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APRIL 27, 2017
ADVENTURES JEFFERSON COUNTY, COLORADO
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SCHOOL SAFETY:
First responders train for the worst at former Jeffco school P2
SEARCH FOR UNDERSTANDING: Twice in a recent two-month span, Denver-area women killed their children, then themselves. In a special report, one father shares the heartbreak of losing his family, and experts give insight into the reasons tragedies like these happen. P 9-12 Your newspaper is made possible by advertisers like this one, who support our efforts to keep you connected to your community! Knight Exteriors Roofing • Siding • Gutters
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ALL RIGHT ARVADA: The state of the city is strong as mayor lists a healthy economy and neighborhood improvements P5
INSIDE
VOICES: PAGE 14 | LIFE: PAGE 25 | CALENDAR: PAGE 31 | SPORTS: PAGE 33
ArvadaPress.com
VOLUME 12 | ISSUE 48
2 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
School safety training facility opens in Jeffco Center will help police train for active-shooter situations BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
On the day before the 18-year anniversary of the Columbine High School shooting, Jefferson County Public Schools dedicated a training facility where law enforcement agencies and other first responders can prepare for active shooter situations, learn crisis prevention techniques in a real-school environment and use a simulator that offers interactive training for a variety of school threat scenarios. The Frank DeAngelis Center for Community Safety, named after former Columbine High Principal Frank DeAngelis, is located at the Martensen Elementary School building, 6625 45th Place in Wheat Ridge. Martensen opened in 1954 and closed to students in 2011. The facility now serves Jeffco Public Schools safety and security staff, local police and fire departments, other school district security departments, and has also hosted training for the Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms and the FBI. Seventeen agencies have booked 157 days of training at the facility for the 2016-17 school year. “The dedication is a reminder of the importance of continuous work towards school safety and security,” said Diana Wilson, chief communications officer for Jeffco Schools. “We all want to keep our kids safe, but we also know we can’t do that alone as a school district.” On April 20, 1999, 12 students and one teacher died and 20 were injured when two teens went on a shooting spree at Columbine High School in Littleton. At the time, the crime was the worst school shooting in U.S. history. The training facility is a result of partnerships with the school district, Jefferson County Sheriff ’s Office and individual police departments in Jefferson County. “This is a one-of-a-kind facility in the United States,” said Steve Bell,
Frank DeAngelis, former Columbine High School principal, said he thinks every day about the students who were killed at the school on April 20, 1999. PHOTOS BY SHANNA FORTIER chief operating officer of Jeffco Schools. “If there’s one out there that’s something like this, we can’t find it.” The training facility is the vision of John McDonald, executive director of safety, security and emergency planning for Jeffco Schools. “Between 1982 and 2010, our school district has had three school shootings,” McDonald said. “Between 1999 and 2016, the state of Colorado has had seven school shootings. Too many, too much, no more. This facility offers us a place to train. This facility provides a different kind of education. This is where tactics are learned, strategies discussed and egos are checked at this door.” In 2006, Emily Keyes was killed at Platte Canyon High School during a hostage situation. To honor her memory, the training room at Martensen was named the Emily Keyes, I Love You Guys training room. “I love you guys,” was the text she sent her parents minutes before she died. McDonald said that when he started thinking about the community and resiliency that has surrounded Jeffco over the years, he thought of DeAngelis.
You’re Invited to a
COLORADO SCHOOL SHOOTINGS 1982: Deer Creek Middle School, Jeffco Public Schools 1999: Columbine High School, Jeffco Public Schools 2002: Community College of Aurora 2006: Platte Canyon High School, Bailey 2007: Youth with a Mission Christian Center, Arvada 2010: Deer Creek Middle School, Jeffco Public Schools Wheat Ridge Police Chief Dan Brennan said the new training center fills a void that was left in the community when Martensen Elementary closed.
2013: Arapahoe High School, Littleton Public Schools 2016: East High School, Pueblo In total, 19 dead and 29 wounded.
“Frank has been one of my heroes and he is also a mentor and friend,” McDonald said. “I’ve seen him in the middle of crisis and I’ve seen the grief and burden he carries — and the strength that he carries it with.” DeAngelis represents hope, McDonald said, and so does the training
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facility. So it was only natural to name it after him. “This building is a reminder of all those lives lost,” McDonald said, “and all those lives we will save in the future.”
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7April 27, 2017
ARVADA NEWS IN A HURRY Arvada High’s spring musical Arvada High School Lights Out Theater Company will their spring musical “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” on April 20, 21 and 22 at 7 p.m. Tickets are $10 for adults; and $8 for seniors and students. Tickets can be purchased at the door or online — see ArvadaHighSchool.org for more information and a link for tickets. The Tony Award winning “25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” by William Finn and Rachel Sheinkin is about a bunch of quirky adolescent students who are competing to win their regional spelling bee and about the adults
who support them. DAR donates books On April 5, Marcy Kimminau, Joni Lewis and Linda Wyman from the Golden-based Mount Lookout Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) donated four volumes to the Arvada Family History Center: the three volume reference, “America’s Women in the Revolutionary Era 1760-1790: A History Through Bibliography” and “Pioneers of the San Juan Country,” a genealogical reference for those researching ancestors from southwest Colorado. These four volumes will be avail-
able for review by the community at the Arvada Family History Center, a public resource operated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and available for the entire community. The center is located at the rear of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, 7080 Independence St., Arvada, and is open on Tuesdays 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Thursdays 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.; and Saturdays 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. RRCC receives award The Jefferson Economic Development Corporation honored Red Rocks Community College with
the Genesis Award for “Economic Developer of the Year” for the Arvada Campus expansion at their 24th annual Industry Appreciation Awards breakfast last month. This award honors an organization that has significantly contributed to sustained economic vitality in Jefferson County through creative leadership, innovation, facilitations, and collaboration both within and outside of Jefferson County. RRCC was nominated by the City of Lakewood and the Arvada Economic Development Association. The college was the recipient of the same award in 2015.
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It’s no surprise that the number of listings rate. Send me an email request and I’ll send “for sale by owner” is at a record low in our you a free RPR report on your home. (Don’t current real estate market. To some readers, be shy about requesting it — it’s quick and that may sound counterintuitive — why pay a free for me to create and send it to you.) The second valuation tool, listing commission when it’s so easy to sell a home? But this is REAL ESTATE which any member of our MLS TODAY can access — not just Realtors — precisely when you need profesis called Realist. When I’m presional representation the most. paring for a listing appointment, I When it’s “this easy” to sell a pull a valuation on both RPR and home, you still need to price a Realist, and often they are close home just right and then be to each other — and far from the prepared to handle tons of Zestimate! I’d be happy to email showings and plenty of offers. you both reports, so you can Sorry to say it, but you’re not well compare them to Zillow’s valuaequipped to handle these tasks! tion of your own house. Let’s consider them one at a The third document I create in time. Pricing your home “just By JIM SMITH, preparation for a listing appointright” is not so easy. Maybe ® Realtor ment is a spreadsheet of compayou give credence to Zillow’s “Zestimate” of your home’s value, but no rable sales near the subject property, using Realtor does. Zestimates deserve even less an MLS program called Virtual Office. Below is an example of that spreadsheet credence than the valuations of county assessors. Like you, Zillow doesn’t have access to which I created for an actual listing. I’ve obscured the addresses of the comps, but you the more accurate valuation tools we use. If your agent is a member of a Realtor can see they’re all townhouses. They’re in the association, he or she has access to RPR, which stands for Realtor Property Resource. This valuation tool is only available to listing agents who are Realtors. Except for really unique properties with hardly any comparable sales to cite, I’ve found RPR to be very accu-
same complex as the 2-bedroom, 2-bath townhouse with 1,172 square feet, plus an unfinished basement, that I listed. Except for having a finished basement, the comp I highlighted is identical. It was listed for $230,000 and sold in 5 days for $241,700. The RPR report for my listing came in at $237,000 and the Realist report came in at $233,000. What would you have listed it for? I listed it for $235,000. Despite a lot of wear & tear from being a rental (especially the carpets), and despite a furnace that really needed replacing, we closed on it this week for more than the listing price — something we wouldn’t have accomplished by listing it for more. Now let me address the “tons of showings” and “plenty of offers.” When listing without an agent, the seller is really challenged on both counts. One of the most important services you receive from a listing agent is the handling of showings, hopefully by a showing service like Showing Time or Centralized Showing Service. (I prefer CSS.) You can’t hire these services yourself, so how are you going to handle all those show-
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ing requests — although you won’t get as many by not listing it on the MLS? Worse than the showing requests is the flood of solicitations you will get from agents whose primary source of business is prospecting “by owner” listings. There’s only one known cure for this annoyance, since the no-call list doesn’t apply when you advertise your home for sale, and that is to list your home with one of them (or us). Only then will the calls stop! Back to the value of a showing service. They screen each caller to make sure they are licensed. After calling you to approve the showing (unless you’ve said that’s not necessary), they give the lockbox code and showing instructions to the showing agent, along with your own detailed instructions such as “remove shoes or use booties” or “dog in garage—don’t enter.” Later, the showing service sends multiple email requests for feedback to each agent and forwards responses to your agent and/or you immediately. You need that! Okay, you’ve listed your home “by owner,” and you have several agents submitting offers. You’re the only party to your transaction
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April 27, 2017A
Arvada ties up loose ends of 2017 budget Delta Station in NW Arvada included in final project approvals BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
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A few loose ends in the city of Arvada’s 2017 budget were tied up at the April 17 city council meeting. With a 6-0 vote, city council approved carryovers and the funding of one-time projects. At the end of 2016, several projects/ programs had been approved but not yet completed. To complete them, funds needed to be carried over from the 2016 budget to the 2017 budget, said Bryan Archer, director of finance for the City of Arvada. These items total $9.9 million. Carryovers include $20,000 set aside for the still-delayed opening celebration of the RTD G-Line and $100,000 for legal and professional fees related to the Olde Town Transit Hub. The police department also requested to carry over $164,136 into 2017 for various projects and specialty orders that are still in process: the completion of the fencing around the patrol cars parking lot, the intergovernmental agreement with the State of Colorado for document services, purchase of ballistic equipment for SWAT and completion of the Colorado Bureau of Investigation office reconfiguration. They will all be completed in 2017.
The water and wastewater departments also requested to carry over more than $5 million for various projects still in progress. Additionally, during the 2017-2018 budget process, city staff had identified and presented to city council a group of one-time items that, if the city had additional funds at the end of 2016, would be presented for approval at this time. This list, totaling $9.5 million, was reviewed again during the council’s January retreat. Three million dollars to pay for the Arvada Police Delta Station topped the list. The Delta Station will be built in Northwest Arvada — a sector that covers West 96th to West 72nd avenues, and Kipling Avenue to the mouth of Coal Creek Canyon. At a March 27 city council workshop, Arvada Police Chief Don Wick told council the department is prepared to pursue land acquisition and put out a bid out for a contractor as soon as possible. The station would ideally take eight months to build, with construction starting this summer for an operational station in 2018. Another $3 million was also approved for street maintenance. A new fund for street maintenance was also added to the 2017 budget. Archer pointed out that these are not new dollars, but are dollars from the general fund now specified for street maintenance expenditures. The finance department will begine working on the 2018 budget this summer.
Man sentenced in 80th Ave. vehicular homicide STAFF REPORT
Jose Sandoval-Cruz, 25, was sentenced April 21 to 16 years in prison for the vehicular homicide death of 40-year-old Monica Zapata in February 2016. Sandoval-Cruz was speeding southbound on Sheridan Boulevard when he ran the red light at 80th Avenue and collided with Zapata’s car. Zapata was traveling westbound on 80th through the intersection on a green light. Sandoval-Cruz was traveling 55 miles per hour in a 40 mph zone. Upon collision, Sandoval-Cruz and his two passengers got out of their car and fled on foot. They were arrested two hours later.
Zapata died from her injuries. Her 15-year-old daughter, who was a passenger, was injured. According to the district attorney’s office, Sandoval-Cruz had a blood alcohol over three times the legal limit. A Jefferson County jury found him guilty of vehicular homicide Sandoval— DUI; vehicular Cruz homicide — reckless; leaving the scene of an accident with death; DUI; reckless driving; careless driving with injury; and driving without a license.
