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October 8, 2020
ADAMS COUNTY, COLORADO
A publication of
Northglenn-ThorntonSentinel.com
VOLUME 57 | ISSUE 9
Northglenn police board gets green light Councilors back plan for citizen-led oversight committee
where one man was killed and a woman injured was injured. The pair were accused of stealing a car. It was the largest use of force settlement in Colorado’s history. The city hired consultants BerryDunn to review the department’s operations and write the report in the wake of that settlement. The 391-page document is available in PDF format on www.northglenn.org, the City’s website. A shorter executive summary of the report — containing all of the report’s findings without the supporting data — is posted there, too.
BY SCOTT TAYLOR STAYLOR@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
City Councilors lined up Sept. 28 to favor a permanent oversight board to monitor the Northglenn Police Department and weigh in on policies. “I’m super excited, but really proud of our staff because this is cutting edge and it’s new,” Mayor Meredith Leighty said. “The fact that you are all willing to take this risks is impressive.” City Manager Heather Geyer and Police Chief Jim May presented three options to give the city more public model of managing the city’s police, ranging from having the department manage the process to creating one-time citizen task force to lead the effort to appointing a permanent citizen Community Co-Production Policing board to work with police going forward. Both Geyer and Hall said they favored the permanent board. “This, we believe, would be a longterm, fully invested commitment by residents of Northglenn,” Geyer said.
City Councilors agreed to move forward to create a citizen’s board that will provide oversight of the Northglenn Police Department. SCOTT TAYLOR It would a permanent board authorized through a City Council ordinance supported by consultants BerryDunn, the chief and other staff. Geyer said she it would likely be similar in make-up as the newly seated Social Equity Board. “This is a long-term investment and I believe the full outcome of this approach is complete CCPP (Community Co-Production Policing) implementation.” Creating the Board should cost the
city $57,000 to pay for consultants BerryDunn and for technical assistance. Councilors agreed unanimously. “It’s clear a lot of thought has gone into this, and it’s clear that option three makes a lot of sense,” Councilor Jenny Wilford said. The decision comes in response to a report on the police department the city commissioned late in December 2019 after agreeing to a $8.75 million settlement that stemmed from a 2017 shooting
New Philosophy The report notes that Northglenn’s police administration are already backers of Community Oriented Policing, a philosophy that tries to build ties between the police and the people. A major recommendation of the report, beyond adding new officers and reorganizing police beats, was to go beyond community policing to create a Community Co-Production Policing board. That would be a group of city officials and Northglenn residents that could review department policies and procedures, recruiting and hiring new officers, keeping current staff, and SEE POLICE, P2
Colorado loosens school quarantine guidelines for some areas Some can send home ‘close contacts’ of COVID cases instead of entire cohorts, classrooms BY ELLIS ARNOLD EARNOLD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
With thousands of students sent home from in-person classes or told to quarantine in the first several weeks of the school year in metro Denver districts, the state public-health department released relaxed guidelines outlining that in some cases, entire
classes or larger groups of students no longer need to quarantine in response to a positive COVID-19 case. In schools in counties operating under the strictest level of Colorado’s safer-at-home social distancing order — where the coronavirus’s spread remains relatively high — classes or cohorts of students would still be quarantined in response to a positive case under the new guidance, according to the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment. To minimize exposure when COVID-19 cases occur, students this year generally attend school in groups, or “cohorts,” of varying sizes. For example, Cherry Creek School District uses a plan for grades six through 12
INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 10 | LIFE: PAGE 12 | CALENDAR: PAGE 15 | SPORTS: PAGE 36
that splits the student population in half. On the other hand, in counties where the virus’s spread is milder, some schools can undergo more targeted quarantines of “close contacts” of an infected student instead of the student’s full class or cohort, according to the department. The new guidance was to take effect Oct. 5. Quarantines and related dismissals of students from in-person classes have resulted in entire grade levels and schools moved temporarily to online classes in metro Denver school districts. Some school district leaders had raised complaints about the state public-health department’s policy. “CDPHE has put out overburden-
ELECTION TIME
Check out where the candidates stand on issues
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some guidance,” Superintendent Scott Siegfried said at a Cherry Creek School District school board meeting. Siegfried took issue with classmates needing to quarantine regardless of how close they were to the student who tested positive. “It’s becoming difficult to find substitutes” for classes whose teachers have been quarantined, Siegfried said at the board’s Sept. 14 meeting. Littleton Public Schools Superintendent Brian Ewert recently called the quarantines “somewhat overreaching” and also called for narrower criteria for who should be sent home. SEE COVID, P9
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Northglenn seats diversity board BY SCOTT TAYLOR STAYLOR@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Saying they were pleased with a public process that is getting new people involved in Northglenn business, City Councilors voted to fill the new nine-member citizen board at their Sept. 28 meeting. “I just want to thank everyone who applied for this board,” Councilor Katherine Goff said. “It was amazing that we had so many interested residents and it was really, really difficult to choose. So many qualified candidates applied, would could have created another whole board.” The members, ranging from high school students to retired art gallery manager, will serve three year terms. Rupa Venkatesh, assistant to Northglenn City Manager Heather Geyer and administrative staff for the group said the their first meeting has not been set but they will begin meeting later this month or early in November. “Those who didn’t make the board this time around, there will be other opportunities and
Northglenn’s Diversity, Inclusivity, and Social Equity Board members Ward 4: Christina Fischel Ward 1:Wesley Dunbar Ward 1: M. Celeste Jackson Ward 4: Autumn Romero Ward 2: Cheryl Huffman At-Large: Rory Moore Ward 2: Everett Renberg At-Large: Sarah Woodson Ward 3: Chase Janis Ward 3: Lucille Rivera At-Large Youth: Rayana Blackmon other openings,” Goff said. “There will be other ways you can connect with the city’s and help us move forward on whatever projects we decide we need to work on.” Councilors agreed to create the new nine-member group of citizens to advise the City Council on matters of diversity, racial equity and social justice in July, part of a pledge councilors made in May to make a constructive change to the way the city operates in the wake of nationwide protests against racism. The idea has been brewing since Mayor Meredith Leighty and the current group of councilors began their terms in 2019, when they agreed to make inclusivity part of the their five year strategic plan.
“It’s been fantastic, this whole process, just a lot of fun,” Councilor Julie Duran Mullica said. “Not only to get to meet all of the people we were able it interview and the read their applications and find out why they were excited about it. Now, I’m excited to get this group together and see what comes out from this amazing group of people.” The board is designed to follow a framework created by the Government Alliance on Race and Equity, a national network of government officials that began discussing racial and equity issues in 1981. The goal is create a set of policies and programs that make the city more diverse and equitable for all residents based on Northglenn’s own make up. The
group will take part in a diversity training program. Councilors themselves are scheduled to participate in the same training program. Members introduced In Northglenn, the board is made up of two members from each ward and two at-large members as well as a youth representative. The City Council meeting was held virtually and most of the new members were logged on and given a chance to introduce themselves. Appointee Wesley Dunbar, who represents Ward 1, said the board is a feather in Northglenn’s cap. “I was a district attorney meet-and-greet and there were two County Commissioners there, and they all agreed that Northglenn is the star of Adams County,” Dunbar said. Ward 3 appointee Chase Janis, a member of the Ogala Lakata nation, introduced herself to fellow appointees and City Councilors using the Lakota Sioux language, before translating her words to English. Janis said she wanted to
“greet you all with a good heart and a handshake.” A sociology and environmental science student at Metropolitan State College, she said she’s a lifelong Colorado resident. “I’ve always wanted to be more involved with my community, and I look forward to working with you all to make Northglenn even more of a inclusive and diverse place,” Janis said. Photographer Lucille Rivera said she’s lived in Northglenn for eight years. “I’m so excited, because I’d just retired from an art gallery in Denver and I love the arts,” she said. “I’m hoping that we can create more art in Northglenn. We have such beautiful artwork in the community but I hope we can consider a gallery in the city.” Northglenn High School student Rayana Blackmon said she’s hoping it be a link to students. “I’m already very involved in my school, and I saw an opportunity to bring it out to my community,” she said. “I’m so glad to meet with all of you.”
North Metro Fire event teaches kitchen safety STAFF REPORT
A North Metro Fire District effort is seeking to make people more cautious
about cooking fires. The district is teaming up with the National Fire Protection Association to promote this year’s Fire Preven-
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tion Week campaign, “Serve Up Fire Safety in the Kitchen!” According to the NFPA, cooking is the leading cause of home fires and home fire injuries in the United States. As part of Fire Prevention Week, which takes place October 4-10, North Metro Fire hopes to educate everyone about simple but important actions to keep themselves and those around them safe. The fire district will host a variety of fun activities virtually and socially distanced throughout the week. The fire district urges residents to follow four safety tips to prevent fires and injuries in the kitchen. •STAY focused on food: Don’t leave cooking food unattended. Turn off the burner if you leave the kitchen, even for a short time. • PUT a lid on it: If a small grease fire starts, slide a lid over the pan and turn off the burner, Leave the pan covered until it is cool. If a fire starts in the oven, turn off the heat and leave the oven door shut. If the fire doesn’t extinguish quickly, exit the home and call 911 for help. • KEEP cooking area clear: Have a “kid-free zone” of at least 3 feet around the stove and areas where hot food or drink is prepared or carried. • PREVENT scalds and burns: Turn pot handles away from the stove, and
keep hot foods/liquids away from the counter’s edge. The district hosted a virtual story time on its Facebook page Oct. 6 and and outdoor story time Oct. 7. Both featured the fire district’s life safety educators and “Dusty” the Fire Safety Dragon. The virtual story time has been posted on the District’s YouTube channel (youtube.com/northmetrofirerescuedistrict). To close out the week, North Metro Fire is tying in a service mission along with its safety education initiative. The District is hosting a drive-up event to collect non-perishable food items for Broomfield FISH and Immaculate Heart of Mary Stewardship Center in Northglenn—both food banks serving the community. Residents are invited to complete the NFPA’s kitchen safety checklist that can be downloaded from North Metro Fire’s website, and bring either canned soup, peanut butter and jelly or cereal to the fire district’s food drive. Those who complete the checklist and come to the drive-by food drive will get a bag from North Metro Fire with free goodies and safety activities for kids to do at home. North Metro Fire invites residents to visit www.nmfr.org/fpw to learn kitchen safety tips and to see the full list of activities residents can participate in.
POLICE
the traditional Community Oriented Policing model to give a greater level of community participation. It is based on community partnerships and problem solving. We use models to help solve crimes in our community, to reduce the fear of crime and ultimately to reduce crime.” Councilors agreed with that recommendation in August, but didn’t settle on how they’d do it. Councilors will see the plans for the board at a meeting in November, Geyer said. “I’ll give you more specifics once we can figure out a date and design considerations for council feedback,” she said.
FROM PAGE 1
reviewing staff training, professional standards and internal affairs. “This is an operation philosophy,” Chief May told councilors “It’s like Community Policing, just taken to the next level.” The CCPP philosophy was create in the wake of the 2014 shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. and May said it was designed modernize policing. “It’s not a cookie-cutter program,” May said. “It expands the focus of
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0October 8, 2020
All the flavors to entice kids. All the nicotine to keep them hooked. E-cigarette makers and vape shops are enticing kids with flavors like cotton candy, gummy bear and bubble gum. And nationally, over 5 million kids are using these flavored e-cigarettes. Vape shops and tobacco companies say their products aren’t ending up in kids’ hands, but that’s just not true. Many retailers still sell to minors, and many of them in Denver even illegally sold products during the COVID-19 shutdown violating emergency orders. Let’s stop pretending vape shops and the industry care about public health or the health of our children. It’s time to stop the sale of flavored tobacco products to protect our kids. Take action now by visiting FlavorsHookKidsDenver.org to tell City Council Members Jolon Clark and Paul Kashmann to end the sale of all flavored tobacco products, including e-cigarettes.
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October 8, 2020O
Regis provides teletherapy services in Thornton STAFF REPORT
The city of Thornton and Regis University are combining efforts to offer teletherapy services to residents view iPads. Thornton families that qualify will be equippedwith the technology needed to conduct counseling sessions online during the COVID-19 pandemic. The $166,270 grant was allocated to Thornton through Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act passed by Congress in March. The clinic will provide an iPad and mobile hotspot, among other technological tools, to clients in need of low- to no-cost therapy services, said Director Luis Alvarez.
“We lost clients when the coronavirus hit because they didn’t have the technology to attend therapy sessions remotely,” Alvarez said. “This program is targeted at those clients who have essentially been pushed out of therapy for lack of resources.” The Regis Center for Counseling and Family Therapy pivoted, moving its in-person services to a virtual platform. After the pandemic, Regis’ clinicians would like to continue with both in-person and virtual counseling services. “This short-term grant addresses an immediate need, but it’s also a stepping stone to a shift in how the clinic operates,” said Lindsay Edwards, associate professor in Regis’
Division of Counseling and Family Therapy and clinical coordinator of the Master of Marriage and Family Therapy program. “We’ve all realized this is the way of the future,” said Edwards, the center’s former director. “Teletherapy helps us reach people in underserved and remote communities, so providing teletherapy services is actually critical for us to accomplish our mission.” The Regis Center for Counseling and Family Therapy, operated through Regis University’s Division of Counseling and Family Therapy, offers low- to no-cost counseling services to the community. The Division is part of the University’s Rueckert-Hartman College for
Health Professions. The counseling center pairs master’s level marriage and family therapists-in-training and counselors-in-training with a client for 14 weeks of individual, couples, family or child-play therapy. The therapists are supervised by Regis faculty, who are Licensed Professional Counselors (LPCs) or Licensed Marriage and Family Therapists (LMFTs). Since the start of the pandemic, 120 Regis students have served 235 clients using teletherapy, Edwards said. Regis University, one of 27 Jesuit universities in the nation, has four campus locations in the Denver metro area and Colorado Springs. For more information, visit www. regis.edu.
Westminster prepping two new food programs STAFF REPORT
Westminster will target hunger in October with two initiatives. The city announced a new program called the WestyRISE Restaurant and Food Security program on Sept. 30. The program has two components. Daily, restaurant-prepared meals for residents over the age of 60 who are struggling to put food on their tables will be delivered beginning
Oct. 19. The meals are prepared by a local restaurant under the supervision of a dietitian and delivered once a day, five days a week. The Senior Hub, a non-profit agency that assists aging adults and families in need in Arapahoe and Adams counties, is coordinating this part of the program and people interested in registering for meals can call 303 426-4408. Also, food boxes distributed at a “Market Night” for families in need
each week. The boxes will include fresh fruits, vegetables, breads, and a $35 gift certificate to a Westminster restaurant for a future meal. “It’s designed to simultaneously help feed people and support local restaurants through mid-December,” said Innovation Coordinator Gregg Moss. “This is a win for our residents in need and a win for our businesses in need.” Market Night starts Oct. 7, and runs through mid-December. Food
box pickup will take place at City Park Recreation Center at 10455 Sheridan Blvd. in the upper circle drive on from 4-6 p.m. Wednesdays. Weekly Market Night updates and detailed information is available by calling 303 706-3663, (303 706FOOD). This program has been approved and supported by City Council and the city’s Economic Development Department, the program is funded by the federal CARES Act.
Phone and Internet Discounts Available to CenturyLink Customers The Colorado Public Utilities Commission designated CenturyLink as an Eligible Telecommunications Carrier within its service area for universal service purposes. CenturyLink’s basic local service rates for residential voice lines are $26.50 per month and business services are $37.00 per month. Specific rates will be provided upon request. CenturyLink participates in a government benefit program (Lifeline) to make residential telephone or broadband service more affordable to eligible low-income individuals and families. Eligible customers are those that meet eligibility standards as defined by the FCC and state commissions. Residents who live on federally recognized Tribal Lands may qualify for additional Tribal benefits if they participate in certain additional federal eligibility programs. The Lifeline discount is available for only one telephone or broadband service per household, which can be on either a wireline or wireless service. Broadband speeds must be 20 Mbps download and 3 Mbps upload or faster to qualify. A household is defined for the purposes of the Lifeline program as any individual or group of individuals who live together at the same address and share income and expenses. Lifeline service is not transferable, and only eligible consumers may enroll in the program. Consumers who willfully make false statements in order to obtain Lifeline telephone or broadband service can be punished by fine or imprisonment and can be barred from the program. If you live in a CenturyLink service area, please call 1-855-9546546 or visit centurylink.com/lifeline with questions or to request an application for the Lifeline program.
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0October 8, 2020
Paid parking could be coming to the Olde Town transit hub garage A look at current and potential future changes for the Arvada garage
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BY PAUL ALBANI-BURGIO PALBANIBURGIO@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Some big changes could be coming to the parking garage inside Arvada’s Olde Town transit hub, including the eventual introduction of paid parking once the garage begins again regularly reaching certain capacity limits. Earlier this month, the Arvada city council entered into a new intergovernmental agreement with RTD outlining how the garage will be managed going forward. That IGA comes after the expiration of an 18-month period in which the city analyzed demand trends inside the garage outlines several changes that will be made to the operation of the garage, including the elimination of requirements that certain spaces be reserved specifically for RTD users. Here is a look at what changes and could be coming and how they will impact the garage’s users and the overall parking situation around Olde Town. What’s already changing? There are no more “RTD Parking Only” and “Public Parking Only” signs and spots. When the G light rail line opened in 2019, the garage adopted a segregated parking system with 400 spots assigned to light rail users and 200 dedicated for use by those parking in the garage for reasons other than riding
the light rail or busses. But starting on Oct. 1, those assigned spots were eliminated in favor of an open system allowing any user to park in any space in the garage. Vehicles that are parked beyond those time limits may be impounded and their owners cited. “The reason is the garage has capacity to support additional parkers and as such we can take some of the confusion about who those parkers are and just let them park in any space in the garage,” said Andrew Vidor, the director planning for Walker Consultants, the city’s parking consultant. “We want to be able to allow public parkers to utilize those RTD spaces outside the traditional peak daytime hours so in the evening if you want to park on the ground floor in the evening you can because those spaces are largely unoccupied.” What’s staying the same for now? All users of the garage must continue to register their vehicle either via the free Passport Parking app or by using one of three kiosks located in the garage. Light rail and bus users are given the option of 12-hour commuter sessions or 24-hour DIA sessions when traveling to DIA and can park for up to 30 days if they update their registration in the app each day. Non-public transit users are limited to four-hour sessions. When will drivers have to pay to park in the garage? The IGA calls for the city to start charging for parking in the garage once it is routinely being filled to 85% of its capacity, which is considered the point when drivers begin to consider a
The Olde Town transit hub in Arvada. PHOTO BY PAUL ALBANI-BURGIO garage full and might begin searching for parking elsewhere creating added pressure on surrounding Olde Town streets. According to RTD rules, paid parking could be used in the following way: Transit users would be able to park in the garage for up to 24 hours for free. However, users could then be charge $2 a day if they live in Arvada’s RTD district or $4 a day if they live outside it, to park in the garage for up to 30 days. The city would also be able to increase the cost of daily parking in 50 cent increments up to $5 a day if capacity stays above 85% and decrease it in 50-cent increments if demand decreases to encourage more parking. What will the revenues be used for? According to the memo, revenue generated from the transit hub would be restricted to being used for maintenance of the hub and the implementation of tools that could help curb
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Gates to be installed in the garage? Not anytime soon. According to a memo addressed to the city council, consultants hired by the city determined that while adopting an entry system involving gates and an attendant would lead to higher user compliance, there would not be enough of a difference to justify the change. “The user compliance rate with the virtual garage is successful enough that changes are not financially justified especially since the purpose of the Transit Hub is not to generate revenue,” read the memo. SEE PARKING, P7
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parking demand once spaces are maxed out. Arvada spent $415,000 in 2019 for the operation and maintenance of the Transit Hub. The IGA allows for parking feeds to generate up to $430,000 in revenue to cover operational and maintenance costs of the garage.
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October 8, 2020O
New community group taking aim at racism in Arvada Arvadans for Social Justice open to residents wanting to make change BY PAUL ALBANI-BURGIO PALBANIBURGIO@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
“There were problems from the very beginning.” That’s what Arvada resident Daniel Mondragon said in comments he made to the Arvada City Council on Sept. 21 about the role racism had played in Colorado’s founding. It was systematic racism, Mondragon said, that led several southern Colorado counties to be included in the state against residents wishes, and later caused two Spanish-speaking Hispanic legislators from those counties to show up to the first state legislature five days after it began with no accommodations in place for them to understand the deliberations all done in English. “We know the abuse that can happen because of prejudice and racism,” said Mondragon. “We forget about the neglect that can happen.” Such comments have become commonplace at council meetings in recent weeks as Mondragon and other members of a new group of community residents called Arvadans for Social Justice have spoken to increase awareness of both racial justice issues in Arvada and their group’s intention to promote conversation and action on those issues locally through education and advocacy. The group that is now ASJ traces its roots back to the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd in May in Minneapolis, when Arvada residents PJ and Amy Travin went out with their kids and two other families to protest with signs in front of Arvada City Hall. “We honestly got pissed that we didn’t see other people in Arvada on the streets,” recalls PJ, who is now on the group’s steering committee. “We were like `where the heck where is everybody?’” But that quickly changed as other residents, including Mondragon who joined the protest after passing by on his way to the post office, came out and the ranks grew to as much as 50. The protests ended up continuing every night for the next six weeks and still continue every Monday night. But what began with those demonstrations has now become an organized group with regular meetings,
Members of Arvadans for Social Justice held signs protesting racism and police violence along Ralston Road on Sept. 21. PHOTOS BY PAUL ALBANI-BURGIO
over 250 members on its Facebook page and a desire to bring about real change in Arvada. First, however, the group is focusing on getting input about the ideas and goals of the membership in order to chart a path forward that makes sense for ASJ and the city. “I’ve heard a lot of statements from people who are coming to the group out of feeling like they had to do something because they were just so frustrated and so angry about seeing the killings,” said Mondragon. “They want to talk about this with other people so that ‘I can effectively be a voice for change.’” PJ said one of the aims of the group is to find a way to mobilize all of the people who want to contribute to making change, regardless of their level of knowledge about and experience in dealing with racial issues. Another goal of the group is to engage more Arvada residents of color in the group membership, which PJ said is so far largely white just like the city it is based in. However, PJ also acknowledges there are reasons why people of color might not want to be involved in the group and said it will be important for the group to find ways to bring them in without creat-
Members of Arvadans for Social Justice protest racism and police violence on Ralston Road outside Arvada City Hall on Sept. 21. ing additional burdens. “It’s a weird fine line where we don’t want to be the voice but we also don’t want to force people of color to have to come be the voice,” PJ said. “So we’re trying to navigate that.” Also on the group’s agenda is to dig into the community’s historical racial dynamics, including a history of KKK involvement in Arvada’s past and the general question of why Arvada became so white, in order to figure out
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how the city might begin to become more diverse. Key to that, Amy said, will be undertaking efforts to make white residents recognize systemic racism and their role in it that they are currently ignorant to. “The problem is when you think ‘we’re not Kenosha’ and you think it’s not a part of your community,” she said. “Because yes we are actually. And that’s why we are doing this.”
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0October 8, 2020
Winter is coming for struggling Jeffco restaurants Cold weather threatens outdoor dining many have depended on BY PAUL ALBANI-BURGIO PALBANIBURGIO@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
For nearly 15 years, Virgilio Urbano has served up some of the most acclaimed and popular pizzas in Jefferson County, first from a small storefront in Lakewood and later a much larger restaurant in South Jeffco. But over the last six months, the COVID-19 pandemic has reduced the long-thriving operation to one that is barely hanging on. “We’re still off about 25 to 30 percent (in sales) which basically keeps the doors open barely and means I am able to make payroll and pay,” said Urbano. “But me personally, I make nothing.” It’s a situation that has left Urbano, who said he was planning to retire in the next five to seven years, unsure about the present — let alone the future. “I don’t know what I’m supposed to do,” he said. “It’s very stressful, obvi-
PARKING FROM PAGE 5
How is space currently being used in the garage? From August to Decem-
ously I don’t sleep well but we are trying to do the best we can to continue to navigate this.” Although Urbano is facing challenges ranging from reservation no-shows to customers who continue to cuss and yell at his employees for trying to enforce the state’s mask rules, he said one of the biggest issues keeping him up at night is about how the restaurant will make up for the business that will be lost when customers are no longer willing to eat on the restaurant’s expanded patio. That patio, which is has 7 tables and makes up about 1/3 of the tables customers are currently allowed to sit at, has been one of the saving graces for Virgilio’s during the summer months. But now, Urbano is starting to worry about how long customers will be willing to continue to dine outside and wonder what he can do to make outdoor dining a possibility during the winter months. “We have an outdoor fire pit that I just got repaired but that doesn’t do much,” Urbano said. “But you can’t have everybody around the fire because you have to maintain social distancing.” That concern is one that has been on the minds of restaurant owners
ber of 2019, an average of 375 spaces were used during the peak of demand on a weekday. Of those, 342 were RTD spaces and 34 were public parking spaces, meaning that the garage was at 85 percent capac-
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across the county and is increasingly leading them toward solutions that are as intriguing as they are unorthodox. For Scott Spears, the owner of multiple restaurants and retail stores in Arvada, those planned solutions include converting a 40-foot long school bus into a three or four table dining space that will be parked outside of School House Kitchen and Libations — provided the streets of Olde Towne Arvada are permitted by the city to stay open as they have for the past several months. “We’re all asking ourselves where we need to invest money which is hard because we don’t really have money coming in right now,” Spears said. “We’re always trying to do new things, even during the dining room shutdown we tried new things to try to get through this.” Meanwhile at Gaby’s German Eatery in Lakewood, owner Gaby Berben’s husband is working to enclose the small restaurant’s handful of outdoor tables in a heated space that will allow customers to comfortably dine there through the winter. Berben said that while she is confident that plan will at least allows the business to continue to operate in the
ity for the RTD spaces. Demand was lower at the peak of the weekdays, with an average of 119 spaces used (92 RTD spaces and 27 public parking spaces). However, demand has dropped significant since
diminished state it has been in since the start of the pandemic, the public’s preference for outdoor space has created several challenges. “I wish we had more reservations,” said Berben, who notes that more reservations from customers would allow the restaurant to better prepare to serve them in this time of so many added challenges. Those challenges will only compound as the pandemic continues and restaurants must figure out how to make it for even longer periods of time at a limited capacity. In Urbano’s mind, it all adds up to a threat to not only his restaurant but the entire industry — particularly if the government does not take more action to help restaurants like Virgilio’s. “Who is going to be left?” he said. “It’s going to be the Olive Gardens and all the places that can have the corporate money and they can issue bonds and sell stock and have access to liquidity to stay open and absorb this whereas the mom and pop’s get nothing. If you need a $10 million loan you can get that but if you need a $22,000 loan you can’t because the chances are you going to fail and they are never going to get that money.”
the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. “We have not analyzed that data but anecdotally yes, the reality is that garage is probably pretty empty right now,” said Vidor. “We are tracking as
a firm those trends and the rebounds of that. Transit use is likely to be one of those uses that is going to take some time to recover until people have the confidence to get in those enclosed spaces.”
8
October 8, 2020O
Many children missing from school enrollment Officials plead with parents to make sure education takes place
Thousands out of school at top of fall semester
BY ERICA MELTZER AND YESENIA ROBLES CHALKBEAT.ORG
More than a month into the school year, thousands of Colorado students still have not shown up to classrooms, physical or virtual. On Sept. 29, Gov. Jared Polis, Education Commissioner Katy Anthes and others pleaded with parents to enroll their children in school, despite their concerns about the risks of in-person learning or their frustrations with online education. “A lot of parents are not ready for their children to go back, and they don’t love the online program,” Polis said. “Enrolling is very important. Your kid will likely go back to school at some point in the future, and you don’t want them to have a very big deficit when they do. Schools are working very hard to catch students up, and that’s impossible to do when they are not participating in school in some form.” In addition to keeping students on track academically, officials said that participating in school even in less-than-ideal circumstances will help children get access to mental health support, social connections, and meals. “Even if you’re doing it remotely, we can still create a sense of belonging for our students,” Anthes said, describing teachers who had gone above and beyond to reach students in distress. “Students who are not engaged in learning at all are missing out on all the resources that schools can offer them.” Enrollment is also closely tied to school funding in Colorado. Oct. 1 was Count Day, when Colorado school districts tally their students to determine their official enrollment for the year. Every student is worth thousands of dollars. Polis said he has directed the Colorado Department of Education to give districts as much flexibility as possible but the state ultimately needs to distribute funding in accordance with the law. Typically, official enrollment numbers from Count Day aren’t released until January, but around the state, districts large and small are reporting fewer students.
Numbers appear to be down Chalkbeat requested initial enrollment data as of Sept. 10 from the five largest school districts in Colorado. Each district reported lower enrollment — up to about 3.5% fewer students — than what districts had projected before the pandemic. In Denver, district officials had estimated they would enroll more than 87,000 students this fall. In September, schools had only registered 85,055 students, or 2.3% less. Aurora enrollment fell 3.5%, the biggest percentage drop of the five largest school districts. Jeffco Public Schools had the smallest decline from projections, at less than 1%. While Denver and Aurora started the school year online, even districts
that offered in-person options saw enrollment declines. In Douglas County, where students started the school year with a hybrid model, officials expected to see about 64,753 students, but in September registered 2% less. Cherry Creek was down 2.6% from expected enrollment of 54,092. More families are registering their intent to home-school their children. Of the five largest districts, Jeffco appears to show the biggest jump. Through the end of August, Jeffco had received 1,506 letters of intent to home-school. Based on state data, that would be a fivefold increase over last year. But in most districts, the number of home-schooling families remains low overall and doesn’t account for most
of the missing students. In the press conference, Polis said that home-schooling properly requires a significant investment of time and resources. “Don’t think you’re homeschooling because you’re giving your kid a book and leaving them all day at home,” Polis said. Enrollment falls below expectations In Aurora, a more detailed look at enrollment trends in September showed an unexpected change: fewer new incoming students. The biggest gap was among kindergarten children. Aurora enrolled only 86% of its expected kindergartners. The large Denver metro area districts are not alone. The Journal newspaper in Cortez reported in late August that nearly 20% of students hadn’t shown up in the 2,500-student Montezuma-Cortez district in southwest Colorado, while Boulder Valley school district has 1,000 fewer students than last year, the Daily Camera of Boulder reported. And in a legislative hearing in September, officials told lawmakers that districts in the Pikes Peak region around Colorado Springs cannot account for as many as 4,000 students. Families appear to be sitting out the school year for several reasons. Some well-off families have formed learning pods with private tutors or enrolled their children in private schools that offered in-person instruction when many school districts started the year online. Other families may not feel safe sending their children to school but don’t think online options provide a good alternative, especially for younger children. Drops in enrollment seem to be highest in the early elementary grades, though Denver Superintendent Susana Cordova said the district has also seen drops in high schools that work with students most at risk of dropping out. Other families, having lost jobs and housing or suffering from illness or the death of relatives from COVID, may be in crisis. They might be homeless or have moved out of state or sent their children to live with relatives. Officials stressed the emotional and psychological importance of school. Dr. Chris Rogers, president of the Colorado Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Society, pointed to the sense of structure and predictability that school provides. The children he SEE SCHOOLS, P9
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9
0October 8, 2020
SCHOOLS
the reasons why some families are not prioritizing school enrollment and attendance, I suspect that many have felt that giving up is the easiest option when faced with so many expectations,” Rogers said.
