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Redstone February / March 25

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RESIDENT / OCCUPANT PRSRT STD ECRWSS US POSTAGE PAID LYONS, CO PERMIT No 2053

Redstone stands with President Zelensky and the people in Ukraine VOLUME 25, NUMBER 1

LYONS, COLOR ADO

$.50

FEBRUARY 14 / MARCH 13, 2025

B •R •I •E •F •S BOCO Brief title County Commissioners meet in Lyons LYONS – text

LYONS – Residents are invitBrief ed to title join the Boulder County LYONS – text in Lyons for a Commissioners Town Hall meeting to discuss wildfire mitigation in the county, on Feb. 20 at 5:30 p.m. at Lyons Town Hall, 432 Fifth Ave. Wildfire Mitigation Manager Jim Webster will present followed by a question and answer session with the board about this and other topics. To request an Americans with Disability Act (ADA) accommodation, please email the ADA Coordinator at ADA@bouldercounty. gov or call 303-441-1386. Protecting home from wildfire

LYONS – Living in the wildland-urban interface, as we do in Colorado, where homes and other structures intermingle with wildland vegetation, is a risk of being affected by wildfire. Planning ahead and taking action can increase the likelihood your home survives when a wildfire occurs. Learn more from the Colorado State Forest Service on how to protect your home better and create defensible space. Also contact the Lyons Regional Fire District to get more information on fire mitigation at their website, lyonsfire.org. Join Mayor Hollie Rogin for Mondays meet and greet

LYONS – Mondays with the Mayor will continue on the second and fourth Monday of each month, from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Moxie Mercantile, 442 High St. in Lyons. Join Mayor Hollie Rogin for her next Monday with the Mayor. Lyons Community Theater presents Almost Maine

LYONS – Lyons Community Theater will offer dinner theater performances of Almost Maine at Oskar Blues Grill and Brew at 303 Main St. in Lyons, on Friday, February 14 and Saturday, February 15, as well as a matinee performance on Sunday, February 16 for those who wish to enjoy the play without a meal. For tickets and more information, visit the Lyons CommuniContinue Briefs on Page 5

issuu.com/sdcmc Like us on Facebook I •N •D •E •X LYONS MAYOR’S CORNER OPTIONS CONTRAST LOOKING UP INSIGHT CONSENSUS REDSTONE 25 YEARS TALK OF THE TOWN CENTER WHAT’S COOKIN’ CHOICES

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Edie is all smiles at Lyons Valley Preschool, proudly showing off her handmade Valentine! February is the sweetest season—a time to celebrate love, friendship, gratitude, and the warmth of our community. CATHY RIVERS Lyons Comp Plan that says Lyons Town Board discusses which parcels will against environmentally sensitive areas be protected. Loukenen A is (IMO) undevelopable: a mere go into the IGA planning area and other issues should 20’ wide access – far, far below By Susan de Castro Redstone Review Editor

LYONS – At a recent meeting, the Lyons Town Board spent a few hours discussing and deciding, to some extent, what properties surrounding the town would be a good fit to include in the proposed Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) with Boulder County. The IGA is a document which, after it gets approval from the Boulder County Commissioners and the Lyons Board of Trustees, would define certain properties around Lyons’ borders to be included in the IGA planning area. This gives the town more control over how the property is used. The properties that the town is looking at are currently in the county and if the town decides to include them in the IGA planning area, they would need the approval of the county and the land owner to become part of

the IGA planning area. The procedure is complicated and it has many layers. There are many reasons why either the land owner or the town would want these parcels to be in the planning area. Some of the land owners want the ability to annex their properties and some want their properties to remain as wild preservation. Some properties are seen as sensitive ecological properties to be permanently protected. Mayor Hollie Rogin pointed out that in some cases the land in the planning area might be used for a park or to keep it from being sprayed with noxious chemicals by the county, or for other means of preservation. In other cases, the land owner might want to develop the land and put in housing. For the most part the board chose to follow the recommendation of the IGA Task Force; this is the group that evaluated each of the parcels and offered a detailed recommendation to the board.

The board looked at eight parcels and considered the pros and cons of each one. They started with the Harkalis parcel, which is a very small parcel, and decided by a 4 to 3 vote to include it in the IGA planning area. This is also known as the Bee Hive property. The Loukonen property is one of the largest properties at 96 acres and possibly the most controversial. The property has three parts which the board labeled A, B and C. The board began discussing the aspects of each part separately, but then Town Administrator, Victoria Simonsen, told the board that it was an all or nothing deal with the Loukonen’s, which was a surprise to the board. According to Trustee Greg Lowell, “Through all the IGA talk they have always been treated as three separate parcels. Loukenen C is especially controversial as Boulder City shows it as ‘critical wildlife habitat’ and should not be developed. Doing so would go

town standards and only one way in. Pretty sure fire dept would never allow. Loukenen B is the stone yard sloping up from Hwy. 36. Has potential but tough to run water and sewer.” The trustees voted 5 to 2 to list it in the group to be included in the IGA planning area. Trustees Lowell and Mark Browning dissented. The board voted by a wide margin to include the Blue Mountain and Hawkins parcels into the IGA planning area. Then the board switched gears and voted not to include the Connor (all 7 voted no) and the Carpenter (4 to 3 vote) parcels into the IGA planning area. Next they removed the Walters parcel from the list to be considered and returned it to Rural Preservation designation. The last item was the Boone property, which has some buildable and some not buildable areas. The board did vote 4 to Continue Town Board on Page 14


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