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7April 27, 2017
A look at what Arvada has done and is doing
State of the city
BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Arvada Mayor Marc Williams gave the State of the City address at early morning April 21. Some highlights included 977 building permits issues in 2016; the opening of the new RTD parking hub in Olde Town Arvada; and the Kipling underpass for pedestrian use. Here’s a look at what Arvada has down over the past year and plans to do before the year’s end. 2016 Financials Total revenues: $90 million, up 3.5 percent over 2015 One time funds: $13.5 million Issued 977 total building permits Unemployment ended December at 2.5 percent New commercial capital investment: $108 million Industrial vacancy ended December at 1.8 percent Net 50 new businesses Over 450 new jobs
Infrastructure Kipling underpass opened for pedestrian use City received $2.5 million in grants Projects with the Gross Reservoir and Hackberry Water Tank are underway
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Arvada Press 5
A worker holds a stop sign at Olde Wadsworth Boulevard as a commuter train passes over the tracks through Olde Town Arvada . The contractor for the G-Line, Denver Transit Partners, has kept the flaggers on duty for months as testing and software delays have plagued RTD’s rollout of the new light rail line. KEVIN M. SMITH/FOR THE ARVADA PRESS
Growth and Economic Development Parking hub in Olde Town Arvada opened FTD G-Line opening delayed Hilton Garden Inn, Arvada’s first hotel opened Solana, a 352-unit luxury apartment complex in Olde Town will open this year Shops at Ralston Creek North are in building phase Harkins Theaters will remodel Olde Town movie theater Arvada Marketplace under renovations New businesses opened including GB Fish and Chips, Homegrown Tap and Dough, New Image Brewing, Sock, Klein’s Beer Hall, Hunter Bay Coffee Roasters and the Butchery Denver Beer Co. will open in Olde Town this summer Sprouts will open in June King Soopers in Candelles will open by early 2018
Community neighbors City launches first day of service 177 block parties were held 120 neighborhood movie nights were held City Hall 101 had 40 graduates Clear Creek Valley Park opened in March Arvada’s section of the Rocky Mountain Greenway Trail was completed Majestic View Nature Center is celebrating its 15 year anniversary Stenger Sports Complex is getting an irrigation upgrade The Fitzmorris Pool is under construction West Woods Golf Course is undergoing expansion and will open in December Delta Sector police substation will be built
6 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
Man gets 32 years prison for stabbing of elderly Arvada woman STAFF REPORT
Daniel Dean Hollingsworth, 55, was sentences to 32 years in prison by Jefferson County Court April 18 for his role in the push-in robbery and stabbing of a 78-year-old Arvada woman. The victims name is being withheld by the district attorney’s office to protect her privacy rights. On the day his jury trial was scheduled to start, April 17, Hollingsworth entered guilty pleas to three felony counts. He pleaded to two counts of First Degree Burglary and one count of Aggravated Robbery. Each is a class 3 felony. He has 12 prior felony convictions. Hollingsworth is one of four people charged in the planning and execution of the robbery of the elderly woman. Codefendant Ryan Thomas Kennedy, 24, was the person who knocked on her front just before 5 a.m. on June 19, 2016. According to the district attorney’s office, Kennedy held up a newspaper as he knocked. Looking out, she thought he was the paper boy. When she opened the door, Kennedy pushed in and stabbed her in the chest. She was able to push past him and run next door, to her sister’s house. Kennedy plundered
her house, finding and taking only an empty cash box and some documents. Kennedy pleaded guilty to First Degree Assault of an At-Risk Adult and Robbery of an At-Risk Person on Feb. 1. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison on Hollingsworth March 24. According to the district attorney’s office, Hollingsworth and his codefendants learned through the elderly woman’s niece that she had won lottery money. This was the second time the woman had won lottery money and Kennedy the second time she had been burglarized for her winnings. She had moved to this address within a year of the first burglary. Another codefendant Delilah Dawn Albin, 42, was sentenced to 16 years in prison for her role in the robbery and stabbing. She pleaded guilty to First Degree Burglary on Feb. 13. The fourth defendant, Zacharie Creart-Duling, pleaded guilty to First Degree Burglary on January 9. He is scheduled to be sentenced on May 8.
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City strikes deal with theater BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
A resolution between the City of Arvada and Harkins Theatres ensures that the project to renovate the movie theater at 5550 Olde Wadsworth Blvd. in Arvada moves forward. Harkins Theatres announced April 5 the acquisition of Landmark Theater’s Olde Town 14 movie theater in Arvada. The company announced plans to upgrade and remodel the theatre; however, Harkin’s Theatres told the city there was a $500,000 gap needed to be filled in order to allow the purchase deal to move forward. To fill that gap, Harkins Theatre requested that the City of Arvada provide financial assistance. Council voted 6-0, April 17 to approve the agreement. Councilman John Marriot was absent. The specific agreement is for the city, after granting Harkins the certificate of occupancy for the renovated theater, to refund 100 percent of the building use tax and admissions tax (after the first $100,000 is collected) for a period not to exceed eight years or $500,000 is remitted back to Harkins Theatres, whichever comes first. Arvada City Manager Mark Devon called this a development incentive and said that his understanding was that if the city of Arvada did
not agree to the deal, then Harkins Theatre would not move forward with renovatons and reopening of the theater. Harkins Theatres plans to spend between $10 and $11 million to remodel the building, according to Mike Bowers, president of Harkins Theatres. Renovations will include plush, leather reclining seats in all auditoriums; reserved seating in all auditoriums; in-lobby bar featuring cocktails, wine and beer, including local craft favorites; state-of-the-art laser projection and digital sound; new luxury finishes throughout the theatre; and wall-to-wall and curved screens. The theater renovations will also boast a gourmet concession stand with a large menu including hot food selections such as Nathan’s Famous mini corn dogs, White Castle cheeseburgers, and Oreo churros. Bowers said he hopes to start the remodel in the coming weeks and have the theater open by the holiday season. The theater is currently closed. “I am thrilled that a company of your quality is coming in and making the investment in our property,” said Arvada Mayor Mark Williams at the April 17 meeting. “We’re pleased that in addition to your decision to come to our community, you’re making a decision to make quality investments.”
JEFFCO NEWS IN A HURRY Drug Take-Back Day The Jefferson County Sheriff ’s Office is hosting a drug take-back day from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. April 29 at three locations. The three locations are: The sheriff ’s office headquarters, 200 Jefferson County Parkway in Golden Conifer High School, 10441 County Road 73 in Conifer Dakota Ridge High School, west parking lot, 13399 W. Coal Mine Ave. in Littleton Drug take-back days offer residents an opportunity to safely and anonymously dispose of expired, unwanted or unused pharmaceuticals and other medications. Prescription and over-the-counter solid dosage medications, such as tablets and capsules are accepted. Items not accepted are intravenous solutions, injectables, needles, oxygen containers, marijuana and illicit substances such as methamphetamine. Prescription medication should be removed from original containers and placed in plastic or Ziploc type bags prior to drop off. For more information, contact the sheriff ’s office at 303-279-6511. Anybody who is unable to participate in Drug Take-Back Day can always drop off unwanted, unused and expired household medications, such as prescriptions and over-the-counter drugs, to the MedReturn Drug Collection Unit anytime of the year between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at the Jefferson Center for Mental Health, 9485 West Colfax Ave. To learn more, call 303-432-5925.
Ladies Only Sample Tour The Ladies Only Sample Tour (LOST) takes place from 4-8 p.m. May 4 at various shopping districts in Arvada, Golden and Littleton. Bracelets cost $12.50 per person and provide access to receive free samples, treats and beverages from participating businesses. To learn more, visit www.ladiesonlysampletour.com or call 303-7979507. Spring Gear Sale Colorado Mountain Club’s Spring Gear Sale takes place from 6-8 p.m. May 5 at the American Mountaineering Center, 710 10th St., in Golden. Attendees will find deals on gently used outdoor gear. Credit cards and cash transactions accepted. The event is free to attend and open to the public. Ten percent of the proceeds from sales will benefit the Colorado Mountain Club. To learn more about the event or the club, visit www.cmc.org. The Mendelssohn Trio West Side Live! Presents is featuring a performance of The Mendelssohn Trio at 7 p.m. May 6 at the Jefferson Unitarian Church, 14350 W. 32nd Ave., in Golden. The Mendelssohn Trio consists of Erik Peterson on violin, Barbara Thiem on cello and Theodor Lichtmann on piano. Tickets cost $17 per person. Tickets are available at the Jefferson Unitarian Church’s office, in the commons area on Sundays or online at www.westsidelivepresents.org.
Arvada Press 7
7April 27, 2017
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8 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
Jeffco BOE prepares to give final budget direction BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
A new timeline has been set for the Jefferson County Public Schools 2017-18 budget, with final direction being presented to staff May 4 and budget adoption on June 1. The original timeline, which had budget adoption on May 4, was revised with the anticipation of more state funding, said Kathleen Askelson, chief financial officer for Jeffco Schools. Discussion on the 2017/2018 budget began in October with additional discussions at board meetings each month since. In a board meeting discussion on March 23, the board directed staff to start building the budget with a conservative estimate of $4 million in new state funds and $19.8 million in increased compensation. However, the Colorado School Finance Act — released April 19, the day before the Jeffco board was to give final direction to staff — indicated a 2.8 percent inflation and $48 million increase of the negative factor. Askelson said this
IF YOU GO
ALTERNATIVE OPTIONS TO CLASSROOM ADDITIONS Postpone 6-8 migration Move only Rooney Ranch Elementary School sixth graders to Dunstan Hard boundary adjustments to shift student population into schools with capacity Eliminate/limit choice enrollment options will give Jeffco an additional $8 million. Because of this, she recommended to the board at their April 20 meeting that they push budget adoption back one month and rework the numbers. Reworking includes bringing revue from state funding from $4 million to $12 million and increasing the district wide compensation placeholder from $17.7 million to $24.7 million. The additional million dollars would go into the general fund, which is used for the routine operations. “I think it’s good news,”
Add additional temporary units to elementary sites
WHAT: Jefferson County Schools Board of Education Meeting
Consider relocating center based programs
WHEN: 6 p.m. Thursday, May 4 WHERE: Jeffco Schools Board Room, 1829 Denver West Drive, Bldg. 27, Golden
Initiate split sessions (e.g., K-3 morning, 4-6 afternoon) or year round school
COMMENT: If you would like to address the Jefferson County Board of Education during public comment periods, visit secure2.jeffco. k12.co.us/board/ or email board@ jeffco.k12.co.us.
Source: Jeffco Public Schools Askelson told the board. But board member Brad Rupert said he was cautious to “count chickens before they hatch.”
AGENDA: The meeting agenda is available at www.boarddocs.com/ co/jeffco/Board.nsf.
Middle school additions Classroom additions to Drake Middle School in Arvada and Dunstan Middle School in Lakewood were also discussed at the April 20 Board of Education meeting. On June 16, 2016 as part of finalizing the Facilities Master Plan, the Board approved that Jeffco Public Schools would move toward a K-5/6-8
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elementary and middle school configuration. That decision reaffirmed by the Board in February. In order for this change to happen, the district needs more classrooms at four area middle schools: Drake, Dunstan, Ken Caryl and Creighton. The staff indicated that the additions to Drake and Dun-
Skunk found at Stott Elementary in Arvada tests positive for rabies BY STAFF REPORT
Another skunk has tested positive for rabies in Jefferson County. This one was found on the property at Stott Elementary School, 6600 Yank Way in Arvada. Jefferson County Public Health is urging anyone who may have come in contact with this skunk to notify their healthcare provider immediately. Skunk rabies is on the rise in Jefferson County with 11 skunks testing positive for rabies already in 2017. The public is strongly urged to vaccinate all of their domestic pets and valu-
March 24 ~ April 30 minersalley.com 303.935.3044
stan middle schools are critical to alleviating area growth trends in the northwest corridor and central areas of Jeffco Public Schools. Ken Caryl and Creighton middle school additions support the ongoing implementation of the 6-8 grade middle school model. The cost of additions at all four middle schools is $26 million. The discussion of the additions was tabled at a February board meeting. However, moving into the 2017-18 budget, the Board will be asked to make a decision on funding the Drake and Dunstan additions at its May 4 meeting. The 16 classroom additions at Drake will cost $10.5 million and the eight classroom additions at Dunstan will cost $4.5 million. According to Tim Reed, director of facilities and construction management for Jeffco Schools, construction at both schools would be done and classrooms open August 2018. District staff proposes funding for these additions out of reserve funds.
able livestock against rabies and to be sure vaccinations are kept up-to-date. Rabies is caused by a virus that affects the nervous system of humans and other mammals and is nearly always fatal. The virus is shed in the saliva of infected animals. People or animals can get rabies from a bite, or from a rabid animal’s saliva if it comes in contact with eyes, nose, mouth or open wounds. Immediate medical treatment is required after exposure to an infected animal. Skunks, bats, foxes, raccoons and other wildlife should not be handled or fed to prevent exposure to this virus.
Arvada Press 9
7April 27, 2017
‘I LOST ALL OF THEM’ BY ALEX DEWIND | ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Portraits of Ethan Laber, 5, and his brother Adam, 3, teddy bears and blue gemstones — which the boys loved to find in backyard treasure hunts — were displayed for guests at a memorial service at St. Philip Lutheran Church in Jefferson County on Dec. 6. ALEX DEWIND
In a world of grief, Ryan Laber keeps memories of family close
A
t times, Ryan Laber feels as if he is drifting in the ocean. Grief washes over him in waves, recedes, then comes in again. Other times, he stands in a valley, staring at sheer cliffs encircling him, wondering how he will ever climb out. “Losing all of your children and your spouse — that is a pretty earth-shattering thing,” he says. Since his wife shot and killed their sons and then herself five months ago, the days flash back and forth between memories of life as it was and the reality of life as it is now. He is trying to move forward, wading through the sorrow, coming to terms with his wife’s depression and bipolar disorder, holding onto the joy his sons brought him. “It’s this nonstop buzz of emotion,” Laber says. “What you’ll find is that you’re just trying to look for tangible memories of the things you lost.” Laber, 40, is a 6-foot-3 solidly-built man with a welcoming demeanor and a dimpled smile, a director in an electronics company whose life revolved around his family. The sadness in his brown eyes wells into tears when he remembers. On Nov. 30, police found his wife of 12 years, Jennifer, 38, and their two sons, Adam, 3, and Ethan, 5, dead in the family minivan on an abandoned loading dock outside of a shuttered Sports Authority in Lone Tree. The Douglas County coroner determined the boys each died of a single gunshot wound and Jennifer from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Laber was upstairs in Ethan’s bedroom, where
he and Jennifer read bedtime stories to their sons, when he saw the police car pull up to their Highlands Ranch home later that day. “I put my arms on his bed and I tried to talk to them.” He knew. They were in heaven.
• WHY WE WROTE THESE STORIES See page 14 for an editorial explaining the thought process behind this package.
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On a March afternoon, Laber sits in a Highlands Ranch coffee shop, next door to Salsa Brava, a favorite Mexican restaurant of his sons. As he talks about their deaths and his grief, his eyes dart from his coffee cup to the room
around him. The day his world shattered was Nov. 29. Laber had left his work at Arrow Electronics in Centennial by 5 p.m. to make it home in time for dinner, as he did every evening. But their home was dark. Jennifer, Ethan and Adam were gone. Confused, Laber started calling friends and family. He wondered if he had unconsciously said or done something to upset Jennifer, a stayat-home mom. He wondered if she had taken the boys and started driving to Minnesota, where they had lived until moving to Colorado two years ago. She had talked about wanting to move back. SEE GRIEF, P10
‘You can only see what’s immediately in front of you, behind you and beside you. You can’t focus on the future.’ Ryan Laber
10 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
What drives a parent to kill a child? Experts point to a variety of reasons, a key one being mental illness
‘Part of the reason that the recent deaths of children at the hands of their own mothers captures our horrified attention is because it is so rare.’
BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Every day, Stephanie Schmalz drives by Highlands Ranch on C-470 from her home in Morrison to her job in Lone Tree. So when she learned in November that Jennifer Laber, a Highlands Ranch mother, had killed her two young sons and then herself, the tragedy stayed with her. It moved her to post a message on a Highlands Ranch Facebook page called Word of Mouth: “I didn’t know these kids. I didn’t know this mom. I do, however, know this mom’s heart. She was likely depressed, overwhelmed, feeling worthless, not measuring up to standards that she thought others have set for her — that the world has set for her.” Her post received more than 600 likes and dozens of comments thanking Schmalz, a mother of three, for her words and extending compassion for the family involved. “I feel like what I wrote is what people think about but don’t say,” Schmalz said. “It takes a village to raise kids — it takes a village to raise a family.”
Randi Smith, psychology professor at Metropolitan State University of Denver
Variety of reasons for ‘rare’ occurrence The Laber tragedy — followed two months later by a similar case involving another Highlands Ranch mother and her 10-year-old daughter — generated an outpouring on social media of compassion, shock and disbelief. Many comments came from women, who although not in any way condoning — or understanding — the killings, expressed empathy for mothers who are struggling with stressors of everyday life or a mental illness such as depression. The resounding questions became: How could this happen? Why the kids? Even among mental health and forensic experts, there is no clear answer.
According to a 2014 study by Brown University in Rhode Island, over the past three decades U.S. parents have committed filicide — the act of a parent killing his or her child — about 500 times every year. Seventy-two percent of the children killed were age 6 or younger. One-third were infants. Ten percent of children killed were between 7 and 18 years old. When a parent also kills himself or herself, the act is referred to as filicidesuicide. Filicide is rare: About 74 million children from infancy to 17 years old live in the United States, according to the U.S. Census. The average number of filicide cases has stayed at about 500 a year for
GRIEF FROM PAGE 9
He called the Douglas County Sheriff ’s Office at about 8 p.m. Deputies came to his house, took down information and sifted through credit card transactions. The Glock 9mm semiautomatic handgun that Jennifer had purchased earlier that day had not yet shown up. Laber went to bed at about midnight. He slept, somehow knowing he would need energy for the next day. He awoke at 5:30 a.m., and soon after, a neighbor called, asking if he had seen the news. Police had discovered three bodies in a van near the old Sports Authority in Lone Tree. Helicopters circled over the scene. Laber immediately called the sheriff ’s department. He was told there wasn’t enough information yet. “That was code for ‘we are worried about you hurting yourself and we are not going to tell you anything,’ ” Laber remembers thinking. “That’s when it sunk in.” Four months later, Laber still doesn’t understand what went wrong. Friends and family of Jennifer didn’t see signs. Her behavior hadn’t changed. Looking back, Laber believes that she had been planning her suicide for months and reached a point of calm in knowing her life would soon end. The sorrow is overwhelming. But, he
After the tragic loss of his wife and two sons, Ryan Laber passed out blue stones at a celebration of life gathering at O’Brien Park in Parker on Dec. 3. His sons loved to treasure hunt, he said, especially for blue gemstones in the backyard. ALEX DEWIND says, he is not angry: His wife was ill.
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Ryan and Jennifer met in Minnesota, where they both grew up. Ryan, 26 at the time, was out to dinner with work clients at a restaurant. Jennifer, then 24, was at the same restaurant with friends. They met, dated for two years and married in September 2005. Shortly after, Jennifer was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and depression, Laber says. She was hospitalized more than once in her late 20s following a suicide attempt. It was the first time Laber had ex-
perienced mental illness in someone close to him. And, at first, it angered him, coming so soon after their marriage. One time, after visiting her, he pounded so hard on the armrest in his two-door sports car that it broke. “It was at that point in time that I recognized that I couldn’t sit there and tolerate it,” he says. “I had to do something differently.” Laber reached out to his pastor, who coached him into redirecting his anger. He started going to therapy with Jennifer and attending classes to learn about mental illness. Eventually, Jennifer learned to manage the depression and bipolar
the past 30 years, though the population of the country has grown. According to Randi Smith, a psychology professor at Metropolitan State University of Denver, when parents cause their children’s deaths it’s more likely to be accidental or, in some cases, part of an ongoing pattern of child abuse. “Part of the reason that the recent deaths of children at the hands of their 1 own mothers captures our horrified at- a tention is because it is so rare,” Smith e said. Reasons for filicide range from murders committed out of “love” — described as altruistic killings — to child abuse and neglect, but mental illness often stands at the forefront. That’s especially true in cases of the killing of a toddler or adolescent, who has formed an attachment with the parent, said Phillip Resnick, an internationally known forensic h psychiatrist and professor c at Case Western Reserve i University in Ohio. “Killing children once i their role is established i in the family would be an J Resnick extreme measure,” said v g Resnick, who has studa ied filicide for 50 years. “It wouldn’t be done casually or incidentally — it t would require some extreme forces p coming together.” c p SEE PARENTS, P12
disorder with medication and lifestyle changes. The couple felt stable enough to think about starting a family and Ethan and Adam were born a few years later. “We reached a point, years ago,” Laber told mourners at a Dec. 2 vigil, “where the darkness had subsided for a family to be born.” The family’s move to Colorado was prompted by a job opportunity for Laber at Arrow Electronics. Though they were leaving close friends and family, Laber and Jennifer saw it as a fresh start. The family moved to an apartment in Parker before settling in a home in a kid-friendly cul-de-sac neighborhood of Highlands Ranch. Life was easy, simple, with a happy flow from day to day. Laber made it home for dinner every weeknight. He and his sons loved to wrestle. He and Jennifer took turns cooking. On Saturdays, Laber woke up with the boys while Jennifer slept in. They made chocolate chip pancakes. Saturday nights, the four of them went out to dinner, then came home to watch movies on the couch. It was a family ritual. Jennifer was kind and caring with the boys, consistent about teaching them good manners. A vegetarian, she encouraged the boys to eat healthy. She instilled a love for cuddling. SEE GRIEF, P11
Arvada Press 11
7April 27, 2017
‘Grief is unique — there is no one-box-fits-all’ Therapist talks about importance of working through grieving process BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Linda Coughlin Brooks lost her 17-year-old daughter nearly 20 years ago, when she died unexpectedly from epilepsy in her sleep. Brooks, a therapist who knows the grieving process all too well, has since dedicated her life to helping others. “I help someone who doesn’t know if they want to live or die,” said Brooks, sitting in her Greenwood Village Brooks office. Photos honoring her patients’ loved ones who have died cover the walls. “I help them reengage in life.” A former nurse of 37 years, Brooks is certified in death and grief studies. In her private practice, the Grief Journey, she provides care for individuals and families experiencing grief, loss and life transitions, such as a divorce. She also serves as the regional director of Compassionate Friends, a nonprofit organization with more than 700 chapters across the United States for parents who have lost a child.
MANY EXPERIENCE MENTAL ILLNESS
WHERE TO FIND HELP
One in five adults nationwide experiences a mental illness, according to the National Association of Mental Illness. One in 25 lives with a more serious mental illness, such as bipolar disorder or schizophrenia. Half of all chronic mental illness begins by the age of 14 — three-quarters by the age of 24, the association reports. About 2.6 percent of adults live with bipolar disorder. And almost 7 percent of American adults live with major depression, the leading cause of disability worldwide, the National Institute of Mental Health reports. Nearly 60 percent of adults with a mental illness didn’t receive mental health services in the previous year, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration has found.
Mental health and suicide prevention • Suicide Prevention Coalition of Colorado: Provides a statewide network of suicide prevention resources and hotlines by county. suicidepreventioncolorado.org/ page-18121. • Colorado Crisis Services: Operates a Crisis Line and Support Line and provides referrals to other mental health services in the Denver metro area. 24/7 crisis line: 844-493-TALK (8255). • AllHealth Network: Behavioral health services, including inpatient and outpatient programs and group, individual and family counseling, offered in locations across south
Research says that individuals experience grief in five stages: denial and isolation, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. But Brooks said that grief is not linear — the experience is different for every individual. She saw a patient one time for the loss of a dog, a companion. She saw a patient for nearly two years for the loss of a mother. “Grief is unique,” she said. “There is no one-box-fits-all.”
COURTESY PHOTOS
gret, it would be that — even after you think you reach a point of stability — you still need to have the conversation.”
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After the deaths, family and friends stayed with Laber in his home. But he felt alone. He couldn’t eat. He compared the feeling to an episode of the old, black-and-white television show “Twilight Zone.” The main character travels to Earth to find that there are no other people, only buildings. “There’s this stagnation,” he
• Jefferson Center for Mental Health: Offers a variety of services, from hotline, therapy, counseling and wellness classes. Hotline: 303-425-0300, jcmh.org.
• Jennifer Laber battled depression and bipolar disorder. “She wanted nothing but for Ethan and Adam to have a mother they could depend on, a mother that felt well,” Ryan Laber said. says. “You can only see what’s immediately in front of you, behind you and beside you. You can’t focus on the future. Your eyes can’t look forward.” He sees the boys’ playset in the backyard, the toys in their rooms and the clothes in their closets. Jennifer’s clothes hang in his closet. Her jewelry box rests on the dresser. A pan inscribed with Laber and Jennifer’s names sits in the kitchen. To honor them and be reminded always, Laber printed and hung photos of Jennifer, Adam and Ethan all over the house. Everywhere he looked,
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Grief support • The Grief Journey: Bereavement care of all types including support groups and individual counseling. 303951-9240, griefandgrowth. com. • Compassionate Friends: Support groups for parents who have lost a child. compassionatefriends.org. • Parents Surviving Suicide: Support groups for those who have lost individuals to suicide. 303-322-7450. • Parents of Murdered Children: For families and friends of individuals who have died by violence. Colorado-pomc. org. For Front Range chapter, contact Phil Clark, 303-7486395.
guilt, and provides resources, such as support groups. Coming to terms with guilt and regret can shift the focus from how a person died to how they lived. And being around peers who have experienced loss and moved forward in life can instill a sense of hope in a grieving individual, Brooks said. The goal, she said, is “to see someone choose life, choose reengagement in a productive way.”
they were there. One day, he opened their urns, wanting to touch their ashes. Overcome with emotion, he collapsed. Mentally and physically exhausted, he stayed on the couch for the rest of the day. “You want to expose yourself to those feelings,” he says, “but sometimes you push too hard.”
FROM PAGE 10
Adam, 3, was a defender of people, his dad, Ryan Laber, says. Ethan, 5, would seek out the kid on the playground who was alone and play with him or her. To honor them, Laber would like to work with an organization for parents who have lost children.
• Adams County Mental Health Center (Community Reach Center): Offers crisis services, and treatment and counseling in the Metro North region for children to seniors for mental health issues from depression and anxiety to more severe disorders. 303-853-3500, www. communityreachcenter.org.
Often, phone calls and check-ins from family members and friends become less frequent as time goes on, as life goes on. But mourning loss is not a journey that an individual can do on his or her own, Brooks said. It requires a safe environment where the individual can honor and work through his or her grief. In her practice, Brooks listens, normalizes the feelings associated with grief, such as anger, regret and
GRIEF “She wanted nothing but for Ethan and Adam to have a mother they could depend on, a mother that felt well,” Laber recounted at the Dec. 6 memorial service for Jennifer and the boys. “In her mind, they deserved the utopia each of them had brought to our lives.” Ethan would seek out the kid on the playground who was alone and play with him or her. Adam, big for his age, was a defender of people. Though he was two years younger than Ethan, they weighed the same. Their favorite activity was treasure hunting for the blue glass gems the family hid in the backyard. Everything seemed to be going the right way for a young family, Laber says. They kept in contact with friends and family in Minnesota. They had a decent home, great neighbors, good schools. “Despite all that stuff, it still crept up,” Laber says of Jennifer’s bipolar disorder and depression. Tears well in his eyes. “If there was any re-
metro Denver. Emergency and crisis intervention line: 303-730-3303. Information or appointments line: 303730-8858.
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These days, when he has the energy, he spends a couple of hours sorting through his family’s belongings. A friend who lost a loved one told him to take down some of the photos on the walls, so he did, and it helped. In his grieving, Laber has connected with others who have lost a child, a spouse, a close friend. But he finds his situation is different: “I lost all of them. It’s not like I could even be grateful for something that was still left.” The faith community, friends, family and coworkers have helped him on his road to healing, he says. Pastors from four churches reached out to him — he has relied heavily on his faith. People flooded his Facebook and mailbox with messages
and letters. Neighbors, family and friends have continually been by his side. He sees medical professionals and attends support groups to help him cope. He could have shut out the world, Laber says, but he knew that would have led him to depression. Instead, he lets the grief pass through him, following the path of others who have experienced a devastating loss. “I invited them all in to share with me where they found the footholds,” he says. “I take different pieces from what I understand from different people.” Laber is unsure if he will stay in his house. Once a place of memories, he says, it is becoming a house of ghosts. He knows he will never let go of Adam, Ethan and Jennifer. To remember Jennifer, he would like to join forces with an existing statewide organization on suicide prevention. To honor his boys, he would like to work with an organization for parents who have lost children. The future remains too murky to see. But he is certain of one thing: He would like, someday, to be a husband and father again.