FROM PAGE 8
treats at Medical Center of Aurora often describe feelings of profound isolation — a feeling that school can mitigate. He also acknowledged that many students are struggling to focus and complete work in classes in which they previously did well and that parents are more stressed out and juggling more roles than ever before. “While I don’t pretend to know all
Employers, agencies play role Anthes asked employers to be flexible with working parents so they can support their children and asked community organizations that work with families in severe poverty to make sure to ask about schooling. Rico Munn, superintendent of the Aurora district, said school staff
COVID
In schools with small cohorts — where students and staff are together for more than one class period — the cohort should be quarantined if a student tests positive, the center said in its statement. Likewise, if the sick student or staffer was not wearing a mask consistently, or a class doesn’t have a consistent seating plan, the new, targeted quarantine strategy would not apply, the statement said. “For these reasons, targeted quarantine is likely not a feasible strategy for elementary school classes,” the statement said. It added: “In younger classrooms, there is likely much more movement in the classroom and children are less likely to stay in their seats and maintain consistent physical distancing.” When considering whether a school can use the new, targeted quarantine guidelines, the department’s guidance lists, among other items, the following criteria: • A school’s county is under Colorado’s “protect our neighbors” or safer-at-home levels 1 or 2, reflecting relatively low or moderate virus spread; • There is only one student or staff member in the class who has COVID-19 or is symptomatic; • There is a plan in place to track and respond to illness-related absences in the school; • Every class attended by the affected student or staff member has a seating chart; • Students remain in their seats enough to make seating charts applicable; • There is a plan in place to perform contact tracing in conjunction with local public health officials; and
FROM PAGE 1
New quarantine rules don’t always apply It appears superintendents received what they asked for, although the new guidance can still be difficult to follow. Under the new CDPHE guidance, when one student — or one teacher or staff member — is confirmed to have COVID-19, schools should tell those who had contact with that person to quarantine. Depending on the situation, COVID-19 symptoms can also trigger a quarantine. The earlier guidance from August said that if a student or staffer tests positive, a school should “dismiss classmates, (the) cohort and other inschool contacts.” But state officials emphasized that broader quarantines shouldn’t entirely be discarded in light of the new guidance. “Quarantining close contacts instead of an entire classroom is now an option in the guidance for schools that meet certain criteria but is not meant to be the new standard,” said a statement from the Colorado State Joint Information Center, which takes questions for the state public-health department. “In many situations, it is likely safer and more effective to continue to use the existing strategy of quarantining an entire classroom or cohort.” The statement also said: “Due to prolonged periods spent in the same indoor classroom, it is often necessary to consider contacts beyond the traditional 6-foot, 15-minute definition in schools.”
have fanned out to knock on doors to find out how families are struggling and what barriers exist to children attending school, and other districts have taken similar steps. On Sept. 29, Polis pledged 40 AmeriCorps volunteers to work with high-needs districts to reach out to families and encourage them to enroll. He also announced more than $2 million in housing assistance to help 225 homeless families find stable places to stay. Munn said the pandemic will affect every student’s life, but it doesn’t need to alter their long-term trajecto-
ries, which is a risk of not attending school. “The way we can make sure this event is not life-changing is to provide as much continuity as possible,” he said. “Public school educators are here with the resources to support you and your family, but to do that, we need you to enroll your kids, whether that’s online or in-person.” This story is from Chalkbeat Colorado, a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools. Used by permission. For more, and to support Chalkbeat, visit co.chalkbeat. org.
• Screening is completed for each student and staff member each day. If a school meets those criteria, it should quarantine students who were within six feet of the individual for 15 minutes or longer when both parties were masked — or those who were within 12 feet of the individual for 15 minutes or longer when either party was unmasked indoors. For schools that don’t meet the criteria, guidance says to quarantine students that same way — along with students who were in a classroom with the individual for 40 minutes or greater. Taken together, that means in schools in counties operating under the most restrictive safer-at-home level, classes or cohorts would be quarantined if there is a positive case, the statement said. In large cohorts, students might not be in the same class as an infected person for 40 minutes or longer, but they still may make contact during mealtime, class breaks and so on, a follow-up statement from the center explained. But the center didn’t immediately clarify why the guidance would mean entire cohorts would be quarantined.
• Shared eating or drinking utensils with someone who has COVID-19; • Was exposed to respiratory droplets from someone who has COVID-19 through sneezing, coughing, shouting and so on. The department recommends creating small cohorts, which it says will minimize disruption to in-person classes and limit the spread of COVID-19 if someone in the cohort tests positive.
Many ways to come in contact The state’s school guidance also says a close contact is a person who: • Came within six feet of someone who has COVID-19, even if they did not have symptoms, for at least 15 minutes total; • Provided care for someone who has COVID-19; • Was a household contact of someone who has COVID-19; • Had direct physical contact with someone who has COVID-19;
School guidance depends on restrictions in county The vast majority of Colorado counties still operate under the state’s safer-at-home phase of social distancing, which came after the statewide stay-at-home order this spring and allowed numerous types of businesses to reopen. The state’s recently updated framework for social distancing policy, referred to as a “dial,” indicates when counties should operate under different shades of Colorado’s safer-at-home phase as well as when they should follow stay-at-home rules or the state’s third and loosest phase, called “protect our neighbors,” which essentially allows for all activities at 50% of pre-pandemic capacity with up to 500 people in one setting. The state public-health department’s new framework breaks the safer-athome phase itself into three levels that counties are placed under based on local COVID-19 spread, according to the final version of the rules, which went into effect Sept. 15. The “protect our neighbors” phase, reserved for counties with notably low coronavirus spread, is likely months away for metro Denver localities.
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10
LOCAL
October 8, 2020O
VOICES
What is the “Uplands Community Collective” and what can it do?
I
t is not often that a proposed development project offers something that throws the whole thing into a brand new light. For me, that’s the case with the Uplands Community CollecCROSS tive and whatever CURRENTS your views about the project itself, this particular wrinkle deserves some consideration. As part of following the Uplands development process involving the Pillar of Fire land, collecBill Christopher tively known as the “Farm”, I recently had the pleasure to meet Eric Kornacki. He has the unique opportunity to lead the non-profit organization known as the Uplands Community Collective. Oread Capital President Jeff Handlin envisioned The Collective as a key component of the overall Uplands plan on the 230 acre parcel. Kornacki had previously worked with other developers and came away skeptical. As he told me in an interview, “I’ve
spent more than the last decade working to grow solutions to poverty and inequity in some of Denver’s most vulnerable and marginalized neighborhoods. Some of these neighborhoods have the most affordable home prices in the metro area and let’s just say that I have not had good relationships with developers. In fact, most developers have viewed me and the organization I built as a hindrance to squeaking their real estate projects through.” Bringing a unique background to the table A little background on Mr. Kornacki is appropriate. He is the founder and CEO of Thrive Partners, a non-profit consulting firm continuing the work to develop thriving, resilient and equitable communities. I say “continuing” because of his hugely successful endeavor in Denver’s Westwood neighborhood called “Re:Vision” which evolved into the largest community agriculture and food access program in the country. The focus has been teaching over 2,000 families how to convert their yard to food-producing gardens. In 2014, he lead an effort to establish one of the first grocery stores owned by a community
LETTER TO THE EDITOR Letter to the Editor: Schools are our responsibility When the Gallagher Amendment was passed, it seemed fair to balance the property tax rates between residential and commercial property to keep residential taxes in check. TABOR put a wrench in that, though. Rates could still go down, but they could only go up if passed in a vote by the people. This has ratcheted down the rates over the years and they have not been able to go up. It has been difficult to get the voters of Colorado to vote to increase their taxes, but let’s take a moment to think about what the result has been. We have the third lowest property taxes in the nation. What do property taxes pay for? Our public schools. The places where we send our children to learn how to function in society and carry on our legacy, our future. That in itself should be enough for people to realize that if we do not properly fund public education, we fail our children and our future. If Amendment B passes, yes, the assessment rate will freeze, and if the value of your home goes up, you will pay more in property taxes. Since that is what funds our public schools, isn’t it our obligation as members of society to take on that burden? Over $11 billion has been robbed from public education funding in the last ten years, isn’t it about time to put an end to us robbing our future of a quality public education? Vote YES on Amendment B. Lori Goldstein, Westminster
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in a food “desert,” an area devoid of grocery outlets. His focus in approaching economic development is through the lens of food access. Eric holds a degree in Economics and International Development from the University of Denver. Mixed perspective Kornacki was familiar with the Pillar of Fire parcel as his organization had scouted it out for farming. He knew it was expensive to purchase because of the zoning and densities allowed on it. When he first met Jeff Handlin, Kornacki said he was torn about Handlin’s plans. On the one hand, he saw one of the largest remaining parcels of working farm land in the Denver metro area — even though it produces commodity/feed crops, as opposed to food for nearby neighbors. On the other hand, he pointed out that Denver continues to be in the throes of an historic housing shortage. Families who he spent the last 10 years working with—hard working families who support our economy i.e. deemed “essential workers” in most cases during the COVID-19 pandemic — were
being priced out of the Denver area and would very likely never achieve housing ownership. Missed opportunities in historic neighborhoods Handlin and his team shared with Kornacki how they were frustrated by the inequities between building new suburban communities while nearby historic neighborhoods declined and were sometimes neglected. While the historic communities surrounding the proposed Uplands site including Historic Westminster, south Adams County, Federal Heights and Shaw Heights have been geographically positioned in the middle of unprecedented regional job growth over the last 20 years, the same disparities that Kornacki had seen in other vulnerable Denver metro area neighborhoods were readily visible in parts of these communities. Such examples included closing of grocery stores, declining school enrollment, scant new private investment and poor health outcomes. In some neighborhoods, he noticed the life expectancy of SEE CHRISTOPHER, P11
Just a little something to strike up conversation
T
here’s no need to go to Disney World to have fun. Just go to the dictionary. It’s cheaper and no one will throw up on your
shoes. In baseball, three strikes and you’re out. QUIET In bowling, three DESPERATION strikes in a row and you’re doing great. If the garbage collectors go on strike, it’s a problem. If lighting strikes you, it a bigger problem. If George Gershwin tells you to “Strike Up the Craig Marshall Band,” you’d better do it. Smith “Lucky Strike means fine tobacco.” “Lightnin’ Strikes” was a number one hit in 1966 for Lou Christie. The three men in “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” strike gold. The English language means more to me than the paisley shawl I inherited from my grandmother. I was one of her heirs. Some of her heirs are airheads. If you say, “Johnny went to the head,” it means one thing. If you say, “Johnny went to the head of the class,” it means another. If you say, “Johnny went to the john,” it means the same as “Johnny went to the head.”
My therapist, Barb Dwyer, explained, “The reason you don’t have any friends, Mr. Smith, is that you make a word game out of everything someone says. Do you see?” “`I see,’ said the blind man to his deaf wife, as he took out his hammer and saw.” One of my favorite old saws is, “Haste makes waste.” An old saw is what’s known as an idiom. Every village has an idiom. Some villages, like Washington, D.C., have more than one idiom. Idioms, most of them, are clichés, and as you know by now I avoid clichés like the plague. You’d better read between the lines before using a cliché around C. Marshall Smith because I’m bad to the bone. As everyone knows, “waste” and “waist” are homophones. Some words have more homophones than others. Rose rose and watered her rows and rows of roses. As many of you may know by now, Merriam-Webster has removed the word “awesome” from its 2021 edition dictionary. The reason given? “Overused and misused to death,” according to spokesperson Anne Teak. “`Awesome,’” Teak continued, “has over 100 perfectly good synonyms that rarely get used. It’s just not cool.” We were so poor when I was grow-
ing up my mother and father could only afford one book and that was a dictionary. On Saturday night, my mother would sit my sister and me down in front of her and make up a story by flipping from page to page. “Measles ... the ... inarticulate ... goat ... ate ... guardrail.” Rarely did her stories make any sense, but because of them I learned to comprehend art critics. I never get tired of words. How many words are there in the English language? The Oxford dictionary has 273,000 words (171,476 in current use; 47,156 being obsolete; and around 9,500 derivative as subentries). The English language is an everchanging organism. Some once popular words such as “bumbershoot” make way for others such as “pooka.” John McWhorter, associate professor of comparative literature at Columbia, reminds his students language is always adding and subtracting words. Certain words become archaic (“betimes”) as new words (Merriam-Webster added “detectorist” in 2019) are infused. “Infused” is a good example of a newly popular, long existent, word. The English language is ... wondrous. Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@comcast.net.
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0October 8, 2020
Getting the proper rest keeps us at our best
W
hether we find ourselves setting the pace for the race, or just trying to keep the pace, we should always find time to give our mind and body a little rest. Some of you have shared that these past several months have given you a chance to slow down, get back into forgotten hobbies or start new ones. Spending more quality time with friends and family. And others have shared that they have never been busier and that their mental stress and physical fatigue have never been higher with little or no time to take a breather. In a bigger, faster, harder, go go go, world, sometimes we get so wrapped up in trying to keep up, we forget to take care of ourselves along the way. We schedule more meetings or calls than we can fit into our day. We squeeze more work into our already jam-packed weekends and try and justify it by saying that it “needs” to get done. Or we try and fool ourselves into believing that we are the only ones who can do it, denying our mind and body the rest we need to
perform at our best. There are many among us who live with an “early to bed and early to rise” attitude. Then again, many others have developed a habit of “late to bed and early to rise,” eroding the amount of quality rest we need to Michael Norton recharge the body and the mind. Those of us who use planning tools and calendars to manage our day have found it very helpful to block off specific times in the calendar for answering emails, making calls, having meetings, research, reading, writing, workouts, and other things that fill our day. I subscribe to this habit of blocking off specific amounts of time in my calendar to make sure I am managing each day as best as I can. That method of managing my calendar has helped to improve my produc-
tivity in all areas. What I started adding to my calendar are blocked times for rest — 15- or 30-minute blocks of time where I allow myself to take a breather, sit quietly, and just rest, giving my mind and my body a pause. And these little added moments of rest seem to inspire creativity, clarity, and vitality, energizing me for the balance of the day and into the evening. This is not new news or revolutionary thinking. I have heard many of these suggestions before and I brushed it off thinking that I was too busy and that I needed to get things done. And then, when I heard someone talk about it one more time, it finally made sense. Hearing the results that others were experiencing, I decided that building time into my day for rest was just as important as anything else. If we allow the rush and crush of life to consume us, at some point stress and fatigue will become the norm. The thing is this, it’s a choice we get to make. We could also choose to take our breaks when we need to, block off com-
mitted time in our crazy busy schedules to take a rest. The key word here is committed. When I first started trying to block off my calendar for moments of rest, I would see that as a discretionary time slot. That If I needed to slip in a call or a meeting, I would just override my blocked-out time of rest. But now, if it isn’t defined as important or urgent, nothing steals my time slots of rest. How about you? Have you heard this recommendation before? Have you put into practice? If you have committed times of rest, are you seeing the benefits in how you work, live, and play? I would love to hear your story at mnorton@ tramazing.com. And when we can get the rest we need, we will certainly be at our best, and that really will make it a better than good week.
CHRISTOPHER
working to develop a construction and horticultural workforce training, certification and documentation program for adult neighbors and Westminster High School graduates. In Kornacki’s view, “We are developing plans to preserve a portion of the historic farm and turn it into a premier urban farm and agricultural education center. We’re getting to know nearby existing small businesses and prime them to capitalize on new households and new customers. We’re designing commercial and community spaces to help incubate and accelerate local entrepreneurs, non-profits and social enterprise programs.” The Collective is also exploring partnerships with community land trusts to ensure a portion of the homes surrounding Uplands will remain affordable amongst rising home values, fighting against displacement of the most vulnerable.
phy and attitude of wanting to be an active community partner for many years to come. It’s a tall order, but I like what I see and hear. I just hope Jeff Handlin and Eric Kornacki are afforded the opportunity to implement their vision.
Bill Christopher is a former Westminster city manager and RTD board member. His opinions are not necessarily those of Colorado Community Media. You can contact him at bcjayhawk68@gmail. com.
FROM PAGE 10
children today has reduced to a decade lower than the average for the Denver metro area due to lack of access to healthy foods and regular healthcare. “Once in a lifetime opportunity” Kornacki said he was impressed how the Uplands team saw/envisioned a new way to solve these issues from a different angle. Handlin realized that a non-profit community development organization must do the deep work — the work that takes time and requires building deep, lasting relationships and earning a lot of trust and goodwill. Kornacki said, “Handlin took his responsibility as a developer seriously and he wanted to make sure Uplands truly would strengthen the existing social fabric.” Kornacki saw two unique opportunities. First, was the ability to shape and influence a proposed community development from the planning phase rather than trying to fix the problems after the community was built. Secondly, he saw a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to leverage the transformational investment and other resources flowing into the Uplands development to tackle the lack of opportunity and inequities in neighboring communities. In Kornacki’s previous non-profit community development work, he had to “...beg, borrow and cajole for the resources needed to fund communityserving projects such as building a grocery store, an urban farm and a community center.” However, in the case of the Uplands development, he saw that the resources would be there to make a meaningful change. He valued the fact that the Uplands development would not require the City of Westminster or surrounding residents to incur ANY costs involving sidewalks, roadways, infrastructure and safety improvements, better access to public transportation, community gardens and a village center. The Collective has its sights on community betterment It is his belief that through the Uplands Community Collective (the non-profit organization which they created) they have the opportunity to leverage the Uplands development for significant economic opportunity for their neighbors. The Collective is
WINNING WORDS
Teaming up with valuable partners What I found especially exciting was the Collective’s plans being introduced to Colorado universities and local colleges, state and national foundations and land trusts, innovative agricultural companies and government and non-government agencies across the region. Kornacki acknowledged these organizations recognize the impact the Collective can make and are eager to participate! A hand up, not a hand out Kornacki summed up his beliefs regarding the Collective, saying it’s doubly-good. “In a region that clearly needs housing and economic opportunities, we can provide both. In a time when COVID-19 is showing us the weaknesses in our food system and the glaring inequities in our economy and health care system, we can create hyper-local, place-based solutions rooted in community. We will grow and share food, create opportunities for business development within our neighborhoods and perhaps above all, create spaces where all voices and needs are heard and valued, not just those who traditionally have the stage.” Promise and a community partnership Certainly in my 50-plus years in and around local government, I have never come across anything like the unique concept of The Collective. It has the potential of a positive impact on the Uplands site and the surrounding area. It brings promise and reflects a philoso-
Michael Norton is the grateful CEO of Tramazing.com, a personal and professional coach, and a consultant, trainer, encourager and motivator to businesses of all sizes.
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LIFE
October 8, 2020O
‘Hecho en Colorado’ tells stories of people T
E b p
History Colorado, Latino Cultural Arts Center team up for revealing artworks BY CHRISTY STEADMAN CSTEADMAN@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
T
he artwork featured in the Hecho en Colorado exhibit is a reflection of the artists, their community and their heritage. “Most were born in Colorado, but not all of them,” said the exhibit’s curator, Adrianna Abarca. “But all call
Ana Marina Sanchez Ana Marina Sanchez believes that when a piece of jewelry is one-of-akind, it creates a strong connection between it and its owner. “It becomes more than just a piece of jewelry,” she said. “It becomes a treasure.” Called Mexica Warrior Priestess, Sanchez’s piece in the Hecho en Colorado exhibit is a carved pendant made of mixed metals and stone. In pre-Columbian beliefs, there are different legends and stories about who went where after death, Sanchez said. Warriors who died during battle became in charge of the sunrise, and women who died during childbirth became in charge of the sunset. These are the two stories reflected in Sanchez’s piece. “My art speaks about who I am and where I come from,” Sanchez said. Sanchez, 35, was born and raised in Mexico City. She immigrated to
Colorado home.” Hecho en Colorado — Spanish for Made in Colorado — is an art exhibit at the History Colorado Center that highlights the history, culture and heritage of the Chicano/a and Mexicano/a people of Colorado. It is presented in collaboration with the Latino Cultural Arts Center (LCAC) of Colorado in Denver. “Until recently, these stories were sometimes excluded, denied or omitted,” said Abarca, who founded the LCAC and currently serves as its board’s chair. “These stories come from the people of this region. All these artists have a strong connection to community and created their
Los Angeles with her parents and her brother in the early 2000s, and lived there for 18 years. Sanchez met her husband Adan, a California native, while living in Los Angeles. It was his job as a health coach for people living with Type II diabetes that brought the couple to Denver. A city girl at heart, Sanchez fell in love with Denver right away, she said. In L.A., Sanchez attended California State University with dreams of becoming a teacher. Being undocumented at the time of her graduation, however, prevented Sanchez from being able to fulfill some postgraduation requirements to become an educator. So, she decided to take a year off and pursue something she always enjoyed — creating jewelry. “It gives me so much joy,” Sanchez said, “being able to bring ideas to life.” Her early days of jewelry-making — roughly 10 years ago — started out as getting together with friends
art with community present in their minds.” The exhibit boasts the artwork of about 40 artists representing different regions of Colorado and includes a variety of formats — paintings, sculptures, textiles, writings and more. The exhibit “depicts and draws from both urban and rural traditions” and reflects “both ancient and contemporary Indigenous and European heritages,” states a news release. From zoot suits and high fashion, Frida Kahlo and Quetzalcoatl, to Casa Bonita and St. Cajetan’s Church, the collection is a vast array of artwork, “representational of our experiences, history, icons and culture,” Abarca said.
and doing the craft together. Sanchez considers that she stepped into the professional world as a silversmith about three years ago, selling her jewelry at fairs, galleries and cultural events. After spending a number of years simultaneously exploring a variety of jobs — namely, working as a barista and freelance gigs in television production — Sanchez decided to pursue a career in jewelry-making fulltime near the end of last year. She launched her website, anamarinastudio.com, during the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. “There are so many great Mexican jewelers,” Sanchez said, adding they have “elevated Mexican design in history.” Though Sanchez is thankful to now be able to make a living creating jewelry, she said she feels “very young” in her career. “I’m still learning and exploring my voice as an artist,” Sanchez said. “But that’s also exciting.”
MORE EVENTS
IF YOU GO
Here are a couple other events going on in Denver to celebrate and learn more about the city’s rich Hispanic culture and heritage.
The Hecho en Colorado exhibit is on display in the Ballantine Gallery at the History Colorado Center, 1200 N. Broadway in Denver, until Jan. 10, 2021. For the duration of the Hecho en Colorado exhibit, History Colorado is offering a special series called Cafecitos, which is a guided tour of the exhibit by Adrianna Abarca, founder of the Latino Cultural Arts Center and curator of the Hecho en Colorado exhibit. Cafecitos attendees have an opportunity to try biscochitos de anis, which is a traditional Hispano cookie from northern New Mexico and southern Colorado, and piñon-flavored coffee. Cafecitos is offered every Friday at 9 a.m. for up to 10 people. Small groups and individuals may register for Cafecitos. History Colorado is offering admission with a limited capacity, and a timed ticket purchased in advance is required for entry. Entry will be timed in 30-minute blocks. Tickets can be purchased online or by phone. No tickets will be available for purchase onsite. On Mondays through Dec. 31, the History
What: Events for Hispanic Heritage Month, and the Rhythm & Ritual: Music of the Ancient Americas exhibit Where: Museo de las Americas, 861 Santa Fe Drive, Denver Details: Hispanic Heritage Month is celebrated Sept. 15 to Oct. 15. The museum is offering a variety of events. A calendar of events is on the museum’s website. The Rhythm & Ritual: Music of the Ancient Americas exhibit takes place through Oct. 17. This exhibit is in collaboration with the Denver Art Museum. It explores music of the ancient Americas, and features about 80 instruments dating from 1000 BCE to 1530 CE. When: Museum hours are noon to 6 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays, and noon to 5 p.m. on Saturdays. It is closed on Sundays and Mondays. Cost: General admission is $8 for adults; and $5 for students, seniors and military. Admission is free for members and children age 12 and younger. How to purchase tickets: Timed tickets for a two-hour block can be purchased online. Learn more/purchase tickets: https:// museo.org/
What: Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, and Mexican Modernism from the Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection Where: Denver Art Museum, 100 W. 14th Ave. Parkway Details: This traveling exhibit focuses on the post-Mexican Revolution artworks of internationally celebrated artists, including Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Lola and Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Gunther Gerzso, María Izquierdo and Carlos Mérida. It features more than 150 artworks — more than 20 of them being by Frida Kahlo. This is the first time this exhibit has come to Denver. When: Oct. 25 to Jan. 24. The museum is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day of the week. Cost: Adult tickets cost $26 for non-members and start at $20 for members. Youth tickets cost $5 for ages 6-18. Tickets for children age 5 and younger are free. How to purchase tickets: Tickets will be for timed entry and must be purchased in advance. They will be available for purchase in two blocks. The first block, for dates between Oct. 25 to Nov. 30, will go on sale on Oct. 12. The second block, for dates between Dec. 1 to Jan. 24, will go on sale Nov. 23. Learn more/purchase tickets: www. denverartmuseum.org or 720-913-0130.
Along with demonstrating the contributions that Colorado’s Mexicanos/as and Chicanos/as have made to the community through history, Abarca was also inspired to honor the anniversary of the Chicano Civil Rights Movement, which took place largely in the southwestern United States, primarily in the late 1960s and `70s. “The Mexican/Chicano/Native people have been in this region from the very beginning of the modern history of Colorado. We have been an integral part of every aspect of Colorado’s history,” Abarca said. “And we continue to be major contributors in all industries, including the arts.”
Ana Marina Sanchez has had a passion for jewelry her whole life, and today, she is a professional silversmith and jewelry designer. COURTESY PHOTOS
This piece by Abi Rosales is one of many works of art that is part of the Hecho en Colorado exhibit at the History Colorado Center in Denver. The exhibit is presented in collaboration with the Latino Cultural Arts Center (LCAC) of Colorado. Colorado Center is open exclusively to members. The museum is open for general admission from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. TuesdaySunday. To purchase tickets to History Colorado Center and the Hecho en Colorado exhibit, or to register for Cafecitos, visit www.historycolorado.org or call 303-866-2394.
LEARN MORE The Latino Cultural Arts Center (LCAC) of Colorado is a cultural campus in west Denver with a mission “to elevate and advance the artistic and intellectual contributions of Latinos in Denver to national and international levels,” states its website. To learn more, visit www. lcac-denver.org.
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0October 8, 2020
Lakewood Symphony brings music to senior communities Editor’s Note: This columnist has been a member of the Lakewood Symphony board for two years.
T
he Lakewood Symphony, like many local musical groups, had to cancel the latter half of its 2019-2020 season as a result of the COCOMING VID-19 restrictions, ATTRACTIONS and is still sorting out when to start its new season. But some symphony members found a different way to keep the music going this summer and autumn, and provided much needed entertainClarke Reader ment to residents of senior homes. “COVID restrictions of isolation and social distancing, as well as the effect on humans, was the impetus to figure out a way to bring musicians wanting to perform live music to the senior settings where there are limited visitors, stimulation, and the emotional journey that is achieved with music,” explained Barb Moritzky, a member of the symphony’s board. “It seemed figuring out a way that musicians could perform to senior citizens would be a win-win.” Members of the symphony began performing at outside of the Village of Belmar in July and recently added performances at the nonprofit Eaton Senior Communities - both communities have residents who
have been longtime supporters of the symphony. The aim is to continue to perform at these locations through the end of October, as long as the weather holds. “The residents of Eaton were overjoyed that the Lakewood Symphony was coming to play,” said Alie Mitisek, director of Life Enrichment at Eaton. “Music is a powerful way to brighten even the darkest of days. This music provides a sense of community when it is deeply needed.” The most recent performances featured a variety of tunes from principal harpist Rebecca Moritzky and music from the symphony brass quartet, Jeff Emanuel, Steve Pollock, Bill Skully and Christopher Chalfant. Past performers have been combinations of various instruments and group sizes. “Audience members would tap or clap to the music, some would sing, a couple of times there was some dancing and laughing, as if they were coming back to life,” Moritzky said. “In one case, one of the performers was playing the marimba and mid-song I overheard him say, `I’m playing live music… I haven’t played to an audience in 3 months… this feels great.’” The performances have been a great way for the symphony to connect with the community, particularly those who could use some extra attention during this challenging time. “The pandemic has had a profound effect on our residents’ well-being. They are used to a full schedule of activities and community engage-
ment,” Mitisek said. “The outdoors, socially-distanced concerts are a wonderful and safe way for residents to share in an experience with neighbors.” For information on supporting and learning more about Eaton, contact kwest@eatonsenior.org. To learn more about the Lakewood Symphony, visit www.lakewoodsymphony.org. Same zoo, new Boo The Denver Zoo, 2300 Steele St., will still be offering an option to get children out and exploring the 84acre campus this Halloween season. Hosted through Saturday, Oct. 31, Boo at the Zoo: Storybook Safari is a new take on the familiar event, featuring classic animal stories and fairy tales brought to life thanks to costumed characters, animal experiences and much more. In addition, Nature Connects®, Art with LEGO® Bricks will also be up through the 31st, with about 15 nature-inspired sculptures by artist Sean Kenney. All the details can be found at www.denverzoo.org/events/boo-atthe-zoo/. Clarke’s Concert of the Week - Band of Horses perform ‘Cease to Begin’ In 2007 Band of Horses released one of the great indie-rock albums of the aughts with their sophomore release, “Cease to Begin,” featuring classic tracks like “No One’s Gonna Love You” and “Is There a Ghost.” The album is celebrating its thirteenth birthday on Oct. 9 and lead vocalist, guitarist and founder Ben
Bridwell and keyboardist, guitarist and vocalist Ryan Monroe will be marking the occasion with a livestream performance of the full album and other favorites. The show will be at 6 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 9, and tickets can be purchased for the “front row” - which means you’ll appear on Bridwell and Monroe’s screen as they perform - or the “balcony.” Get yours at https:// bandofhorses.topeka.live/. Streaming style - ‘Once Upon a River’ There’s an art to creating a riveting character-driven film, and director Haroula Rose’s debut, “Once Upon a River,” shows she already has the knack. I came across the film at the 2019 Vail Film Festival and was rocked back, not only by Rose’s assured direction, but also by leadactor Kenadi Delacerna’s hypnotic performance - also her first. Based on the novel by Bonnie Jo Campbell, Delacerna plays Margo Crane, a young woman in the late 1970s Michigan grappling with who she is and where she fits in a world that doesn’t seem to care. John Ashton also deserves recognition for the gruff warmth he brings to the character of Smoke. This is a film for the seekers — which is all of us, really. Don’t miss it at virtual cinemas by visiting www.filmmovement.com/onceupon-a-river. Clarke Reader’s column on culture appears on a weekly basis. He can be reached at Clarke.Reader@hotmail. com.
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October 8, 2020O
Thornton Day of the Dead events offer art, virtual interaction STAFF REPORT
Thornton artists will celebrate the Day of the Dead through Nov. 3 with paintings and other creations and a special virtual Dia De Los Murtos celebration. The events, sponsored by Thornton Arts Sciences and Humanities Council , kicked off Oct. 5 with a show by Thornton artist, Wanda Marshall that runs through Jan. 8 at the Thornton Arts and Culture Center, 9209 Dorothy Blvd. Marshall’s work seeks to bring the outdoors indoors, with paintings, drawings, and sculptures. Discover natural landscapes inspired by the Kansas plains and the Rocky Mountains, as well as fantasy landscapes that draw on Greek mythology, creation myths and Marshall’s imagination. The gallery is open Tuesday through Thursday from 1-5 p.m. Walk-ins are welcome or reserve your free tickets at ArtsThornton. eventbrite.com. Day of the Dead goes virtual Thornton’s annual Day of the Dead/Dia de los Muertos Cultural Celebration, the city’s fifth, is
scheduled over three days, Nov. 1-3. Thornton Arts Sciences and Humanities Council and Alt Ethos Experiential Design Studio invite residents to create designs online in playful interaction with other participants. Use the Alt Ethos easy, free-flowing app to create a collaborative work of art that will be projected on three large nylon screens on the Thornton Community Center’s south lawn at 2211 Eppinger Blvd. “It will be a fun and memorable experience for all ages,” Thornton Arts and Culture Manager Alisa Zimmerman said in a written statement. “We hope residents will take part and make a plan to celebrate with us.” Visit ArtsThornton.com for the link to view the event and play along. Both events are free and require attendees to follow COVID-19 safety measures Maximum attendance at one time is 10 people indoors for the exhibit and 175 people outdoors on each night of the cultural celebration. Visit artsthornton.com or call 720-977-5880 for updates or additional information.
