAVID GILBERT DGILBERT@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Arapahoe County’s elections director says voters can expect a safe, secure fall election, overseen by bipartisan teams. Voters can choose to mail or drop off their ballots, or vote in person, said Peg Perl, Arapahoe County’s elections director, and can track their ballots online to make sure they’ve been received and accepted. Arapahoe County will have 29 inperson vote centers and at least 32 ballot drop boxes for the fall election, Perl said — up from 25 drop boxes last year. Several of the in-person vote centers will be open beginning Oct. 19. Perl described the layers of security used to ensure ballots are fairly counted and insulated against fraud. “It would be extremely difficult to cheat in our elections,” Perl said. “There’s so much oversight. So many eyes on the entire process. So much tracking.” A bipartisan process Much of the process is handled by bipartisan teams of election judges, SEE BALLOTS, P10
INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | SPORTS: PAGE 23
TOUCHING HISTORY
Effort aims to collect archives for Center for the Blind P14