12 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
PARENTS FROM PAGE 10
In a 2005 study of 30 filicide-suicide cases published by the Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law — written by Resnick and four other authors — 70 percent of the motives were identified as murders committed out of “love” to relieve the real or imagined suffering of the child. The second most prevalent reason was acute psychosis, such as schizophrenia, which can cause delusions. That was the case for LaShuan Harris, a 23-year-old who, in 2005, dropped her three boys, ages 6, 2 and 16 months, into San Francisco Bay. Harris, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia, believed she was listening to God and sending her children to heaven. She was found criminally insane and sentenced to a psychiatric hospital. Other motives of filicide have included mistreatment, such as child abuse resulting in death; having an unwanted child; and revenge against a spouse. In March, a Chicago father shot and killed his twin daughters. According to national media outlets, police dispatch heard the father tell his wife he wanted her to live and suffer before shooting her in the leg — she survived — and then shooting and killing himself. Michael Karson, a clinical psy-
chologist at the University of Denver, cited a variety of reasons for filicide, including an “end-ofthe-world” psychosis, when a parent feels that he or she is trying to spare their child from what is to come. Postpartum depression, a hormonal imbalKarson ance that can affect new mothers following childbirth, can be a cause in rare instances, Karson said. In instances of postpartum psychosis, the mother most likely has a history of bipolar disorder or schizoaffective disorder, a mental disorder characterized by symptoms of schizophrenia and mood disorder, according to a 2016 report of filicide in the United States authored by Resnick and published in the Indian Journal of Psychiatry. That was the case for Andrea Yates, who was found not guilty by reason of insanity in the 2001 drowning of her five children. The Texas woman reportedly experienced severe postpartum depression and psychosis. She is now in a state mental hospital. Postpartum psychosis occurs in about one out of 1,000 new mothers, as opposed to the two or three out of 100 new mothers who might experience postpartum depression, a common and treatable malady, Resnick said. But, he emphasized, “most people with postpartum de-
pression don’t go on to harm their child or commit suicide.” In some altruistic filicide cases, the report in the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law says, the parent was depressed and considered the children’s deaths as extended suicides rather than homicides. The study found that parents who killed their children and themselves overall appeared to have high rates of mental illness. Smith echoed that finding. Filicide-suicide scenarios, such as the two recent cases involving mothers and their children in Highlands Ranch, she said, usually occur in the midst of a deep depression with psychotic features or in the midst of a bipolar episode. After the death of his wife and two sons, Ryan Laber publicly spoke of his wife’s battle with depression and bipolar disorder. Jennifer Laber, 38, was diagnosed in her mid20s after a suicide attempt, he said. Her autopsy revealed that she had bipolar-disorder medication in her system at the time of her death. According to the police report, Cristi Benavides, 40, the Highlands Ranch woman who was found dead with her daughter, Emma, in February, had a history of post-traumatic stress disorder and anxiety. ‘Things pass, things get better’ How to prevent such tragedies is the challenge. World Psychiatry, an office
journal of the World Psychiatric Association, suggests that psychiatrists should assess filicide risk in a systematic way, as they do for suicide, by asking questions about childrearing practices, parenting problems and feelings of being overwhelmed — and then provide steps to ensure the safety of all involved. And although many resources exist for those contemplating suicide, Karson wonders whether a parent thinking of filicide would admit to those thoughts. “How,” he asked, “can we arrange a world in which a person in that situation would tell someone?” Several mental health and education experts also say establishing connections for parents to community and the support that can be found there — whether personal or professional — is key. “Many people can profit from talking with mental health care professionals, experiencing support and seeing how to change situations so that they can manage stress more productively,” said Judith Fox, associate professor of the University of Denver Graduate School of Professional Psychology. Psychology experts agree that in many filicide-suicide cases the parent acts on impulse. “Things pass, things get better,” Karson said. “All the lost opportunities — if they could just get past that impulse.”
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Arvada Press 13
7April 27, 2017
Achieving that ‘High Grade’ at School of Mines CSM releases annual art and literary journal BY CHRISTY STEADMAN CSTEADMAN@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Students at the Colorado School of Mines are more than just aspiring engineers, scientists and mathematicians — they are also skilled artists and creative writers. They seem to be total opposites, but engineering and art collide together surprisingly well, said Rebecca Reeve, 22, a senior studying mechanical engineering who has been painting nearly all of her life. “Art encourages people to think outside the box,” Reeve said. “It’s huge to be able to think outside of the box with engineering.” On April 14, about 150 people attended a release party at the Foothills Art Center for Mines’ 41st edition of “High Grade” — the school’s annual art and literary journal. The journal features varied genres of art in mediums including visual arts, creative writing and music. The content is submitted by students, faculty, staff, alumni or anybody with an affiliation to Mines. “A lot of people don’t realize that engineers are really creative,” said Wenli Dickinson, the journal’s editor-in-chief, who is a junior studying environmental engineering. “The quality of the journal shows that we are more than just engineers.” “High Grade” has had its original name since its founding in 1976 — but the journal itself has evolved a lot. It started out as a couple of standardsized pages stapled together, with the content printed in black and white. Modern versions are a full-color, bound book of about 100 pages. The name “High Grade” has a couple of different interpretations, said Toni Lefton, a professor in Mines’ Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences Department who has been the faculty adviser for “High Grade” for 18 years. Defined, high grade refers to a topquality ore that is rich in metal value and is commercially profitable, Lefton said. But students around campus
From left, Colorado School of Mines students Kamilia Putri on violin, AJ Classen on viola and Nick Smith on cello perform a string concert at the 2017 release party for Mines’ annual art and literary journal called “High Grade.” The release party took place on April 14 at the Foothills Art Center in Golden. CHRISTY STEADMAN often think of it as how hard they work to obtain good grades, she added. Either way, Lefton said, “High Grade” creates a legacy that reflects upon the creativity of the Mines community — past, present and into the future. This year’s journal features more than 50 works of submitted pieces, not including web-exclusive content such as music and fiction that wasn’t printed in the journal. A lot of the 2017 content has the common theme of aging and the passing of time, which served as a framework of sorts for the journal, Dickinson said. Each year, the “High Grade” staff of Lefton and about 25 Mines students, receives hundreds of submissions, which then go through a jury process to select which submissions will be published in “High Grade.” The journal is not just a bunch of engineers casually getting together to throw some artwork together to pass out around campus, Reeve said. “`High Grade’ is a hidden gem of our school,” she added. In addition to their academic course load, the students work hard to pro-
duce a quality journal, Lefton said. “It’s a labor of love,” she said. “These students don’t get academic credit for this.” Nationally, a hot term in education is STEAM, which integrates arts and design into STEM — Science, Technology, Engineering and Math — subjects, Lefton said. Although Mines is a world renowned
university for engineering and applied science, there is much more that goes on at Mines, Lefton said. There are robust extracurricular activities and clubs for students to get involved with athletics, as well as visual and performing arts, she added. “Mines is a small STEM school, but the arts are alive here, too,” Lefton said. “We get a little steamy.”
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14 Arvada Press
LOCAL
VOICES Our thought process behind this week’s special report
O
n Nov. 30, Jennifer Laber was found dead with her two sons, ages 3 and 5, in the family minivan outside a closed Sports Authority. Just two months later, on Jan. 30, Cristi Benavides and her 10-year-old daughter were found dead in the basement of a home. In both instances, law enforcement authorities determined the mothers had killed their children, and then themselves. Both families lived in the Douglas County community of Highlands Ranch, one of the more than 20 towns, cities and counties that Colorado Community Media covers. The tragedies devastated family members, neighbors and school communities and generated an outpouring of comments on social media. There was compassion for all involved. But there also was shock and disbelief: Why would a parent kill his or her child? Because the tragedies occurred in such proximity to each
B
April 27, 2017A
other, and because one of our communities was struggling with the ensuing grief, we thought it important to try to understand why this happened and to put these cases in context of issues surrounding them. Those stories are packaged as a special report in this week’s editions, on our communities’ websites and at coloradocommunitymedia.com. Reporter Alex DeWind spent weeks researching and reporting to find answers to the why. She found that the act of a parent killing his or her child is rare. And that the reasons are varied, but that mental illness is at the forefront. In both of these instances, family members and law enforcement say depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder were present.
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One in five adults experiences a mental illness; one in five children ages 13-18 has, or will have, a serious mental illness. It’s time to talk about the issue and make sure resources and support systems exist to help. In conjunction with Mental Health Awareness month in May, a new public health campaign called “Let’s Talk Colorado” gets underway. The campaign, supported by a coalition of agencies led by Tri-County Health Department, focuses on eliminating the stigma around mental illness so that those who need the help will seek it. Look for our story next week about the campaign.
SEE OUR VIEW, P15
Earth Day is every day
ecause we do not think of the next generation, they will never forget us. – Henrik Tikkanen What did you do on Earth Day, Saturday, April 22? I drove – alone – on several errands. After my car was totaled when I was ALCHEMY crashed into recently, though, I now drive a vehicle that uses a bit more gas. So for both environmental and economic reasons, I’m even more cognizant about combining trips. I also did some spring cleaning and some laundry, although with only some bio-friendly deterAndrea Doray gents. I mean, after all, biodegradable cleansers can be more expensive and less effective … right? I took a chance and planted my patio pots before Mother’s Day, and, on the advice of the garden center guy, I purchased bags of soil with only organic compounds because I grow an herb garden as well as flowers. I prepared a meal of bison filet not just because it’s lean and healthy meat, but also because bison are humanely and sustainably raised on ranches, where their hooves actual help reseed and restore the ecosystem. All day on the radio I heard public service announcements reminding us, for example, to choose reusable water bottles (I do) and shopping bags (mostly I don’t). And as I listened to these earth-saving pleas, I couldn’t help but be struck by the dichotomy consistently
LET’S TALK ABOUT MENTAL ILLNESS
OUR VIEW
‘Just do it’ is more than a shoe motto
playing out in our country. Even as more and more of us take personal responsibility for preserving the planet, the current administration systematically dismantles effective safeguards in ineffective attempts to restore jobs and hide cronyism. Scott Pruitt, the man somehow selected to lead the Environmental Protection Agency is hardly a protector himself. He spent much of previous political life challenging, suing and even decrying the need for the very agency he now heads. I awake each morning to the frustrating reality that there’s not much you or I or anyone else inclined to conserve, protect, and sustain our environment can do at this highest level. But I do pick up my pen to converse with you here, and I call and write emails to members of Congress. I’ve now gathered a supply of cloth shopping bags and stowed them in the front of my car so I will remember to use them. My condo community doesn’t do recycling, but I’ve started to collect my paper and my cans and my glass to carry to a friend’s place that does. I’ve decided to buy brown coffee filters next time, not the ones that have been chemically treated to turn them white, and to commit the biodegradable cleaning ingredients. I can remind all of us here to turn off the tap while brushing our teeth or shaving, to choose reusable water bottles, and to find a way to recycle no matter what. The statistics about the amount of plastic – which never goes away – are absolutely staggering. For SEE DORAY, P15
I
think I’ve mentioned before that I am a runner. Sort of. Not really a happy one, or one by nature. I run because I know that it is good for me (if I do it right), and because there are very few ways to build up cardiovascular endurance HITTING as effectively as simHOME ply putting one foot in front of the other for an extended period of time. At any rate, the hyper-competitive nature of my personality compels me to want to be better at it, which means running faster. So, I Michael Alcorn started doing some research into exercises to help speed, and different processes I could engage in to improve my split times, and so forth. And, in the end, they’re all great and useful, but do you know what I realized it all boiled down to? That, if you want to run fast, you have to run fast. I know. There’s nothing slow runners like more than a good tautology. What I mean by that is that all the exercises and training regimens in the world are not as valuable as simply resolving to run faster for an extended period of time, until your body is used to doing it at that speed. That is how you learn to run faster. It’s really pretty simple. All things considered, I’d still rather be chasing a basketball around the court. It’s the simple answers in life, it
seems, that kill you. The more complicated the answer, the more subjunctive clauses and dependent phrases, the more loopholes and excuses you have to avoid doing what is necessary. Not so with simple answers. You don’t suppose it’s just coincidence that the Ten Commandments uses only 300-ish words, but the U.S. Tax Code requires a semi-tractor, a forklift and Dwayne Johnson to haul around? You want to become a good trumpet player? Play the trumpet. For hours and hours every day, play the trumpet. (This one, I know from experience as a teacher, is an answer that drives students crazy.) You want to become a computer programmer? Then program computers. Learn to write code, learn to write in different languages (are there still different languages? Is Fortran still a thing?), and then simply write. Isn’t that what Malcolm Gladwell told us made Bill Gates special? Speaking of writing, also from experience, you want to be a writer? Then sit down and write. Every day. 500 words, 300 words, a Haiku, something, just write. The simple answers don’t give you a lot of wiggle room, is the problem. And also the wonderful solution. Once you are forced to abandon all the different “buts” and “what ifs” that keep you from taking your interest and turning it in to something productive, you end up with just you and the thing, whatever it is. That’s a
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SEE ALCORN, P15
Arvada press A legal newspaper of general circulation in Jefferson County, Colorado, the Arvada Press is published weekly on Thursday by West Suburban Community Media, 722 Washington Ave, Unit 210, Golden, CO 80401. Send address change to: 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
Arvada Press 15
7April 27, 2017
OUR VIEW FROM PAGE 14
To ensure we presented this sensitive topic appropriately, we followed the media resource guide compiled by the World Health Organization and the International Association for Suicide Prevention to help journalists cover suicide, along with other guidelines for reporting on homicides. l We worked not to sensationalize the stories, to explain in context the reasons that could lead to these tragedies and to find sources with knowledge and authority on the issue. We hope the stories spotlight the importance of public community discussion on mental illness and the need for support systems. Also, a sidebar provides information on resources for grief and mental health support. Finally, when Ryan Laber shared us with the story of his family and his experience with devastating
grief, we committed to him that it would be told with great care, compassion and respect. Journalistic ethics guidelines call on us to minimize harm in the telling of truth. We do that by treating our sources as human beings who deserve our respect and compassion, particularly in circumstances such as these. And to ensure Mr. Laber did not incur any more harm because of our story, we made an exception to our guideline that does not allow sources to read articles before publication. We are conscious of the privilege of telling his story. We wanted to make sure we got it right. We realize these stories may be uncomfortable to read. Our hope is that they bring some understanding of not only the consequences for those left behind but also what can lead to these kinds of tragedies. As one mother said: “It takes a village to raise a family.” In the broader sense, a community is a family. We must take care of each other.
FROM PAGE 14
confrontation that you can understand and overcome. By the way, this is not necessarily a philosophy I would adhere to in life-threatening circumstances. “You want to be a swimmer? Dive in a lake.” There may be some necessary preparations. But, generally speaking, life presents very few Gordian knots without
DORAY FROM PAGE 14
example, every piece of plastic ever made still exists today, and we use enough plastic each year to circle the earth four times. And, sadly, more than one million sea birds and 100,000 marine mammals are killed annually
simultaneously presenting a sword with which to cut through them. Next time you face a challenge, try to avoid the tendency to discover all the complications, and go, rather, for the simple answer. Oh, yeah, I might have forgotten to mention: “simple” is, in this context, NEVER the same thing as “easy.” Quite the opposite, actually. Michael Alcorn is a teacher and writer who lives in Arvada with his wife and three children. His novels are available at MichaelJAlcorn.com
from plastic in our oceans. Perhaps most importantly, I can urge us all to make our voices heard – often – about preserving and protecting our most valuable resource, Mother Earth. Andrea Doray is a writer who also urges us to consider the dire situations so much of the rest of the world endures with respect to water, pollution, and unbearable living conditions. Let’s remember our own future generations. Contact her at a.doray@andreadoray.com.