Owners say goodbye to indoor amusement park Husband and wife plan to open an outdoor amusement park when pandemic subsides BY ELLIS ARNOLD EARNOLD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Louise Elinoff had to make calls and cancel more than 200 birthday parties. As the state rolled out restrictions in response to the pandemic in March, Louise and Nathan Elinoff — owners of a well-known line of amusement parks in the Denver metro area — were forced to close Lollipop Park, their location at 6901 S. Peoria St., just off East Arapahoe Road in the central Centennial area. After nine years in business, the indoor amusement park has now shut its doors for good, the Elinoffs announced in late September. “Nathan and I have been doing this for 38 years — been married for 43,” said Louise Elinoff, 61. “It’s in our DNA. We miss seeing the kids smile.” Catering to children 10 and younger, Lollipop Park enjoyed record sales before the pandemic forced it to shutter, a news release said. The park had hosted thousands of birthday parties, drawing families with a mix of amusement park rides, a bounce house and other attractions, the release said. The husband-and-wife team started out as high school sweethearts who met at George Washington High in Denver, going on to have three children. Along the way, it struck them that there wasn’t much for kids to do in Denver in winter. The couple shared a love of amusement parks, having growing up with Lakeside Amusement Park and the old Elitch Gardens. “We thought, ‘Why don’t we put some amusement parks inside?’ ” Louise Elinoff said. The Elinoffs also wanted to provide physical activity for kids. Their first children’s entertainment location — Nathan’s Physical Whimsical in Englewood in the early 1980s — featured a large ball pit, toy cars to ride in and other attractions, according to
photos on the couple’s website. The 1980s also saw the couple open Nathan’s Physical Whimsical in Houston, Nathan’s Lollipop Park in Westminster and Funtastic Nathan’s in Englewood’s dearly remembered Cinderella City mall, which stood where Englewood’s city hall and Walmart are now located. “We were in the Cinder Alley,” Louise Elinoff said, referring to one of the mall’s shopping areas. “Cinderella City was fabulous in the 1980s. That was the place to go — everybody shopped there.” The Elinoffs continued to branch out in the 1990s with Nathan’s Classical Flying Pizza in Littleton and Funtastic Fun in Englewood, the latter of which operated until 2010. The couple also opened a Lollipop Park in California. “We’re on our third generation of customers,” said Louise Elinoff, who has received messages from the public reminiscing about the old locations. “We loved working with teenagers on staff,” she added. “We had grandmas come up to us saying they used to work at Funtastic Nathan’s.” The couple’s entertainment offeriings became a statewide draw, seeing families roll in from mountain communities, Fort Collins and elsewhere in Colorado, Nathan Elinoff said. After a long journey through the industry, Louise Elinoff said that even if Lollipop Park was allowed to open, it wouldn’t, as people don’t feel comfortable indoors during the pandemic, and Lollipop Park thrives on crowds. The couple can’t feel sorry for themselves because so many worldwide have been affected by the pandemic, Nathan Elinoff said. “We still feel thankful for our health and community,” said Nathan Elinoff, 63. He added: “When a vaccine is here, the virus is under control and the economy is strong, we’ll open.” For the past five years, the Elinoffs have been working on a plan for an outdoor amusement park in the metro area, and they hope to cater to parents, some teenagers and especially kids, Louise Elinoff said. “That’s the thing about amusement parks,” she said. “They never go out of style.”
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October 8, 2020O
Gothic horror authors come back from the grave Versions of Victorian Horrors @ Molly Brown House Museum offered as in-person or at-home STAFF REPORT
Victorian Horrors @ the Molly Brown House Museum will be offered again this year with in-person and at-home options for the spooky experience. Victorian Horrors is environmental theater presented by Castle Lion Development, set within the Molly Brown House Museum, 1340 Pennsylvania St. in Denver’s Capitol Hill neighborhood. The in-person experience starts with a pre-recorded video transmission of a story from a Gothic horror author who has come back from the grave. This takes place onsite, and after listening to the tale, attendees are invited to tour the 14-room Molly Brown House Museum. It will be decorated by Denver’s authentic oddities dealers, The Learned Lemur and Atomic Folk Art, to create a Victorian cabinet of curiosities —
The Molly Brown House Museum in Capitol Hill is decorated for its annual Victorian Horrors event, which takes place this year on select dates in October. COURTESY PHOTO creepy taxidermy, spiny specimens and rattling bones. The tours are primarily self-guided with audio narrated by specters from the past, but docents will be present. A ticket also includes additional video transmissions of Victorian Horrors actors presenting tales that
can be viewed before or after your visit. Those who prefer the at-home version will have access to the prerecorded video transmission of the story, which can be viewed from anywhere, but the ticket does not include access into the Molly Brown
House Museum. A different story and author will be featured each night. This year’s stories include “The invisible Man,” “Frankenstein” and “La Llorona.” “La Llorona,” translated to “The Weeping Woman” in English, will be presented in both Spanish and English. The authors of these Gothic horror tales will be portrayed by local actors David and Julia Payne, Jim Hunt, Trina Magness, Josh Hartwell, Gabriella Cavallero and John Wittbrodt. Victorian Horrors @ the Molly Brown House Museum is being offered on Oct. 16, 17, 23, 24, 29 and 30. Advance ticket purchase is required. Ticketed admission will take place every 20 minutes between 6 and 9 p.m. Tickets for in-person Victorian Horrors cost $18 for non-member adults, and $16 for members, seniors and juniors age 6-18. This event is advised for ages 12 and up, per parental discretion. Masks are required. Tickets for the at-home spooky story access is $8 per household. To purchase tickets, call 303-8324092 ext. 16 for tickets or go online to www.mollybrown.org.
Historic opera house touts fabulous find Old stage scenery had been stored for long years in iconic Leadville facility BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
For a number of Julys, we have been making a trek to a longtime favorite Colorado location — sky-high Leadville. And we have often visited the 1879 Tabor Opera House, concerned about aging walls and stage ... A recent CPR program related really good news — we’ll encourage readers to plan a summer visit in 2021 and perhaps consider taking in a show, and adding some support to keep this historic gem, now owned by the City of Leadville, in condition to entertain us for another century ... The story that aired recently was about a discovery of hand-painted
curtains and stage sets, which will be an added draw when displayed. In the early years, special artists toured the nation’s operating theatres, painting scenery appropriate for the planned productions — or just decorative pieces that might back soloists or groups of musicians ... Minnesota-based Wendy Rae Waszut-Barrett, owner of Historic Stage Services LLC, stopped at the opera house while on a family vacation last year, toured the building, including the attic — and has been cataloging the collection, which she has described as “the finest collection of stage scenery in the nation.” She located about 250 pieces in the building: screens, roll drops, wings and shutters, created by artists such as T. Frank Cox, who traveled the country creating sets and scenery for theaters. In its heyday, the Tabor drew famous performers, including John Philip Sousa, Oscar Wilde, Buffalo
Bill and perhaps, magician Harry Houdini. (It usually offers a summer of programming these days, although the past COVID- summer was a nogo.) A story about the first opening night reports that the crowd was thinner than expected — because a hanging was scheduled across the street ... The Leadville Elks Lodge bought the building and added new curtains and set pieces. The group operated it through the start of motion pictures then sold it to local businesswoman Evelyn Furman, who — with her family — operated it until the City of Leadville bought it in 2016. Set pieces remained piled in the attic — fortunately, the opera house did not suffer a fire or a leaky roof throughout the years — or an overly zealous neatnik! The set pieces are painted on fabric screens and may suggest a manor, a forest, a village or a wooden cabin
and more ... Cox, a favorite of historian WaszutBarrett, created a forest scene that has his own face peering through a knothole ... a He would also attend an opening c performance and do lightning-fast t portraits of audience members — a g sort of “performance art.” b Waszut-Barrett, with a crew of volunteers, has hauled down huna dreds of pieces that will be displayed n as backgrounds for lectures, concerts w o and operas. The Tabor Opera House Preservation Foundation is currently working m i on a $10 million renovation on the b exterior of the building, including windows, which are always a touchy n challenge for preservationists. Programming for summer 2021 is c not yet listed, but we’ll watch for it. t The mountain theaters make for a p wonderful weekend outing and we’ll s d hope for successful seasons across g Colorado — to be announced.
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October 8, 2020
Inside: Q&As with candidates for county commissioner, U.S. Senate, state House and more
Adams County question aims to preserve sales taxes Ballot questions 1A and 1B would make three-quarter percent sales taxes for open space, roads permanent BY SCOTT TAYLOR STAYLOR@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
A pair of Adams County questions aimed at making three-quarters of a cent sales taxes permanent are meant to address the concerns of two different groups — county residents and county businesses, according to supporters. Bo Martinez, president of the Adams County Regional Economic Partnership said both sales tax questions would look to improve the area without adding to the local tax burden. “The good thing is that all of this money, money that’s currently coming in via sales tax, is going it continue to be reinvested back into the community,” Martinez said. Question 1A would make the county’s current quarter-cent sales tax, devoted to open space and parks, permanent. Question 1B would do the same for a half-cent sales tax that is devoted to roads, bridges and county government facilities. “Roads and bridges are the number one issue among our business community, whether it’s in Adams County or the rest of the Metro Denver region,” Martinez said. “Transportation and mobility infrastructure investment is number one. When you talk with our community members and you ask that question, open space, parks and trails and water conservation are the big items.” Roads and buildings Voters first approved the half-cent sales tax on 1993 to pay for construction of the Adams County Justice Center in Brighton. Voters extended it in 1997 to pay for expansion of the Adams County Detention Facility and extended it again in 2001 to help pay for building road and bridge projects. Voters extend it again two more times, in 2006 to pay for a pre-trial holding facility and government center and in 2014 for the expansion of new county government facilities.
Masked seniors gather around around a picnic table in Northglenn’s E.B. Rains Jr. Park this spring. The park was one of several in Adams County that has received money from a quarter-cent county sales tax. Question 1A on November’s ballot would make that sales tax permanent. FILE PHOTOS Since 2002, the tax has collected more than $254 million for road and bridge projects. That’s money that is split between county projects and road and bridge projects for the county’s cities and towns. Sole county projects have received about $50.8 million, while another $203.2 million is goes to Brighton, Federal Heights, Northglenn, Thornton and Westminster. The tax has also set aside $188 million for capital facilities project in Adams County for the Justice Center and county government building projects. “As the county continues to grow and development, not only will we need to maintain the existing buildings, we’ll need to build new buildings,” he said. “This tax allows that.” Issue 1B would continue all of that, earmarking the sales tax revenue for roads and bridge projects and new county government facilities. The issue would also divide up the revenue going forward, keeping 60 percent of new revenues for new Adams County facilities. The remaining 40 percent of new revenues would be shared among Adams County cities and towns for road and bridge work. The 2020 issue would make the sales tax permanent.
Backers of a plan to make a half-cent Adams County sales tax say that expected Metro Denver growth will require more spending on road expansion and maintenance across the region. Open Space Adams County voters first approved a sales tax designed to preserve open space, protect farmland and to protest wildlife, rivers, streams and wetlands in 1999, expanding it from one-fifth of a cent to one-quarter of a cent in 2004. As it stands, the sales tax is scheduled to end in 2026. A yes vote on Adams County issue 1A would make the sales
tax permanent. Since 2000, the sales tax has collected $212 million for parks and open space across Adams County, being used to help build 127 parks, 66 miles of trails and to protect 3,994 acres of open space. Projects that have received money from the sales tax include the Hidden Lake Park and Open Space and the Tennyson Knolls and Street trails in Arvada, E.B. Rains Jr. Park and 16 other projects in Northglenn, 33 parks in Thornton — including Carpenter Park and Open Space — and 30 projects in Westminster. “We are not expanding taxes, and we are not creating anything new,” Martinez said. “We working hard to build a 21st century community, and doing that requires all the resources and investment we can, whether it’s from the public or private sectors.” Martinez said he expects Adams County to continue growing and expanding. “When you think about all the growth happening in our region, all arrows point north. We need to make sure we have all the resources to stay ahead of that and continue building the community we have today.”
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Adams County commissioner, District 1 Alexander “Skinny” Winkler Party: Republican Residence: Northglenn Contact: SkinnyWinkler@gmail.com
What do you see as the most important responsibilities of being a County Commissioner?
What is the most pressing issue for Adams County residents and businesses and how will you address it?
County Commissioners should communicate local policies and direct funding accordingly to public services that the people of Adams county desire. We should be better stewards of the public dollars.
Obviously, we need to recover from the COVID-19 ordeal. I would communicate the frustration of the people of Adams County to the Tri-County Health Department and encourage them to reassess and reevaluate their restrictive policies.
» Eva Henry Party: Democrat Residence: Thornton Campaign website: Evahenry.com
Adams County commissioner, District 2 Charles “Chaz” Tedesco
Party: Democrat Residence: Commerce City Campaign website: www. ChazforAdams.com
Being the voice for Adams County in the region is important. Making sure that the county is included in plans of the region and not forgotten.
Helping our small businesses recover from the pandemic and supporting our neighbors that are unemployed find employment that pay livable wages.
What do you see as the most important responsibilities of being a County Commissioner?
What is the most pressing issue for Adams County residents and businesses and how will you address it?
There are many responsibilities related to the County Commissioner position and prioritizing one is very hard. Overall I believe that having an open mind and doing the work, researching each item as it comes before us as well as understanding the impacts it may have on the budget and varying demographics of our communities is paramount.
Before 2020 I would have said Transportation and Housing. Now that we have entered 2020 and the COVID outbreak, I believe stabilization of our business community and schools should be our focus. I still believe housing and transportation issues are a top priority.
» James Treibert Party: Unity Residence: Thornton Contact: jamesktreibert@wordpress.com
Adams County commissioner, District 5 Lynn Baca Party: Democrat Residence: Brighton Campaign website: www.lynnbaca.co
Make sure to serve the residence of Adams County needs and become an honest and responsible leader or public servant. Promote better communication between residences and county commissioners. Do not just enact mandates and laws based on special interests.
Recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and lowering our county taxes. Help business with any assistance with grants and low cost loans. The growing problem of underemployment or unemployment with small or medium business.
What do you see as the most important responsibilities of being a County Commissioner?
What is the most pressing issue for Adams County residents and businesses and how will you address it?
The most important responsibility of being a County Commissioner is to ensure the annual budget, which is over $500 million, reflects our citizens’ values and county priorities. Our families work hard for their money and I will keep a watchful eye on a budget that funds our most critical areas which includes human services, safe and reliable infrastructure and enriching our communities.
The most pressing issue facing our community is COVID, not only from a health perspective but long term economic effects for our residents and businesses. The county needs to be diligent to look at the budget in 2021 and beyond. We also need to be nimble and take advantage of funding opportunities that will support our small business and our communities.
» Editor’s note: Republican candidate Phil Covarrubias did not submit a profile to Colorado Community Media.
Adams County opening voting information centers STAFF REPORT
While most Adams County ballots will be delivered by mail or dropped into ballot boxes, Adams County will host voter service and polling Center locations throughout the area. Adams County’s voting service locations will be open phases, begin-
ning Oct. 19. Voters can go to those locations to register to vote, update their registration, drop off or request a new or replacement ballot and vote using an ADA accessible ballot marking device. The County opens six locations Oct. 19, one each in Aurora, Ben-
nett, Commerce City and at the Government Center at 4430 S. Adams County Parkway in Brighton. Westminster will get two phase-one locations, in the Adams County Economic Development Building at 12200 N. Pecos St and at Westminster Motor Vehicle office at 8452 Federal Boulevard.
Those first locations will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. They’ll be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays beginning Oct. 31 and they’ll be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Election Day Nov. 3. SEE VOTING, P19
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What should Adams County do to balance economic growth with the current quality of life?
What reforms, if any, should the Adams County Sheriff’s Department enact to fairly police and protect all county residents?
These issues are incredibly interrelated. Quality of life is subjective. I encourage everybody to follow their own path to find their highest quality of life. It is difficult for a government official to dictate quality of life, but I do believe that we can encourage economic growth with better free market policies.
I believe that in general, the Adams County Sheriff has a great track record with the citizens of Adams County. If there are policy changes that are suggested, I’m open to suggestions. No-knock warrants, qualified immunity, and civil asset forfeiture are three areas where we could see some modifications.
I would love to see greater efficiency in government and decreases in government red-tape. I am also very interested in some election reform — namely in the form of alternative voting methods — to improve our elections and give people more of a voice in their representation.
Parks, open space, and good schools attract large responsible corporations. In order to have high paying good jobs you need a clean environment and invest in the education of our children. Economic growth and quality of life go hand and hand.
The Sheriff is a separate elected person and is responsible for the policies of his department. I support any reforms he chooses to implement.
Addressing the county’s housing needs, implementing greener policies for the county government, and increasing mass transit.
What should Adams County do to balance economic growth with the current quality of life?
What reforms, if any, should the Adams County Sheriff’s Department enact to fairly police and protect all county residents?
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success?
Balanced housing options with adequate amenities I.e. grocery stores, restaurants etc.. can be accomplished with community input and needs assessments. Infrastructure that meets the needs of both the existing communities as well as the new can be accomplished with proper planning and budgeting.
The Sheriff is a separately elected office and County Commissioners are statutorily required to fund them. It is difficult to require them to establish programs based on our suggestions. That being said, we would like to see more training and programming that would meet the needs of our community without overburdening our deputies. Better mental heath resources, more training opportunities and increased citizen input and collaboration to deal with cultural, racial, immigration and gentrification topics.
Continue to improve our quality of life in Adams County ultimately leaving knowing I made Adams County a better place to live.
Establish a reserve in its budget and have more taxes reduced. Increase quality of life by having more recreational and family activities. Making sure residents are safe but not mandate laws that are not proving to be effective.
Reduce no knock raids and reform the SWAT team department.
Reduce county taxes and establish more accountability of any new enacted ordinances. Make sure to read twice any new ordinances. Have better communication with county residents, not just mandate laws for control.
What should Adams County do to balance economic growth with the current quality of life?
What reforms, if any, should the Adams County Sheriff’s Department enact to fairly police and protect all county residents?
Actively review current and long-term plans for the county to ensure it meets the needs and expectations of our residents. Continuously improve government services and programs which include our human services, open space, trails, outdoor recreation and farmland preservation. Ensure our citizens feel safe in their community by funding the Sheriff’s office. In addition, the county should continue to monitor those industries that are a detriment to our citizens including noise, air and water pollution.
The residents of Adams County elect the sheriff to carry out public safety for Adams County. I recently met with Sheriff Reigenborn to express that I do not support defunding the Adams County Sheriff’s Office, that he and his team of law enforcement officers have my support. I also expressed that I am open to future discussions about calls for service volume, mental health transports and staffing levels.
VOTING FROM PAGE 18
More locations open on Oct. 30, and they’ll be ready to answer questions from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 30, 31 and Nov. 2 and from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. y on Election Day Nov. 3. Those locations include five spots in Thornton: Anythink Library at 9417 Huron St., Anythink Wright
Farms at 5877 E. 120th Ave., the Carpenter Recreation Center at 11151 Colorado Blvd., the Thornton Civic Center at 9500 Civic Center Drive, the Trail Winds Recreation Center 13495 Holly St. Front Range Community College at 3645 W. 112th Ave. in Westminster will also get voting center. The final seven centers will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Nov. 2 and 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Election Day Nov. 3.
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success?
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success? I would consider my term a success by being a leader that listens to the citizens, seeks out solutions, and advocates to improve our residents’ quality of life and to be accessible to our school districts, non-profits, service organizations, municipal and state elected officials, economic business partners and labor unions. I will continue to support our quality of life in Adams County, including open space and trails, transportation, economic development opportunities.
Those locations include Anythink Brighton, 327 E. Bridge St. in Brighton, the Perl Mack Community Center at 7125 Mariposa St. in Denver, Pinnacle Charter School at 1001 W. 84th Ave. in Federal Heights, the North Metro Church at 12505 Colorado Blvd., Thornton and Westminster’s The Mac recreation center at 3295 W. 72nd. Ave., as well as locations in Henderson — at the Belle Creek Family Center at 10693 Belle Creek Boulevard —
and at the Eagle Point Recreation Center, 6060 Parkway Dr. in Commerce City. Voting by mail Voters that want to send their ballots by mail should put 55 cents in postage on the envelope. They can also bring them to one of Adams County’s 28 dropbox locations. For an updated list of those locations, go to https://www.adamsvotes.com/ ballot-drop-boxes/
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District Attorney, Colorado Judicial District 17 Timothy McCormack Party: Republican Residence: Brighton Campaign website: McCORMACKforDA. com
What makes you the best choice for this office?
What must an effective District Attorney accomplish?
Your public safety is my top priority. I have been prosecuting for over 28 years. Hired by Bob Grant, promoted to management by Don Quick, I supervised and managed every division in the office during my career in the 17th JD. I stand for the Rule of Law, Due Process and the fight for victims of crime. My endorsements are across the political spectrum. The office needs change and they agree that I am that change.
Effectiveness is accomplished by restoring integrity, trust and ethics to this office. Public safety must be top priority as well as: establishing a positive environment promoting employee retention and institutional knowledge, prosecute violent crime, address meaningful criminal justice reform without sacrificing public safety, enhance transparency to re-build public trust, expand problem-solving courts to better utilize resources to initially prevent crime, resolve cases that limit exposure to the criminal justice system and reduce recidivism.
»
Brian Mason Party: Democrat Residence: Westminster Campaign website: www.brianmason. us
CU Board of Regents, 6th District Richard Murray Party: Republican Residence: Highlands Ranch Campaign website: www. murrayforcuregent.com
My mantra as the next District Attorney is this: Do the right thing, at all times, in every case. This is what I believe and is why I’m the best choice for this office. I will work day and night to keep our community safe and to make our criminal justice system better. I will be a leader of integrity for the DA’s Office, our community and our state.
First and foremost, a District Attorney must prioritize community safety. I will do this by prosecuting violent offenders, human traffickers and those who hurt children. A District Attorney must fight for the most vulnerable, including domestic violence victims and the elderly, which I will do. Finally, the District Attorney must build trust between law enforcement and our communities and make our justice system fair for all. I hope to accomplish all of these things.
What makes you the best choice for this office?
If you’re elected, what single issue will be at the top of your agenda?
Experience at CU and devotion to my alma mater — I am a two-time alumnus of CU Boulder (undergraduate and law degrees). While at CU, I served as student body president (a “triexecutive” in student government), working closely with the university system on key issues facing students, and served on the Chancellor’s Executive Committee and Boulder Campus Planning Commission. I have kept strong ties to CU over the past 20 years and recently served as the chair of the CU Law Alumni Board, working on issues of tuition costs, diversity, scholarships and job placement. I understand the importance of affordable, high-quality and accessible public education.
The number one long-term issue that must be addressed is the rising cost of attendance for our students. Recent generations are being crushed by an ever-increasing student loan burden. As a millennial who attended CU in the 2000s, I know this firsthand. We must find ways to make the in-state cost of obtaining a degree from CU sustainable for our students. This issue is multiplied by the COVID-19 pandemic as revenue sources become more limited. I will work closely with the administration on solutions so CU comes out of the pandemic more innovative, more cost-efficient and stronger.
» Christopher Otwell Party: Unity Party Residence: Aurora Campaign website: www.facebook.com/ otwellc4CURegent
Ilana Spiegel Party: Democrat Residence: Unincorporated Arapahoe County Campaign website: www.ilana4regent. com
As both an educator and as an engineer in the technologies and aerospace defense industry sectors, I provide a unique perspective and in-field experience to the students. Thirty-ish years working in the industry and nearly four years as an educator teaching others about computer science and cybersecurity, the fields of study that drive the job market in Colorado.
Providing education through technological improvements to everyone to ensure that Colorado is the best-educated and well-prepared for the future. Before the pandemic, I was pushing forward with encouraging the existing CU regents to establish online learning capabilities and start laying the groundwork to support nontraditional students. As the pandemic has shown us, this is now critical to the future of education.
Students, faculty and the community are asking for changes in leadership. As a mother of University of Colorado students, I will defend academic freedom, fight to lower tuition costs, and put our students and educators first. I have a proven track record of fighting for policies to eliminate opportunity gaps for students of color, students with disabilities, and low income and first-generation students, in addition to expertise in education funding and budgets. My background as a public school teacher, with over 20 years of public service, has prepared me to serve as our next University of Colorado Regent.
Today’s students are in a pinch: More jobs than ever require some kind of postsecondary degree or credential, and the cost of obtaining a degree has skyrocketed. That’s why my top priority is affordability. We must control costs of higher education. It is time for Colorado to provide younger generations with many of the same opportunities enjoyed by previous generations by fundamentally reforming financing higher education. Demand for high-cost degrees in STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) is a large driver of cost. I will partner with business and industry to produce STEM degrees through innovative apprenticeships and co-ops.
League of Women voters discuss National Popular Vote question STAFF REPORT
The Adams County League of Women voters will tackle the controversy surrounding the National Popular Vote question Oct. 12. The National Popular Vote and other ballot issues will be explained at the local league’s meeting, 6:15 p.m. Oct. 12 at the Community Reach Administration Building, 1870 W 122nd Ave, Ste 100, Westminster. Colorado legislators voted to join the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact in 2019 by a vote of the legislature. Colorado voters will weigh in on that decision at the polls
this November, voting up or down on Proposition 113. League member Peggy Gonder will explain NPV and Proposition 113, a citizen initiative to repeal this decision. The interstate compact is meant to assure that the presidential candidate with the most votes nationally will be elected president. Currently, 48 states operate a “winner take all” system, causing candidates to focus on only a handful of “swing states”. The League of Women Voters of the US has supported direct election of the president since 1970. The compact will only take effect when enough states
join to reach the 270 electoral college threshold to determine the winner. Other issues Voter Service Chair Marge Innes will explain nine more ballot issues, including Proposition 115, which would create prohibitions on lateterm abortions, Proposition 116 which reduces the state income tax rate, Proposition EE which creates a new tax on vaping products and Proposition 118 which establishes a Paid Family and Medical Leave Insurance Program. The meeting is free and open to the public. For more information, visit lwvadamscounty.
org and “events”. Voters can see pro and con arguments on all the ballot issues by visiting the State League website: lwvcolorado.org and clicking “Ballot Issues.” The site also explains how to register to vote and how mail ballots operate in Colorado. The League of Women Voters of Adams County, Colorado is part of a national network that is nonpartisan, grassroots and multi-issue - a recognized force in shaping public policy. The League promotes political responsibility through informed and active participation of citizens in local, state and national government.
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What traits are crucial for a District Attorney to possess?
What will your top priority be, if elected?
What else should voters know about you?
A District Attorney must possess integrity and have earned a reputation for fundamental fairness, honesty, credibility and trustworthiness. A District Attorney must have the experience, leadership and problem solving skills to manage the entire office. District Attorney’s must also develop and maintain collaborative and productive working relationships with community leaders and criminal justice service providers. A District Attorney must be a leader both in the office and in their communities.
Ensuring public safety for everyone is my top priority. Several communities in our district have been identified as some of the most dangerous cities in Colorado. This is not acceptable. This is why the relationship between law enforcement, city councils and the District Attorney’s Office is so important. My endorsements speak to that. I intend to ensure that our residents have honest government and a District Attorney’s Office they deserve and can be proud of.
I have dedicated my entire career to servant leadership and upholding my sworn oath. I am a prosecutor, not a politician. I distinguish between good citizens who have made mistakes and evil that preys upon our residents. Republicans, Democrats and Unaffiliated leaders and voters in our communities endorse our campaign. We are unanimously endorsed by law enforcement. The message is clear, there needs to be change in this office.
The most important trait of a District Attorney is integrity. Absolutely everything flows from there. The other crucial traits of a District Attorney are judgment, compassion, leadership, humility, strength, empathy and courage.
My top priorities are community safety and making the criminal justice system fair for everyone. You cannot have one without the other. I am committed to doing both.
Colorado is my home. I was raised here, went to school here and am raising my children here. I’ve worked for the District Attorney’s Office for many years and supervise 30 attorneys there now. I am proud of the broad, bipartisan support I have earned from leaders, elected officials and citizens from across our community. I would be honored to have your vote.
If you’re elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success?
CU Boulder has promised reforms on campus diversity for years, but plans have appeared to be delayed since 2017. What role do regents play in such plans?
In light of the pandemic’s effect on tax revenue, how will you address budget shortages on CU campuses?
CU provided me with the foundation for everything I am today. But it came with a significant price tag. Although tuition did not increase this year, it will naturally need to be adjusted as time passes if measures are not taken to address budget shortfalls. As a regent, I will roll up my sleeves and work to identify areas where savings can be made to ease the financial burden on the next generation of our students. Also, as a longtime athletics supporter, the Buffs winning the Rose Bowl is an achievement I want to see happen.
We must foster an environment of belonging, where all students are safe and able to learn, grow and become our next generation of leaders. The regents are in a position to adopt policies and provide the guidance from the top down to address diversity, inclusivity and equity. As a student body president, one of our student government’s biggest agenda items was diversity. During my time as chair of the CU Law Alumni Board, I continued to work on these issues, and the most recent entering class is the most diverse in the history of the law school.
The budget shortages are here and will likely continue if enrollment goes down, state funding continues to decrease, self-generated revenue drops and so on. I will work tirelessly with the university system administration and each campus to identify how best to offset shortfalls and will work to identify areas where consolidation or reorganization are appropriate. This includes a detailed analysis of the budget, working with the Legislature and Joint Budget Committee for more state funding, and increasing our advancement efforts with donors and the business community to raise the necessary funds to provide a world-class education at an affordable price.
A difference. I will push forward with establishing CU in the online technological educational markets, which will allow those that are not easily able to attempt face-to-face education with the ability to earn a quality education.
Diversity is a strength in the United States. Embracing and supporting the diversity of thought, experience and understanding places Colorado ahead of many other states in future opportunities and capabilities. Providing education to those that need it and expanding the experience of those with other’s thoughts and opinions ensures improvement in the long-term growth and acceptance of others.
It is necessary to find ways, through technology, to make reusable sources of educational teaching to reduce overhead costs and to allow more students access to it. As more students can gain access to cheaper, quality education and making the availability of that education greater through easier online access, the student population should grow accordingly and eliminate those budget shortfalls over time.
A change in leadership direction that empowers students, faculty, staff and the community that CU serves will be a key measurement of success. Improving transparency in the budget, driving down costs and increasing financial aid opportunities will open the doors of higher education to all Coloradans, regardless of background or wealth. Creating a model where higher education is applicable, cutting-edge, and relevant to students and the next generation of jobs will be a key accomplishment.
To address this issue, we need to listen to our students, faculty and staff by adding and following a systemwide CU Anti-Racist Creed and implementing action items for the reduction of racial injustices from the Black Student Collective on the CU Anschutz Medical Campus. Student groups are challenging CU to engage all BIPOC-led student, staff and faculty groups in every planning meeting, conversation, document and implementation of anti-racism efforts across CU and include accountability checks at every step of the way. It’s time to have representation in (district) 6 and a board majority that is responsive to these student concerns.
