
4 minute read
Kulmann runs for reelection
ferent than what they’ve always been, she said. Public safety, economic development and a ordable housing all are her top goals, and they all tie in together to make the city a place where residents can do it all.
BY LUKE ZARZECKI LZARZECKI@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Jan Kulmann is an engineer. She said that means her job is to solve problems where solutions don’t necessarily exist.
She sees parallels to politics.
“ ere’s a lot of problems that exist and nobody knows how to solve them, or we wouldn’t have constant work to do. So engineers are really suited for that kind of work,” she said.
Kulmann is in the last year of her four-year term as mayor. Voters will go to the polls in November to select the mayor for the next four years, as well as three City Councilors. Candidates can begin passing nomination forms and collecting signatures on Aug. 8.
Kulmann moved to ornton in 2007 because her uncle lived in the city, and they were looking for a place that felt like home. With ornton giving a small town feel but also being a huge community, she said the opportunities are endless to live, work and play in the city.
She wants to expand on those opportunities and continue to build o the work she’s done while she’s been the mayor.
Her main priorities aren’t much dif-
“We want people to not just live here. We want them to work here, play here, stay here, spend more money here,” she said.
Her experience on the council, which she served since 2013 as a councilor and later as mayor, prepared her to continue the work she’s been doing. She said she has learned how the city works and feels she is able to make real di erences in the community.
Kulmann pointed to the fact that she’s passionate about public safety. e amount of hires in the police department has increased and the re department won a congressional award for the work they did with COVID-19.
Current issues
When Kulmann was running for congress, she learned that if everything is local, it doesn’t matter what’s happening at the state and federal levels.
“Everything a ects us locally,” she said.

To address the rising cost of living, it’s vital to bring jobs to the city and make sure housing is available, she said.
“A ordability is a lot about having a place to live, being able to a ord to live, being able to have a job where you live so you don’t have to travel so much and those are the things that we’re working on in the city,” she said.
Housing
Kulmann sees housing as a water issue.
“We have to have water in order to make sure that we have stock available,” she said.
She’s looking forward to see how Proposition 123, a sales tax dedicated to a ordable housing that was approved by voters in 2022, will pan out and how ornton will bene t from it.
Crime
Housing also plays into crime.
“It’s extremely important because, without a safe community, we’re not going to have residents that want to live here,” she said.
Kulmann hopes to build o the new hires in the police department, as well as focus on training, with help from the new training center that recently opened.
“It’s about having the right o cers that are trained to protect our community in the right ways,” she said.
She touted Chief Terrence Gordon for helping make community policing part of ornton’s culture.
Past issues
Kulmann said a 2022 grassroots movement seeking for more campaign nance reform in ornton is worth discussing.
“I think there’s opportunity for conversations and I’m open to real conversations about it, not political posturing about it,” she said.
A group of residents tried to collect signatures to put the issue on the 2022 November ballot, but fell short. e group of more than 6,000 signatures, but needed 8,565 make the ballot.
If passed, the ordinance would have limited contributions, created more frequent reporting deadlines and required more disclosures on campaign materials. It also, would’ve banned corporate, special interest and union money and made it easier to understand rules that govern making donations.
Kulmann, who at the time stopped short of supporting the initiative, did say she was in favor of more transparency.
She said she felt the approach to the issue was ‘an us versus them approach.’ She wants to have a collaborative e ort that can address some sort of reform.
Thornton Shopping Center
With ornton recently acquiring the ornton Shopping Center, Kulmann hopes for it to be a center for revitalization.

“It’s something all of us in the community are excited to actually start to move forward on,” she said.
However, she stressed the importance of managing expectations. ere’s a lot to x which will take a long time before something happens to the property.
Jacque Phillips vote
On Feb. 9, 2022, Former City Councilor Jacque Phillips was voted o council 5-4, with those for the removal citing a purchase of a home in Alamosa and starting a second job there. Kulmann voted for it.
“ e facts are she doesn’t live here. And that’s really the gist of it,” she said.
She said she wished Phillips brought up the issue earlier to have a collaborative conversation about it.
“It’s unfortunate that someone decided to move out of the city instead of representing the community where she told people she was,” Kulmann said.
Thornton water project
Adams 12 Five Star Schools Superintendent Chris Gdowski told Northglenn City Councilors Feb. 13 that more housing and a ordable housing is a strong interest for Adams 12. He said 15 acres of their property were sold to a housing developer, but it fell through due to water issues in ornton.