VAN ARSDALE
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
A yuge cost The Denver Post recently reported that an undocumented Aurora mother hof four was taken into custody when she checked in for her appointment with ICE. According to her attorney she has complied with our law for years, but is now scheduled for deportation. One of her children is developmentally disabled. Besides the obvious lack of compassion, it is worth reviewing the financial impact of this decision. ICE reports the average cost for a deportation in 2016 was $10,854. Furthermore, if the mother is deported, social services ewill undoubtedly bear additional costs of care for this woman’s developmentally disabled child. On a larger scale, if our nation engaged in the mass deportation that ICE seems to be headed towards, the direct cost to taxpayers is estimated by the American Action Forum to be between $420 and $620 billion. This does not include the damage to our economy done as we lose agricultural, service, and skilled tech industry labor. Don’t forget another $20 billion for the proposed “wall” between Mexico and America. Are we sure it makes sense to spend this money deporting law-abiding community members when we could instead be investing this in quality education, healthcare for all, transportation, and affordable housing? Robin Kupernik, Arvada
ALCORN
Wayne A. Van Arsdale Where McMinimee fell short In a recent letter to the editor it was suggested that a school superintendent who was hired to ensure quality education for 86,000 students with a $950 million budget (of which $280,000 is going to his compensation) should somehow not be responsible for his own decisions, his approach to communications, and his ability to raise public awareness regarding budget needs vis a vis the mill levy. It’s the board’s job to set strategy and it depends on its full-time, dedicated superintendent to run the business of Jefferson County Public Education. His weakness in doing this has been pointed out several times by numerous readers. I don’t think Mr. McMinimee is a bad administrator or that he has had anything but good intentions for Jefferson County Public Schools. With the recall of the Koch brotherbacked board majority he was left in a tough spot and tried to make that best of it. The board made the right decision after giving him a fair shot. All that said, he did not serve Jefferson County Public Schools successfully. I wish Mr. McMinimee well, and I look forward to an effective leader stepping up to Superintendent position as a result of the current selection process. Marjorie Frantz, Golden
WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU If you would like to share your opinion, visit our website at www.coloradocommunitymedia.com or write a letter to the editor. Include your name, full address and the best telephone number to contact you. Send letters to letters@coloradocommunitymedia.com.
Wayne Alcott Van Arsdale died peacefully at Covenant Village, in Westminster, on April 20, 2017. He was 95. He was preceded in death by his wife, Marjorie (“Mardie”) Van Arsdale, who passed away in December. Wayne was born in Pueblo, Colorado, the second son of Stella G. and Lewis H. Van Arsdale. Both brothers were precocious, making friends with the likes of David Packard (later of Hewlett – Packard fame). Wayne attended Pueblo Centennial High School, where he was a class officer and on-stage performer. Poetry memorization and recitation were his favorites. Wayne attended the University of Colorado – Boulder, eventually earning a B.A. degree in economics. He was a member of Chi Psi Fraternity. As it was for many of his classmates, World War II intervened in his education. He joined the Army Air Corps. After completing flight school, and after telling his fiancé Mardie to be sure to wait, he left for the Pacific Theater. Wayne joined the 90th Bomb Group, Jolly Rogers Squadron, as a B-24 pilot. He completed 52 missions over the Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam. He brought his crew back safely each time. Wayne and Mardie were married on November 3, 1945. They moved to Denver. After stints at Union Station in the import – export business and in finance at the Gates Rubber Company, Wayne was called up from the reserves to train pilots, navigators, and bombardiers during the Korean War. Flying a B-29, he was based at Lowry AFB. After the war, he retired from the military, and joined John Eble & Company as a credit adjustor. He later became its president, and still later, president of the regional credit adjustors association. With two young children, and a third on the way, Wayne and Mardie moved
to their West 73rd Place home in Arvada in 1953. The view of Mt. Evans from their back porch was one reason they “stayed put” for 63 years. During this period Wayne honed his wide-ranging musical interests, which spanned American cowboy songs (Sons of the Pioneers) to classical music (J.S. Bach). He continued his life-long love of the outdoors, eventually building a cabin with Mardie near Fairplay, with a view of the Buffalo Peaks Wilderness. Among many achievements in the educational arena, Wayne was elected to the Jefferson County school board in 1961. He served for 13 years, over half of that time as president. He was a pioneer of the district’s outdoor educational program. Wayne also volunteered as co-founder and president of the Jefferson Foundation. The Wayne A. Van Arsdale Elementary School in Arvada is named in his honor. A Christian spirit of service was vital to Wayne. He and Mardie were enthusiastic members of Arvada Presbyterian Church for over 60 years. He is survived by his son, Peter Van Arsdale (and his wife Kathy) of Centennial; by his daughter, Elise Van Arsdale of Placitas, New Mexico; by his daughter, Celia Van Arsdale Powell (and her husband David) of Louisville; by his grandchildren Sarah (and her husband John), Amy (and her husband Chris), Mark, Dylan, and Matthew; and by his great-grandchildren Sydney, Colin, and Paul. The funeral service will be held at Arvada Presbyterian Church, 5592 Independence Street, Arvada, Colorado 80002, on Monday, May 1, 2017 at 10 a.m. Reception and burial will follow. Contributions in Wayne’s name can be made to the church. Services are being coordinated by Horan & McConaty. Please share memories and condolences at HoranCares.com.
16 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017
Productivity 101: Three simple secrets to success Productive = achieving or producing results. Productivity isn’t an absolute. It’s a sliding scale that generally refers to how efficiently someone is able to produce desired results. Productivity is about being focused vs. scattered. Glenn Bott Intention vs. “I don’t know” or “I’m not sure.” We all know people who are extremely productive and we know others who are at the other end of the scale. These people are often referred to as having “no traction.” This is an excellent analogy — the wheel is spinning and the engine revving, but there’s no for-
BUSINESS AIKIDO
ward motion. Their day is wasted with talk and useless activities. The productivity scale varies from person/person and activity/activity. Some are very productive at work but much less so in their personal lives. Productive people don’t have time for idle chatter: They’re on a personal mission that’s near and dear to their hearts and nothing is as important to them other than accomplishing their goals. Here’s three simple techniques to improve your productivity: 1. Establish your vision: This is your goal. A vision sets the direction for your activities. This is the yardstick by which you judge your actions. Without a clear vision you waste time and activities doing many different things, none of which help you move forward to produce results. Without a clear
vision your energy and activities are scattered. Establishing a vision is your first priority. 2. Know your purpose: What’s your why? You can have great intentions and techniques, but without a powerful and compelling why, progress is slow. You lose steam and have difficulty getting started. Purpose is the engine for being more productive. Take time to understand and create your why. An overall and compelling why is great for your overall life mission. Don’t overlook the equally important need to have one for your day-to-day activities. 3. Make a commitment: Your overall intention to accomplish your vision. Commitment is the fuel for your activities. No matter the obstacles or set-backs, your commitment remains unwavering and you will creatively
find other ways to achieve your vision. If you’re blocked going to the left, you quickly adjust and take a step to the right and then move forward. Nothing goes exactly as planned – your commitment to continue moving forward to achieve your goals will ultimately lead to success. Being productive feels good. You’re moving toward your heartfelt vision. By crossing off items on your to-do list you know you’re that you’re much closer to realizing a successful outcome. Glenn Bott of Arvada is enthusiastic about life and everything he does. He speaks and consults on empowerment and lateral thinking. He shares what he learned by successfully reinventing himself after recovering from a severe brain injury.
Writing personalized books with preschoolers
CATHOLIC
UNITED METHODIST
ST. JOAN OF ARC C AT H O L I C C H U R C H
Proclaiming Christ to the Mountains & Plains www.StJoanArvada.org 12735 W 58th Ave · 80002 · 303-420-1232 Daily Masses: 8:30am, Mon-Sat Confessions: 8am Mon; Wed – Fri 7:30am & 4:00pm Sat Saturday Vigil Mass: 5:00 PM Sunday Masses: 7:30, 9:00, 11:30 am, 5:30pm
S ERVICES 8 &10 am Church School
9 &10 am 6750 Carr St. Arvada, CO 80004 303.421.5135 • www.arvadaumc.org Nursery Available
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Pastor: Bill Sanders
Living and Sharing the Love of Christ Worship: 10:00am every Sunday Sunday School: 9:00am Sept – May (nursery provided)
5592 Independence St. 80002 Tel. 303-422-3463 www.Arvada-pres.com Email: office@arvada-pres.com
Now enrolling for All Precious Children Learning Center
Golden First Presbyterian Church
On the round-about at South Golden Rd. and West 16th Ave. Sunday Praise & Worship................... 9:00 am Fellowship Time ................................. 10:00 am Church School ................................... 10:30 am
Pastor: Rev. Dr. Miriam M. Dixon
Nursery provided
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Share the life, love, and laughter of Jesus Christ! 8:30 AM - Worship in Chapel 9:00 AM -Sunday School 10:00 AM - Worship in Sanctuary
Young children may not be able to form their letters yet, but they are able to talk and draw. All they need are family members to help them write a personalized book. Children like to talk about themselves and be the complete focus of an adult’s attention. Gather some computer paper, pencils, crayons, and markers. Explain that you are going to make a little book together to share with others to read on the next Face time with a loved one, a gift, or a book to add to the book box. Talk together The first step to writing is talking. You can talk together and take some notes for the sentence you will write for them in their words. The topic is all about me, but there are many sentence starters to help approach the topic: I am happy when … My favorite (inside or outside) things to do are … These are the things I can do (jump, run, pet my dog, sing, tell a story, set the table, ride my trike, cuddle, hug, smile, play a game, draw, throw a ball. Virtues are always good book starters: I am thankful for… I am kind when I… I show respect when I … I help when I ... I show love when I ... I am helpful when…. Family teaching The topic may be something the fam-
LIFELONG LEARNING Esther Macalady
ily is teaching right now like self-control: I am kind to my brother when I … When I am angry I can … I am courteous when … I am prayerful when I … I help stay healthy when I… After talking, take out three pieces of paper and fold them in half to make a small book. Together choose a few sentences to write as a captions for their illustrations. Talk about what they would like to draw for each sentence. They can draw illustrations on separate pieces of paper that can be cut out and glued in the book. Draw with them. You can show how to draw stick people and add features and clothes. Give a little help only if they are stuck. When finished add a cover, date, and staple together. You can reinforce the binding with packaging tape over the staples. Some pages can remain empty for another writing time together. Esther Macalady lives in Golden. Grandparents Teach Too is an organization that helps families prepare young children for success in school and a lifetime love of learning. For more information and podcasts, visit www.grandparetsteachtoo.org and www.grandparentsteachtoo.blogspot.com.
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No matter where you are from, we’re glad you’re our neighbor and we’d like to get to know you! Join us for Coffee and Conversation on Sundays at 9:30am. Stay, if you like,for a time of Singing and Reflection at 10:15am. We are Living Light of Peace, a faith community affiliated with the Mennonite Church USA and Church of the Brethren 5927 Miller Street, Arvada, CO 80004 just north of Marge Roberts Park
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7
ADVENTURES The Royal Gorge Route Railroad Page 4
a special supplement of
Places To Go Page 2
2
2017
olorado Adventures
Places to go
ABOUT THIS SECTION Late spring and summer bring a wealth of activities and events to the Denver metro area. Consider all of this: • Miles and miles of hiking and biking trails. • State parks, including Roxborough, Chatfield and Cherry Creek. • Annual family-friendly events that draw thousands of people. Those include Parker Days, Western Welcome Week, Buffalo Bill Days, the Arvada Harvest Festival, the Wheat Ridge Carnation Festival and Westy Fest. But sometimes — especially as the weather warms up and the days get longer — you just want to get out of town. Colorado has a multitude of welcoming destinations, and we explore some of them in this section. Some of the destinations in this section are just on the outskirts of the metro area. One of those nearby spots is Estes Park, where you might see an elk or two and can stay at a worldfamous hotel. If you want a longer road trip, consider Telluride. It’s about a sevenhour drive, but you’ll still be in the beautiful state of Colorado. Maybe such a trip will become an annual tradition for your family, one to join the county fair outings and those long summer bike rides. — Chris Rotar
The pot of gold at the end of the rainbow is in Aspen, of course. Photo courtesy of Chris Council and Emily Chaplin
Aspen
Durango
ELEVATION: 7,908
ELEVATION: 6,512
WHERE IS IT? Most Denver-area road trippers go west on I-70 to Glenwood Springs, then turn southeast on State Highway 82, altogether a trip of about four hours. In the summer, consider going through Leadville to Twin Lakes, then over stunning Independence Pass. NEED TO KNOW: Though typically thought of as the domain of the jet set, Aspen’s got a lot to offer regular folk as well. The Aspen Music Festival and School hosts hundreds of live musical performances though the summer. The free Aspen Art Museum, housed in a daring structure that looks a bit like a wicker basket, houses a bevy of striking pieces. More adventurous visitors might consider a hike to Conundrum Hot Springs, a clothing-optional geothermal spring accessible by an eight-mile trail south of town. FUN FACT:
The Stanley Hotel. Photo courtesy of Visit Estes Park
PLACES TO GO written by David Gilbert
Aspen went through several incarnations before it became some of the most expensive real estate on the planet. Before World War II, Aspen’s population had dwindled to less than a thousand. In the 1970s, counterculture icons like Hunter S. Thompson and John Denver popularized Aspen as a funky, bohemian colony. MORE INFORMATION: www.aspenpitkin.com
WHERE IS IT? The quickest way is down Highway 285, turning west at Del Norte on Highway 160. The most beautiful way is Highway 285, turning west at Poncha Springs, west on Highway 50 to Montrose, then south on Highway 550 – the Million Dollar Highway, a spectacular wend along the shoulder of giant mountains. NEED TO KNOW: Durango is uniquely situated between the desert of the Four Corners region and the mountains of the igneous San Juans. Mesa Verde National Park, with its ancient and mysterious ruins, is just down the road. The Durango and Silverton Railroad heads north out of town through magnificent scenery. Little-known Navajo Lake is 50 miles southeast, straddling the New Mexico border, where a bevy of boat rentals can be had. FUN FACT: Hike back to Denver on the Colorado Trail – the south end is in Durango, the north in Waterton Canyon. Fun fact: The original name of the Animas River that runs through town was the Rio de las Animas Perdidas – the River of Lost Souls. MORE INFORMATION: durango.org
Places to go
CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
2017
olorado Adventures
3
Places to go Estes Park
Fort Collins
Glenwood Springs
ELEVATION: 7,522
ELEVATION: 5,003
ELEVATION: 7,761
WHERE IS IT?