CU needs bold leadership to advocate for adequate state resources by addressing conflicting constitutional amendments. While some cost savings can be found, CU already runs a pretty lean administration. Additional cuts could be taken, but it’s not nearly enough to make a significant impact. We currently fund higher education 48th in the nation. CU builds its budget and sets tuition excluding state funding. This needs to change. I have a proven track record of making the case that public education works and is the best return on public investment for not just educators and students but for the entire state.
PARTY REGISTRATION BY COUNTY
The following is a look at the active-voter registration figures in some Denver metro area counties and in Colorado as of Sept. 1: COUNTY
DEMOCRATIC PARTY
REPUBLICAN PARTY
LIBERTARIAN PARTY
GREEN PARTY
AMERICAN CONSTITUTION
UNAFFILIATED
TOTAL
ADAMS
89,313
59,374
2,634
538
989
114,664
267,964
ARAPAHOE
126,865
93,582
3,848
797
1,016
157,077
383,726
DENVER
203,105
48,925
3,959
1,125
1,012
171,123
429,877
DOUGLAS
48,585
93,595
2,488
306
396
96,214
241,703
ELBERT
2,202
10,339
194
22
58
7,152
19,972
JEFFERSON
120,264
103,663
4,296
833
851
169,674
399,932
STATE
1,067,541
973,545
36,364
7,934
10,185
1,441,872
3,541,334
Source: www.sos.state.co.us
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State House District 30 Kerrie Gutierrez Party: Republican Residence: Hudson Campaign website: www. kerriegutierrezhd30.com/
What makes you the best choice for this office? I have a passion for the people, I have heard their concerns and I want to be their voice. I have lived in HD30 for 20 years, and I have seen the negative and positive that comes with growth to our community. Elected government officials need to represent the people that voted them in. That is what I intend to do if I am blessed with the opportunity to be your next State Representative.
As the metro area grapples with traffic, high water rates and other growth pressures, what should the state do to balance economic expansion with current quality of life? Traffic: Work with CDOT to speed up road expansion and repair efforts and encourage companies to have employees work from home instead of commuting. Water: Collaborate with counties and cities to identify the rate of non-essential water use, set goals for more efficient water use and identify what is needed from the state to achieve those goals.
» Editor’s note: Democratic candidate Dafna Michaelson Jenet did not submit a profile to Colorado Community Media.
State House District 31 Yadira Caraveo Party: Democrat Residence: Thornton Campaign website: www. caraveoforcolorado.com
What makes you the best choice for this office? I am the only medical doctor in the General Assembly, and I have used my expertise to pass bold, progressive reforms to support the families I see in my clinic and in my community. In my first term, I have passed a best-in-the-nation paid sick leave bill and other major pieces of legislation to support workers and their families. If re-elected, I will continue to translate my perspective and values into action.
As the metro area grapples with traffic, high water rates and other growth pressures, what should the state do to balance economic expansion with current quality of life? As Adams County continues to grow, we need to put middle class families first. That means ensuring that there is affordable housing and tenant protections in place so that people can continue to afford to live here. We must also address traffic by expanding public transit and protecting public investments in our transportation system. That is how we can make sure that economic growth benefits all of Adams County, not just the wealthy few.
» Editor’s note: Libertarian candidate Breanna Owens did not submit a profile to Colorado Community Media.
State House District 32 Adrienne Benavidez Party: Democrat Residence: Denver Contact: ahbenavidez4@gmail.com
What makes you the best choice for this office? Experience! I have completed four legislative sessions representing the hard working people of HD 32. As a member of the House leadership team, I helped to pass meaningful, bipartisan legislation. This year alone we passed a balanced budget despite a $3 billion deficit, 14 COVID-related bills to help resident and the most comprehensive police reforms in our nation. With the challenges 2020 has brought, we need someone ready to continue that important work.
As the metro area grapples with traffic, high water rates and other growth pressures, what should the state do to balance economic expansion with current quality of life? As a result of high unemployment, business reductions and losses and the only partial reopening of schools and daycare, maintenance of our best quality of life may put some economic expansion on the back burner. The State expects to face at least a $1 billion deficit next year so we will need to identify cuts as well as ways to increase revenues.
» Anthony Caputo Party: Republican Residence: Commerce City Campaign website: www. tonycforhd32.com
Jason Chapman Party: Libertarian Residence: Denver Contact: swtchrly08@gmail.com
I believe in the rule of law and limited government. I will push for individual and parental rights to keep bureaucracies out of our lives. Government’s “one size fits all” attitude creates more problems than it fixes. I believe in the rule of law, not unequal treatment from governmental leaders (deep state bureaucrats and lawmakers, on both sides — but especially on the Democrat side).
Quit creating obstacles that end up hurting our traffic system; i.e. two or more occupant lanes, money wasted on bike lanes that should be used on highways and roads. These ideas are well meaning but not productive. Counties, cities and the state need to sit down and work on a plan. Would be nice to elect commissioners who have some knowledge of good developmental policies.
I’m a libertarian, like most people. Socially liberal and fiscally conservative.
Unfortunately we need to raise taxes to build more roads and infrastructure.
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What reforms, if any, should be enacted to ensure minority populations are represented at all levels of government?
What two issues demand more attention in the upcoming Legislative session than they received in the previous one, and why?
We should maintain our commitment to having fair and nondiscriminatory standards for hiring and other opportunities.
Addressing adolescent suicide through promoting therapy and treatment that involves the input of parents, children, teachers, counselors, etc. Addressing inequities in healthcare by expanding access to quality care to underserved people while preserving medical freedom.
What reforms, if any, should be enacted to ensure minority populations are represented at all levels of government?
What two issues demand more attention in the upcoming Legislative session than they received in the previous one, and why?
One key step to make our democracy more reflective and inclusive of minority communities is multilingual ballot access. Too many voters are effectively disenfranchised because they cannot read the complicated ballot language and do not have translation assistance provided by their county. I have worked hard to expand multilingual ballot access during my first term and I will continue to work towards passing this critical step in empowering voters from all communities across Colorado.
We need to focus more on housing and support for our immigrant communities next session. Colorado is facing an affordable housing crisis, and there are a number of structural issues that disadvantage tenants and create housing insecurity. The legislature also needs to provide more support for immigrant communities, especially if the federal government continues to target immigrant families and exclude them from COVID-19 relief packages.
What reforms, if any, should be enacted to ensure minority populations are represented at all levels of government?
What two issues demand more attention in the upcoming Legislative session than they received in the previous one, and why?
The challenges of 2020 continue to provide us opportunities to put a new lens on the disparities we face in employment, health, education, police abuse and other areas. Government at all levels must recognize these disparities and reevaluate policies and practices to make meaningful changes. The Governor issued a recent executive order to address these issues at the state level. It may provide a template for other levels of government.
Toxins spewed by certain facilities have contaminated the air in much of HD 32. I passed a bill that requires those facilities to provide a 911 notification when there is a release, beginning in January. We have not been able to provide real-time monitoring of those emissions, but the bill will be brought back. We also need to address tax expenditures that I want to modify as we face such a strain on our revenues.
I think it is extremely important that we identify sustainable funding sources and mechanisms to address continuing shortfalls in transportation, education and healthcare in our state as these are vital to our economy and quality of life. I also hope we can address inequities in our criminal justice system to stop our reliance on private prisons.
I don’t believe in rule by quota. To have quotas is akin to saying Blacks and Hispanics are not smart enough to make it on their own. I could care less if a board is all Black, Hispanic, women, or “white” (or any other ethnic group) as long as they are competent. I don’t particularly care for career politicians who become very good at lining their own pockets.
For me it’s governmental intrusions forced on families and individuals. The fact is, we are supposed to be a nation of laws but are becoming a nation of the favored. Liberal speech is the only speech to be allowed in school (at all levels) especially at colleges who turn down or cancel freedom of speech when it comes down to speakers that are not “woke”.
If in the minority, I’d work to make the public aware of what’s really in some of the good-sounding legislation and to prevent some really radical ideas, like teaching gender fluidity — even to kindergarteners. If in the majority, I’d work to rescind many of the bills passed in the previous years and come up with legislation that allows individuals and ingenuity to succeed where the government could not.
None, Colorado government seems to include people of different ethnicities, races, cultures and sexual orientations.
Property taxes and RTD.
Help RTD achieve the promises it made.
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success? For my term to be a success, I would like to get Colorado’s economy safely reopened and get people back to work; Maintain safe streets and ensure police have adequate funding and training; Protect medical freedom; Make progress on identifying causes and solutions to rising adolescent suicide rates in Colorado; and Increase access to affordable healthcare.
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success? A successful second term depends on whether we can protect Medicaid and other public healthcare programs during this recession. We cannot undermine the medical care that our most vulnerable need, especially during a pandemic. As we navigate Colorado’s fiscal crisis, we need to make sure that our budget is not balanced at the expense of patients who need Medicaid, CHP+, and other public programs.
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success?
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State House District 34 Kyle Mullica Party: Democrat Residence: Northglenn Campaign website: www.kylemullica. com
What makes you the best choice for this office? During this pandemic and economic crisis, we need progressive, pro-science leadership in Denver. As the only nurse in the General Assembly, I have worked hard to expand healthcare coverage and address other public health issues facing Adams County. When not in session, I have been treating COVID patients in the ER. If re-elected, I will bring frontline experience to the Capitol and build upon previous legislative victories to fight for working families in Adams County.
As the metro area grapples with traffic, high water rates and other growth pressures, what should the state do to balance economic expansion with current quality of life? We need to make sure that our economic growth benefits working families. In addition to the pressures we experience with traffic, too many families are struggling to afford the high costs of living here. That is why we must protect and expand public investments in affordable housing, public transportation and our infrastructure. By addressing the pressures we face daily while lowering housing and transportation costs, we can grow and remain an affordable place to live.
» Mark Bromley Party: Republican Residence: Northglenn Campaign website: vote-bromley. webnode.com
Robert Stutz Party: Libertarian Residence: Thornton Contact: 3dpipe@gmail.com
State House District 35 Shannon Bird Party: Democrat Residence: Westminster Campaign website: www. shannonbirdforcolorado.com
I have more professional aptitude and am more accomplished and capable of Representing the wonderful people of House District 34. I’m Local, family and honorable and have served in the U.S. Military specifically for the People of my home town, the state of Colorado and for the USA. I know more about government and domestic and foreign policy and how trade works.
There are many solutions and I’ll need all hands on deck in energy, oil and gas and emerging technology, infrastructure, agriculture and education to build our next century and beyond. Most of all we need people with stable incomes, stable jobs, a stable economy and we need the unborn to live to create that future. I’m counting on young geniuses of all colors and creeds to be born to create that glorious future.
Most representatives today have greater loyalty to their party than their constituents. The Libertarian party advocates supporting people’s individual rights above those of the state. I believe that a representative should support all of their constituents. I believe I represent those values better than most.
The state has repeatedly put their party selling-points above the overall welfare of the citizens. The voters have been sold a bill of goods. Our General Assembly has repeatedly been addressing short-term issues and ignoring long term problems. The General Assembly has to take a greater role in fiscal accountability. Projects need to be managed and people held accountable for inferior work. Identify the goal, reach the goal.
What makes you the best choice for this office? My commitment and service to our community and skills make me the best candidate. I have been a volunteer in our schools, chaired a school funding campaign and am the current State Representative for House District 35. I’m an attorney with a background in complex finance transactions and have a B.A. in Economics, an M.B.A., an M.S. in Finance and J.D. This combination is the leadership our state needs.
As the metro area grapples with traffic, high water rates and other growth pressures, what should the state do to balance economic expansion with current quality of life? Growth management is best determined at the local level. Because each community is different, a statewide solution to growth management is not appropriate. The better role for our State, however, is to identify a responsible way to sustainably fund the modernization and maintenance of our State’s transportation infrastructure. Ideas I believe are worth exploring include a vehicle miles-traveled fee or possibly a referred measure to the voters seeking approval for additional transportation infrastructure funding.
» Editor’s note: Republican candidate Roger Lehman did not submit a profile to Colorado Community Media.
NOVEMBER 3, 2020
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0October 8, 2020
What reforms, if any, should be enacted to ensure minority populations are represented at all levels of government?
What two issues demand more attention in the upcoming Legislative session than they received in the previous one, and why?
A major hurdle for candidates from historically marginalized communities is the difficulty of running for office. Our system favors the well-connected and those who benefit from social and economic privileges. That is why I passed legislation to allow candidates to use campaign funds to cover childcare expenses. This helps more parents, especially those from minority communities, to run for office. However, we need to continue pursuing campaign finance reform to make campaigning more equitable.
Two issues that demand more attention next session are affordable housing and our state’s ability to respond to public health emergencies. Too many Coloradans are struggling with rent or their mortgages and the recession has only worsened the problem. Meanwhile, this pandemic demonstrated how we need to improve the public health infrastructure to handle future crises. While we passed some short-term relief, we need to work on long-term solutions to address these issues.
If re-elected, I want to make sure that our state has the systems in place and resources it needs to recover from COVID-19 and to handle future public health crises. We must improve our ability to deploy support so that we can mitigate emergencies as they arise. This also requires pursuing further reforms to fix our broken healthcare system so that all Coloradans can receive the care they need during this pandemic and beyond.
First get rid of the Democrats and the useless unions and special-interest paid, corrupt dark-money politicians that I’m running against in Colorado. Dig into the hypocrisy and the useless excessive progressive nonsense that turned Colorado’s regulatory agencies into union puppets that fail to meet the growing future needs of Colorado. Make sure we adequately fund and staff our police so they are not overworked or over-stressed and can serve and protect our people.
Are you kidding just two? How about all of 2020! The Budget is a mess and that Democrat spent it up like a hot credit card. Preserving TABOR, the Gallager amendment and reducing taxes will create a better government and restore the responsibility of the economy to the citizens. American rights need to be restored in Colorado. The Dictator I’m running against is the cause of the dystopian problems that ended up 2020.
I hope to get Colorado back in shape and the economy on its feet. If my fellow Republicans finally respect me and the Democrats work with me and all the voters vote for me, I have the solutions to get Colorado back on track. When my work in the house is done I’ll aim higher and work on national and international goals for the USA. Then, my term in office will be a success.
All citizens need to be represented. To address people separately by their ethnic identity is part of the problem. Why do minorities need to be represented by another member of the ethnic group? I would like to see greater tolerance and empathy for others, thereby ethnic identifiers become less important.
Education. For years, we have taught children the answers without teaching them how to obtain the answers. The inability to identify a problem and develop a solution is at the core of most of our national problems, including unemployment and gun violence. Teach people how to solve problems and many other problems are solved. Medical insurance. There are a variety of potential solutions to the amount of people without insurance and the stress this causes.
My priority motivation in running for office is not to get certain laws passed but more importantly to get more voters and elected officials to think in a manner towards solving problems for all and less about the narrow scope of priories of the political parties.
What reforms, if any, should be enacted to ensure minority populations are represented at all levels of government?
What two issues demand more attention in the upcoming Legislative session than they received in the previous one, and why?
Diverse representation is necessary to ensure that government is responsive to the needs of the people it serves. Minority representation has increased over the years due to effective grassroot efforts that help minority communities organize around issues of importance and to encourage and support members of minority communities to run for elected office. More work is needed to achieve full, fair and diverse representation, but our State is on the right path.
Because of the recent economic downturn, funding for the State’s pension system (PERA) and public education was cut. If PERA’s unfunded liability is not repaid as contemplated under current law, the liability will continue to grow and consume an increasing share of State revenues. Funding for public education has been inadequate for years and has worsened because of the economic downturn. Both issues are critically important and must be a priority in the coming years.
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success?
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success? My term will be a success if I am able to craft solutions that (1) support the recovery of our State’s economy, (2) restore appropriate funding for PERA and (3) set us on a path to appropriately funding our public schools and our State’s transportation infrastructure.
NOVEMBER 3, 2020
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State House District 56 Kevin Gulbranson
What makes you the best choice for this office? I’m not one of the Old Party Candidates.
Party: Libertarian Residence: Aurora Contact: klgelkin@aol.com
As the metro area grapples with traffic, high water rates and other growth pressures, what should the state do to balance economic expansion with current quality of life? I am here to represent the interests of the people of my district. I will work hard to prevent the City and County of Denver and surrounding Metro from railroading their concerns over the people of rural Colorado!
» Maria-Vittoria “Giugi” Carminati Party: Democrat Residence: Aurora Campaign website: www.giugi4co.com
Rod Bockenfeld Party: Republican Residence: Watkins Campaign website: www.Bockenfeld. com
State Senate District 21 Dominick Moreno Party: Democrat Residence: Commerce City Campaign website: www. dominickmoreno.com
When I see suffering, my instinct is to relieve it. And I see suffering all around us, in our Black communities, among our LGBTQ brethren and in families struggling to make ends meet. A person cannot be a good choice for a legislator if they do not see this. If they don’t see it, they cannot fix it. I do see it and will do all I can to help as many people as possible.
Government can use economies of scale to address problems of scale. The answer to traffic congestion is a comprehensive public transportation system with a hub and spoke system that allows most people to get to most places within 30 minutes. We also have to work with rural communities to balance our resources and make sure we are all contributing to each other’s well-being.
Background in Finance, Criminal Justice, Banking and Small Business.
Growth must pay its own way and not on the backs of current residents. This is generally done by the establishment of special districts in newly developed areas. Plus, the size of the state government needs to be kept in check in order to fund any additional needs.
What makes you the best choice for this office?
As the metro area grapples with traffic, high water rates and other growth pressures, what should the state do to balance economic expansion with current quality of life?
I am running for re-election to continue serving our community. In a decade of public service, I have worked to ensure breakfast is served to low-income students, provide pay raises for home health care workers and provide transportation so foster students can stay in their schools of origin. The initiatives I champion are in response to the needs of our community with the goal of making our community a better place to live and work.
Increased population means a greater demand for government services and an increase in unhoused people in our communities. At the state level, we should increase investments in affordable housing, transportation infrastructure and education. We also need to be sensitive to the pressure of rising home values on vulnerable populations. While we had to cut $3 billion from the state budget, I’m proud that we were able to maintain the senior homestead property tax exemption.
» Martin Mendez Party: Republican Residence: Denver Contact: martin@electmendez.co
State Senate District 25 Paula Dickerson Party: Democrat Residence: Thornton Campaign website: paulaforcolorado. com
I am a local citizen, a family man with grown children. I have been involved in politics for the last 25 years but I have not held public office. I am a fresh face offering a new perspective and unadulterated ideas for the future.
I will take innovative ideas, a round table discussion with as many minds engaged as possible, a look at past accomplishments in these areas and people that are willing to work together.
What makes you the best choice for this office?
As the metro area grapples with traffic, high water rates and other growth pressures, what should the state do to balance economic expansion with current quality of life?
I am a Colorado native, born and raised in Adams County. I am a qualified leader and an active union member. I understand the struggle too many hard-working families are facing just trying to get by. I will provide compassionate leadership that represents the voice of the people. I am the best choice for this office because it is time for a teacher to lead, not a polished politician.
Coloradans deserve fresh air, clean drinking water and healthy quality of life. Balancing growth and expansion requires the voice of all stakeholders. Understanding the impacts and consequences are essential to the decision making process. When we work together we can find common ground and work toward balanced solutions.
» Editor’s note: Republican candidate Kevin Priola did not submit a profile to Colorado Community Media.
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0October 8, 2020
What reforms, if any, should be enacted to ensure minority populations are represented at all levels of government?
What two issues demand more attention in the upcoming Legislative session than they received in the previous one, and why?
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success?
We should care equally for the rights of all the people, all the time!
Judicial reform/qualified immunity & long term economic recovery.
Bring the state back to a sustainable growth economy without the problems that seem to plague most heavily populated states.
You are asking the wrong person. Reforms must be driven by leaders of the communities we claim to serve: What do they need? What do they want? What is the best way to deliver those needs and wants to them? Beyond that, we ensure that minority populations (and we should stop referring to them as “minority populations”) can access the privileges which enable running for office, engaging in the community and ending cycles of poverty.
Subsidized childcare and transportation need a lot more attention than they have received thus far. The lack of affordable and quality childcare creates an uneven burden on women and especially BIPOC women. It widens the wage gap, decreasing the funds each individual earns on an hourby-hour basis. We have to create a comprehensive public transportation system that can get people from near their homes to near their workplaces through regular and reliable buses and trains.
To be successful at the end of my term, I would want to have: 1) reformed family law so abusers do not automatically get joint decision making with their victims; 2) changed the standards for obtaining a permanent protection order, which are far too onerous; 3) have a committee in place to study the feasibility and cost of subsidized child care; and 4) addressed the lack of access to healthcare services.
There is a perception that we have systemic racism in our society. Rightfully or wrongly, perception is reality. Everyone should be afforded equal access and protections under our laws. We need to re-evaluate our current governmental systems and make necessary reforms. Adequate stakeholder participation from all perspectives is paramount in coming to a real solution.
Right-sizing our state government. Our state government keeps growing without any consideration given to how to handle the next downturn. Secondly, the State needs to live within its means. Its means are determined by what citizens are willing to pay in taxes.
My constituents’ understanding that I am a district centric elected official who is responsive to their needs.
What reforms, if any, should be enacted to ensure minority populations are represented at all levels of government?
What two issues demand more attention in the upcoming Legislative session than they received in the previous one, and why?
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success?
Government works best when people of all walks of life contribute to the discussion and decisions. As a gay Latino man who is (relatively) young, I don’t have the typical background of most other politicians. I view it as my responsibility to encourage people of diverse backgrounds to seek public office. If the thought of running for office has ever crossed your mind, I’d love to hear from you. We need good people in politics.
The issues that deserve more attention are income inequality and responding to the effects of the coronavirus. This global pandemic has exposed the gaps and flaws in our system. We need a government that’s willing to level the playing field between the wealthy and the rest of us. We also need reforms to our tax code that end preferential tax treatment for big corporations and direct those resources to our classrooms and roads.
I will view my term of office as a success if I can continue to propose policies that help people and connect people to the services they need. When thousands of people were left unemployed because of the coronavirus, I helped people in our community breakthrough the bureaucracy to get them the unemployment benefits they needed. It’s my job to make government more accessible and I’d be honored to do it for another four years.
A one-semester Political Education class needs to be a Colorado graduation requirement at the high school level. Not necessarily for minorities but for the general public. For instance, do you know what your Precinct Number code is and what it means? Well, you should, every voter has one. I think it’s a shame that it is not taught in school.
Two issues on the ballot this year will catch people by surprise: the Proposition EE — Increase Taxes on Nicotine Products and Amendment B — Repeal Tax Assessment Rates (Repeal Gallagher Amendment). Most people won’t understand how damaging these are to household budgets. I like the Gallagher Amendment as it stands and although I am not a smoker, I think it is unfair to raise taxes on cigarettes by 62%.
I will aim to have a clear conscience that what I have done is morally acceptable before God and man. Cheaters never prosper.
What reforms, if any, should be enacted to ensure minority populations are represented at all levels of government?
What two issues demand more attention in the upcoming Legislative session than they received in the previous one, and why?
Campaign finance reform is essential to remove the oppressive barriers that are ingrained in the system. Ensuring minority populations are represented at all levels requires education, recruitment efforts, and accessibility to our political structures.
Education and Health Care are two issues that require attention in the upcoming legislative session. As we work toward an economic recovery that benefits everyone we must be committed to prioritizing protecting people’s health and easing their financial burdens.
If elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success? When I am elected I will work to protect and increase funding for public education. I will enact policies that ensure Coloradans have access to quality medical care and stop any attempts to ban abortion care. I will be successful when our at-risk population and vulnerable communities have access to the resources they deserve.
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State Congressional District 7 Ed Perlmutter Party: Democrat Residence: Arvada Campaign website: www. perlmutterforcolorado.com
What makes you the best choice for this office? I’m running to continue working on behalf of the hardworking folks of Adams and Jefferson Counties to fight this pandemic and ensure every person has the chance to succeed. This includes supporting affordable and accessible health care, public education, access to good jobs and the skills needed to get those jobs, and protecting our beautiful outdoors. I work hard to stay accessible to the people of the 7th district and find common ground to help our communities.
If elected, what would your top issue be? My top priority is keeping our communities safe from COVID-19 and helping our economy recover from this pandemic. This means significant state and local investments, which includes our schools, in rebuilding our infrastructure, raising the minimum wage, expanding access to skills training and apprenticeships, increasing the ability of workers to collectively bargain, paid family leave, pay equity, overtime protections and much more. We need to renew our promise to our seniors by protecting Social Security and Medicare for generations to come.
» Casper Stockham Party: Republican Residence: Aurora but planning to move to CD7 Campaign website: www. casperforcolorado.com
U.S. House, 6th District Jason Crow Party: Democrat Residence: Aurora Campaign website: jasoncrowforcongress.com
I’m running for Congress on a Values-based platform to empower the Family, Finances and the Future of Colorado. My opponent is missing in action and follows his party line. He has little to show for 14 years in Congress. It’s time for a change. I stand for law and order, safety and security, quality education and better solutions for health care. I’m for free markets, fair trade, the 2nd Amendment and initiatives that go after actual bad guys with guns, not law-abiding citizens. This election is about the promise of America – you and me; challenges and heartbreaks; hopes and dreams.
What makes you the best choice for this office? I’m fighting to bring a new generation of leadership to Congress. As your representative, I’ve worked to restore trust in the government, held over 26 town halls and reject corporate PAC money. I’m also one of the few members of Congress to post my daily congressional meeting schedule publicly. I cracked down on price-gouging by Big Pharma, enacted into law my plan for the Pentagon to tackle climate change and stood up for small businesses that are struggling during the pandemic. In these turbulent times, CD6 deserves a servant leader who will work for the people, not special interests.
My top issue will be to ensure that our communities, neighborhoods and cities are safe for our citizens, including justice and equality for all, . Second is quality education. Education is the closest thing to magic that we have in America today. Choice, transportation allowances, and freedom for parents to have a say in what their children are taught.
If you’re elected, what single issue will be at the top of your agenda? The COVID-19 crisis is the greatest public health and economic crisis we’ve faced in generations. We need to rebuild our economy and invest in testing, contact-tracing and a vaccine. Since the onset of the pandemic, I worked to pass coronavirus relief packages that provide critical (personal protective equipment) funding for our frontline workers, increase the availability of testing and contact-tracing services, and support small businesses. I will continue to fight to keep families and small businesses afloat throughout the crisis and will advocate for evidence-based policy solutions to ensure the health and economic security of my constituents and all Americans.
» Jaimie Kulikowski Party: Unity Party Residence: Unincorporated Arapahoe County near Aurora Campaign website: jaimielynn.com
Norm Olsen Party: Libertarian Residence: Centennial Campaign website: www. Norm4Liberty.org
Of the four candidates running for the U.S. House seat in Colorado’s 6th Congressional District, I am the only leader. Period.
My biggest effort when elected will be to stop a cycle of exploitation and crisis projection during election years. The wars against COVID and racism were unnecessary and endless wars that the government forced us all into. I fully support Trump’s initial response to the coronavirus. Instead, the Democratic Party smeared his response and exploited all our deepest fears by projecting crisis after crisis onto us. The Dems’ Chicken Little syndrome of always screaming, “the sky is falling!” and we’re all going to die from virus, racism, sexism, climate change, economic collapse, drugs, bacon, etc., etc., etc., must stop.
I am not a politician. I have absolutely no intention of pursuing a political career. I am not affiliated with either of the major political parties. I have no loyalty to either of the major parties or any of the leaders of such. As your representative, I would have no loyalty to anyone other than you, the folks who I would represent. When voting for or against legislation my one concern, my only concern, will be the future of the republic and the future of our progeny as citizens of this great republic.
A constitutional amendment and modification of the rules of the House of Representatives to conform with the rules to which the Colorado legislature adheres. Specifically: 1) term limits on (lawmakers), 2) all bills shall deal with a single issue, 3) the content of a bill must remain true to its title, and 4) continuing resolutions with regard to appropriations would be prohibited.
» Steve House Party: Republican Residence: Brighton Campaign website: www. HouseForColorado.com
My life has been devoted to public service and my community. I believe strongly that my 36 years in health care, my education in engineering and my deep love for Colorado and the United States will make me both a knowledgeable and practical moderate representative for my neighbors in CD6.
Passing affordable, quality health care for every American: health care that will cover preexisting conditions, that lowers costs and increases coverage, and is transparent in pricing. My goal is to make Americans healthier at a much, much lower cost.
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If you’re elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success?
With so many bipartisan House bills passed but ignored in the Senate this year, what is the best way for you to be effective in such an environment?
Success to me would be providing hardworking folks relief during the pandemic and getting folks back to work as quickly as possible in order to help our communities recover, taking on climate change and passing into law the SAFE Banking Act. Critical to being successful is also listening and being accessible to our community. I’ll continue to work tirelessly to remain accessible in a responsible way like I’ve done hosting numerous virtual town halls during this pandemic and hosting virtual office hours to listen to the people of the 7th District.
It’s been extremely frustrating seeing the Senate refuse to consider bills to address the challenges we face like increasing access to quality, affordable health care, increasing wages, reforming our broken immigration system, campaign finance reform, and common sense gun safety legislation. Even with these challenges, I’ve been able to get things done like helping firefighters determine the health risks of exposure to PFAS chemicals, ensuring Rocky Flats workers get the care and compensation they deserve, and assisting the people of the 7th District get the benefits they’re owed.
Colorado’s vote by mail system has been a monumental success with one of the highest turnout rates in the country leading to safe, secure, and accessible elections. I strongly believe that every other state should adopt our voting system to increase participation in our Democracy.
The enactment of my Citizens Empowerment Act, Incorporating a transportation allowance in school voucher programs, and the preservation of freedom of speech not freedom from speech or cancel culture.
I bring people together. That is my nature and has been the case all my life. The caustic entrenchment and refusal to find common ground is unacceptable. I don’t toe the line when I see something unjust or unfair. Rather I challenge convention and will never be afraid to do that in the U.S. House of Representatives. I also have tremendous working relationships with current Republican House members and current Senate members. Communication and getting of your high horse in the interests of the American people is what I’m about.
I think that unless voters realize that they need to demand accountability from election commissions about the chain of possession and progression — from the time a vote is mailed or placed in a ballot box to the time it is received and counted — mail-in will not work. Voters also must be responsible for ensuring that their ballots arrive on or before election day. Not 3 days after, not a week after, but ON TIME. We’re adults, we can at least be that responsible.
If you’re elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success?
What role should Congress play in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic that you feel it has not fulfilled so far?
After intense wildfires on the West Coast and in Colorado, what action should Congress take to mitigate the danger of future wildfires?
If reelected, I promise I will honor my oath and work tirelessly for the people of the 6th Congressional District. In my first term in Congress, we helped return over $2 million to CD6 residents. We secured millions of dollars in grant funding to invest in our roads and schools. We launched a boots-onthe-ground effort to support our community with weekly ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) detention center oversight inspections, a virtual job fair and mobile office hours. And we helped over 1,000 Coloradans solve problems they were having with the federal government.
Over four months ago, I voted for — and the House passed — the HEROES Act. The bill would provide unemployment benefits to Americans impacted by this recession, fund the United States Postal Service, and expand vote-by-mail efforts. It would also establish a heroes fund so our frontline workers can get the hazard pay that they earned and provide the necessary funding for PPE, contact-tracing and testing. The Senate hasn’t even debated the bill yet (as of Sept. 21). Congress needs to come together to pass much-needed relief to help this country through the months ahead.
When my kids can’t go outside to play and people with asthma can’t leave their houses because of the air quality, we know that there is a problem. We need more support for our first responders who confront these fires every year. More than that, we need a Congress and president that will act decisively on climate change. Climate change is making wildfires bigger and more frequent, and it will take federal, state and local collaboration to protect our communities. We need to transition our economy to rely more on renewable energy to ensure that we are addressing this crisis.
