Parker Chronicle 0507

Page 1

May 7, 2021

FREE

DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO

A publication of

ParkerChronicle.net

INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 16 | SPORTS: PAGE 21

VOLUME 19 | ISSUE 23

RTD vows to listen to community Representatives say they will work to improve service BY ELLIOTT WENZLER EWENZLER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

The acquisition is the first for NTLN, a nascent nonprofit that seeks to leverage national foundation funding to buy and bolster local newspapers threatened by faltering business models and the encroachment of hedge funds and corporate conglomerates. The Colorado Sun, a statewide news outlet founded and run by former Denver Post journalists, will oversee daily operations at Colorado Community Media.

Parker Town Council members aired grievances in their first meeting with the town’s newly elected RTD director, who was joined by a colleague in promising to work on improving service to the town. Julien Bouquet, the director who represents Parker and the rest of District G on the RTD board, spoke to councilmembers in an April 26 work session about where RTD stands with the pandemic and what it is focusing on moving forward. Bouquet said there is a chance that Route P, a bus line taking residents from Parker to downtown Denver, will return in September. The route was suspended last year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. “We don’t know how many people are often going to be actually going to the office, that’s why it has a delay of potentially resuming in September based on where the studies are and the data that they’re finding,” Bouquet said. Route 483, which runs between the Lincoln Light Rail station and the Nine Mile Light Rail Station in Aurora, via Lincoln Avenue and Parker Road, was approved to return in June. The next step for RTD in the town is to host listening sessions within the community, Bouquet said. “I believe that if demand is heard enough, that’s something I can fight for on the board,” Bouquet said. Fellow RTD board member Doug

SEE SOLD, P2

SEE RTD, P7

Ann Healey, former co-owner of Colorado Community Media, speaks during a meeting announcing the sale of the print and digital news company. At right, former publisher and co-owner Jerry Healey and reporter Thelma Grimes listen. PHOTO BY JOHN LEYBA/SPECIAL TO THE COLORADO SUN

‘Tell stories that matter:’ Colorado Community Media sold to news entity Colorado Sun, national foundation to take the reins of two dozen Denver-area newspapers BY DAVID GILBERT DGILBERT@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Colorado Community Media, the company that produces two dozen newspapers around the Denver-ar-

ea suburbs — including the Parker Chronicle — and two shoppers has been acquired by a local and national partnership with the goal of building a sustainable business model for local news, its ownership announced on May 3. Jerry and Ann Healey, the couple who built the company over the past decade, sold the network of papers that now spans eight counties and dozens of communities to a joint partnership between the National Trust for Local News, or NTLN, and The Colorado Sun.

SQUEEZE PLAY ON APPLES

Apple cider lovers enjoy sampling season P14

PREP SPORTS IN ACTION Soccer, field hockey fill the fields P21


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