Lone Tree Voice 0624

Page 1

June 24, 2021

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DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO

A publication of

LoneTreeVoice.net

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

VOLUME 20 | ISSUE 18

Fee increases will pay for highway projects Polis signs transportation bill that adds to costs of gasoline, rideshares BY JESSE PAUL THE COLORADO SUN

per. This past year, she enrolled in a capstone course. Students were tasked with writing about any issue they wanted to solve, and she chose to tackle her school’s lack of recycling. This project was on top of many other commitments to her school and community, including work as a Sky Ridge Medical Center Youth Volunteer. Further she is the only woman on the CyberPatriots team, a program created by the Air Force Association that educates students about cybersecurity. She has also been a part of varsity cross country, lacrosse, and track and field at her school

FLOYD HILL — Shaded by an Interstate 70 bridge that has fueled steering-wheel-pounding rage for generations, Gov. Jared Polis on June 17 signed a transportation fee and spending bill that seeks to inject more than $5 billion into Colorado road and transit projects over the next 11 years. “Everybody knows we need to fix it,” Polis said of Colorado’s road and highway system before signing Senate Bill 260 under the curved I-70 bridge at the bottom of Floyd Hill, a structure over Clear Creek that chokes traffic and ruins the best-laid plans of skiers, snowboarders, hikers and bikers every weekend. “If it was easy it would have been done already.” Colorado lawmakers have been trying to solve the problem of the state’s limited transportation funding for years, proposing tax hikes and bonding and committing more existing money from the state budget to the problem. But the efforts to find money in the couch cushions to supplement a 22-cent gasoline tax that hasn’t increased since 1992 have either not been successful or not been sufficient to tackle the breadth of the issue.

SEE AWARD, P10

SEE HIGHWAYS, P5

Dylan Daniels, 2021 Outstanding Youth of Lone Tree Award winner, celebrates with the Lone Tree City Council and a representaPHOTO BY MADDIE BROWNING tive from Canvas Credit Union, one of the award’s sponsors.

Student honored by council Dylan Daniels garners Outstanding Youth Award BY MADDIE BROWNING SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA

Dylan Daniels, a senior at Valor Christian High School, was awarded the 2021 Outstanding Youth of Lone Tree Award at the Lone Tree City Council meeting June 1 for her leadership and hard work over the past year. The Outstanding Youth of Lone Tree Award program was created in 2011 to recognize “youth in the community who demonstrate a commitment to community

involvement as well as personal achievement,” according to the City of Lone Tree’s website. Youth commissioners Laura Pulido and Sarah Paschke, Councilmember Jay Carpenter and Mayor Pro Tem Cathie Brunnick conducted the interviews for this award, and the Youth Commission voted to select Daniels. They said that she demonstrated impeccable leadership skills and commended her work creating a recycling program for her school amid the pandemic. Daniels noticed that there weren’t any recycling bins at Valor during her freshman year and thought it wasn’t right, considering the school’s high usage of pa-

REEL CHANGES

Movie theaters open but the pandemic changed viewing modes

P14

TREADING THE TURF Prep sports action fills the fields P23


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