WHERE IS IT?
WHERE IS IT?
There are several gorgeous routes into Estes Park, though the most common is to take Highway 36 northwest out of Boulder. It’s about an hour and a half from Denver. The Peak to Peak Highway, a more scenic route, departs from Golden and goes through Nederland.
North of Denver on I-25 by about an hour and a half. If you hit the Wyoming border, you’ve gone too far – or you’re headed to buy fireworks.
NEED TO KNOW: There are few better jumping-off points to experience Colorado’s high alpine tundra during its brief summer than Estes Park. Trail Ridge Road, which traverses the crest of the Rockies through Rocky Mountain National Park, starts just outside of town. About 11 miles of the road are above timberline. The park is loaded with world-class hiking, views, wildlife and natural splendor. Though quite a bit less remote than the 1980 horror movie “The Shining” made it out to be, the stately old Stanley Hotel offers late-night ghost tours to guests, though they are asked to refrain from hacking open doors with fire axes. FUN FACT: For years, the death toll from the 1976 Big Thompson flood that swept through the canyon to the east of Estes was listed as 144, until in 2008, supposed victim Darrell Johnson was found to be alive and well, living in Oklahoma. It turned out he had decided to ditch a crummy cabin rental without telling anyone, and was presumed dead when the cabin was washed away.
NEED TO KNOW: Fort Collins teems with old-school charm, from the restored trolley that clatters between City Park and College Avenue to the quirky shops in Old Town. Stop at Walrus Ice Cream on Mountain Avenue for a root beer float made with Coopersmith’s Root Beer, or at the Silver Grill Café for gooey cinnamon roll French toast. West of town, head up Poudre Canyon to see the strange folded granite of northern Colorado. The Mishawaka Amphitheatre holds concerts by the river all summer. No visit would be complete without a tour of the New Belgium Brewery. FUN FACT: Horsetooth Reservoir, on the west side of town, submerged the town of Stout when it was filled in 1949. Legend has it that the town’s old stone buildings are still standing deep beneath the surface. MORE INFORMATION: visitftcollins.com
West on I-70, just shy of three hours. NEED TO KNOW: Glenwood Springs has long been known for the Glenwood Hot Springs Pool, a massive geothermal soaking pool alleged to have healing properties. Same with the Yampah Spa & Salon, featuring naturally occurring “vapor caves” filled with minerals that some say can cure a range of ailments. Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park, largely perched atop a mountaintop at the edge of town, features zip lines, a Ferris wheel, roller coasters, and giant swings that fling visitors over the abyss below. Get someone else to drive on the way into town, so you can gawk at Glenwood Canyon. FUN FACT: Doc Holliday, the Old West gunfighter, died in a Glenwood Springs hospital in 1887. Holliday had always figured he’d “die with his boots on,” and his last words – while looking at his bare feet – were “This is funny.” MORE INFORMATION: visitglenwood.com
Places to go
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
MORE INFORMATION: visitestespark.com
The Durango & Silverton Railroad. Photo courtesy of Yvonne Lashmet
Summer color at Linden and Mountain in Fort Collins. Photo courtesy of Tim O’Hara and Visit Fort Collins
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2017
olorado Adventures
A Royal Ride The Royal Gorge Route Railroad: an epic adventure
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2017
olorado Adventures
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2017
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olorado Adventures
Places to go The free gondola from Telluride ascends to Mountain Village. Photo courtesy of visittelluride. com
Grand Lake ELEVATION: 8,369 FEET WHERE IS IT?
Go west out of Denver on I-70, then north on Highway 40 west of Idaho Springs. Turn north on Highway 34 at Granby. NEED TO KNOW:
Grand Lake is Colorado’s largest natural body of water, and boating, sailing and fishing abound. The town of Grand Lake, on the lake’s north shore, boasts a boardwalk with dozens of shops and restaurants. The Rocky Mountain Repertory Theatre hosts musicals all summer – this season’s lineup includes “Mamma Mia!”, “Newsies,” “West Side Story” and “Almost Heaven.” Hit up one of the many boat-rental outfits to head out on the lake – local marinas rent everything from paddle boards to pontoon party boats. FUN FACT:
Though on the western side of the Continental Divide, Grand Lake provides water to the Front Range via the Alva B. Adams Tunnel. MORE INFORMATION:
visitgrandcounty.com/explore/towns/grand-lake/
Grand Junction ELEVATION: 4,583 FEET WHERE IS IT?
Due west on I-70, about four hours. Can’t miss it.
NEED TO KNOW:
The undisputed capital of the Western Slope, GJ (as the locals call it) is the hub of desert adventure. Colorado National Monument is just west of town, featuring landscapes of spires and cliffs. Main Street between First and Seventh streets is
a lovely walk of quirky shops and good eats. Stroll a block south on Fifth to check out the top-notch Museum of the West. Venture south of town to journey onto the Uncompahgre Plateau, a vivacious landscape of canyons. East takes you up Grand Mesa, to fab fishing in 10,000 lakes. West goes deep into the Colorado River Canyons. North is no-man’s-land. And, of course, there are the wineries in town and in nearby towns, like Palisade, which is also known for its peaches. FUN FACT:
Peter Heller’s 2012 post-apocalyptic novel “The Dog Stars” is largely set in and around the ruins of Grand Junction. MORE INFORMATION: visitgrandjunction.com
Great Sand Dunes National Park ELEVATION: 7,520 TO 13,604 FEET WHERE IS IT?
The easy way is south on I-25, turning west on Highway 160 at Walsenburg, then north into the park. The prettier way is down Highway 285, turning off onto Highway 17 at the north end of the San Luis Valley. NEED TO KNOW:
The tallest dunes in North America, the Great Sand Dunes cover 80 square miles of the valley floor. Close to Memorial Day, visitors can experience Medano Creek, a temporary stream that flows in successive waves. Intrepid trekkers can head up into the Sangre de Cristo Mountains for some stunning scenery.
Places to go
CONTINUED ON PAGE 7
Sunrise over Colorado National Monument. Photo courtesy of the Grand Junction Visitor and Convention Bureau
2017
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Places to go ALSO IN THE AREA: Crestone, a lost-in-time hippie village, and Colorado Gators, a geothermal outpost home to some massive reptiles. South of the park is Sand Dunes Swimming Pool, a geothermally heated pool and greenhouse with low-cost rental cabins. FUN FACT:
Legend has it that mysterious web-footed horses roam the dunes in the moonlight. MORE INFORMATION: nps.gov/grsa
Telluride ELEVATION: 8,750 FEET WHERE IS IT?
Go west on I-70 to Grand Junction, then south on Highway 50 to Ridgway. Go west on State Highway 62 to Placerville, then east on State Highway 145. At roughly seven hours from Denver, it’s about as out of the way as a Colorado town gets.
galleries and gourmet restaurants on Colorado Avenue, but for a bird’s-eye view, check out the gondola to Mountain Village – a free, 13-minute ride to a mountaintop town featuring eye-popping views. The other joy of summer in Telluride is access to the high country of the San Juan Mountains, teeming with waterfalls and ghost towns. Coming into Telluride from the east are two of the West’s most famous four-wheel-drive roads: Imogene Pass and Black Bear Pass, the latter dropping precariously into town with a spine-tingling descent down a series of unforgiving switchbacks. FUN FACT:
The summit of Imogene Pass – more than 13,000 feet high – is home to a restored Colorado National Guard installation called Fort Peabody, which was built in 1904 to keep deported striking miners from sneaking back into town. MORE INFORMATION: visittelluride.com Human-powered watercraft on Grand Lake. Photo courtesy of Grand County
NEED TO KNOW:
Telluride is nestled in a stunning box canyon beneath towering peaks. Visitors can stroll the
Places to go
Great Sand Dunes National Park. Photo by Shutterstock.com
Find Clues Solve Puzzles Reach the Goal 860 Tabor St. Suite 210 Lakewood, CO (303) 396-7359
CONTINUED ON PAGE 8
2017
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Vail
Woodland Park
ELEVATION: 8,022 FEET
ELEVATION: 8,465 FEET
WHERE IS IT?
Due west on I-70 about 2 ½ hours from Denver. NEED TO KNOW:
Though the town’s name is synonymous with skiing, Vail is loads of fun in the summer as well. Events abound. The Bravo! Vail Music Festival will run from June 22 to Aug. 4 this year, featuring chamber, classical and jazz performances. The Vail International Dance Festival will run from July 29 to Aug. 12, and boasts top-notch dance talent from around the globe. The Betty Ford Alpine Gardens, open from Memorial Day to Labor Day, showcase all manner of high elevation plants in a variety of settings, crowned by a 120-foot waterfall. FUN FACT:
Vail was founded in the early 1960s by a group of World War II 10th Mountain Division veterans who fell in love with the area while training at nearby Camp Hale in the war years. MORE INFORMATION: visitvailvalley.com
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olorado Adventures
WHERE IS IT? Head northwest out of Colorado Springs on Highway 24, about 20 miles from I-25. If you’re feeling particularly adventurous, take the back way through Deckers. NEED TO KNOW: The hot new thing in Woodland Park is the Dinosaur Resource Center, a handson kid-friendly dinotopia featuring more than 30 skeletons and “life restorations.” Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument is 15 miles west of town, home to fossilized redwood tree stumps and displays of some of the exquisite fossils found in the area. Rangers host night sky programs several times through the summer, taking advantage of the glorious night skies. The Colorado Wolf and Wildlife Center, 10 miles west of town, offers a variety of tours to meet the center’s resident lobos. FUN FACT: At nearly 8,500 feet above sea level, Woodland Park’s average July high temperature is only 74 – the perfect place to beat summer heat within easy reach of the big city. MORE INFORMATION: woodlandparkchamber.com
Vail Village at dusk. Photo courtesy of Abby Hein and Vail Resorts
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The
Arvada Press 25
LOCAL
April 27, 2017
LIFE
appeal to home school
Benefits, challenges of parents who teach their kids
HOME-SCHOOL PROGRAMS The Home School Connection offers groupsetting classes for home-schooled children in grades kindergarten through sixth. Students may attend one class a week. Subjects include performing arts, creative writing, science and physical education. Locations are in Westminster, Lakewood and Evergreen.
BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
B
ecause of her experience as a student in public schools, Ashley Maes decided to homeschool her 7-year-old son and 5-year-old daughter. “When I was in school, I never felt challenged,” the Littleton resident said. “I was present in school but not participating, and I felt like I could do more for my children.” She continues to home-school because of the freedom it provides — her family isn’t restricted to a school-day schedule and her kids can explore their passions and interests, Maes said. Maes’ decision to home-school reflects a trend that has significantly grown over the past two decades. In 1999, there were about 850,000 home-schooled students ages 5 through 17 in the United States, according to a household education survey conducted by the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics. That number jumped to an estimated 1.1 million students in 2003 and an estimated 1.5 million students in 2007, the most recent year of the survey. In Colorado, 7,659 students were registered with public school districts as home-schooled in 2016, up from 6,462 students in 2010, according to the Colorado Department of Education. Douglas County School District currently has 509 home-schooled students, the district reports. In fall of 2016, according to records from the Colorado Department of Education, Jefferson County Public Schools had 436 home-schooled students and Adams 12 Five Star Schools had 313. All of the districts’ home-school counts have increased since 2010. Families home-school for a number of reasons. Considered the most important are religious or moral instruction, concern about the school environment and dissatisfaction with academic instruction at other schools, the survey by the U.S. Department of Education reported. Colleen Sprister, of Sedalia, wanted her four children, ages 7, 9, 11 and 13, to have a Christ-based education. Private school was not in her family’s budget, so she and her husband decided to home-school. Sprister’s children are enrolled in Classical Conversations, an international home-school program with an emphasis on classical learning and Christianity. They work in group settings one day a week with other
For more information, call 720-289-9230 or email info@wwahomeschool.org. Two Roads is a K-12 charter school that offers home-school programs at its two campuses — 6980 Pierce St., Arvada, and 5890 Alkire St., Littleton. Home-school students are required to take a minimum of 6.25 hours of classes per week on campus.
For more information, call the Arvada campus at 303-423-3377 or the Littleton campus at 720-425-6163.
The Academy Charter School, based in Castle Rock, offers a home-school program with curriculum, lessons and classes for homeschooled students in Castle Rock, Lone Tree and Parker. The program is tuition-free with a small cost for materials. For more information, visit academycharter. org/home-school.
FAST FACTS Home school programs must have no less than 172 days of instruction, averaging four hours a day.
Colleen Sprister, a resident of Sedalia, home schools her four children, ages seven, nine, 11 and 13. She made the decision because she wanted her kids to have a Christbased education. “I get to see my kids through the good and the struggles everyday ,” she said, “and we get to work through it as a family.” COURTESY PHOTO Classical Conversations students from Castle Rock, Parker and Elizabeth. The other four days, they work on assignments at home. Her kids also participate in recreational activities, such as gymnastics and football, and work on their family’s small-scale farm. Home schooling has strengthened the relationship of her family, Sprister said. “I get to see my kids through the good, the struggles, every day, and we get to work through it as a family,” she said. Like Classical Conversations, many resources provide curriculum for families who home-school. Programs are offered online or as an extension of a public or charter school. Some are free; others have a fee for curriculum and material. When a parent or legal guardian decides to home-school a child, they take on the responsibility for the student’s education, according to the Colorado Department of Education.