The day our government walks its talk of our founding documents will be the day I can say, “I am a successful congresswoman.” The U.S. Constitution and Declaration of Independence are all we need to govern our country at the federal level. These documents are powerful. They are here to both protect our rights and give us the freedom to bravely find our purpose. The U.S. was not founded on control and regulation. We were founded on freedom and bravery. Democrats seem to have forgotten this. They cannot win in November. We will lose everything we’ve worked so hard for.
My first assignment while stationed in Heidelberg, Germany, was to be the force protection officer for the Army posts. I learned the first and most important thing to do when faced with a potentially dangerous situation is to thoroughly and accurately assess the level of threat the situation poses. Congress failed to do this with COVID-19 and instead projected a crisis onto citizens. This should never happen again, and I will do everything to make sure it doesn’t when I am congresswoman. Congress needs to end the endless war against COVID-19 ASAP.
I don’t have enough expertise or information to confidently answer this question. What I will say is I would let the congresspeople and other officials who are in the territories impacted by the fires do their jobs as leaders. As a U.S. representative, I am not here to solve all our country’s problems. I am here to represent a specific territory, listen to the ideas and concerns of the constituents who live in it, and then speak and act on their behalf in Washington.
Elimination of the absolute dominance of the majority party in the House of Representatives. Party-line voting would be the measuring stick. When legislation is passed with significant approval rates by representatives of all political parties, then I would be successful.
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have an annual budget of $7 billion. Its primary raison d’£tre is to be prepared to deal with a pandemic such as COVID-19 … This agency/department is incompetent and is, perhaps, totally superfluous. Congress needs to examine and restructure. Certainly, some leaders need to be terminated. If this agency/department can’t be fixed, let’s just disband it and save ourselves $7 billion a year.
Congress has control of federal lands. Federal government agencies (Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, Department of Agriculture, and so on) are responsible for the management of the dominant portion of the acreage on fire. If the federal government can’t manage federal lands properly, the lands should revert to state control. If states can’t manage state lands properly (some do, some don’t), the lands should revert to private control. Private interests which have some skin in the game are likely the to be the best managers.
First and foremost, I must be accountable to the residents of my district. To be a success as their representative, I must represent them and be transparent about the process. I will hold at least one large — open to the public — event each month in district. Second, I will be 100% successful my first term when I stand next to the president as a new, better health care law is signed into law.
Congress needs to get very targeted in support for those suffering due to the economic shutdown. Restaurants were hard-hit, and for those that can be restarted or stay in business, another round of (Paycheck Protection Program loans) is needed, and employees laid off (from) restaurants, event planning and travel should be considered for special support … (Black business owners were widely impacted) during COVID and in many of those cases (it was) due to a lack of capital funding. An effort should be made to restart those businesses where possible because the experience of the owners is critical to future economic development.
Jon E. Keeley and Alexandra D. Syphard published a comprehensive study of California wildfires and their causes. They concluded that fuel-dominated fires replaced wind-dominated fires in the in the past 50 years. Prior, fires burned biomass every 10-20 years. The United States Forest Service has put fires out, allowing biomass to grow by 50%, which enables larger, more destructive fires. (We need a) forest-management strategy to eliminate biomass buildup in clean-up operations, controlled burns or both. We should create a national firefighting resource center equipped with 35-40 747 super tankers … to provide water to fire areas anywhere in the U.S.
The majority of ballots cast for you will be mail-in. What is your view of pushing for more mail-in vote access across the country?
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U.S. Senate Cory Gardner Party: Republican Residence: Yuma Campaign website: www. corygardnerforsenate.com
What makes you the best choice for this office?
If you’re elected, what single issue will be at the top of your agenda?
I’m the best candidate for the job because I get things done. I’m the third-most bipartisan senator and have been named the most effective member of the Colorado delegation. Since 2015, I’ve had 11 bipartisan bills signed into law, including legislation which secured funding for Aurora’s VA hospital and the most historic conservation bill to become law in 50 years. I work across party lines because the people of Colorado demand independent and focused leadership. I’ll continue to work tirelessly for all four corners of the Centennial State, regardless of ZIP code.
We’re experiencing an economic crisis as a result of the coronavirus. Keeping people safe and getting Americans back to work must be our No. 1 priority. Prior to COVID-19, Colorado’s economy saw record job growth, wage increases, its (historically low unemployment rate), and an outdoor recreation economy that employed 229,000 workers and added $11 billion to the economy annually. Working together, we can return to that economic climate and ensure that every Coloradan is safe and healthy.
As a former governor and mayor, I know what it takes to unite people and lead through crises. When I became governor during the Great Recession, we were 40th in job creation, and we worked with local officials and leaders across the state to make Colorado the top economy in the nation. I have a record of bringing folks together across the aisle to make progress on what really matters, from groundbreaking anti-pollution measures to expanding health care to (more) Coloradans. As senator, I’ll do what I did in Colorado: work to unite people … and build back better after COVID-19.
My No. 1 priority in the Senate will be helping Coloradans weather the COVID-19 crisis and emerge stronger on the other side. First and foremost, we’ll deliver urgent aid to families and the smallest small businesses. At the same time, we’ll kickstart long-term growth by ending corporate giveaways and investing instead in workers, skills training and the industries of the future. If we roll up our sleeves and come together, we can not only survive this crisis but build an even stronger economy that works for every Coloradan.
» John Hickenlooper Party: Democrat Residence: Denver Campaign website: hickenlooper.com
Will redistricting face smooth sailing or encounter obstacles? COVID-19, among other things, has sparked challenges BY EVAN WYLOGE COLORADO POLITICS
Months ahead of any of the actual mapmaking at the center of the oncein-a-decade redistricting process, emerging challenges — from fewer and less diverse applicants for the commissions than hoped for, to problems administering the census caused by the novel coronavirus — have prompted calls to correct course and even contingency plans for possible delays. The complications add weight to the task of launching an entirely new redistricting system, after voters in 2018 approved a restructuring of the process in Colorado. The reforms are intended to increase transparency and accountability. But, equally important is the goal of avoiding a situation where courts end up drawing the maps, which is what’s happened in every redistricting cycle in Colorado for the past 40 years. The two goals — increasing transparency and avoiding court-drawn maps — show the potential to create a paradox, where, for example, holding at least 21 public hearings, now written into the state Constitution’s redistricting procedures and aimed at increasing public involvement and oversight, could have to be fit into an abbreviated mapping period, due to delays. But the adherence to, or the failure to follow strict procedural rules like those, has been the basis of lawsuits challenging independent redistricting commissions and the maps they produce. Jessika Shipley, a staff member on the Colorado General Assembly Legislative Council, the nonpartisan group that handles much of the administrative part of the commissions, said the authors of the voter-approved redistricting commission put some wiggle room into the process, in case they needed to adjust to unexpected
situations out of their control. The commissions should be able to fulfill the constitutional requirements laid out in the law, even if there are delays, Shipley said. “But don’t get me wrong,” she said, “I’m still concerned.” Census delays The decennial census, the key to the redistricting process, has seen a slower response than hoped for, causing concerns about minority participation in particular. Census researchers have observed that racial and ethnic minorities typically are underrepresented in efforts to enumerate populations, for a variety of reasons. A study published by The Urban Institute, a nonprofit think tank, last year estimated that as many as 4 million people could be undercounted during the 2020 census, with a disproportionate impact on minority populations. A mix of factors suggest minority groups could be even further affected because of COVID-19. Whether or not an already extended census timeframe will be extended further is the matter of ongoing litigation. The end-of-July deadline was already pushed back, due to the coronavirus making the counting process more difficult. Now it’s up to courts to decide if the counting should end this month or next. The California cities of Los Angeles, San Jose and Salinas on Sept. 24 won a federal lawsuit filed in August against the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Department of Commerce, arguing that the large number of Spanish speakers in those cities are most at risk to be undercounted and that the deadline to finish the census should go until the end of October, not the end of September. Attorneys for the agencies said during the hearing they would likely appeal, the Associated Press reported. The proper counting of Hispanic residents in the census has also been called into question due to President Donald Trump’s efforts last year to add a citizenship question to the census and a plan to exclude undocumented immigrants in the reapportionment calculations.
The U.S. Supreme Court thwarted the initiative, but voting rights advocates have worried that the struggle alone, because it was well-publicized, could lead to confusion about who is and isn’t allowed to participate in the census, which would, in turn, suppress response rates from some portion of Hispanic residents who should be counted. Harris County in Texas, King County in Washington and civil rights organizations joined the California cities’ lawsuit, saying the same dynamic highlighted by the initial litigants is at play in their heavily Hispanic urban areas. If the efforts to extend the information gathering period are successful, it could lead to delays in the compilation and dissemination of the census data, with Legislative Council staff considering how the redistricting commissions’ schedules would be affected if data isn’t delivered until as late as July, instead of the planned March 31, 2021, census data publication deadline. That could put the state redistricting commissions in an accelerated map-drafting process, because of the need to finish new maps by late 2021, giving enough time before the 2022 elections. “We have created a sort of parallel schedule,” Shipley said about the prospect of receiving data from the Census Bureau late. Normally, states would have data ready early in the year of redistricting, giving several months to draft the maps. In the case of independent redistricting commissions, that time period also includes holding public hearings and getting input from various interest groups, before settling on final maps. The maps need to be ready with enough time to incorporate the changes into election procedures in time to carry out the following year’s primary elections. Generally, county elections offices will need to have the maps months in advance of those primary elections. The pressures of being public The language of Amendments Y and Z require the commissions to hold
multiple public hearings around the state. Specifically, they have to hold at least three hearings in each congressional district, including at least one west of the Continental Divide and at least one east of the Continental Divide that is either south of El Paso County’s southern border or east of Arapahoe County’s eastern border. The nonpartisan Legislative Council handles the initial processes of the redistricting commission, like administering the commissioner application process. They will also provide technical assistance to the commission, specifically running the mapping software that will be used next year. Julia Jackson, a member of the Legislative Council staff who is already working on some of their redistricting commission support tasks, said she and others have discussed what it would mean if the census data is not delivered until the summer. “We don’t know when we’re going to get our census data,” Jackson said. “If we get the Census Data early, at the original deadlines, then we are starting to draw maps, and we can start doing our public hearings as early as next May. If we don’t get our Census Data until July, which I think is a possibility that’s on the table, then we’re looking at a much more compressed schedule for those public hearings, and that would be probably like two weeks at the end of July and the beginning of August.” Louis Pino, a Legislative Council staff member who specializes in mapping, said he’s begun testing mapping software, updating voting precincts maps and even begun using existing census data, like the American Community Survey datasets published between decennial censuses, to create hypothetical district maps with data that’s only a couple years old. “We obviously don’t have the 2020 data, but we’re using some of the American Community Survey data to kind of look at potential areas of the state where we might have to focus on, as far as drawing lines,” Pino said during a Sept. 21 redistricting forum SEE DISTRICTS, P32
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Colorado lags behind many states in education spending. What should senators do to ensure states such as Colorado can spend more to support students?
As Colorado housing prices continue to climb, how can senators increase the supply of affordable housing, or ensure that more of the current housing stock is affordable?
In the past six years, I’ve helped move the Bureau of Land Management headquarters to Colorado, got funding for the Arkansas Valley Conduit to ensure 50,000 Coloradans have access to clean drinking water, secured millions to repair Interstate 25 and Interstate 70, and passed the most sweeping conservation legislation to protect our national parks in the last 50 years. I’m going to build on these accomplishments over the next six years and continue to find common-sense solutions that drive Colorado’s economy, protect Colorado’s public lands and rebuild our crumbling infrastructure.
I believe that quality education stems from the state rather than the federal government, because local school boards, communities and parents best understand the needs of their students and are therefore better equipped to make decisions that will lead to excellence in education. As a Coloradan still paying off his student loans, I understand the hardship that comes with a college education and know the federal government must do more to help. I’ve introduced a number of bipartisan bills in the Senate that would increase minority access in STEM education and help students of all backgrounds pay off their loans.
I’ve worked hard to identify and address the root cause of the lack of affordable housing and subsequently worked to secure millions of dollars from the federal government to ensure affordable housing and assistance for those experiencing homelessness in Colorado. Moving forward, we can guarantee more affordable housing by expanding the low-income housing tax credit, preserving existing affordable housing, and making the housing credit better serve extremely low-income families and families in rural areas and Native American communities.
We must protect Coloradans’ health care coverage, including for those with preexisting conditions. We must take action to bring down the cost of health care, including lower prescription drug prices. And we must act urgently to combat the threat of climate change. I know that it takes unity to overcome crises. As a brewpub owner, I understand what small businesses need to recover and thrive post-COVID-19 … as a Coloradan, I feel the frustration of having leadership in Washington that would rather argue than get things done for us ... We’ll only succeed by doing things differently.
Education is the best investment we can make in our kids and our future — but right now, we’re not investing enough. We must invest in every aspect … from educators to electives, with an emphasis on underserved students through the Title I program. We must do what I did as mayor of Denver and work toward universal preschool. And we must increase college affordability and expand pathways to skills training. Alongside groups of dedicated educators like Colorado Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers — whose endorsements I’m honored to have received — we’ll build thriving, equitable public schools.
Affordable housing is a fundamental necessity, and it should be within reach for every Colorado family. If elected, I will push for inclusion of affordable housing in any major infrastructure package we consider, ensure all new federal housing units meet accessibility guidelines for individuals with disabilities, and hold lenders accountable for discrimination and predatory housing loans. I’ll also work to end disparities due to decades of racist, segregationist housing policy by expanding the low-income housing tax credit and ensuring compliance with the 1968 Fair Housing Act. These steps can ensure every family has a place to call home.
If you’re elected, what must you accomplish in order for you to consider your term a success?
This year’s ballot measures address political spectrum Electoral College, wolves among issues going before Colorado voters
Who’s against: Fair Tax Colorado. PROPOSITION 117 / INITIATIVE 295 Fees for new state-based enterprises What it does: Asks voters to approve fees for new state-based enterprises. An enterprise is a state-owned business, such as what’s proposed for the paid family leave ballot measure. Republicans have complained for years (as well as in the courts) that requiring new fees is a work-around against the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, which requires voter approval for taxes. This would put fees in the same category. Who’s in favor: Americans for Prosperity and Michael Fields of Colorado Rising State Action. Who’s against: Fair Tax Colorado and Earthworks Action Fund.
BY MARIANNE GOODLAND THE DENVER GAZETTE
Ideologically tempting ballot measures can lure like-minded voters to turn out for a general election, but that’s a difficult proposition this November. As University of Denver pollster Floyd Ciruli said recently, there’s something on the ballot for everybody this year. The 11 measures approved for the Nov. 3 ballot touch on social, fiscal and electoral issues and represent diverse political views, Ciruli said. As a result, it’s a wash for either side to think a particular ballot question would drive turnout in their candidates’ favor. Voter turnout in Colorado is likely to be record-setting, regardless, Ciruli said. All proposition measures will require a 50% plus one vote to pass. Amendments will require 55% voter approval to pass. PROPOSITION 113 / SENATE BILL 42 National Popular Vote This is the first time citizens have tried to overturn a law passed by the General Assembly since 1932. What it does: Repeals Senate Bill 42, passed in 2019 to put Colorado into the effort to mandate that Electoral College votes would go to the nationwide winner of the popular vote. So far, 15 states and the District of Columbia, with a total of 196 electoral votes, have signed on. Should the campaign reach 270 electoral votes — the winning number required for a presidential contender — the law would go into effect, according to Yes on National Popular Vote. What your vote means: A “yes” vote confirms the General Assembly’s action; a “no” vote repeals the law. Who’s in favor: In addition to Yes on National Popular Vote, the law is supported by the left-leaning Colorado Common Cause, the League of Women
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Voters, Coloradans for National Popular Vote and Conservatives for Yes on National Popular Vote (which as of early September had yet to identify any Colorado conservatives in favor of it). Who’s against: Protect Colorado’s Vote, led by Republicans Rose Pugliese, a Mesa County commissioner, and Monument Mayor Don Wilson. The duo launched the petition drive that put the issue on the ballot last year.
hibit abortions after 22 weeks What it does: Prohibits abortions after 22 weeks. Exceptions are allowed to save the life of the woman but no exceptions for pregnancies resulting from rape or incest. Who’s in favor: The Catholic Church, the Coalition for Women and Children, Alliance for Life, Coalition to Help Moms and Save Babies, and End Birthday Abortions Colorado. Who’s against: Abortion Access for All.
PROPOSITION 114 / INITIATIVE 107 Reintroduction of gray wolves What it does: Asks voters to allow reintroduce of gray wolves west of the Continental Divide. The Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission would create a plan to manage the wolves, and “fairly compensate” livestock owners for losses at taxpayers’ expense. Who’s in favor: Colorado Sierra Club and Rocky Mountain Wolf Action Fund. Who’s against: Coloradans Protecting Wildlife, Colorado Farm Bureau, Stop the Wolf PAC.
PROPOSITION 116 / INITIATIVE 306 Reduce state income tax rate What it does: Lowers the state income tax rate from 4.63% to 4.5%. Who’s in favor: Republican State Sen. Jerry Sonnenberg of Sterling sponsored bills in the 2019 and 2020 session to do the same thing, but those measures got axed by Senate Democrats. Sonnenberg had hoped to get support from Gov. Jared Polis, who has voiced support for an income tax rate reduction, both on the campaign trail and in his first two State of the State addresses. Also in support: the Independence Institute’s Jon Caldara, Americans for Prosperity and the committee Energize Our Economy.
PROPOSITION 115 / INITIATIVE 120 Pro-
PROPOSITION 118 / INITIATIVE 283 Paid family and medical leave What it does: Sets up a state-run enterprise through the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment that would provide up to 12 weeks paid leave. Who’s in favor: Colorado Families First and the Working Families Party. Who’s against: Not Now Colorado, which is backed by the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce. AMENDMENT 76 / INITIATIVE 76 Citizen qualification of electors What it does: The Colorado Constitution states that “every citizen” is eligible to vote; this would change that to “only a citizen” is eligible to vote. Who’s in favor: Colorado Citizen Voters. In Colorado, the measure is backed by Republicans such as former state Rep. Joe Stengel and George Athanasopoulos. Who’s against: None so far. AMENDMENT 77 / INITIATIVE 257 Allow local gaming voting for 3 towns What it does: Gives voters in Central City, Black Hawk and Cripple Creek the right to approve a maximum single bet of any amount and to approve new casino games in each city. SEE BALLOT, P12
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COLORADO’S SEVEN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS
Source: U.S. Census Bureau
DISTRICTS FROM PAGE 30
hosted by Colorado College, “just as a way to gauge what we might be seeing, once the 2020 decennial census data is released.” The work by the Legislative Council now could be crucial in avoiding problems next year caused by delays or other census data issues, but the state’s new redistricting system comes with binding strictures that will need to be followed in order to keep the mapping in the hands of the citizen commissioners and out of the hands of judges. A reflection of the state? The guidelines for selecting commissioners also contain some rigid parameters, which counted on having a robust applicant pool, and so far that hasn’t happened. With more than half of the application period passed, fewer than three hundred Coloradans have applied, and almost a quarter of them have been
BALLOT FROM PAGE 31
The amendment does not eliminate limits; it gives residents in the towns the option to hold a local election instead of putting the decisions up to a statewide vote. Who’s in favor: Local Choice Colorado. Who’s against: None so far. AMENDMENT B / SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION Repeal the Gallagher
initially rejected for not meeting the qualifications. But the process for selecting commissioners anticipated having enough applicants that the next step would be to randomly select qualified applicants, narrowing to 1,050 — 300 Democrats, 300 Republicans and 450 unaffiliated voters. Then a panel of judges would review the applicants and forward 50 Democrats, 50 Republicans and 50 unaffiliated voters to an again narrowed pool of 150 people. Finally, a process that includes legislative leaders’ selections, judicial panel selections and random selection would finalize the commission selection process. But as of now, there’s not enough applicants to even follow the next step in the process. On top of that, the state Constitution mandates that the commission makeup should reflect the demographic diversity of the state, and so far the applicants don’t, in matters related to gender, age, geography or, most important, racial and ethnic identity. The racial and ethnic diversity has been emphasized, because the
redistricting reforms are intended to support the goals of the Voting Rights Act, minority voting rights are a key component in the process, and minority voting rights have been at the center of many of the legal fights over redistricting. The commission will be charged with protecting minority voting rights, by making majority-minority legislative districts where possible and by considering minority voting rights, even where majority-minority districts can’t be created. Having representation for the minority community on the commissions, is a way to strive for inclusion and ensure that minority communities have a voice on the commissions, on top of the public input from minority communities that will be solicited to help inform the commissioners’ decisions about protecting those communities’ voting rights. A parallel logic is at play when it comes to the geographic diversity of the commission, where at least one commissioner on each commission, but no more than two commissioners on each commission, needs to be
from each congressional district. It’s another attempt, like the requirement for hearings in far-flung areas of the state, to be sure rural Colorado is included in the redistricting process.
Amendment What it does: Repeals the 1988 voterapproved Gallagher Amendment, which sets a property tax ratio of 55% on commercial and 45% on residential land. Critics say that because of rising residential property values, it has lowered the amount of property taxes for K-12 education and other property taxfunded services, such as fire, police, water and hospitals. Who’s in favor: The Colorado General Assembly, which passed the resolution on a 51-14 vote in the House and 28-6 in the Senate (it required a two-thirds vote in each chamber to
make it to the ballot). Colorado Coming Together, which registered as an issue committee on July 23, also backs the measure. Who’s against: Protect Our Homes Colorado and Keep Property Taxes Low.
Who’s in favor: Colorado Charitable Bingo Association. Who’s opposed: None so far.
AMENDMENT C/HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION 20-1001 New bingo licenses What it does: Allows those with bingo-raffle licenses to “hire managers and operators of games” as well as reduce the requirement that a charity be in operation for five years before obtaining a charitable gaming license.
Still on track Even if the initial application period hasn’t produced the number or diversity of applicants hoped for, and even if census data ends up being provided later than anticipated, the commissions should still be able to meet their constitutional mandates, Shipley said. But she said she’s still concerned about the hiccups so far. “I would like our numbers to be much higher by now,” she said of the application process that ends Nov. 10. “But I think we’re going to get 80% of our applicants in the final two weeks of the application period.” Shipley said the Legislative Council staff is working with some of those groups to continue to get the word out to underrepresented communities. This story is from Colorado Politics, a statewide political and public policy news journal. Used by permission. For more, visit coloradopolitics.com.
PROPOSITION EE/HOUSE BILL 1427 Taxing nicotine products What it does: Increases the taxes on nicotine and vaping products, to raise $294 million annually. The money would go to public education. Who’s in favor: A Brighter, Healthier Future for Colorado’s Kids. Who’s against: None so far. For stories like this, subscribe at denvergazette.com
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No Bike to Work Day, but cyclists roll on Denver-area event canceled in light of public health guidelines BY ELLIS ARNOLD EARNOLD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Lone Tree resident Sam Jacobson, 67, rode down Willow Creek Trail as he often does, Bike to Work Day or not. Jacobson has not participated in Bike to Work Day, but the avid cyclist said he bikes that trail about two to three times per week along with other trails in the area. The week of Sept. 21 was dubbed “Bike to Wherever” week after the cancellation of the Sept. 22 metroarea Bike to Work Day in light of public health guidelines. “For me, (biking) offers me opportunities to ride different trails, explore different areas,” said Jacobson, who started biking in the last 10 years for the cardiovascular benefits. “Biking also strengthens my knees, which allows me to be better at hiking.” Several cyclists rode on Willow Creek Trail near C-470 and South Yosemite Street on Sept. 22 during rush hour. That trail continues north in Centennial and south in Lone Tree. Instead of biking to work on a single day, riders were encouraged to bike rather than drive to work, to the store, to the park or other places that week. Due to the pandemic, the event had already been moved from
A map of local trails, parks and open space sits near a crosswalk on the Willow Creek Trail. The trailway continues north into Centennial and south to Bluffs Regional Park. its original date of June 24 before new date was canceled. Bike to Work Day is a free annual event that encourages people to commute by bike. On the fourth Wednesday each June, participants can visit volunteer stations throughout the Denver metro area that offer breakfast and prizes in the morning, and they can join “bike parties” in the afternoon, according to the Denver
Lone Tree resident Sam Jacobson, 67, rides on Willow Creek Trail on Sept. 22. He bikes that trail about two to three times per week. PHOTOS BY ELLIS ARNOLD area’s website for the event. The Denver Regional of Council of Governments’ Way to Go program organizes Bike to Work Day with help from partners in the metro area. The Denver Regional Council of
Governments, often pronounced “Dr. Cog,” is an organization of local governments collaborating to set policy and allocate funding regarding transportation, growth and development, and aging and disability resources.
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877-220-6081 CHOICE 1-YR ALL INCLUDED PACKAGE W/ OTHER ELIG. SVC: Ends 11/7/20. Available only in the U.S. (excludes Puerto Rico and U.S.V.I.). Pricing: $59.99/mo for first 12 mos. only. After 12 mos. or loss of eligibility, then prevailing rate applies (currently $115/mo for CHOICE All Included), unless cancelled or changed prior to end of the promo period. Pricing subject to change. $5/mo. autopay/paperless bill discount: Must enroll in autopay & paperless bill within 30 days of TV activation to receive bill credit starting in 1-3 bill cycles. First time credit will include all credits earned since meeting offer requirements. Must maintain autopay/paperless bill and valid email address to continue credits. No credits in 2nd year for autopay/paperless bill. $10/mo. bundle discount: Internet: Reqs new (min. $39.99/mo plus taxes and $10/mo. equip. fee) or existing svc. Excludes DSL. Equipment Non-Return fees apply. Wireless: Consumers only. Sold separately. Reqs new (min. $50/mo after discounts) or existing AT&T postpaid svc on elig. plan (excl. Lifeline) on a smartphone, phone or AT&T Wireless Internet device (excl. voice-only AT&T Wireless Internet). Both svcs: Eligible svc must be installed/activated w/in 30 days of TV activation and svc addresses must match to receive bill credit starting in 1-3 bill cycles. First time credit will include all credits earned since meeting offer requirements. Must maintain both qualifying svcs to continue credits. No credits in 2nd year for bundled services. Includes: CHOICE All Included TV Pkg, monthly service & equipment fees for one Genie HD DVR, and standard pro installation. Additional Fees & Taxes: Price excludes Regional Sports Fee of up to $9.99/mo. (which is extra & applies to CHOICE and/or MÁS ULTRA and higher Pkgs.), applicable use tax expense surcharge on retail value of installation, custom installation, equipment upgrades/add-ons (min. $99 one-time & $7/mo. monthly fees for each extra receiver/DIRECTV Ready TV/Device), and certain other add’l fees & charges. See att.com/directvfees for additional details. Different offers may apply for eligible multi-dwelling unit and telco customers. DIRECTV SVC TERMS: Subject to Equipment Lease & Customer Agreements. Must maintain a min. base TV pkg of $29.99/mo. Some offers may not be available through all channels and in select areas. Visit directv.com/legal or call for details. GENERAL WIRELESS: Subj. to Wireless Customer Agmt (att.com/wca). Credit approval req’d. Deposit/Down Payment: may apply. Additional monthly fees & taxes: Apply per line & include Regulatory Cost Recovery Fee (Up to $1.50), Administrative Fee ($1.99) & other fees which are not government-required surcharges as well as taxes. Additional one-time Fees may apply. See www.att.com/mobilityfees for more details. Usage, speed, coverage & other restr’s apply. International and domestic off-net data may be at 2G speeds. AT&T service is subject to AT&T network management policies, see att.com/broadbandinfo for details. 2020 NFL SUNDAY TICKET OFFER: Subject to change. Package consists of all live out-of-market NFL games (based on customer’s service address) broadcast on FOX and CBS. However, games broadcast by your local FOX or CBS affiliate. will not be available in NFL SUNDAY TICKET. Games available via remote viewing based on device location. Other conditions apply. 2020 NFL SUNDAY TICKET regular full-season retail price is $293.94. 2020 NFL SUNDAY TICKET MAX regular full-season retail price is $395.94. Customers activating CHOICE Package or above or MÁS ULTRA Package or above will be eligible to receive the 2020 season of NFL SUNDAY TICKET MAX at no additional cost. NFL SUNDAY TICKET subscription will not automatically renew. Only one game may be accessed remotely at any given time. Compatible device/operating system required for online/mobile access. Additional data charges may apply. Visit directv.com/nfl for a list of compatible devices/system requirements For full Mix Channel and interactive functionality, HD equipment model H/HR 21 or later is required. NFL, the NFL Shield design and the NFL SUNDAY TICKET name and logo are registered trademarks of the NFL and its affiliates. NFL team names and uniform designs are registered trademarks of the teams indicated. ©2020 AT&T Intellectual Property. All Rights Reserved. AT&T, Globe logo, DIRECTV, and all other DIRECTV marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property and/or AT&T affiliated companies. All other marks are the property of their respective owners.
36
LOCAL
October 8, 2020O
SPORTS Holy Family snaps Mead streak PHOTOS BY STEFAN BRODSKY
Strong batting and a stingy defense lifted the Holy Family Tigers over Mead Sept. 29, ending that team’s winning streak 15-0. Holy Family walked away from the game with a 13-2 record. The Tigers have been on a tear since dropping a Aug. 27 match-up to the same Mead team. Mead, unbeaten until the Sept. 29 matchup, ended the day with a 14-1 record.
Holy Family senior Ty Whitlock, right, scores a run against Mead catcher, Veronica Elsis in a North Central Athletic Conference softball game Sept. 29 in Longmont. The Tigers took advantage of Cassidy Chvatal’s fine pitching, and scored 12 runs in the third inning, to shut out the previously unbeaten Mavericks, 15-0.
Holy Family’s Jenna Pfenning, left, strokes an early base hit against Mead Sept. 29 in Longmont. The Tigers used a 12-run third inning and good pitching from Cassidy Chvatal, to easily defeat the previously unbeaten Mavericks, 15-0.
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37
0October 8, 2020
Finding peace amidst stay-at-home C R O S S W O R D stress and cabin fever P U Z Z L E Dear Ask a Therapist, My whole family gets a little stressed due to the increased amount of time we spend at home because of COVID-19. Our house was not really set up for working from home and distance learning. On top of that, we all face limitations of places to go for fun and recreation. Do you have a few good tips? Dear Reader, Inhale, exhale, and take comfort in knowing that you are not alone. We are all juggling innumerate stressors right now: the pandemic itself, our upended routines, economic and occupational uncertainty, and a profound sense of grief and loss of what was and what would have been. Any one of these stressors would be a lot to handle. Put them all together and sprinkle in some cabin fever and you’ve got a recipe for some tense family time. Let’s see if we can make family time fun again! Here are a few things to try: Move it or lose it Movement is incredibly helpful in reducing anxiety and tension, and most of us are naturally moving a lot less while stuck at home. Try a dance party, yoga, DIY bowling (you can use old soda bottles), bike rides, or walks. Get outside The mental health benefits of getting vitamin D and fresh air cannot be underestimated. Try moving some typical family activities outside. Eating, playing cards, drawing or coloring—move these outside to get the added benefit. Create a sense of newness in the normal Try a living room picnic, play around with shaving cream on your kitchen table, add music to your routine, involve family in meal prep, try a campout in the living room, or
GUEST COLUMN
have reading time in a fort. We don’t have a ton of new experiences these days, so create newness where you can.
