Northglenn thornton sentinel 1107

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Sentinel Northglenn 11.7.2013

Northglenn -Thornton

November 7, 2013

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A Colorado Community Media Publication

ournorthglennnews.com, ourthorntonnews.com

Adams County, Colorado • Volume 50, Issue 13

Northglenn incumbents fare well Mayor Joyce Downing wins re-election bid By Tammy Kranz

tkranz@ourcoloradonews.com Northglenn Mayor Joyce Downing took a strong lead in her re-election effort, securing the position with 64.42 percent, or 3,895 votes, as of press time Wednesday. Her opponent, Gene Wieneke, had 2,151 votes, or 35.58 percent. “I think (the voters) like to see the progress the city is making and we have a great

council working together and they want to continue on that path,” Downing said Wednesday morning. She said much has been accomplished in the past four years she served as mayor — including ongoing development projects Downing like the Webster Lake Promenade at 120th Avenue and Grant Street, the revitalization of the Garland Center with the Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market, plus several new businesses coming in to the city.

“It’s really making the city vibrant and healthy,” Downing said. Attracting new businesses and revitalizing the ones already in the city are a few of her top priorities for her second term. Another top priority, she said, was bringing the FasTracks line up north as soon as possible. “We have such a great council and a lot of great ideas, we have to continue to work together,” she added. Downing has lived in Northglenn since 1969. She and her husband have six children, 10 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. Downing was appointed

to serve as Ward II councilwoman in 1990 and re-elected in 1992, 1996 and 2000. She was elected as mayor in 2009, beating out two other candidates at that time, including Wieneke. “Joyce has been in the political and social limelight since the early ‘90s and had a well-financed campaign,” Wieneke said Wednesday. “As the Sentinel’s endorsement implied, she listens to all before adopting the majority’s or staff’s opinion. I was a one issue candidate centered on the use of tax Incumbents continues on Page 20

Amendment 66 falls way short School-finance tax loses resoundingly By Vic Vela

vvela@ourcoloradonews.com A ballot measure that sought to overhaul the way Colorado schools are funded suffered a sound defeat on Nov. 5. Voters by a resounding margin rejected Amendment 66, a measure that would have created at least $950 million in new taxes annually to fund major school reforms across the state. It was never close. After early returns showed the measure to be doomed, the only matters in question were how wide of a margin the ballot measure would fail by, and at what time would supporters publicly admit defeat — which occurred about an hour after 7 p.m. poll closings. As of the early morning of Nov. 6, Amendment 66 had been rejected by about 66 percent of voters, with 91 percent of precincts reporting. “Perhaps this wasn’t the right transaction,” Gov. John Hickenlooper acknowledged to a room of muted and disappointed supporters from inside downtown Denver’s Marriot Denver City Center. Trying to remain positive, the governor also said that “no one fought against” the measure’s vision of making funding for Colorado schools a model for the rest of the nation. Hickenlooper said he will continue to strive toward achieving that goal. “Every great social victory in the history of this country was based on a number of failures,” Hickenlooper said. Meanwhile, Amendment 66 opponents crowed. “Colorado families spoke loud and clear,” said Kelly Maher, executive director of Compass Colorado, a group that worked to oppose Amendment 66. “We need substantive outcome-driven reforms to the educational system before we ask families and small businesses to foot a major tax bill.” The measure sought to fund full-day kindergarten, preschool for at-risk youth, and would have provided more resources for English language learners, special education students and children who are in gifted and talented programs. Additionally, the measure aimed to reduce class sizes and would have reformed per-pupil funding statewide in a more equitable fashion, proponents argued. POSTAL ADDRESS

Gov. John Hicklenlooper addresses Amendment 66 supporters inside the ballroom at the Marriot Denver City Center on Nov. 5. The measure, which would have created at least $950 million in new taxes annually to fund an overhaul of Colorado schools, was flatly rejected by voters that evening. Photo by Vic Vela While the reforms may have sounded good to many people, even the governor acknowledged that the hefty price tag associated with overhauling the new funding system was responsible for turning off many voters. The measure would have raised taxes on all Colorado taxpayers. The two-tiered proposal would have raised income taxes to 5 percent on everyone earning $75,000 or less. Those who earn over that amount would have paid 5 percent on the first $75,000 in taxable income and 5.9 percent on taxable income above $75,000. Colorado’s current income tax rate is a flat 4.63 percent, regardless of income level. The measure sought to put in place legislation that was enacted through Senate Bill

213. The Democrat-sponsored bill — which was signed by Hickenlooper in June — did not receive a single vote from Republican lawmakers. Republicans and other critics blasted the school funding overhaul as a “billion-dollar tax hike” that comes at a time when Coloradans are barely coming out of a recession. They also argued that Senate Bill 213 did not put in place the kind of reforms to warrant that kind of a tax increase. Opponents also argued that much of the revenue that would have been raised through Amendment 66 would have ended up going to school districts other than the ones where taxpayers’ children attend. The measure was rejected in just about every area of the state. For example, late re-

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turns showed the measure was failing badly in Adams, Arapahoe, Douglas, El Paso and Jefferson counties. The only large counties that could end up seeing majority support when the votes are officially tallied are Denver and Boulder. The campaign that drove Amendment 66, Colorado Commits to Kids, had a huge fundraising advantage over its opposition, having collected more than $9 million for the measure’s messaging efforts. “Honestly, you could have had the best messaging in the world, I just think that people felt it was too expensive,” Hickenlooper told reporters after his remarks. Maher said afterward, “Never has so much been spent by so few to accomplish so little.”

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