That includes providing curriculum, books, supplies and tests and maintaining permanent records. That also includes making sure the student has at least 172 days of instruction a year in basic subjects, such as reading, writing, math, history, science and others. For Maes, taking on the role of a teacher has been challenging. Keeping her kids focused and interested can be difficult, she said. “It’s hard being with your kids all the time and getting them motivated,” Maes said. “Because you’re Mom, they feel like they can argue with you.” Another challenge that some homeschool families face is being labeled with stereotypes, such as socially awkward or sheltered. Maes had concerns about socialization when she first started homeschooling her children, she said. But she no longer worries about that. Her children interact with others when they are out running errands. They play with kids in their neighborhood,
Students in a home-school program must have academic progress evaluated in grades 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11. Home schooling is considered nonpublic and is not regulated by the state of Colorado. The parent who oversees the homeschool program is responsible for obtaining and paying for books, supplies and tests. Home-school resources vary because programs can be purchased from private companies or the parent or guardian can create the curriculum. Source: Colorado Department of Education
kids on their sports teams and students at the charter school they attend one day a week. “I used to be terrified that they would be hermits,” Maes said. “They are learning to interact with a variety of age groups.” Maes isn’t sure if she will homeschool her children through high school. She is taking it year by year. For now, the positives outweigh the negatives. “The relationship I am developing with them is different,” Maes said, “and I’m treasuring that because I won’t get that time back.”
26 Arvada Press
I
April 27, 2017A
Spending the summer with live music
f there’s a better part of summer than music under the stars, I don’t know what it is. Colorado has no shortage of picturesque locations for LINER summer concerts, NOTES and while everyone is well aware of places like Red Rocks, many more intimidate venues exist that provide a lovely setting for some classic acts. The Denver Botanic Gardens, Arvada Center and Clarke Reader Hudson Gardens in Littleton have concert lineups that are shining jewels. “What makes a good concert series is a mix of the new with the familiar,” said Barry Osborne, marketing manager with Swallow Hill Music, which puts on the concerts at the Botanic Gardens and Arvada Center. “We want these experiences to be like relaxing in your backyard, listening to
WHAT’S PLAYING? To find the Summer Stage Concert Series at The Arvada Center, call 720-898-7200 or visit www.SummerAtTheCenter.com. To find the Denver Botanic Gardens Summer Concert Series, call 1-877-435-9849 or visit concerts.botanicgardens.org. To find the Hudson Gardens & Event Summer Concert Series, visit www.altitudetickets. com. something you really love.” The lineups at all three venues tend toward classic rock acts, with musicians like Three Dog Night coming to the Arvada Center, Joan Jett, Firefall and Yes heading to Hudson, and Stephen Stills, Judy Collins and Randy Newman performing at the Botanic Gardens. “People are really excited about Stills and Collins, particularly because Collins is a Colorado musician,” Osborne said. “Newman is such a great songwriter. I think it will be really interesting to see
how he balances his deep, sarcastic songs with his popular movie songs.” Blues wizards are always fantastic performers, and this summer offers a mix of old hands and the new guard performing. The Robert Cray Band and Jonny Lang will be stopping by Arvada, Littleton will host The Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band, and the Botanic Gardens hosts blues god Buddy Guy and a special coheadlining performance with Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’. “The Taj Mo’ show is going to be really special, because they’re in such high demand as solo artists,” Osborne said. “They’re well-known friends, and seeing them together will reinvent the way they approach their music.” Among the three venues, all your stylistic bases are covered. A fan of country and bluegrass? Clint Black and The Punch Brothers are heading your way. More of a jazz fan? You can’t miss Herbie Hancock and Béla Fleck & The Flecktones and The Chick
Corea Elektric Band. For pop lovers, The B-52s, Michael McDonald, Loverboy and Survivor will all be in town. And if your leanings take you off the beaten path, José González and Dweezil Zappa playing years of his father’s music will more than serve. As the saying goes, variety is the spice of life. So I encourage you to check out one of these venues and see someone you’ve always been curious or have heard good things about. “We’ve got the whole summer ahead,” Osborne said, “and we’re really excited about it.” Me, too. Clarke Reader’s column on how music connects to our lives appears every other week. A community editor with Colorado Community Media, he is so excited to see Randy Newman live — he better play “Sail Away.” Check out his music blog at calmacil20.blogspot.com. And share what concerts you’ll be going to this summer at creader@ coloradocommunitymedia.com.
Edge Theater having fun amid the ‘Misery’ Lakewood theater stages Stephen King’s classic BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
As a creative person, it is encouraging to know whether people support the work. But for romance novelist Paul Sheldon, his number one fan Annie Wilkes might be a step or two over the line. That’s the setup of Stephen King’s classic horror thriller, “Misery,” which is playing at The Edge Theater this spring. “We want to keep it simple and
just focus on the story,” said actor Rick Yaconis. “We’re taking a very cinematic approach to telling this story to audiences.” Directed by Warren Sherrill, “Misery” runs at The Edge, 1560 Teller St., April 28 through May 21. Performances are at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 6 p.m. on Sunday. After a nasty car accident in the Colorado Rockies, Paul (Yaconis) is rescued by Annie (Emma Messenger). As it happens, Annie’s favorite character is Misery Chastain — a character that Paul recently killed in an effort to start a new stage in his career. Needless to say, Annie is less than thrilled about the scenario. “Annie is a very complicated
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monster,” Messenger said. “She is this interesting blend of childlike adoration and chilling mental control.” Dan Mundell rounds out the small cast as Buster, which Messenger said adds a dimension of the outside world to the proceedings. There’s a creative challenge that comes with putting on a show as well-known as “Misery,” but Yaconis said going in new creative directions is what the theater does best. “I think people are going to be curious about how this story translates onto the stage,” he said. “We’re bringing a fresh view, and people are going to be on the edge of their seat the whole time.” Annie is such a classic character
A
SSISTED
L
IVING
Home is where the
H ONORED
IF YOU GO
WHAT: “Misery” WHERE: The Edge Theater 1560 Teller St., Lakewood WHEN: April 28 - May 21 Friday - Saturday - 8 p.m. Sunday - 6 p.m. COST: $28 INFORMATION: 303-232-0363 or www.theedgetheater.com
because she’s so mystifying and frightening, Messenger said. This fact, combined with the subtext and scares of King’s work, makes the production a must-see. “I hope everyone comes to love Annie Wilkes,” she said. “I do.”
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Arvada Press 27
7April 27, 2017
Abstract painter’s work joins with Still’s in Denver show Mark Bradford makes commentary on issues through his art BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Noted contemporary abstract painter Mark Bradford’s large, striking mixed media paintings are presently exhibited at the Denver Art Museum in company with examples of Abstract Expressionist Clyfford Still’s work. Both painters have chosen to use black liberally in their work and the exhibit, “Shade,” circulated by Buffalo’s Albright-Knox Gallery, and expanded here, is a collaboration Bradford between the DAM and the next-door Clyfford Still Museum. Bradford, was born in Los Angeles in 1961, where he lives and works, following study at California Institute of Fine Arts in Valencia. Widely honored, he is a MacArthur Fellowship winner and will represent the United States at the 57th Annual Venice Bienniale with a major solo show in the U.S. Pavilion (May 13-Nov. 26.) He was influenced by Still’s works. In museum materials, he is quoted after seeing a Still painting for the first time: “What caught my eye was the insistence of his paintings. His surfaces are more raw and immediate than other abstract expressionist paintings. His paintings are not just optical — they have a very physical presence.” He compared studio processes (Bradford tears found papers and uses layers with paint.) “My paintings are made up of tearing. To - me it represents a process that is more of a reality than laying down a perfect line of paint. It’s raw and violent but it still comes together. And it’s not just tearing that you see in Still’s paintings, it’s a collision of colors. These daren’t smooth transitions.” Bradford’s paintings include comment on class, culture, race and gender. The museums will further explore social activism and art through programming, to be announced. For a third year, a contemporary
IF YOU GO “SHADE” will be at the Denver Art Museum and Clyfford Still Museum through July 16, with one ticket valid for entrance to both. Denver Art Museum is between 12th and 14th Avenues the first block west of Broadway, with a parking garage on 12th immediately west of Broadway. The Clyfford Still Museum is directly west of the Hamilton Building, connected by a walkway, or is entered from Acoma Street. See denverartmuseum.org or clyffordstillmuseum.org. artist, Bradford in 2017, was chosen to curate an exhibit from the collected works of Still. His selection of 15 works by Still, which prominently include black pigments, is exhibited in the CSM’s two largest galleries and a ticket to “Shade” includes visits to both museums. “The title, `Shade,’ has rich implications such as to shelter from light, to be in a shadow or to add black to a hue to darken it,” said DAM contemporary art curator Rebecca Hart. “Both Clyfford Still and Mark Bradford have a unique relationship to black. At a time when other Abstract Expressionist artists had vibrant palettes, Still used black to force viewers out of their comfort zones. For Bradford, the choice isn’t neutral; it intentionally forces us to confront conventional notions of race. Each viewer will interpret the use of black differently, hopefully evoking emotions that connect them to the works on view.” As one enters the first floor Gallagher Family Gallery, one views “Realism,” a two-panel mixed media, textured work on canvas (108 ¼” X 168 ½”) which is in the Denver Art Museum collection. A look at the edges of Bradford’ works shows the layering and tearing involved. Other works follow, such as “Butch Queen” and “Mississippi Gottdam,” which introduces silver with other found paper layers. Still’s related works are woven into the exhibit. At the rear of the gallery is an especially well-made video interview with the articulate Bradford, who says “`Shade’ is simply putting questions into the public domain.” He also commented that Still was a precursor to the civil rights movement. Social activism and art will be explored in future programming by both museums.
“Realness” by contemporary abstract painter Mark Bradford is included in “Shade,” an exhibit of works by Bradford and Clyfford Still at the Denver Art Museum and Clyfford Still Museum. PHOTO COURTESY OF THE DENVER ART MUSEUM
28 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
School of Mines E-Days gets prehistoric Tim Seeber of Gunbarrel, aka Mr.Bones, roams around the IM Fields on the Colorado School of Mines campus during the school’s E-Days Carnival. This year’s theme for E-Days, which took place April 20-22, was prehistory.
C
olorado School of Mines students stepped back in time for this year’s Engineering Days (E-Days) events. E-Days takes place annually on campus and offers students an opportunity to take a break from studies and enjoy a variety of performances and events during the weekend. This year, activities and events took place April 20-22 and was themed PreHistorEDays. Events included a field day, carnival, concerts and comedian performances, and of course, the annual Ore Cart Pull from Golden to Denver and the Cardboard Boat Race on Clear Creek.
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Arvada Press 29
7April 27, 2017
Alamo Drafthouse hosts three days of silent films Festival will feature nine productions covering range of genres BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Alamo Drafthouse, located at Aspen Grove in Littleton, will again host The Denver Silent Film Festival. The 2017 version is organized by film educator Howie Movshovitz and will be held April 28-30.Movshovitz said he is especially happy about the range in this year’s selection of nine films, ranging from comedy to serious drama to delightful eccentricity. Three of them feature state-of-theart 2K digital restorations. Screenings will be accompanied by live musical performance. This is where our films of today began … Films vary from Chaplin and Keaton to “Nanook of the North” amd “Faust” and “Stella Dallas.” Tickets cost $12 each or $99 for a weekend pass — available at Alamo Drafthouse, drafthouse. com/denver or denversilentfilmfestival. org. Schedule: • April 28, 7 p.m. — “Steamboat Bill Jr.” with Buster Keaton and Charles Reisner, about a young dandy and his riverboat owner father in the old South. Newly restored. (70 minutes). Preceded
by “Back Stage,” with Buster Keaton and Al St. John (26 minutes). Newly restored. • April 29, noon — “Sparrows,” 1926, William Baudine with Mary Pickford in a pastoral melodrama, with escape through the swamp ... 16mm (93 minutes). • April 29, 4 p.m. — “Faust,” 1926, F.W. Murnau, 16mm. Accompanied by Donald Sosin and the UCD Student Orchestra. Ancient story about a man giving himself to the devil. Made in Germany, with German Expressionist sets. • April 29, 7:30 p.m. — “Master of the House/Du skal aere din hustru,” 1925, Carl Theodore Dreyer (107 minutes). Man who needs “fixing” and his old nanny, who takes charge. • April 30, 10 a.m. — “Nanook of the North,” 1921, Robert Flaherty (78 minutes). A title we’re familiar with, but may not have seen. Documentary/ ethnography, a look at human struggle against nature. Restoration. • April 30, 3 p.m. — Student-made shorts, created since January, incorporating live music. • April 30, 5 p.m. — “Stella Dallas,” 1925, Henry King, 16mm (110 minutes). First filmed version of Olive Higgins Prouty’s novel. • April 30, 8 p.m. — “He Who Gets Slapped,” 1924, Victor Seastrom, 1924, 16mm struck from original nitrate from Jon Mirales (95 minutes). Features Lon Chaney, Norma Shearer, John Gilbert. About a resentful clown (Chaney).
A scene from the film “Stella Dallas,” which will be shown at the Silent Film Festival on April 29 and 30 at Alamo Drafthouse in Littleton. COURTESY OF HOWIE MOVSHOVITZ
Miners Alley Children’s Theatre
April 1 ~ 29
minersalley.com 303.935.3044
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30 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
Drop by drop: Volunteers record rain and snow Crew of 20,000 measures precipitation for environmental organizations BY AMY THOMSON SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
Steve Austin has been measuring the precipitation levels in his backyard every morning since 2005 at his home in Northglenn. Outside of a few weekend trips, he hasn’t missed a day. “I’ve been doing it so long, it’s just part of what I do,” he said. “Get up, get washed, shaved and measure the rain.” He doesn’t keep that data for his own amusement but sends it off to the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network, or CoCoRaHS, an international group of volunteers that use their rain gauges to help the National Weather Service and other environmental organizations. “Moisture is so important,” the retired engineer said. “If you only get one-tenth of an inch, CoCoRaHS wants to know.” The network, headquartered in Fort Collins, is key to helping hydrologists and climatologists around the world get the most accurate, informed data on precipitation rates possible.
