CASPER THE FRIENDLY REPUBLICAN
Walker Stapleton takes the truth test
BS OR NOT?
POLITICS | PG 2
LEFT UNEDITED | PG 5
ZINK HAS THE ELEMENTS
Cuisine is the canvass for DTC “artist”
Candidate Stockham wins friends in Demheavy CD1
S O U T H
SPOTLIGHT ON BUSINESS | PG 8
M E T R O
VOLUME 36 • NUMBER 10 • JANUARY 25, 2018
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The Stock Show was fun for all ages Conifer ranch owner Sarah Grayson Bauer, a Cherry Creek High School graduate, and her son Max were on hand at the National Western Stock Show to watch one of their ranch hands, Coy Zang, participate in the Coors bull-riding event. This year’s stock show broke attendance records. See more on pages 13-14. Photo by Stefan Krusze
Bull reflects on tenure and retirement plans Cherry Creek Schools’ superintendent to step down in June
Ask Harry Bull about his decision to retire at the end
of this schoolyear and he tells an anecdote about the school district retirement parties he has attended over the years. “The mic gets handed to the person who’s retiring,” said the superintendent of Cherry Creek Schools. “The first thing out of the person’s mouth is an apology to their children for having spent
more time on other people’s children than their own children—I said to myself, if I were ever blessed to have a family, I wasn’t going to do that.” Bull announced this month he would retire at the end of June after more than three decades working for the district as a teacher, dean, principal, administrator and finally superintendent since 2013. The reasons for his exit are of a personal nature, he said. “My kids are growing up fast and
I’ve been realizing for a time that there’s just chunks of their lives I’m missing,” Bull explained. “It’s something that I’ve been attentive to, but there’s allure of this office. It’s kind of the sirens from the cliffs that pulls you in.” Bull’s stress and health were the other factors that prompted the superintendent’s decision to step down from the helm of a district that boasts 55,000 students and 8,000 employees. “I don’t know if it’s my inability to do this job differently or it’s just the job, but you live in this world of constant stress, and that stress is taking a toll on me personally,” said Bull, who turns 61 in March. “When I
was 45-50, my body probably wore stress better. As I’ve gotten older, my body doesn’t wear it as well” When Bull steps down this summer, it will mark the end of nearly four decades as an educator and leader in the K-12 system, including his work prior to joining Cherry Creek in 1984. During his career, Bull has been named Superintendent of The Year and School Library Journal’s Administrator of the Year, among a litany of other professional designations. In 2017, Bull was named The Villager’s Man of the Year. In 2013, Bull convened more than 70 of Colorado’s Continued on page 2