Do an exchange with some neighbors Do a book swap, a toy exchange, even swap some clothing to give your closet a Rachel Rossi refresh. Just be sure to sanitize before using anything new to your home. Family rituals Take a photo or video each day, start a family journal, find an audio book to enjoy as a family, try a daily or weekly gratitude ritual, create a time capsule, send each other on a scavenger hunt— this can be an opportunity to connect and also memorialize this incredibly strange time. Find time apart In order to enjoy family time, you also need a chance to miss one another. I know this seems impossible, but if you get creative, you may find that increasing quiet time as a family can create even small windows of respite. This is hard. Really hard. And the sense of uncertainty can feel crippling. Let’s hope that we can take the good with the challenging and come out of this moment in history with more compassion and appreciation for one another, for our families, and for the resilient human spirit. Rachel Rossi, MS, LPC is a schoolbased therapist with Community Reach Center in Brighton. Please submit your questions to Ask A Therapist at AskATherapist@CommunityReachCenter. org. This column is for educational purposes only, and opinions are not those of Colorado Community Media.
Local Focus. More News. ColoradoCommunityMedia ColoradoCommunityMedia.com
Answers
© 2016 King Features Synd., Inc.
Solution THANKS for
PLAYING!
38
October 8, 2020O
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October 8, 2020O
www.ColoradoServiceDirectory.com
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Please Recycle this Publication when Finished
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P L A C E A D S O N L I N E 2 4/ 7 AT
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October 8, 2020O
Public Notices Legals Public Trustees COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. A202078812 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On July 30, 2020, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Adams records. Original Grantor(s) Colorado Homes, LLC Original Beneficiary(ies) Indigo Trails, LLLP Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Indigo Trails, LLLP Date of Deed of Trust May 04, 2017 County of Recording Adams Recording Date of Deed of Trust May 08, 2017 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) 2017000039863 Original Principal Amount $2,375,000.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $2,375,000.00 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. EXHIBIT A (Legal Description) PHASE V: Lots 18-28, inclusive, Block 9; Lots 7-12, inclusive, Block 12; Lots 3-14, inclusive, Block 13; Lots 1-6, inclusive, Block 14; Lots 1-4 inclusive, 8-11 inclusive, Block 15; Lots 1, 8, 9, 10, 11, Block 16; and Tract L except that portion of Tract L more particularly described on that Special Warrant Deed dated April 25, 2002 and recorded on April 29, 2002 at Reception No. CO961748 Indigo Trails Filing No. 1 City of Brighton, County of Adams State of Colorado Also known by street and number as: Vacant Land in, Brighton, CO 80601. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 AM on Wednesday, 12/02/2020, at 4430 S. Adams County Pkwy, Suite W1000, Brighton CO 80601-8219, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 10/8/2020 Last Publication: 11/5/2020 Name of Publication: Metro North IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 07/30/2020 Lisa Culpepper, Public Trustee in and for the County of Adams, State of Colorado By: Lisa Culpepper, Treasurer-Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: David A. Brewster #52481 Otten, Johnson, Robinson, Neff, and Ragonetti PC 950 Seventeenth St., Suite 1600, DENVER, CO 80202 (303) 825-7588 Attorney File # 220147.0001 The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. A202078808 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On July 2, 2020, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Adams records. Original Grantor(s) Scott C. Braig and Sondra L. Braig Original Beneficiary(ies) Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as Beneficiary, as nominee for Stearns Lending, LLC, its successors and assigns Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Lakeview Loan Servicing, LLC
Date of Deed of Trust November 22, 2016 County of Recording Adams Recording Date of Deed of Trust November 29, 2016 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) 2016000102869*** Original Principal Amount $417,302.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $309,450.45 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 AM on Wednesday, 11/04/2020, at 4430 S. Adams County Pkwy, Suite W1000, Brighton CO 80601-8219, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 9/10/2020 Last Publication: 10/8/2020 Name of Publication: Metro North
LOT 13, REUNION FILING NO. 19, AMENDMENT NO. 3, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO.
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
***The Deed of Trust was modified by a Loan Modification Agreement recorded 3/26/2020 at Reception No. 2020000027695, in the records of Adams County, Colorado.
DATE: 07/02/2020 Lisa Culpepper, Public Trustee in and for the County of Adams, State of Colorado By: Lisa Culpepper, Treasurer-Public Trustee
Also known by street and number as: 10902 Unity Lane, Commerce City, CO 80022.
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 AM on Wednesday, 11/04/2020, at 4430 S. Adams County Pkwy, Suite W1000, Brighton CO 80601-8219, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 9/10/2020 Last Publication: 10/8/2020 Name of Publication: Metro North IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 07/02/2020 Lisa Culpepper, Public Trustee in and for the County of Adams, State of Colorado By: Lisa Culpepper, Treasurer-Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: Amanda Ferguson #44893 Halliday, Watkins & Mann, P.C. 355 Union Blvd., Suite 250, Lakewood, CO 80228 (303) 274-0155 Attorney File # CO10536 The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. A202078807 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On July 2, 2020, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Adams records. Original Grantor(s) MARIO ESPINOSA AND JEANETTE ESPINOSA Original Beneficiary(ies) LONG BEACH MORTGAGE COMPANY Current Holder of Evidence of Debt U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR ASSET BACKED SECURITIES CORPORATION HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST 2002-HE3, ASSET BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2002-HE3 Date of Deed of Trust June 14, 2002 County of Recording Adams Recording Date of Deed of Trust June 25, 2002 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) C0988017 Original Principal Amount $153,000.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $120,978.58 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 9, BLOCK 2, MOR RIDGE SUBDIVISION, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO Also known by street and number as: 3491 Mowry Place, Westminster, CO 80031. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE
David R. Doughty #40042 Janeway Law Firm PC 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., #400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990 Attorney File # 20-023978 The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
COMBINED NOTICE - RESTART - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-109(2)(b)(II) FORECLOSURE SALE NO. A201978574
resenting the legal holder of the indebtedness is: Alison L. Berry #34531 Janeway Law Firm PC 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., #400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990 Attorney File # 19-023194 The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. A202078809 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On July 2, 2020, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Adams records. Original Grantor(s) Guadalupe Garcia and Josefina Garcia Original Beneficiary(ies) Argent Mortgage Company, LLC Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Indenture Trustee, on behalf of the holders of the Terwin Mortgage Trust 2007-1SL, Asset-Backed Securities, Series 2007-1SL Date of Deed of Trust September 13, 2006 County of Recording Adams Recording Date of Deed of Trust September 21, 2006 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) 20060921000956760 Original Principal Amount $28,600.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $27,607.41
Republished to restart foreclosure stayed by bankruptcy and reset sale date.
Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
On July 2, 2020, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Adams records.
Lots 9 and 10, Block 58, except the rear 8 feet thereof, County of Adams, State of Colorado.
Original Grantor(s) Jose Ulises Parra Cazares and Darely Ruiz Espinoza Original Beneficiary(ies) MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR BROKER SOLUTIONS, INC.DBA NEW AMERICAN FUNDING, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS Current Holder of Evidence of Debt COLORADO HOUSING AND FINANCE AUTHORITY Date of Deed of Trust April 18, 2018 County of Recording Adams Recording Date of Deed of Trust April 24, 2018 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) 2018000032719 Original Principal Amount $326,968.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $322,751.08 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 7, BLOCK 6, DUNES PARK, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO.
Also known by street and number as: 1756 Clinton Street, Aurora, CO 80010. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 AM on Wednesday, 11/04/2020, at 4430 S. Adams County Pkwy, Suite W1000, Brighton CO 80601-8219, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 9/10/2020 Last Publication: 10/8/2020 Name of Publication: Metro North IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
APN #: 0172103403018
DATE: 07/02/2020 Lisa Culpepper, Public Trustee in and for the County of Adams, State of Colorado By: Lisa Culpepper, Treasurer-Public Trustee
Also known by street and number as: 9888 East 113Th Avenue, Commerce City, CO 80640.
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
Marcello G. Rojas #46396 The Sayer Law Group, P.C. 3600 South Beeler, Suite 330, Denver, CO 80237 (303) 353-2965 Attorney File # CO180127
NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 AM on Wednesday, 11/04/2020, at 4430 S. Adams County Pkwy, Suite W1000, Brighton CO 80601-8219, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 9/10/2020 Last Publication: 10/8/2020 Name of Publication: Metro North IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 07/02/2020 Lisa Culpepper, Public Trustee in and for the County of Adams, State of Colorado By: Lisa Culpepper, Treasurer-Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) rep-
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. A202078810 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On July 16, 2020, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Adams records. Original Grantor(s) Yolanda Hernandez, a married woman Original Beneficiary(ies) Nova Financial & Investment Corporation Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Nova Financial & Investment Corporation Date of Deed of Trust May 25, 2018 County of Recording Adams Recording Date of Deed of Trust May 25, 2018 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) 2018000042380 Original Principal Amount $236,550.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $228,912.84
Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
EXHIBIT “A: CONDOMINIUM UNIT 5155, BUILDING NO. 3, SPANISH OAKS CONDOMINIUMS, ACCORDING TO THE CONDOMINIUM MAP THEREOF RECORDED JULY 9, 1984 IN PUD FILE 677 IN THE RECORDS OF THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF THE COUNTY OF ADAMS, COLORADO AND AS DEFINED AND DESCRIBED IN THE CONDOMINIUM DECLARATION FOR SPANISH OAKS CONDOMINIUMS, RECORDED ON JULY 9, 1984 IN BOOK 2892 AT PAGE 897 IN SAID RECORDS, TOGETHER WITH THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE THE FOLLOWING LIMITED COMMON ELEMENTS: GARAGE SPACE NO. N/A, AND PARKING SPACE NO. N/A, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 5155 West 73rd Avenue, Westminster, CO 80030.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 AM on Wednesday, 11/18/2020, at 4430 S. Adams County Pkwy, Suite W1000, Brighton CO 80601-8219, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 9/24/2020 Last Publication: 10/22/2020 Name of Publication: Metro North
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 07/16/2020 Lisa Culpepper, Public Trustee in and for the County of Adams, State of Colorado By: Lisa Culpepper, Treasurer-Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: Robert Graham #26809 Foster Graham Milstein & Calisher LLP 360 South Garfield St., Ste 600, DENVER, CO 80209 (303) 333-9810 Attorney File # 24957.0002 The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. A202078811 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On July 23, 2020, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Adams records. Original Grantor(s) EDWARD G. OWEN Original Beneficiary(ies) MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR CLARION MORTGAGE CAPITAL, INC., ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS Current Holder of Evidence of Debt TRUE NOTE CAPITAL, LLC Date of Deed of Trust September 22, 2006 County of Recording Adams Recording Date of Deed of Trust September 29, 2006 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) 20060929000981610 Original Principal Amount $25,500.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $30,712.50
Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 8, BLOCK 25, NORTH-GLENN SECOND FILING, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 143 NORTHGLENN DRIVE, NORTHGLENN, CO 80233.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
NTS WW Legals 10.8.20 * 1
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0October 8, 2020
Public Notices THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 AM on Wednesday, 11/25/2020, at 4430 S. Adams County Pkwy, Suite W1000, Brighton CO 80601-8219, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
By Order of the Westminster City Council Abby Fitch, Senior Deputy City Clerk
First Publication: 10/1/2020 Last Publication: 10/29/2020 Name of Publication: Metro North
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Adjustment for the City of Federal Heights, Colorado will hold a Public Hearing on October 27, 2020, commencing at 6:00 p.m., to consider a variance application request to reduce the required 65-foot front setback to a 0-foot front setback for a 6-foot tall fence, as required by Municipal Code §70-542.
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; DATE: 07/23/2020 Lisa Culpepper, Public Trustee in and for the County of Adams, State of Colorado By: Lisa Culpepper, Treasurer-Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: Alison L. Berry #34531 Janeway Law Firm PC 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., #400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990 Attorney File # 20-024912 The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
City and County Public Notice CITY OF NORTHGLENN ORDINANCE ADOPTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that CB-1950, Ordinance 1796, Series of 2020 was adopted by the City Council of the City of Northglenn on Monday, August 24, 2020. “A bill for an ordinance adopting a new Article 13 of Chapter 2 of the Northglenn Municipal Code creating the Diversity, Inclusivity, and Social Equity Board.” Copies of the ordinance may be obtained from the office of the City Clerk, 11701 Community Center Drive, Northglenn. This ordinance will be effective five days after the date of this publication. Johanna Small, CMC, City Clerk Legal Notice No. 706886 First publication: October 8, 2020 Second publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice City of Westminster Summary of Proceedings Summary of proceedings of the online Westminster City Council meeting of Monday, September 28,2020. Mayor Atchison, Mayor Pro Tem Seitz, and Councillors DeMott, Seymour, Skulley, Smith, and Voelz were present online at roll call. The minutes of the September 14, 2020 meeting were approved as presented. Council approved the following: Financial Report August 2020; Authorization of a Construction Contract with Lillard and Clark Construction Company, Inc. for the 2020 Water Treatment Facilities Construction Project, and Authorization of an Amendment to the Contract with J&T Consulting Inc. for Engineering Services During Construction for the 2020 Water Treatment Facilities Construction Project; substantial amendment to the City of Westminster Community Development Block Grant 2019 Annual Action Plan to cancel the 7225 Bradburn Site Preparation project; Authorization of the repayment expenditure of $449,105 with Adams County Open Space funds to pay back the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for previous site acquisition costs incurred in connection with the cancelled 7225 Bradburn Site Preparation project; 2021 Property and Liability Insurance Renewal; and Authorization of Sole Source Contract for ConvergeOne. Council held a public hearing regarding the Proposed 2021 City Budget. Council adopted the following: Resolution No. 33 Proclaiming the City of Westminster as a Bee City USA Affiliate; Resolution No. 34 Designating October 10, 2020, as World Migratory Bird Day in Westminster; Resolution No. 35 Re: Purchase and Sale Agreement with Community Resources and Housing Development Corporation for City-owned Property at West 73rd Avenue and Lowell Boulevard; and Resolution No. 36 Re: Public Safety/Health Personnel Dedicated to COVID Response. City Council passed on first reading the following: Councillor’s Bill No. 29: An Ordinance Amending the General, Water and Wastewater Utility Enterprise, Fleet Maintenance, General Capital Outlay Replacement, Sales and Use Tax, Parks, Open Space and Trails and General Capital Improvement Funds Purpose: An ordinance amending the 2020 appropriation for the General, Water and Wastewater Utility Enterprise, Fleet Maintenance, General Capital Outlay Replacement, Sales and Use Tax, Parks, Open Space and Trails and General Capital Improvement Funds and authorizing a supplemental appropriation from the 2020 estimated revenues in the fund. Councillor’s Bill No. 30: A Supplemental Appropriation of the Community Development Block Grant Funds Purpose: An ordinance amending the 2020 Budget or the Community Development Block Grant Fund and authorizing a Supplemental Appropriation from the 2020 estimated revenues in the fund. There was no further business to come before the City Council, and the meeting adjourned at 10:24 p.m.
Legal Notice No. 706889 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window Public Notice CITY OF FEDERAL HEIGHTS NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
This variance application has been submitted by the property owner, for the property located at 9275 N. Elm Court, Federal Heights, Colorado 80260 and legally described as: LOT 3, JADIMA SUBDIVISION, CITY OF FEDERAL HEIGHTS, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO Due to the continuing threat of the spread of COVID-19, the Public Hearing shall be conducted in a virtual setting and all submitted materials and instructions for participation will be posted at https://www.fedheights.org/calendar. To appear or participate in the Public Hearing, please follow the remote meeting information below: To use Zoom technology video conferencing: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83285582083 Enter Meeting ID: 832 8558 2083 To use audio dial-in: Please call 312-626-6799 Enter Meeting ID: 832 8558 2083 Submittal of any materials for the Board of Adjustment Public Hearing are due no later than five days before the hearing and written comments must be submitted no later than 5:00pm on the day of the meeting. All submittals of materials and written comments are to be sent to planning@ fedheights.org. Any person may, subject to applicable COVID meeting protocols, appear at the Public Hearing and be heard regarding the matters under consideration. For questions or comments contact: Patti K. Lowell, Secretary Board of Adjustment clerk@fedheights.org 2380 W. 90th Avenue, Federal Heights, CO 80260 Legal Notice No. 706904 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY in Adams County and Jefferson County, Colorado. A copy of such proposed budget has been filed in the office of the City of Westminster Finance Department, where the same is open for public inspection; such proposed budget will be considered for adoption at a special meeting to be held virtually on October 12, 2020 immediately following the Westminster City Council meeting scheduled to begin at 7:00 p.m. Any interested person may inspect the proposed budget and file or register any objections thereto at any time prior to the final adoption of the budget. Due to the President’s Declaration of a National Emergency, the Governor’s Declaration of a State Emergency, and Westminster’s Declaration of a State of Emergency, Westminster City Hall is closed to the public until further notice. This hearing will be conducted remotely. See below for additional information. Public Testimony for this item will be accepted in one of the following three (3) ways: 1. Submit your written testimony to PublicHearing_WEDA_Item3A@cityofwestminster.us, by no later than Noon (12 p.m.) on Monday, October 12, 2020. 2. Call (303) 706-3111 and leave a voice message to be played during the live Public Hearing, by no later than Noon (12 p.m.) on Monday, October 12, 2020. 3. Sign up to give testimony during the live virtual meeting: email cityclerk@cityofwestminster.us to sign up with your full name, address, and contact number by Noon (12 p.m.) on Monday, October 12, 2020. Please note the deadline to participate in the Public Hearing in any of the three ways described above is Noon (12 p.m.) Monday, October 12, 2020. Information related to providing public testimony via means other than electronically as described above, will be posted on: www.CityofWestminster. us. The public hearing will be streamed live via the City’s traditional webcast (www.youtube.com/user/WestminsterCO/live) or by calling 631-992-3221 and typing in access code: 234-663-063. The Board meeting agenda, agenda memo, and other materials will be posted on this website no later than four days prior to the hearing. Westminster Economic Development Authority By: /s/ David Frankel, City Attorney City of Westminster Attorney for the Authority Legal Notice No. 706892 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
CASE NUMBER: 20-03 To Whom It May Concern:
Pursuant to the Colorado Beer Code, Stinker Stores CO, Inc., 3184 Elder Street, Boise, ID 83705, Mr. Charley Jones, 5201 Bogus Basin Road, Boise, ID 83702; Ms. Nancy Jones, 5201 Bogus Basin Road; Boise, ID 83702, DBA Stinker Stores CO Inc., 1650 E. 104th Avenue, Thornton, CO 80233, have requested the Thornton Local Licensing Authority (LLA) to grant a Fermented Malt Beverage License to sell fermented malt beverages for consumption OFF-PREMISES.
You are hereby notified that on Tuesday, October 26, 2020 at 7:00pm a public hearing will be held with the Northglenn City Council to review a request by Southern Land Company, LLC, for a Final Plat (Replat) and associated Subdivision Improvement Agreement. The replat is part of a development application that would allow for the construction of a 385 unit multifamily residential apartment development on a portion of the Karl’s Farm site. The purpose of the replat is to memorialize utility and access easements associated with the development. This hearing is for property located on the north side of 120th Avenue between Race Street and Irma Drive. The site is legally described as the following: LOT 1, BLOCK 8, KARL’S FARM FILING NO. 1, AMD. NO. 1, CITY OF NORTHGLENN, STATE OF COLORADO Due to the closure of city facilities related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the City Council will participate in this meeting electronically. Public access option information will be available on the meeting agenda to be posted on the city website, www.northglenn.org, at least 24 hours prior to the meeting. All interested parties may participate and be heard. Legal Notice No. 706894 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice CITY OF NORTHGLENN ORDINANCE ADOPTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that CB-1952, Ordinance 1798, Series of 2020 was adopted by the City Council of the City of Northglenn on Monday, September 28, 2020. “A bill for an ordinance amending Chapter 8 of the Northglenn Municipal Code regarding certain Municipal Court fees and costs.” Copies of the ordinance may be obtained from the office of the City Clerk, 11701 Community Center Drive, Northglenn. This ordinance will be effective five days after the date of this publication. Johanna Small, CMC, City Clerk Legal Notice No. 706888 First publication: October 8, 2020 Second publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING AND BUDGET HEARING NOTICE is hereby given that a proposed 2021/2022 budget for the Westminster Economic Development Authority has been submitted to the Westminster City Council, in its capacity as the exofficio Board of Directors of the WESTMINSTER
Hearing on the application received 9/14/2020, will be held virtually before the LLA on Wednesday, October 21, 2020, at 6:00 p.m., or as soon thereafter. Interested parties who wish to provide testimony during the public hearing, should attend the meeting at https://thorntonco.zoom. us/j/99764278162 or call 669-900-6833 and enter meeting ID 997 6427 8162. By Order of the LLA (Liquor and Beer) Karren Werft, Agenda and Licensing Coordinator Legal Notice No. 706878 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice CITY OF NORTHGLENN NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING 2021 PROPOSED BUDGET NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Northglenn, Colorado will hold a public hearing on the Proposed Budget for 2021 for the governmental and proprietary funds and for the capital projects program at a regular meeting of the City Council to be held on Monday, October 12, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the City Council meeting will be held electronically. Public access to the meeting will be available by telephone by calling 720-961-5043 and entering Meeting ID: 148 873 4083. All residents are invited to attend the hearing and provide written and/or oral comment on the Proposed 2021 Budget. Questions concerning the entire proposed budget and capital projects will be entertained by Council. Additionally, interested residents may file objections to the proposed budget any time prior to the final adoption thereof. The Proposed 2021 Budget and Capital Projects Program may be inspected by the public from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, in the Office of the City Clerk, 11701 Community Center Drive, Northglenn. A copy of the Proposed 2021 Budget will also be available by accessing the Oct. 12 City Council meeting packet online at webdocs.northglenn.org. Johanna Small, CMC, City Clerk Legal Notice No. 706898 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice CITY OF NORTHGLENN
ORDINANCE ADOPTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that CB-1951, Ordinance 1797, Series of 2020 was adopted by the City Council of the City of Northglenn on Monday, September 14, 2020. “A bill for an ordinance amending Section 5-8-8 of the Northglenn Municipal Code regarding the timing of the public hearing on the annual budget.” Copies of the ordinance may be obtained from the office of the City Clerk, 11701 Community Center Drive, Northglenn. This ordinance will be effective five days after the date of this publication. Johanna Small, CMC, City Clerk Legal Notice No. 706887 First publication: October 8, 2020 Second publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF ELECTION General Election by Mail Ballot Adams County, Colorado Tuesday, November 3, 2020 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a General Election will be held in Adams County, Colorado, on Tuesday, November 3, 2020, as a Mail Ballot Election.
- 11151 Colorado Blvd., Thornton Thornton Civic Center - 9500 Civic Center Dr., Thornton Trail Winds Recreation Center - 13495 Holly St., Thornton Front Range Community College - 3645 W. 112th Ave., Westminster Phase 3: Open November 2 – November 3 Anythink Library Brighton - 327 E. Bridge St., Brighton Eagle Pointe Recreation Center - 6060 Parkway Dr., Commerce City Perl Mack Community Center - 7125 Mariposa St., Denver Pinnacle Charter School - 1001 W. 84th Ave., Federal Heights Belle Creek Family Center - 10693 Belle Creek Blvd., Henderson North Metro Church - 12505 Colorado Blvd., Thornton The MAC - 3295 W. 72nd Ave., Westminster
Sample ballots will be available online at GoVoteColorado.gov by accessing your voter registration record.
For more election information and frequently asked questions, visit the Adams County Elections website at AdamsVotes.com or call the Adams County Elections office at 720.523.6500. ADAMS COUNTY CLERK AND RECORDER
Beginning October 9, 2020, ballots in signed Official Return Envelopes may be dropped off at any of the following designated drop-off locations.
/s/ Josh Zygielbaum, Clerk and Recorder 4430 S. Adams County Parkway, Suite E3102 Brighton, CO 80601
24-Hour Drop Box Locations Adams County Western Services Center - 12200 N. Pecos St., Westminster Adams County Government Center - 4430 S. Adams County Pkwy., Brighton Adams County Human Services Center - 11860 Pecos St., Westminster Adams County Justice Center - 1100 Judicial Center Dr., Brighton Anythink Library Wright Farms - 5877 E. 120th Ave., Thornton Aurora Municipal Center - 15151 E. Alameda Pkwy., Aurora Aurora Motor Vehicle - 3449 N. Chambers Rd., Aurora Bennett Motor Vehicle - 355 S. First St., Bennett Brighton City Hall - 500 S. 4th Ave., Brighton Colfax Community Network - 1585 Kingston St., Aurora Commerce City Civic Center - 7887 E. 60th Ave., Commerce City Commerce City Sheriff’s Substation (south side) - 4201 E. 72nd Ave., Commerce City Federal Heights City Hall - 2380 W. 90th Ave., Federal Heights Front Range Community College - 3645 W. 112th Ave., Westminster Hilltop Village Shopping Center - 13762 Colorado Blvd., Thornton Kelver Public Library - 404 E. Front St., Byers Margaret Carpenter Recreation Center - 11151 Colorado Blvd., Thornton Martin Luther King, Jr. Library - 9898 E. Colfax Ave., Aurora Northglenn City Hall - 11701 Community Center Dr., Northglenn Perl Mack Community Center - 7125 Mariposa St., Denver Riverdale Animal Shelter - 12155 Park Blvd., Brighton Rotella Park - 1824 Coronado Pkwy. S., Denver Strasburg Sheriff’s Substation - 2550 Strasburg Rd., Strasburg Thornton Civic Center - 9500 Civic Center Dr., Thornton Trail Winds Recreation Center - 13495 Holly St., Thornton University of Colorado Anschutz Campus - 12477 E. 19th Ave., Aurora Westminster City Hall - 4800 W. 92nd Ave., Westminster Westminster Motor Vehicle - 8452 Federal Blvd., Westminster
Legal Notice No. 706908 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Ballots must be received at the Adams County Election office, a designated ballot drop box, or Voter Service & Polling Center (VSPC) location by 7 p.m. on Election Day, November 3, 2020, for your vote(s) to be counted. Ballots received after 7 p.m. on Election Day will not be counted. Postmarks do not count as a received date. VOTER SERVICE & POLLING CENTERS (VSPCs) Services offered include voting, ballot replacement, ballot drop box, ADA accessible ballot marking devices, new voter registration, and voter registration updates available at all locations. Hours of Operation: Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturday, October 24, closed Saturday, October 31, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. Election Day, Tuesday, November 3, 7 a.m. – 7 p.m. Phase 1: Open October 19 – November 3 Moorhead Recreation Center** - 2390 Havana St., Aurora Bennett Motor Vehicle Office - 355 S. First St., Bennett Adams County Government Center (West Entrance) - 4430 S. Adams County Pkwy., Brighton Adams City Middle School - 4451 E. 72nd Ave., Commerce City Adams County Economic Development - 12200 N. Pecos St., Westminster Westminster Motor Vehicle – 8452 N. Federal Blvd., Westminster **In addition to the standard days and hours for Phase 1 VSPCs, on Sunday, November 1, 2020, from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m., voting and other services will be available at Moorhead Recreation Center. Phase 2: Open October 30 – November 3 University of Colorado Anschutz Campus - 13121 E. 17th Ave., Aurora Anythink Library Huron - 9417 Huron St., Thornton Anythink Library Wright Farms - 5877 E. 120th Ave., Thornton Margaret Carpenter Recreation Center
Public Notice NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING AND BUDGET HEARING
NOTICE is hereby given that proposed 2021 budgets have been submitted to the Westminster City Council, in its capacity as the ex-officio Board of Directors of CITY OF WESTMINSTER 136TH AVENUE, CITY OF WESTMINSTER 144TH AVENUE, CITY OF WESTMINSTER AMHERST, CITY OF WESTMINSTER MANDALAY TOWN CENTER, CITY OF WESTMINSTER PARK 1200, WESTMINSTER ORCHARD PARK PLACE NORTH, CITY OF WESTMINSTER – WESTMINSTER STATION AND CITY OF WESTMINSTER SHERIDAN CROSSING GENERAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICTS (Districts) in Adams County and Jefferson County, Colorado. A copy of such proposed budgets has been filed in the office of the City of Westminster Finance Department, where the same is open for public inspection; such proposed budgets will be considered for adoption at a special meeting to be held virtually on October 12, 2020 immediately following the Westminster City Council meeting scheduled to begin at 7:00 p.m. Any interested person may inspect the proposed budget and file or register any objections thereto at any time prior to the final adoption of the budget.
Due to the President’s Declaration of a National Emergency, the Governor’s Declaration of a State Emergency, and Westminster’s Declaration of a State of Emergency, Westminster City Hall is closed to the public until further notice. This hearing will be conducted remotely. See below for additional information.
Public Testimony for this item will be accepted in one of the following three (3) ways: 1. Submit your written testimony to PublicHearing_GID@cityofwestminster.us, by no later than Noon (12 p.m.) on Monday, October 12, 2020. 2. Call (303) 706-3111 and leave a voice message to be played during the live Public Hearing, by no later than Noon (12 p.m.) on Monday, October 12, 2020.
3. Sign up to give testimony during the live virtual meeting: email cityclerk@cityofwestminster.us to sign up with your full name, address, and contact number by Noon (12 p.m.) on Monday, October 12, 2020.
Please note the deadline to participate in the Public Hearing in any of the three ways described above is Noon (12 p.m.) Monday, October 12, 2020.
Information related to providing public testimony via means other than electronically as described above, will be posted on: www.CityofWestminster. us. The public hearing will be streamed live via the City’s traditional webcast (www.youtube.com/user/WestminsterCO/live) or by calling 631-992-3221 and typing in access code: 234-663-063. The Board meeting agenda, agenda memo, and other materials will be posted on this website no later than four days prior to the hearing. * City of Westminster136th Avenue General Improvement District * City of Westminster144th Avenue General Improvement District * City of Westminster Amherst General Improvement District * City of Westminster Mandalay Town Center General Improvement District * City of Westminster Park 1200 General Improvement District * Westminster Orchard Park Place North General Improvement District * City of Westminster – Westminster Station General Improvement District * City of Westminster Sheridan Crossing General Improvement District By: /s/ David Frankel, City Attorney City of Westminster Attorney for the Districts Legal Notice No. 706891 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window Public Notice City of Westminster Notice of Public Hearing
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Public Notices 2021 Proposed Budget Notice is hereby given that the proposed 2021 budget for the City of Westminster has been submitted to the City Council and will be considered for adoption on November 23, 2020 at 7:00 pm in a City Council meeting. Prior to the adoption of the budget the City will conduct a public hearing on October 26, 2020 at 7:00 p.m., at which time feedback on the proposed budget will be accepted. The proposed budget is available for inspection by the public on the City’s website at https://www.cityofwestminster.us/Government/ Budget/Proposed2021Budget. The community may continue to provide feedback on the proposed budget at any time prior to the final adoption of the budget. Westminster City Council By: /s/ David Frankel, City Attorney City of Westminster Attorney for the City Legal Notice No. 706881 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window Public Notice CITY OF NORTHGLENN NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given in accordance with C.R.S. 31-16-203 that a public hearing will be held before the City Council of the City of Northglenn, Colorado at 7:00 p.m. on October 26, 2020 at City Hall, 11701 Community Center Drive, Northglenn, Colorado 80233, for the purpose of considering the adoption of certain codes by reference. Following the public hearing, the City Council will consider the passage of the adopting ordinance, CB-1953, Series of 2020. Certain amendments to the codes are indicated in the proposed ordinance. If the COVID-19 pandemic prevents the City Council from meeting in person, the public hearing will be held during an electronic meeting. The public may access the electronic meeting by phone using call-in information published on the October 26, 2020 meeting agenda, which will be posted online at webdocs.northglenn.org. Public comments may also be submitted in writing to the physical address above or by email to jsmall@northglenn. org no later than 7:00 p.m. on October 26, 2020. The codes being considered include: The International Building Code, 2018 Edition, published by the International Code Council, Inc., 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20001, which regulates the conditions and maintenance of all property, buildings and structures; by providing the standards for supplied utilities and facilities and other physical things and conditions essential to ensure that structures are safe, sanitary and fit for occupation and use; and the condemnation of buildings and structures unfit for human occupancy and use and the demolition of such structures. The International Energy Conservation Code, 2018 Edition, published by the International Code Council, Inc., 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20001, which regulates energy-efficient building envelopes and installation of energy-efficient mechanical, lighting and power systems. The International Existing Building Code, 2018 Edition, published by the International Code Council, Inc., 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20001, which regulates the repair, alteration, change of occupancy, addition and relocation of existing buildings, including historic buildings. The International Fire Code, 2018 Edition, published by the International Code Council, Inc., 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20001, which regulates the safeguarding of life and property from fire and explosion hazards arising from the storage, handling and use of hazardous substances, materials and devices, and from conditions hazardous to life or property in the occupancy of buildings and premises. The International Fuel Gas Code, 2018 Edition, published by the International Code Council, Inc., 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20001, which regulates fuel gas systems and gas-fired appliances. The International Mechanical Code, 2018 Edition, published by the International Code Council, Inc., 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20001, which protects public health and safety for all building heating, cooling and ventilation related design, installation and inspection by providing minimum safeguards for people at homes, schools and workplace. The International Plumbing Code, 2018 Edition, published by the International Code Council, Inc., 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20001, which regulates the design, construction, quality of materials, erection, installation, alteration, repair, location, relocation, replacement, addition to, use or maintenance of plumbing systems. The International Property Maintenance Code, 2018 Edition, published by the International Code Council, Inc., 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20001, which regulates the conditions and maintenance of all property, buildings and structures; by providing the standards for supplied utilities and facilities and other physical things and conditions essential to ensure that structures are safe, sanitary and fit for occupation and use; and the condemnation of buildings and structures unfit for human occupancy and use, and the demolition of such existing structures. The International Residential Code, 2018 Edition, published by the International Code Council, Inc., 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20001, which regulates the construction, alteration, movement, enlargement, replacement, repair, equipment, location, removal and demolition of detached one-and two-family dwellings and multiple single-family dwellings (townhomes) not more than three stories in height with separate means of egress. The International Swimming Pool and Spa Code, 2018 Edition, published by the International Code
Council, Inc., 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20001, which regulates the minimum requirements for the design, construction, alteration, repair and maintenance of swimming pools, spas, hot tubs, aquatic facilities, and related equipment. The National Electrical Code, most current edition as adopted by the State of Colorado, sponsored by the National Fire Protection Association, which regulates the planning, laying out, and installing or the making of additions, alterations, and repairs in the installation of wiring apparatus and equipment for electric light, heat, and power. The Uniform Building Code for Abatement of Dangerous Buildings, 1997 Edition, published by the International Conference of Building Officials, 5360 South Workman Mill Road, Whittier, California 90601, which addresses abating dilapidated, defective buildings which endanger life, health, property and public safety. Copies of the codes are on file at the Office of the City Clerk and may be inspected during regular business hours. Johanna Small, CMC City Clerk Legal Notice No. 706885 First publication: October 8, 2020 Second publication: October 15, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Metropolitan Districts Public Notice NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED 2021 BUDGET AND AMENDMENT OF 2020 BUDGET ASH MEADOWS METROPOLITAN DISTRICT ADAMS COUNTY, COLORADO NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Sections 29-1-108 and 109, C.R.S., that a proposed budget has been submitted to the Board of Directors of the Ash Meadows Metropolitan District (the “District”) for the ensuing year of 2021. The necessity may also arise for the amendment of the 2020 budget of the District. Copies of the proposed 2021 budget and 2020 amended budget (if appropriate) are on file in the office of the District’s Accountant, CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, 8390 E. Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, CO 80111, where same are available for public inspection. Such proposed 2021 budget and 2020 amended budget will be considered at a special meeting to be held November 13, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. This meeting will be a virtual/teleconference meeting via Microsoft Teams. Any interested elector within the District may, at any time prior to the final adoption of the 2021 budget and 2020 amended budget, inspect the 2021 budget and 2020 amended budget and file or register any objections thereto. DUE TO CONCERNS REGARDING THE SPREAD OF THE CORONAVIRUS (COVID-19) AND THE BENEFITS TO THE CONTROL OF THE SPREAD OF THE VIRUS BY LIMITING INPERSON CONTACT, THIS MEETING WILL BE HELD BY VIDEO/TELEPHONIC MEANS WITHOUT ANY INDIVIDUALS (NEITHER DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVES NOR THE GENERAL PUBLIC) ATTENDING IN PERSON You can attend the meeting in any of the following ways: 1. To attend via Videoconference, e-mail trina. hartman@claconnect.com to obtain a link to the videoconference. 2. To attend via telephone, dial 720-547-5281 and enter the following additional information: Conference ID: 410 598 968# ASH MEADOWS METROPOLITAN DISTRICT /s/ Geol Scheirman, District Manager Legal Notice No. 706866 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF ELECTION NORTH END METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 3 SPECIAL ELECTION (BY MAIL BALLOT) November 3, 2020 §§ 1-13.5-1105(2)(d), 1-13.5-502, C.R.S. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, and, particularly, to the electors of the proposed North End Metropolitan District No. 3, Adams County, Colorado (the “District”). NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an election by mail ballot will be held Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Ballots will be distributed by U.S. Mail sent not earlier than October 12, 2020, and not later than October 19, 2020, to all active registered electors of the District. The address of the location for application and return of mail ballots is 1641 California Street, Suite 300, Denver, CO 80202 (the “Mail Ballot Drop-Off Location”). Beginning October 12, 2020, the Mail Ballot Drop-Off Location will be open from 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m., Monday - Friday; and 7:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Election Day, Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Ballots must be received by 7:00 p.m. on November 3, 2020. The purpose of the election is to authorize the imposition of property taxes, to authorize the issuance of debt, and to submit questions regarding the collection, retention and spending of revenues. Ballot Issues Certified by the District include: • North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5A (Operations and Maintenance Mill Levy – Ad Valorem Taxes) • North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5B (Operations and Maintenance - Fees) • North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5C (Multiple Fiscal Year IGA Mill Levy) • North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5D (DeBrucing) • North End Metropolitan District No. 3
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Ballot Issue 5E (Streets) North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5F (Sanitation) North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5G (Water) North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5H (Transportation) North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5I (Mosquito Control) North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5J (Safety Protection) North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5K (Parks and Recreation) North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5L (Operations and Maintenance Debt) North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5M (Refunding Debt) North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5N (District Intergovernmental Agreements as Debt) North End Metropolitan District No. 3 Ballot Issue 5O (Multi Fiscal Year IGA)
Legal Notice No. 706918 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF ELECTION NORTH END METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 2 SPECIAL ELECTION (BY MAIL BALLOT) November 3, 2020 §§ 1-13.5-1105(2)(d), 1-13.5-502, C.R.S. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, and, particularly, to the electors of the proposed North End Metropolitan District No. 2, Adams County, Colorado (the “District”). NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an election by mail ballot will be held Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Ballots will be distributed by U.S. Mail sent not earlier than October 12, 2020, and not later than October 19, 2020, to all active registered electors of the District. The address of the location for application and return of mail ballots is 1641 California Street, Suite 300, Denver, CO 80202 (the “Mail Ballot Drop-Off Location”). Beginning October 12, 2020, the Mail Ballot Drop-Off Location will be open from 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m., Monday - Friday; and 7:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Election Day, Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Ballots must be received by 7:00 p.m. on November 3, 2020. The purpose of the election is to authorize the imposition of property taxes, to authorize the issuance of debt, and to submit questions regarding the collection, retention and spending of revenues. Ballot Issues Certified by the District include: • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5A (Operations and Maintenance Mill Levy – Ad Valorem Taxes) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5B (Operations and Maintenance - Fees) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5C (Multiple Fiscal Year IGA Mill Levy) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5D (DeBrucing) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5E (Streets) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5F (Sanitation) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5G (Water) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5H (Transportation) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5I (Mosquito Control) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5J (Safety Protection) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5K (Parks and Recreation) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5L (Operations and Maintenance Debt) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5M (Refunding Debt) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5N (District Intergovernmental Agreements as Debt) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue 5O (Multi Fiscal Year IGA) • North End Metropolitan District No. 2 Ballot Issue Legal Notice No. 706919 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF ELECTION NORTH END METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 1 SPECIAL ELECTION (BY MAIL BALLOT) November 3, 2020 §§ 1-13.5-1105(2)(d), 1-13.5-502, C.R.S. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, and, particularly, to the electors of the proposed North End Metropolitan District No. 1, Adams County, Colorado (the “District”). NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an election by mail ballot will be held Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Ballots will be distributed by U.S. Mail sent not earlier than October 12, 2020, and not later than October 19, 2020, to all active registered electors of the District. The address of the location for application and return of mail ballots is 1641 California Street, Suite 300, Denver, CO 80202 (the “Mail Ballot Drop-Off Location”). Beginning October 12, 2020, the Mail Ballot Drop-Off Location will be open from 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m., Monday - Friday; and 7:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Election Day, Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Ballots must be received by 7:00 p.m. on November 3, 2020. The purpose of the election is to authorize the imposition of property taxes, to authorize the issuance of debt, and to submit questions regarding the collection, retention and spending of revenues. Ballot Issues Certified by the
District include: • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5A (Operations and Maintenance Mill Levy – Ad Valorem Taxes) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5B (Operations and Maintenance - Fees) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5C (Multiple Fiscal Year IGA Mill Levy) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5D (DeBrucing) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5E (Streets) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 1 Ballot Issue 5F (Sanitation) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5G (Water) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5H (Transportation) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5I (Mosquito Control) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5J (Safety Protection) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5K (Parks and Recreation) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5L (Operations and Maintenance Debt) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5M (Refunding Debt) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5N (District Intergovernmental Agreements as Debt) • North End Metropolitan District No. 1 Ballot Issue 5O (Multi Fiscal Year IGA) Legal Notice No. 706916 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF ELECTION NORTH END METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 4 SPECIAL ELECTION (BY MAIL BALLOT) November 3, 2020 §§ 1-13.5-1105(2)(d), 1-13.5-502, C.R.S. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, and, particularly, to the electors of the proposed North End Metropolitan District No. 4, Adams County, Colorado (the “District”). NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an election by mail ballot will be held Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Ballots will be distributed by U.S. Mail sent not earlier than October 12, 2020, and not later than October 19, 2020, to all active registered electors of the District. The address of the location for application and return of mail ballots is 1641 California Street, Suite 300, Denver, CO 80202 (the “Mail Ballot Drop-Off Location”). Beginning October 12, 2020, the Mail Ballot Drop-Off Location will be open from 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m., Monday - Friday; and 7:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Election Day, Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Ballots must be received by 7:00 p.m. on November 3, 2020. The purpose of the election is to authorize the imposition of property taxes, to authorize the issuance of debt, and to submit questions regarding the collection, retention and spending of revenues. Ballot Issues Certified by the District include: • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5A (Operations and Maintenance Mill Levy – Ad Valorem Taxes) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5B (Operations and Maintenance - Fees) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5C (Multiple Fiscal Year IGA Mill Levy) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5D (DeBrucing) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5E (Streets) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5F (Sanitation) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5G (Water) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5H (Transportation) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5I (Mosquito Control) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5J (Safety Protection) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5K (Parks and Recreation) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5L (Operations and Maintenance Debt) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5M (Refunding Debt) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5N (District Intergovernmental Agreements as Debt) • North End Metropolitan District No. 4 Ballot Issue 5O (Multi Fiscal Year IGA) Legal Notice No. 706917 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE TO ELIGIBLE ELECTORS OF 144th AVENUE METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NOS. 1 & 2 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that one or more vacancies exist on the Boards of Directors of 144th AVENUE METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NOS. 1 & 2, City of Westminster, State of Colorado. Pursuant to Section 32-1-808(2)(a)(1), C.R.S., any qualified eligible elector of the Districts may file a letter of interest in filling the Boards’ vacancies. A letter of interest may be filed at the office of Icenogle Seaver Pogue, P.C. located at 4725 South Monaco Street, Suite 360, Denver, Colorado 80237. BY ORDER OF THE BOARDS OF DIRECTORS: 144th AVENUE METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NOS. 1 & 2 /s/ ICENOGLE SEAVER POGUE, P.C. Legal Notice No. 706880 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020
Publisher: Westminster Window Public Notice NOTICE OF BUDGET (Pursuant to § 29-1-106, C.R.S.)
NOTICE is hereby given that a proposed budget has been submitted to Berkeley Water and Sanitation District for the ensuing year of 2021. A copy of the proposed budget is open for public inspection at the District’s office at 4455 West 58th Avenue, Unit A, Arvada, Colorado 80002. The proposed budget will be considered at the regular meeting of Berkeley Water and Sanitation District to be held at the District’s office at 4455 West 58th Avenue, Unit A, Arvada, Colorado 80002, on November 11, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. Any interested elector of Berkeley Water and Sanitation District may inspect the proposed budget and file or register any objections thereto at any time prior to the final adoption of the budget. Berkeley Water and Sanitation District By: Sharon Whitehair, District Manager Legal Notice No. 706879 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window Public Notice NOTICE CONCERNING PROPOSED BUDGET OF ORCHARD PARK PLACE NORTH METROPOLITAN DISTRICT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all interested parties that a proposed 2021 Budget and a possible draft amendment to the 2020 Budget have been submitted to the Board of Directors of the Orchard Park Place North Metropolitan District (“District); that a copy of such proposed Budgets for the District has been filed in the office of District’s accountant at 304 Inverness Way South, Suite 490, Englewood, Colorado, where the same are open for public inspection, and that such proposed Budget of the District for the year 2021 and an amendment to the 2020 Budget, if necessary, will be considered at a public meeting of the District to be held via teleconference: 1-866-931-7845; Access Code 591843 at 3:00 p.m., on October 15, 2020. Any interested elector within the District may, at any time prior to the final adoption of the Budgets, inspect the Budgets and file or register his or her objections thereto. ORCHARD PARK PLACE NORTH METROPOLITAN DISTRICT By: /s/ Jeffrey Reed, Chairman Legal Notice No. 706893 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window
Bids and Settlements Public Notice NOTICE OF CONTRACTOR’S SETTLEMENT
Mapleton Public School District, Adams County School District #1 in Adams County in The State of Colorado. Notice is hereby given that on October 15, 2020, final settlement with JHL Constructors / Hord Copland Macht (Design-Builder), Working Spaces (Furniture), and Olsson (Construction Materials Tester and Third Party Inspector) will be made by Mapleton Public Schools for an account of the contracts of the said JHL Constructors / Hord Copland Macht, Working Spaces, and Olsson for the completion of the Explore PK-8 project in the Mapleton Public School District, Adams County School District #1, in the State of Colorado, and that any person, copartnership, association, or corporation who has an unpaid claim against the said JHL Constructors / Hord Copland Macht, Working Spaces, or Olsson, for or on account of the furnishing of labor, materials, team hire, sustenance, provisions, provender or other supplies used or consumed by such contractor or any of his subcontractors in or about the performance of said work, may at any time up to and including said time of such final settlement on said JHL Constructors / Hord Copland Macht, Working Spaces, and Olsson, file a verified statement of the amount due and unpaid on account of such claim with the Board of Education of said School District, at the office of: Mapleton Public School District, 7350 N. Broadway, Denver, CO 80221. Failure on the part of a claimant to file such statement prior to such final settlement will relieve said School District from any and all liability for such claimant’s claim. Legal Notice No. 706915 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 15, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT WITH CONTRACTOR
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on or about October 23, 2020 the Finance Director for the City of Northglenn, Colorado shall make final settlement with KECI Colorado Inc., Sedalia, CO on account of their performance on the 2020 Speed Table Construction bid, IFB 2020-007. Up to the time of making final settlement, the Finance Director shall receive at their office, 11701 Community Center Drive, Northglenn, Colorado, verified statement of claims with respect to such work and as provided in Section 38-26-107, Colorado revised statutes, 1973. City of Northglenn /s/ Jason Loveland, Finance Director Legal Notice No. 706863 First Publication: October 1, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF CONTRACTOR’S FINAL SETTLEMENT Notice is hereby given that on or after the 19th day of October, 2020, Final Settlement will be made by the City of Thornton, CO, with:
NTS WW Legals 10.8.20 * 3
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0October 8, 2020
Public Notices Calahan Construction Services 1661 Wadsworth Boulevard Lakewood, CO 80214 hereinafter called “Contractor”, for and on account of the Contract for construction of Thornton Business Assistance Center, Project No. 260-20B. 1. Any person, co-partnership, association, or corporation who has an unpaid claim against the said Project, for or on account of the furnishing of labor, materials, team hire, sustenance, provisions, provender, or other supplies used or consumed by such Contractor, or any of his subcontractors, in or about the performance of said Work, may at any time up to and including said date of such Final Settlement, file a verified statement of the amount due and unpaid on account of such claims. 2. All such claims shall be filed with the City Clerk at 9500 Civic Center Drive, Thornton, CO 80229. 3. Failure on the part of the creditor to file such a statement prior to such Final Settlement will relieve the City of Thornton from any and all liability for such claim. CITY OF THORNTON, COLORADO Date: 9-15-20 /s/ Jim Jensen, Contracts Supervisor Legal Notice No. 706836 First Publication: October 1, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice SECTION 00 11 16 INVITATION TO BID Date: October 8, 2020 Sealed Bids will be received by the South Adams County Water and Sanitation District acting by and through its South Adams County Water and Sanitation District Activity Enterprise (OWNER); Attn: Sandra Schrawder, at 6595 East 70th Avenue, Commerce City, Colorado 80022 until 2:30 p.m., local time, Thursday, October 29, 2020, for the project entitled “Tanabe Communication Tower.” At said place and time, and promptly thereafter, all Bids that have been duly received will be publicly opened and read aloud. The project generally consists of installation of a 60-foot, galvanized steel, self-supporting antenna tower and foundation near 112th Avenue and Belle Creek Boulevard in Commerce City, Adams County, Colorado. The project will also consist of the installation of Gateway radio meter reading equipment on the tower. It is the desire of the Owner to select a Contractor who will provide a “turnkey” operation to design, supply and construct the tower and foundation, as well as coordinate the permitting of the tower through the Adams County Building Department. All bids must be in accordance with the Contract Documents on file with the owner, South Adams County Water and Sanitation District, 10200 E. 102nd Avenue, Henderson, Colorado 80640; and at the office of Muller Engineering Company, 777 S. Wadsworth Boulevard Suite 4-100, Lakewood, CO 80226, (303) 988-4939. Copies of the Contract Documents for use in preparing Bids may be obtained via email from Abel Moreno, amoreno@sacwsd.org, South Adams County Water and Sanitation District, 10200 E. 102nd Avenue, Henderson, Colorado 80640. Bid documents will be available on Friday, October 9, 2020. A project inspection of the site is recommended prior to submitting a bid. Site visits must be scheduled in advance with D&C staff, phone 720-206-0595. It is anticipated that the Contract Agreement will be signed and the Notice to Proceed will be issued no later than mid-November, 2020. It is the desire of the Owner to have the Work completed as soon as possible, ideally by December 31, 2020. Bids will be received on a lump sum basis. Bid Security in the amount of 5 percent of the total Bid must accompany each Bid. The successful Bidder will be required to furnish a Construction Performance Bond and a Construction Payment Bond as security for the faithful performance and the payment of all bills and obligations arising from the performance of the contract. The Bid and Bid Security will remain subject to acceptance for forty-two (42) calendar days after the Bid opening, or for such longer period of time that Bidder may agree to in writing upon request of Owner. The District reserves the right to reject any and all Bids, to waive informalities, and to reject nonconforming, non-responsive, or conditional Bids. By: Vicki Ennis, Secretary South Adams County Water and Sanitation District Legal Notice No. 706907 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE TO BIDDERS Denver Water Capital Improvements Project The Berkeley Water and Sanitation District (hereinafter called the “The District”) will receive sealed bids for the Denver Water Capital Improvements Project (the “Project”) at the District Office - 4455 W. 58th Avenue, Unit A, Arvada, CO 80002 until 9:00 AM, November 5th. Specifications, and bid forms will be distributed electronically. Plans can be downloaded at www. elementengineering.net under “Project Bidding” and will be available on October 1st, 2020 at 10:00 AM. The charge for plans is $20.00. Bids shall be made on the forms furnished by the District. All bids must be accompanied by a bid
security in an amount of at least 5% of the Bid, in the form of a bid bond. The bond will be retained by the District if the successful bidder refuses or fails to enter into a contract with the District. Bids shall be valid for ninety (90) consecutive calendar days from the bid date. The Project consists of 1 hydrant removal, 3 fire hydrant replacements, 2 PRV abandonments, a PRV installation, a 60 LF 8” bore with 18” steel casing, the installation of 372 LF of 6” waterline, 330 LF of 8” water line, 32 LF of 12” water line, waterline abandonments, ¾” waterline reconnections, asphalt paving and associated fittings, valves for all projects. Bidders are hereby advised that the District reserves the right to not award a Contract until ninety (90) days from the date of the opening of Bids, and Bidders expressly agree to keep their Bids open for the ninety (90) day- time period. District reserves the right to reject any and all Bids, to waive any informality, technicality or irregularity in any Bid, to disregard all non-conforming, non-responsive, conditional or alternate Bids, to negotiate contract terms with the Successful Bidder, to require statements or evidence of Bidders’ qualifications, including financial statements, and to accept the proposal that is in the opinion of the District in its best interest. Legal Notice No. 706858 First Publication: October 1, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window PUBLIC NOTICE RFP # 20-022, ASPHALT OVERLAY & MILLWORK Maiker Housing Partners is soliciting submissions from qualified business to bid on asphalt overlay and millwork. Work is to be performed at Village of Greenbriar Apartments, 8290 Federal Blvd, Westminster, CO 80030. Maiker Housing Partners is a public entity formed in 1974 to provide federally subsidized housing and housing assistance to low-income families, within Adams County, Colorado. Though brought into existence by a Resolution of the Adams County Board of Commissioners, it is a separate entity from the Adams County, Colorado government. Maiker has approximately 15 properties of multi-family apartment communities in Adams County, throughout the cities of Thornton, Commerce City, Westminster, and Denver (Adams County). The complete RFP# 20-022 can be obtained at www.maikerhp.org Legal Notice No. 706867 First Publication: October 1, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT WHEREAS, The Metro Wastewater Reclamation District, hereinafter referred to as the “Metro District”, has contracted with Moltz Construction, Inc. hereinafter referred to as the “Contractor”, for the construction of PAR 1379 – Fixed Asset Replacement (FAR) Civil/Mechanical Projects Task Order 1, hereinafter referred to as the “Project”; and WHEREAS, the Contractor has completed the construction of the Project; and WHEREAS, the Contractor is entitled to final payment; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Metro District does hereby give notice that on October 29, 2020 the Metro District will pay the full balance due the Contractor, and that all persons having claims for labor, services, equipment rental, or materials furnished to the Contractor should present their claims to the Contractor and the Surety prior to said date for payment. Pursuant to Colorado Revised Statute 38-26-107, claimants may also file a verified statement of the amount due and unpaid on such claims with the Metro District prior to the date specified herein for final payment. METRO WASTEWATER RECLAMATION DISTRICT By: William J. Conway, District Manager Legal Notice No. 706883 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 15, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window Public Notice NOTICE OF FINAL PAYMENT Notice is hereby given that at 12:00 p.m., on October 23rd, 2020, North Washington Street Water and Sanitation District will make final settlement with Ricor Services, LLC, 6255 W. 52nd Avenue Arvada, CO 80002, in connection with payment for all services rendered, materials furnished, and for all labor performed in and for construction of project: 65418627, Balboa Park Sewer Rehabilitation. 1. Any person, co-partnership, association, or corporations who has unpaid claim against the said project or on account of the furnishing of labor, materials, team hire, sustenance, provision, provender, or other supplies used or consumed by such contractor or any of his subcontractors in or about the performance of said work, may at any time up to and including said time of such final settlement file a verified statement of the amount due and unpaid on account of such claims. 2. All such claims shall be filed with the North Washington Street Water and Sanitation District, 3172 E. 78th Avenue, Denver, CO 80229 on or before the above-mentioned time and date of final settlement. 3. Failure on the part of a creditor to file such statement prior to such final settlement will relieve the North Washington Street Water and Sanitation District from any and all liability for such claim.
Legal Notice No. 706903 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 15, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT, GREETINGS:
Summons and Sheriff Sale Public Notice SUMMONS SERVICE BY PUBLICATION IN THE DISTRICT COURT IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADAMS AND STATE OF COLORADO Civil Action No. 20CV31019, DIV. W THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO, Plaintiff, vs. WILMER SANDREZ-CUADRAS and FOUR THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED SIXTY-TWO DOLLARS IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY, Defendant, TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT, GREETINGS: You are hereby summoned and required to file with the Clerk an answer to the Complaint, which has been filed with the Court within thirty days after service of this Summons upon you. If you fail to do so, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. If service upon you is made outside the State of Colorado, or by publication or if a copy of the Complaint is not served upon you with this Summons, you are required to file your Answer to the Complaint within thirty five days after service of this Summons upon you. This is an action for forfeiture pursuant to C.R.S. §16-13-307 of the currency that was seized in Adams County, Colorado by officers of the North Metro Task Force on July 19, 2020, as being derived from activity constituting a class one public nuisance. A copy of the Summons, Complaint and Temporary Restraining Order may be obtained at the Adams County District Attorney’s Office, 1000 Judicial Center Drive, Suite 100, Brighton, Colorado 80601. DATED: September 8, 2020 s/s Cameron Munier, Senior Deputy District Attorney Judicial Center Drive, Suite 100 Brighton, CO 80601 (303) 659-7720
1000
You are hereby summoned and required to file with the Clerk an answer to the Complaint, which has been filed with the Court within thirty days after service of this Summons upon you. If you fail to do so, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. If service upon you is made outside the State of Colorado, or by publication or if a copy of the Complaint is not served upon you with this Summons, you are required to file your Answer to the Complaint within thirty five days after service of this Summons upon you. This is an action for forfeiture pursuant to C.R.S. §16-13-307 of the currency that was seized in Adams County, Colorado by officers of the North Metro Task Force on May 26, 2020, as being derived from activity constituting a class one public nuisance. A copy of the Summons, Complaint and Temporary Restraining Order may be obtained at the Adams County District Attorney’s Office, 1000 Judicial Center Drive, Suite 100, Brighton, Colorado 80601. DATED: September 9, 2020 /s/Cameron Munier Senior Deputy District Attorney 1000 Judicial Center Drive, Suite 100 Brighton, CO 80601 (303) 659-7720 Legal Notice No. 706829 First Publication: September 24, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice DISTRICT COURT, ADAMS COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO Court Address: Adams County District Court 1100 Judicial Ctr Dr. Brighton, CO 80601 Case No.: 2020CV031140 Division: A Plaintiff: COLONY PARK COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION, INC., a Colorado nonprofit corporation v. Defendants: LAITH LYONS; MONA DEEB; BOKF NA; ADAMS COUNTY PUBLIC TRUSTEE Attorneys for Plaintiff: Orten Cavanagh Holmes & Hunt, LLC Hal R. Kyles, #23891 1445 Market Street, Suite 350 Denver, CO 80202 Phone Number: (720) 221-9780 Matter ID #2823.0007
Legal Notice No. 706790 First Publication: September 17, 2020 Last Publication: October 15, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice SUMMONS
SUMMONS [BY PUBLICATION]
SERVICE BY PUBLICATION IN THE DISTRICT COURT IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADAMS AND STATE OF COLORADO
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO TO THE ABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANTS:
Civil Action No. 20CV31040, DIV. A THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO, Plaintiff, vs. INTERESTED PARTY, VERONICA MORALES and EIGHT THOUSAND TWENTY DOLLARS IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY, TO THE ABOVE NAMED PARTY, GREETINGS: You are hereby summoned and required to file with the Clerk an answer to the Complaint, which has been filed with the Court within thirty days after service of this Summons upon you. If you fail to do so, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. If service upon you is made outside the State of Colorado, or by publication or if a copy of the Complaint is not served upon you with this Summons, you are required to file your Answer to the Complaint within thirty five days after service of this Summons upon you. This is an action for forfeiture pursuant to C.R.S. §16-13-307 of the currency that was seized in Adams County, Colorado by officers of the North Metro Task Force on June 29, 2020, as being derived from activity constituting a class one public nuisance. A copy of the Summons, Complaint and Temporary Restraining Order may be obtained at the Adams County District Attorney’s Office, 1000 Judicial Center Drive, Suite 100, Brighton, Colorado 80601. DATED: October 1, 2020 s/s Mike Whitney Deputy District Attorney 1000 Judicial Center Drive, Suite 100 Brighton, CO 80601 (303) 659-7720
Senior
Legal Notice No. 706905 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: November 5, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice SUMMONS SERVICE BY PUBLICATION IN THE DISTRICT COURT IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADAMS AND STATE OF COLORADO Civil Action No. 20CV30776, DIV. C THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO, Plaintiff, vs. VICTOR TORRES-CORRAL and SIXTY-ONE THOUSAND NINE HUNDRED FIFTY-FOUR DOLLARS IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY, Defendant.
You are hereby summoned and required to appear and defend against the claims of the complaint filed with the court in this action, by filing with the clerk of this court an answer or other response. You are required to file your answer or other response within 35 days after the service of this Summons upon you. Service of this summons shall be complete on the day of the last publication. A copy of the complaint may be obtained from the clerk of the court. If you fail to file your answer or other response to the complaint in writing within 35 days after the date of the last publication, judgment by default may be rendered against you by the court for the relief demanded in the complaint without further notice. This is an action of foreclosure pursuant to Rule 105, C.R.C.P. to the real property situate in Westminster, Colorado more particularly described as Lot 5, Block 4, Colony Park Subdivision, Filing No. 1, County Of Adams, State Of Colorado.
This is an action for forfeiture pursuant to C.R.S. § 16-13-307 of the currency that was seized in Adams County, Colorado by officers of the North Metro Task Force on February 5, 2020, as being derived from activity constituting a class one public nuisance.
A copy of the Summons, Complaint and Temporary Restraining Order may be obtained at the Adams County District Attorney’s Office, 1000 Judicial Center Drive, Suite 100, Brighton, Colorado 80601. DATED: September 2, 2020 s/s Cameron Munier, #40343 Senior Deputy District Attorney 1000 Judicial Center Drive, Suite 100 Brighton, CO 80601 (303) 659-7720 Legal Notice No. 706774 First Publication: September 10, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Misc. Private Legals Public Notice
Cellco Partnership and its controlled affiliates doing business as Verizon Wireless (Verizon Wireless) proposes to build a 27-foot utility pole Communications Tower at the approx. vicinity of 2073 N Clinton St, Aurora, Adams County, CO 80010. Public comments regarding potential effects from this site on historic properties may be submitted within 30 days from the date of this publication to: Trileaf Corp, Alison, a.cusack@ trileaf.com, 10845 Olive Blvd, Suite 260, St. Louis, MO 63141, 314-997-6111 Legal Notice No. 706882 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel. Public Notice NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND FORECLOSURE SALE
WHEREAS, on October 14, 2002, a certain Deed of Trust was executed by Jimmy L. Davis, Grantor, in favor of Financial Freedom Senior Funding Corporation, a Subsidiary of Lehman Brothers Bank, FSB, as Beneficiary, and the Public Trustee of Adams County, Colorado as Trustee, and was recorded on October 18, 2002 at Reception Number C1040491 in the office of the Clerk and Recorder of the County of Adams, Colorado; and
WHEREAS, the Deed of Trust was insured by the United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (the Secretary) pursuant to the National Housing Act for the purpose of providing single family housing; and
WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of the Deed of Trust is now owned by the Secretary, pursuant to an assignment recorded on November 1, 2007 at Reception Number 2007000101935 in the office of the Clerk and Recorder of the County of Adams Colorado.
WHEREAS, a default has been made in the covenants and conditions of the Deed of Trust in that Paragraph 9 (a) (i) has been violated; and
WHEREAS, the entire amount delinquent is $269,743.93 as of August 18, 2020; and
WHEREAS, by virtue of this default, the Secretary has declared the entire amount of the indebtedness secured by the Deed of Trust to be immediately due and payable;
NOW THEREFORE, pursuant to the powers vested in me by the Single Family Mortgage Foreclosure Act of 1994, 12 U.S.C. 3751 et seq., by 24 CFR part 27, subpart B, and by the Secretary’s designation of me as Foreclosure Commissioner, recorded on April 2, 2018 at Reception No. 2018000026482, notice is hereby given that on October 20, 2020 at 10:30 a.m. local time, all real and personal property at or used in connection with the following described premises (“Property”) will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder:
This Summons is issued pursuant to Rule 4(g), Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure.
LOT 10, BLOCK 19, YORK HIGHLANDS FILING NUMBER TWO, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO . Commonly known as: 9798 Milwaukee Court, Thornton, CO 80229. The sale will be held 9798 Milwaukee Court, Thornton, CO 80229.
Legal Notice No.: 706797 First Publication: September 17, 2020 Last Publication: October 15, 2020 Published in Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
The Secretary of Housing and Urban Development will bid the lesser amount of the loan balance or the appraised value obtained by the Secretary prior to sale.
Dated: September 9, 2020. ORTEN CAVANAGH HOLMES & HUNT, LLC By: /s/ Hal R. Kyles Hal R. Kyles, #23891
SUMMONS SERVICE BY PUBLICATION IN THE DISTRICT COURT IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADAMS AND STATE OF COLORADO Civil Action No. 20CV30565, DIV. A THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO, Plaintiff, vs. MICHAEL WILLIAMSEN and ONE THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED FIFTY-TWO DOLLARS IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY, Defendant. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT, GREETINGS: You are hereby summoned and required to file with the Clerk an answer to the Complaint, which has been filed with the Court within thirty days after service of this Summons upon you. If you fail to do so, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. If service upon you is made outside the State of Colorado, or by publication or if a copy of the Complaint is not served upon you with this Summons, you are required to file your Answer to the Complaint within thirty five days after service of this Summons upon you.
There will be no proration of taxes, rents or other income or liabilities, except that the purchaser will pay, at or before closing, his prorated share of any real estate taxes that have been paid by the Secretary to the date of the foreclosure sale.
When making their bids, all bidders except the Secretary must submit a deposit totaling 10% of the Secretary’s bid in the form of a certified check or cashier’s check made out to the Secretary of HUD. A deposit need not be accompany each oral bid. If the successful bid is oral, a deposit of 10% of the Secretary’s bid must be presented before the bidding is closed. The deposit is nonrefundable. The remainder of the purchase price must be delivered within 30 days of the sale or at such other time as the Secretary may determine for good cause shown, time being of the essence. This amount, like the bid deposits, must be delivered in the form of a certified or cashier’s check. If the Secretary is the highest bidder, he need not pay the bid amount in cash. The successful bidder will pay all conveying fees, all real estate and other taxes that are due on or after the delivery date of the remainder of the payment and all other costs associated with the transfer of title. At the conclusion of the sale, the deposits of the unsuccessful bidders will be returned to them.
The Secretary may grant an extension of time within which to deliver the remainder of the payment. All extension will be for 15-day increments for a fee of $500.00, paid in advance. The
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October 8, 2020O
Public Notices extension fee shall be in the form of certified or cashier’s check made payable to the Secretary of HUD. If the high bidder closes the sale prior to the expiration of any extension period, the unused portion of the extension fee shall be applied toward the amount due.
Commerce City, CO 80022.
If the high bidder is unable to close the sale within the required period, or within any extensions of time granted by the Secretary, the high bidder may be required to forfeit the cash deposit, or at the election of the foreclosure commissioner after consultation with the HUD representative, will be liable to HUD for any costs incurred as a result of such failure. The Commissioner may, at the direction of the HUD representative, offer the property to the second highest bidder for an amount equal to the highest price offered by that bidder.
There will be no proration of taxes, rents or other income or liabilities, except that the purchaser will pay, at or before closing, his prorated share of any real estate taxes that have been paid by the Secretary to the date of the foreclosure sale.
There is no right of redemption, or right of possession based upon a right of redemption, in the mortgagor or others subsequent to a foreclosure completed pursuant to the Act. Therefore, the Foreclosure Commissioner will issue a Deed to the purchaser(s) upon receipt of the entire purchase price in accordance with the terms of the sale as provided herein, HUD does not guarantee that the property will be vacant. The scheduled foreclosure sale shall be cancelled or adjourned if it is established, by documented written application of the mortgagor to the Foreclosure Commissioner no less than three (3) days before the date of sale, or otherwise, that the default or defaults upon which the foreclosure is based did not exist at the time of service of this notice of default and foreclosure sale, or all amounts due under the mortgage agreement are tendered to the Foreclosure Commissioner, in the form of a certified cashier’s check payable to the Secretary of HUD, before the public auction of the property is completed. The amount that must be paid if the mortgage is to be reinstated prior to the scheduled sale is $269,743.93 as of August 18, 2020, plus all other amounts that would be due under the mortgage agreement if payments under the deed of trust had not been accelerated, advertising costs and postage expenses incurred in giving notice, mileage by the most reasonable road distance for posting notices and for the Foreclosure Commissioner’s attendance at the sale, reasonable and customary costs incurred for title and lien record searches, the necessary out of pocket costs incurred by the Foreclosure Commissioner, and all other costs incurred in connection with the foreclosure prior to reinstatement. Tender of payment by certified or cashier’s check or application for cancellation of the foreclosure sale shall be submitted to the address of the Foreclosure Commissioner provided below. Dated: September 14, 2020 Foreclosure Commissioner Deanne R. Stodden 1430 Wynkoop Street, Suite 300 Denver, CO 80202 Telephone: (303) 623-1800 Email: foreclosure@messner.com Legal Notice No. 706828 First Publication: September 24, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND FORECLOSURE SALE WHEREAS, on September 22, 2003, a certain Deed of Trust was executed by Tito Padilla and Rose Padilla, as Grantors, in favor of Financial Freedom Senior Funding Corporation, a Subsidiary of Lehman Brother Bank, FSB, as Beneficiary, and the Public Trustee of Adams County, Colorado as Trustee, and was recorded on October 8, 2003, at Reception Number C1221261, in the office of the Clerk and Recorder of the County of Adams, Colorado; and WHEREAS, the Deed of Trust was insured by the United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (the Secretary) pursuant to the National Housing Act for the purpose of providing single family housing; and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of the Deed of Trust is now owned by the Secretary, pursuant to an assignment recorded on May 30, 2012 at Reception Number 2012000038815 in the office of the Clerk and Recorder of the County of Adams Colorado. WHEREAS, a default has been made in the covenants and conditions of the Deed of Trust in that Paragraph 9 (a) (i) has been violated; and WHEREAS, the entire amount delinquent is $258,978.53 as of August 28, 2020; and WHEREAS, by virtue of this default, the Secretary has declared the entire amount of the indebtedness secured by the Deed of Trust to be immediately due and payable; NOW THEREFORE, pursuant to the powers vested in me by the Single Family Mortgage Foreclosure Act of 1994, 12 U.S.C. 3751 et seq., by 24 CFR part 27, subpart B, and by the Secretary’s designation of me as Foreclosure Commissioner, recorded on April 2, 2018 at Reception No. 2018000026482 in the records of the Adams County Clerk and Recorder, notice is hereby given that on October 20, 2020 at 11:00 a.m. local time, all real and personal property at or used in connection with the following described premises (“Property”) will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder: LOT 10, BLOCK 1, FOR-NEL SUBDIVISION, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO, THE PLAT OF WHICH IS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 7, PAGE 177; AND BEING MORE FULLY DESCRIBED IN A DEED DATED 07/27/1987, AND RECORDED 07/27/1987, AMONG THE LAND RECORDS OF THE COUNTY AND STATE SET FORTH ABOVE, IN DEED BOOK 3347, PAGE 848, APN No: 182308221009. Commonly known as: 6009 Locust Street, Commerce City, CO 80022. The sale will be held at: 6009 Locust Street,
The Secretary of Housing and Urban Development will bid the lesser amount of the loan balance or the appraised value obtained by the Secretary prior to sale.
When making their bids, all bidders except the Secretary must submit a deposit totaling 10% of the Secretary’s bid in the form of a certified check or cashier’s check made out to the Secretary of HUD. A deposit need not be accompany each oral bid. If the successful bid is oral, a deposit of 10% of the Secretary’s bid must be presented before the bidding is closed. The deposit is nonrefundable. The remainder of the purchase price must be delivered within 30 days of the sale or at such other time as the Secretary may determine for good cause shown, time being of the essence. This amount, like the bid deposits, must be delivered in the form of a certified or cashier’s check. If the Secretary is the highest bidder, he need not pay the bid amount in cash. The successful bidder will pay all conveying fees, all real estate and other taxes that are due on or after the delivery date of the remainder of the payment and all other costs associated with the transfer of title. At the conclusion of the sale, the deposits of the unsuccessful bidders will be returned to them. The Secretary may grant an extension of time within which to deliver the remainder of the payment. All extension will be for 15-day increments for a fee of $500.00, paid in advance. The extension fee shall be in the form of certified or cashier’s check made payable to the Secretary of HUD. If the high bidder closes the sale prior to the expiration of any extension period, the unused portion of the extension fee shall be applied toward the amount due. If the high bidder is unable to close the sale within the required period, or within any extensions of time granted by the Secretary, the high bidder may be required to forfeit the cash deposit, or at the election of the foreclosure commissioner after consultation with the HUD representative, will be liable to HUD for any costs incurred as a result of such failure. The Commissioner may, at the direction of the HUD representative, offer the property to the second highest bidder for an amount equal to the highest price offered by that bidder. There is no right of redemption, or right of possession based upon a right of redemption, in the mortgagor or others subsequent to a foreclosure completed pursuant to the Act. Therefore, the Foreclosure Commissioner will issue a Deed to the purchaser(s) upon receipt of the entire purchase price in accordance with the terms of the sale as provided herein, HUD does not guarantee that the property will be vacant. The scheduled foreclosure sale shall be cancelled or adjourned if it is established, by documented written application of the mortgagor to the Foreclosure Commissioner no less than three (3) days before the date of sale, or otherwise, that the default or defaults upon which the foreclosure is based did not exist at the time of service of this notice of default and foreclosure sale, or all amounts due under the mortgage agreement are tendered to the Foreclosure Commissioner, in the form of a certified cashier’s check payable to the Secretary of HUD, before the public auction of the property is completed. The amount that must be paid if the mortgage is to be reinstated prior to the scheduled sale is $258,978.53 as of August 28, 2020, plus all other amounts that would be due under the mortgage agreement if payments under the deed of trust had not been accelerated, advertising costs and postage expenses incurred in giving notice, mileage by the most reasonable road distance for posting notices and for the Foreclosure Commissioner’s attendance at the sale, reasonable and customary costs incurred for title and lien record searches, the necessary out of pocket costs incurred by the Foreclosure Commissioner, and all other costs incurred in connection with the foreclosure prior to reinstatement. Tender of payment by certified or cashier’s check or application for cancellation of the foreclosure sale shall be submitted to the address of the Foreclosure Commissioner provided below. Dated: September 18, 2020 Foreclosure Commissioner Deanne R. Stodden 1430 Wynkoop Street, Suite 300 Denver, CO 80202 Telephone: (303) 623-1800 Email: foreclosure@messner.com Legal Notice No. 706850 First Publication: September 24, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF ANNUAL STOCKHOLDERS MEETING LOWER CLEAR CREEK DITCH COMPANY VIRTUAL MEETING To the Stockholders of LOWER CLEAR CREEK DITCH COMPANY You are hereby notified that the Annual Meeting of the LOWER CLEAR CREEK DITCH COMPANY will be held virtually on Thursday, November 5, 2020 at 10:00 a.m., for the purpose of electing Directors of said Company for the ensuing year, setting the annual assessment for the ensuing year, discussing availability of contract inches and the transaction of any business which may regularly come before said meeting. Registering of shares will begin at 8:45 a.m. Due to current conditions, the Annual Meeting will be held virtually this year. If you would like to attend, please contact the Ditch Company at 720-556-5842, or ditch.recording@gmail.com and a link to the meeting will be provided to you. Thank you for your understanding and we look forward to seeing you soon.
All stockholders are earnestly requested to be present at said meeting either in person or by proxy in order to obtain a quorum for the transaction of business. Dated at Thornton, Colorado this 2nd day of October, 2020. LOWER CLEAR CREEK DITCH COMPANY BY: /s/ Josh Redman Corporate Secretary Legal Notice No. 706914 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE OF ANNUAL STOCKHOLDERS MEETING COLORADO AGRICULTURAL DITCH COMPANY VIRTUAL MEETING To the Stockholders of COLORADO AGRICULTURAL DITCH COMPANY You are hereby notified that the Annual Meeting of the COLORADO AGRICULTURAL DITCH COMPANY will be held virtually on Thursday, November 5, 2020 at 9:00 a.m., for the purpose of electing Directors of said Company for the ensuing year, setting the annual assessment for the ensuing year, and the transaction of any business which may regularly come before said meeting. Registering of shares will begin at 8:45 a.m. Due to current conditions, the Annual Meeting will be held virtually this year. If you would like to attend, please contact the Ditch Company at 720-556-5842, or ditch.recording@gmail.com and a link to the meeting will be provided to you. Thank you for your understanding and we look forward to seeing you soon. All stockholders are earnestly requested to be present at said meeting either in person or by proxy in order to obtain a quorum for the transaction of business. Dated at Thornton, Colorado this 2nd day of October, 2020. COLORADO AGRICULTURAL DITCH COMPANY BY: /s/ Josh Redman Corporate Secretary Legal Notice No. 706913 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Storage Liens/Vehicle Titles Public Notice NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Stor-N-Lock Self Storage #20 Auction to be held online with StorageTreasures.com. Unit contents of the following storage unit(s) will be sold at 10AM on October 24, 2020. Sale is beingconducted to satisfy landlord’s lien in accordance with Article 21.5, Title 38m Colorado Revised Statutes 1973, as amended. Unit # 09008: Ronald Fivecoat Jr.: Unit Size: 10x30 Umbrella, buckets, totes, suitcase, boxes Legal Notice No. 706853 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 15, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice Bear Enterprise Towing has these vehicles for sale for money owed. 1) 88 GMC 7000 Dump Truck 517781 2) 99 Jeep Grand Cherokee 531165 3) 72 Dodge Motorhome 2U580894 4) 78 Dodge Motorhome 9V714-642 5) 08 Ford Expedition LA78321 Contact BJ Rodgers: 720-621-0233 Legal Notice No.: 706877 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Notice to Creditors Public Notice NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Romona Claire Bester, aka Ramona Claire Bester, Deceased Case Number: 20PR246 All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before January 25, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Linda K. Sauer, Personal Representative 1791 Red Poppy Dr. Brighton, CO 80601 Legal Notice No. 706847 First Publication: September 24, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Cody Lee Lawson, aka Cody L. Lawson, aka Cody Lawson, Deceased Case Number: 2020 PR 256 All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court
of Adams County, Colorado on or before February 8, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Arlene Lawson, Personal Representative 3720 W. 68th Avenue, No. 209 Westminster, Colorado 80030 Legal Notice No. 706895 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of CLIFFORD ROBERT NELSON, a/k/a BOB NELSON, a/k/a BOB KECKTER, Deceased Case Number: 2020PR30718 All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before February 8, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Scott Richter, Personal Representative 10011 Lowell Way Westminster, CO 80031 Legal Notice No. 706910 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE TO CREDITOR Estate of Anthony John William Short, Deceased Case Number: 2020PR240 All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before February 8, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Helen Rodenburg, Personal Representative 2236 Violet Avenue Boulder, CO 80304 Legal Notice No. 706890 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Thomas C. Morell and Catherine M. Nickle, Co-Personal Representatives 15673 Fiddlesticks Blvd. Ft. Myers, FL 33912 Legal Notice No. 706906 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Jamie Romero, aka Jamie A. Romero, aka Jamie Alfred Romero, Deceased Case Number: 2020 PR 212
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before February 1, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Michael Romero, Personal Representative 11874 Quam Drive Denver, Colorado 80233 Legal Notice No. 706860 First Publication: October 1, 2020 Last Publication: October 15, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Lemuel McGill Evans, Deceased Case Number: 20 PR 252
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before February 8, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Karen Ann Christner Personal Representative 33 Whitetail Drive New Castle, Colorado 81647 Legal Notice No. 706912 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of James Allen Schreibvogel, Sr., aka James A. Schreibvogel, Sr., aka James Schreibvogel, Sr., aka James Allen Schreibvogel, aka James A. Schreibvogel, aka James Schreibvogel, aka Jim Schreibvogel, Deceased Case Number: 2020 PR 30798
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Mildred Ilene Tuttle, aka Mildred I. Tuttle, Deceased Case Number: 2020 PR 30844
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before January 25, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. James A. Schreibvogel, Jr. Personal Representative 12161 Riverdale Road Brighton CO 80602 Legal Notice No. 706842 First Publication: September 24, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of NANCY ANN McKAY, a/k/a NANCY A. McKAY, a/k/a NANCY McKAY, Deceased Case Number: 2020PR30770 All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before February 2, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Gary McKay, Personal Representative 2108 NE 45th Street Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308 Legal Notice No. 760872 First Publication: October 1, 2020 Last Publication: October 15, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Nancy Marie Reed, aka Nancy M. Reed, aka Nancy Reed, aka Nancy Bottom, aka Nancy Marie Bottom, aka Nancy Marie Bottom Reed, aka Nancy M. Bottom Reed, Deceased Case Number: 2020PR187 All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before February 2, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Brian Anthony Kelly Personal Representative 4707 Sunridge Terrace Drive Castle Rock, CO 80109 Legal Notice No. 706870 First Publication: October 1, 2020 Last Publication: October 15, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Elizabeth Johnson Morell, a/k/a Elizabeth J. Morell, a/k/a Elizabeth Morell, Deceased Case Number: 2020PR30827 All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before February 8, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred.
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before February 12, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Daniel P. Kapsak Attorney to the Personal Representative 1610 Hover Street. Suite 203 Longmont, Colorado 80501 Legal Notice No. 706902 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Jimmie Leon Winders, aka Jimmie L. Winders, aka Jimmie Winders, aka Jim Leon Winders, aka Jim L. Winders, aka Jim Winders, Deceased Case Number: 20 PR 239
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before January 25, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Thomas Lorimor Personal Representative 1888 330th Avenue Sidney, Iowa 51652 Legal Notice No. 706855 First Publication: September 24, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel Public Notice NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Allen Bradley McCann, a/k/a Allen B. McCann, a/k/a Allen McCann, a/k/a Bradley McCann, a/k/a Brad McCann, Deceased. Case Number: 2020PR30813
All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before January 25, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Kay L. McCann, Personal Representative c/o KATZ, LOOK & ONORATO, P.C. 1120 Lincoln Street, Suite 1100 Denver, CO 80203 Legal Notice No. 706848 First Publication: September 24, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Westminster Window Public Notice NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of J ENCARNACION PIZANO ALAMILLA, Deceased Case Number 2020PR30580, Division PR
All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before January 31, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Robert J. Bruce, Esquire RJB Lawyer, LLC
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Douglas County ranked second healthiest community in America U.S. News and World Report’s rankings are based on a variety of factors BY ELLIOTT WENZLER EWENZLER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
In a report based on 84 indicators, Douglas County has been ranked the second healthiest community in the United States by U.S. News and World Report. Six other Colorado counties ranked in the top 10. Los Alamos, New Mexico, ranked first. Last year, Douglas County was ranked the No. 1 healthiest community in the country. U.S. News and World Report collaborates with Aetna Foundation to create the report. “In a year of unprecedented public health emphasis, this exceptional distinction reminds
us how well-positioned Douglas County citizens are to remain healthy and thrive,” County Commissioner Abe Laydon said in a news release from the county. The news organization looks at almost 3,000 counties and uses 84 indicators in 10 categories to make determinations. Factors include community vitality, economy, education, environment, food and nutrition, housing, infrastructure and public safety, but the most heavily weighted categories are population health and equity, according to U.S. News and World Report. Douglas County earned a score of 95.5 in the “population health” category. Life expectancy in the county is ranked at 83.7 years, which is almost six years higher than the national average. More details on the county’s ranking and various scores are available at usnews.com.
A mountain biker rides on a trail in Highlands Ranch.
FILE PHOTO BY ELLIOTT WENZLER
Public Notices Attorney to the Personal Representative 1543 Champa Street, Suite 400 Denver, CO 80202 Phone: 303.573.5498 E-Mail: bobbruce@rjblawyerllc.com Legal Notice No. 706851 First Publication: September 24, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Legal Notice No. 706862 First Publication: October 1, 2020 Last Publication: October 15, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Hoskin Farina & Kampf, P.C. Post Office Box 40 Grand Junction, Colorado 81502
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of BRENDA JO CASADY, aka BRENDA JO CASADY PISHALSKI, Deceased Case Number: 2020PR030821 All persons having claims against the above named estate are required to present them to the personal representative or to the District Court of Adams, County, Colorado on or before February 1, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Beth S. Littleton, a/k/a Beth Smith Littleton, a/k/a Beth Louise Littleton, Deceased, Case Number: 2020 PR 30843 All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before February 8, 2021, or the claims may be forever barred. Gwen Littleton, Personal Representative c/o Gregg K. Kampf
Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
By: Clerk of the Court / Deputy Clerk Legal Notice No. 706911 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Legal Notice No. 706884 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
Public Notice
Public Notice
Neal K. Dunning, Esq.
Brown Dunning Walker Fein PC Attorney to the Personal Representative 2000 S. Colorado Blvd, Tower 2, Ste 700 Denver, CO 80222
PUBLIC NOTICE
Name Changes
Public Notice of Petition for Change of Name
PUBLIC NOTICE
Public notice is given on September 22, 2020, that a Petition for a Change of Name of an adult has been filed with the Adams County Court.
Public Notice of Petition for Change of Name Public notice is given on October 1, 2020 that a Petition for a Change of Name of an adult has been filed with the Adams County Court.
The petition requests that the name of Jill LaDawn Jackson be changed to Jillian LaDawn Jackson Case No.: 20 C 1176 By:Matt, Deputy Clerk
The petition requests that the name of Elaine Suzanne Galindo be changed to Elena Alizabeth Galindo Case No.: 20 C 1280
Legal Notice No. 706899 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 22, 2020
PUBLIC NOTICE Public Notice of Petition for Change of Name Public notice is given on September 14, 2020, that a Petition for a Change of Name of an adult has been filed with the Adams County Court. The petition requests that the name of Kathryn Lee Anderson be changed to Kathryn Lee Case No.: 20 C 1145 By:Sabino E. Romano Legal Notice No. 706849 First Publication: September 24, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
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Adams County Warrants -- September 28 through October 2, 2020 Public Notice Adams County Warrants: September 29, 2020 through October 2, 2020 GENERAL FUND Supplier Name CARUSO JAMES LOUIS EARLY CHILDHOOD PARTNERSHIP OF WESTMINSTER CITY OF CINA & CINA FORENSIC CONSULTIN DENOVO VENTURES LLC G4S SECURE SOLUTIONS USA INC MAIKER HOUSING PARTNERS JP MORGAN CHASE BANK NA 193RD FRG ACCESS HOUSING ADAMS COUNTY FOUNDATION INC APEX SYSTEMS GROUP LLC APPLEONE EMPLOYMENT SERVICES ARMORED KNIGHTS INC ASBURY CO CDJR LLC AVIS RENT A CAR SYSTEM INC BC SURF & SPORT BROOMFIELD CITY AND COUNTY BUTLER SNOW LLP C & R ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS I CA SHORT COMPANY CENTURA HEALTH CENTURY LINK COLORADO POVERTY LAW PROJECT COMMERCIAL CLEANING SYSTEMS COMMUNICATION CONSTRUCTION & E ELEMENTS FIDELITY NATL TITLE COMPANY GALLS LLC GROUNDS SERVICE COMPANY GROUPE SHAREGATE INC HARDWIRED COACHING HELTON & WILLIAMSEN PC HILL’S PET NUTRITION SALES INC HRQ INC JAZOWSKI KAREN JUSTICE BENEFITS INC KELYN TECHNOLOGIES KIMLEY-HORN AND ASSOCIATES INC KNOW YOUR TEAM LLC KNUTSON JOANN LARAMIE COUNTY WYOMING
Warrant DateAmount 09/30/20 1,025.00 09/30/20 333,333.34 09/30/20 1,835,696.00 10/01/20 5,750.00 10/01/20 280.00 10/01/20 12,462.48 10/01/20 137,500.00 10/02/20 959,140.09 10/01/20 1,000.00 10/01/20 24,940.29 10/01/20 787,570.95 10/01/20 435.00 10/01/20 2,768.14 10/01/20 2,036.52 10/01/20 38,858.00 10/01/20 680.35 10/01/20 100.00 10/01/20 107,079.00 10/01/20 15,000.00 10/01/20 1,835.00 10/01/20 470.00 10/01/20 4,800.00 10/01/20 201.40 10/01/20 11,000.00 10/01/20 2,685.00 10/01/20 4,490.00 10/01/20 518.96 10/01/20 8,044.00 10/01/20 1,026.48 10/01/20 2,187.00 10/01/20 3,995.00 10/01/20 6,500.00 10/01/20 2,737.50 10/01/20 22.08 10/01/20 450.00 10/01/20 3,250.00 10/01/20 1,056.00 10/01/20 26,165.71 10/01/20 17,983.20 10/01/20 16,660.00 10/01/20 50.00 10/01/20 6.50
LEXIS NEXIS MATTHEW BENDER MEI TOTAL ELEVATOR SOLUTIONS MILE HIGH YOUTH CORPS MWI VETERINARY SUPPLY CO NORTHGLENN AMBULANCE ORACLE AMERICA INC OUTDOOR PROMOTIONS OF COLORADO PRUDENTIAL OVERALL SUPPLY PUSH PEDAL PULL INC ROADRUNNER PHARMACY INCORPORAT ROWAN, BROOKE ROWAN, CLAIRE SANITY SOLUTIONS INC SATELLITE SHELTERS INC SENIOR HUB THE SENIORS RESOURCE CENTER INC SHERMAN & HOWARD LLC SHRED IT USA LLC STRASBURG SCHOOL DIST 31-J SUMMIT FOOD SERVICE LLC T&G PECOS LLC TOM RICHARDSON LLC TRI COUNTY HEALTH DEPT TRI COUNTY HEALTH DEPT TRI COUNTY HEALTH DEPT TYGRETT DEBRA R UNITED POWER (UNION REA) UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE UTILITY NOTIFICATION CENTER OF VERIZON WIRELESS WELLS FARGO BANK WESTAR REAL PROPERTY SERVICES ZAMORA, ALEXANDRA ZAYO GROUP HOLDINGS INC ZOE TRAINING & CONSULTING ZOETIS US LLC GOVERNMENT FINANCE OFFICERS AS U S POSTMASTER Fund Total
10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/02/20 10/02/20
2,180.99 2,358.71 27,000.00 1,611.53 241.50 7,146.42 5,950.00 55.28 1,526.65 442.32 57.00 100.00 1,200.00 869.00 134,347.50 149,272.00 4,356.25 548.40 135,832.00 70,961.58 1,800.00 220.00 5,600.00 6,451.43 116,996.90 312.00 182.37 66.35 289.06 1,929.80 2,500.00 13,988.09 26.34 2,567.50 2,500.00 327.40 1,775.00 11,761.34 5,097,139.70
GOLF COURSE ENTERPRISE FUND PROFESSIONAL RECREATION MGMT I ACUITY SPECIALTY PRODUCTS INC AGFINITY INC UNITED POWER (UNION REA) UNITED POWER (UNION REA) UNITED POWER (UNION REA)
10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20
9,000.00 308.29 603.10 39.93 2,631.02 4,234.91
UNITED POWER (UNION REA) UNITED POWER (UNION REA) UNITED POWER (UNION REA) UNITED POWER (UNION REA) Fund Total
10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20
4,681.37 1,354.92 85.65 166.83 23,106.02
EQUIPMENT SERVICE FUND ASBURY CO CDJR LLC BEARCOM WIRELESS WORLDWIDE PRECISE MRM LLC Fund Total
10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20
22,042.00 32,934.92 5,976.00 60,952.92
STORMWATER UTILITY FUND URBAN DRAINAGE & FLOOD CONTROL URBAN DRAINAGE & FLOOD CONTROL Fund Total
09/30/20 09/30/20
25,000.00 75,000.00 100,000.00
ROAD & BRIDGE FUND UMB BANK NA EST INC JMJ LLC MARTIN MARTIN CONSULTING ENGIN Fund Total
10/01/20 2,000,000.00 10/01/20 43,287.90 10/01/20 1,230.00 10/01/20 42,772.50 2,087,290.40
INSURANCE FUND TALX CORPORATION UNITED HEALTH CARE INSURANCE C Fund Total
10/01/20 1,861.25 10/01/20 138,457.92 140,319.17
OPEN SPACE PROJECTS FUND COLOCO INCORPORATED Fund Total
10/01/20
20,331.00 20,331.00
COMMUNITY DEV BLOCK GRANT FUND DLT ENTERPRISES LLC DRUNKEN MONKEYS LLC BIG CHOICE BREWING LLC PARTY CLOZ & BRIDRES DREAMS TINY TOTS AND TUMBLERS LLC TURN II BINGO INC Fund Total
10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20
4,708.00 2,780.00 4,745.50 1,400.00 9,431.00 4,131.25 27,195.75
HEAD START FUND CENTURY LINK CENTURY LINK CENTURYLINK CESCO LINGUISTIC SERVICE INC DFA DAIRY BRANDS CORPORATE LLC L & N SUPPLY COMPANY INC SYSCO DENVER Fund Total
10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20
113.08 443.64 11.38 401.28 1,444.75 1,703.80 5,085.91 9,203.84
COLORADO AIR & SPACE PORT AURORA WATER CENTURYLINK DISH NETWORK JONES JAMES JVIATION INC MORTENSON ROBIN ROGGEN FARMERS ELEVATOR ASSN XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY Fund Total
10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20
5,776.08 361.91 154.04 1,827.96 4,896.00 348.25 42.00 15.80 74.22 207.92 1,552.26 58.58 84.38 88.55 143.03 447.44 1,355.12 36.94 290.42 17,760.90
10/01/20 10/01/20 10/01/20
1,760.00 1,655.00 176.00 3,591.00
SHERIFF PAYABLES CLERK OF THE COUNTY COURT COLO DEPT OF HUMAN SERVICES COLO JUDICIAL DEPT Fund Total GRAND TOTAL
7,586,890.70
Legal Notice No.: 706920 First Publication: October 8, 2020 Last Publication: October 8, 2020 Publisher: Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
NTS WW Legals 10.8.20 * 6
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October 8, 2020
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