Volunteers use rain gauges like this one to track precipitation around the globe. COURTESY PHOTO
“Rainfall is so variable,” Education Coordinator Noah Newman said. “A rainstorm could go right in between the official stations of the National Weather Service and they might not know how much rain fell.” And that’s happened before. “It all started from the Fort Collins flood in 1997,” Newman said. The weather service’s station was out by I-25 and hadn’t picked up on the dangerous incoming storm. As a result,
the community never received a warning to evacuate and five people died. Colorado State Climatologist Nolan Doesken realized that starting a community network of rain gauges could save some lives and the network was formed, according to Newman. What began with a handful of people in Colorado now comprises 20,000 volunteers across the United States, Puerto Rico, Canada, the Virgin Islands and the Bahamas. The nonprofit asks that observers report data every morning, but it’s not required. The only equipment necessary is a $35 rain gauge. Recording the precipitation measurement is simple. There is a funnel to direct rainwater into a plastic pipe, called the measuring tube, that tells how much rain fell in the past 24 hours. Measuring snow requires a few additional steps, like weighing the snow from your rain gauge to determine the precipitation amount and reporting the inches of snow in your backyard. Volunteers say it takes between 5 and 15 minutes a day. The Urban Drainage and Flood Control District (UDFCD) uses this data regularly. They have an alert system of 200 automatic rain gauges across the Denver and Boulder areas to measure and identify when heavy rainstorms are happening and alert the public of appropriate safety measures. But the volunteer data makes
this system more robust. “The network observer data really does fill a nice gap (in the alert system),” said Kevin Stewart, program manager for Flood Warning and Information Services for UDFCD. “In fact, there are more network observers in the region than we have automated gauges.” Another Thornton observer, John Simmons, first became interested in water conservation when he and his wife implemented a water-conscious xeriscape landscape when they purchased their home in 1980. When he heard about the observer opportunity, he signed up. Simmons said he was motivated by the environmental and civic responsibility. “More and more people use the water and we need to be more aware of water resources in general,” Simmons said. “It’s a civic duty.” During the tragic 2013 Colorado floods, Simmons recorded 5.07 inches of rain on Sept. 12, 2013 — and another 1.64 inches the following day. Paul Bartholomew, a business analyst living in Thornton, started recording 12 years ago to help round out the data for the National Weather Service and organizations like the UDFCD. “I’m committed to statistics and I know how important this data is,” he said. “The emergency reports that we can submit go right to the National Weather Service.”
7April 27, 2017
THINGS to DO THEATER
Children’s Theater: 1 p.m. Saturdays through April 29, with 11 a.m. shows on select days at Miners Alley Playhouse, 1224 Washington Ave., Golden. Miners Alley Children’s Theatre presents “Peter and the Wolf.” Call 303-935-3044 or go to minersalley.com. ‘A Skull in Connemara’: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 1 p.m. Sundays through April 30 at Miners Alley Playhouse, 1224 Washington Ave., Golden. Additional show at 6 p.m. Sunday, April 23. A raucous and unsettling comedy about death and dirt. Call 303-935-3044 or go to minersalley.com. Dinner Theater Show: 6 p.m. Sunday, April 30 at Colorado ACTS Theater, 11455 W. I-70 Frontage Road North, Wheat Ridge. “The Diaries of Adam and Eve” is a light-hearted look at the world’s first love story through the eyes of America’s greatest humorist, Mark Twain, whose Garden of Eden bursts with wit, laughter and the lyric poignancy of the first love and the first loss. Call 303-4566772 for reservations. Spring Musical ‘Guys and Dolls’: 7 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 4-6, and 2 p.m. Saturday, May 6, at the Event Center at Pinnacle. Presented by Timbergriffen Theater Company, along with students from Early College of Arvada and the Pinnacle Charter school. For tickets, call 720-4734400; they also will also be sold at the door. Las Cafeteras: 7:30 p.m. Friday, May 5 at the Lakewood Cultural Center, 470 S. Allison Parkway. Tickets available at 303-9877845, www.Lakewood.org/LCCPresents or the box office. Group creates a remix of traditional Son Jarocho sounds, poetry in English and Spanglish and instruments like jarana, requinto, a donkey jawbone and a wooden platform called the Tarima into one energetic and uplifting performance.
ART
Wheat Ridge Quilt Circle: 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. the fourth Wednesday of the month in the Red Brick house at Historic Park. Upcoming meetings are April 26, May 24, June 28, July 26, Aug. 23, Sept. 27, Oct. 25, Nov. 29. Presented by the Wheat Ridge Historical Society.
this week’s TOP FIVE Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, April 28-29, and 2 p.m. Saturday, April 29, at Colorado ACTS Theater, 11455 W. I-70 Frontage Road North, Wheat Ridge. Delicious story of the adventures experienced by Charlie Bucket on his visit to Willy Wonka’s mysterious chocolate factory. Tickets purchased at the door. Call 303-456-6772, email coloradoacts@yahoo. com or go to www.coloradoacts.org. ‘Misery’: 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 6 p.m. Sundays from April 28 to May 21 at the Edge Theater, 1560 Teller St., Lakewood. Shows also at 8 p.m. Monday, May 8 and Thursday, May 18. Novelist Paul Sheldon is writing as if his life depends on it, and it does. Adult themes. Call 303-232-0363 or go to www.theedgetheater.com.
those who would like to experience the music and dance and prayer of the afternoon. Contact Christina Bryan at 303-359-1878 or christina.bryan@ colorado.edu to schedule a rehearsal time. Rikki-Tikki-Tavi: 7 p.m. Saturday, April 29 and 2 p.m. Sunday, April 30 at the Lakewood Cultural Center, 470 S. Allison Parkway. Ballet Ariel original ballet based on the short story in Rudyard Kipling’s classic `Jungle Book.’ Tickets available at www.Lakewood.org/Tickets, by calling 303-9877845 or at the box office. Go to www.balletariel. org.
Spring Sharing: 2-3 p.m. Saturday, April 29, at First United Methodist Church, 1500 Ford St., Golden. Presented by the Rocky Mountain Network of the Sacred Dance Guild. Dancers and dance groups invited, as are
Paint Mom a Masterpiece: 4:305:30 p.m. Friday, May 5, at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. For ages 5-12 years. Outdoor, instructor led class with a step-by-step tutorial. No experience necessary. All supplies included. Dress appropriately for activity and the weather. Register at Arvada.org/public-classes. ‘Damage’ Art Exhibit: open through February 2018 at Red Rocks Community College, Lakewood, in the mezzanine near the library. Denver artist Sharon Brown’s exhibit features psychologically charged paintings created mostly from photographs. Go to www. rrcc.edu.
EVENTS
Community Coffee with Rep. Tracy Kraft-Tharp: 8 a.m. Thursday, April 27 at La Dolce Vita in Olde Town Arvada; and at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 27 at Panera in Walnut Creek, Westminster. Contact TracyForStateRep@ gmail.com or 303866-2950 Aging Actively at 50 and Older: 6:30 p.m. Thursday, April 27 at Boulder Public Library Theater, 1001 Arapahoe Ave., Boulder. Arrive at 6 p.m. for registration and coffee. Presented by EnrichLifeOver50.org, which focuses on the positive aspects of growing older. A Denver area
chapter is being formed. Go to www.ELO50.org for details or to register. SilverSneakers Senior Prom: 5:30-9 p.m. Friday, April 28 at the Arvada Center for the Performing Arts, 6901 Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada. Theme is the Kentucky Derby - Run for the Roses. Call 303-403-4241 for information. Go to ApexPRD.org Fox Hollow Golf Tournaments: Saturday, April 29 (Two Man Better Ball) and Saturday, May 21 (Spring Stableford). CGA golfers with handicaps may play in the Fox Hollow Amateur Open on Saturday, June 3. This 27-hole facility at 13410 W. Morrison Road, Lakewood, added new tee options for all player levels. Join the golfing fun through October; go to fhmgc.org. Meet 2018 Senate Candidate: 7-9 a.m. Monday, May 1, at Davies’ Chuck Wagon Diner, 10151 W. 26th Ave., Lakewood. Presentation of the Jefferson County Republican Men’s Club. Christine Jensen, 2018 candidate, presents “Why I’m Running for State Senate District 20, Running so Hard, and Why You Shoud be Running with Me.” Republicans, especially students, youth and women, are invited. Go to www.JeffcoRepublicanMensClub.org. Upcycled Gardening: 4-5 p.m. Tuesday, May 2, at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. For ages 5-10. Learn about seed starting and have a few plants to put in the beds and pots after that last snowfall. Sign up in advance at Arvada.org/ public-classes.
Jefferson Symphony Orchestra Season Finale: 3 p.m. Sunday, April 30 at the Green Center, Colorado School of Mines, 924 16th St., Golden. Tickets for `An Arabian Night’ are available online at www. jeffsymphony.org or by calling 303-278-4237, or at the door before the concert.
Take a Bite of the Big Apple: 2:30-3:30 p.m. Thursday, May 4 at Atria of Applewood, 2800 Youngfield St., Lakewood. Join Active Minds as we virtually visit one of the world’s most important cities. We’ll explore the city’s past and present, as well as the important people and places that have shaped this unique city. Call 303-233-4343. Mile High Dowsers: 7-9:30 p.m. Thursday, May 4, at Clements Community Center, 1580 Yarrow St., Lakewood. Learn beginning dowsing from Jennifer Newton. Practical dowsing is presented by Jack Roberts, who also will demonstrate the group’s website improvements. Richard Herman is the featured presenter, sharing his knowledge of the dowsing world, which is educational and entertaining. Go to http://www. milehighdowsers.org/ Round Table Issues Breakfast: 7 a.m. Friday, May 5, at American Legion Wilmore-Richter Post 161, 6230 W. 60th Ave., Arvada. Learn about local projects and events. Open to the public. Contact 303-424-0324 for cost and other information. Avian Arvada: 8-11 a.m. Saturday, May 6, at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. Join an avid birder from the Front Range Birding Company for a bird walk around Oberon Lake. Bring binoculars if you have them; a few
Arvada Press 31
extras will be on hand. Dress for the weather; bring water and a snack, and meet at the Nature Center. Sign up Arvada.org/public-classes. Busy Bees, Monarch Butterflies, and other Pollinators: 10:30 a.m. to noon Saturday, May 6 at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. For ages 5-10 years. Explore the importance of plant pollination and helping all the pollinators in our backyards. Make a native pollinator house to take home and encourage these beneficial insects to spend more time nearby. Presented by Pioneer Farmsteaders. Sign up at Arvada. org/public-classes.
Mountain Derby Daze: 1-5 p.m. Saturday, May 6 at Anchorage Farm, 12889 S. Parker Ave., Pine. Fundraiser celebrates the tradition of the Kentucky Derby. Play games, enjoy a silent auction, have your face painted, compete for prizes and enjoy Southern Derby fare. Mint juleps, beer and wine served; Shirley Temples for the kids. Kentucky Derby race will be aired live as the event finale. Go to www. mrcco.org. Proceeds benefit the Mountain Resource Center. Container Gardening Workshop: 10 a.m. Saturday, May 6, at First United Methodist Church, 1500 Ford St., Golden. A master gardener from CSU’s Extension Service will discuss horticultural techniques as well as design concepts. After the presentation, the master gardener will answer questions about specific concerns. Asian Food Bazaar: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, May 6, at Simpson United Methodist Church, 6001 Wolff St., Arvada. Beef teriyaki and chow mein dinner available for purchase. Baked goods, sushi and omanju also available. Call 303-428-7963 or go to www. simpsonumc.com.
Gardening in Colorado: Growing Veggies and Flowers in Containers: 2-4 p.m. Sunday, May 7, at Wheat Ridge Library, 5475 W. 32nd Ave., Wheat Ridge. Pick up special techniques to grow herbs or your favorite vegetables in containers. The class also covers design concepts for flower containers. Taught by a Colorado State University-trained Colorado Master Gardener. SEE CALENDAR, P32
32 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
CALENDAR
American Legion Post 161 Meeting: 7 p.m. Thursday, May 11, at 6230 W. 60th Ave., Arvada. Contact 303-424-0324 for cost and other information.
FROM PAGE 31
International Dawn Chorus: 6-9 a.m. Sunday, May 7, at Two Ponds National Wildlife Refuge, 9210 W. 80th Ave., Arvada. Rise early and listen to the chorus of birds starting a new day. Bring your binoculars and join bird enthusiast Doug Shoffner on a bird walk. Family friendly program; no reservations needed. Wheat Ridge Historical Society: 7:30 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at the Red Brick House, 4610 Robb St. Social time begins at 7 p.m. Upcoming meetings are May 9, June 13, July 11, Aug. 8, Sept. 12, Oct. 10, Nov. 14. The society’s holiday party is Dec. 12 at the Braugh House.
Demographic Challenges: 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Thursday, May 11 at Jefferson County Administration and Courts Facility, 100 Jefferson County Parkway, Golden. Jefferson County Commissioners and the Jeffco League of Women Voters will discuss key issues identified by the league’s recent study of the county’s demographics and the challenges we will face in the near future. The public is welcome to observe the discussion; however, no questions will be taken from the audience at this special meeting. League of Women Voters Book Club: 1 p.m. Wednesday, May 17 in the Lakewood area; and 9:30 a.m. Saturday, May 20 at Westland Meridian Library, 10695 W. 17th
Ave., Lakewood. Get a copy of the nonfiction book, “Thank You For Being Late, An Optimist’s Guide to Thriving in the Age of Accelerations,” by Thomas L. Friedman, three-time Pulitzer prize winner, and be ready to discuss by May. Call Lynne at 303-985-5128 for Wednesday’s meeting location and details about either meeting. The public is welcome. Food Pantry: open from 9-11 a.m. Wednesdays at New Apostolic Church, 5290 Vance St., Arvada, rear entrance (across the street from Beau Jo’s restaurant). Contact Gertrude at 303-902-6794. Fun with Animals: During the months of April and May, there are chances for children to learn about bees, butterflies and bullfrogs at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. For ages 3-6 years. Sign up at arvada.org/public-classes.
HEALTH
Improve Your Body Image: noon and 7 p.m. Tuesday, May 2 at Lifetree Café, 5675 Field St., Arvada. `Hey, Good Lookin’: A Healthy Approach to Body Image” features a filmed interview with artist Adam Schultz, who sculpts plus-size female figures in bronze and stone. Program also includes advice from professional counselor Cheryl Eresman. Contact Polly Wegner at 303424-4454 or pwegner@peacelutheran. net. Editor’s note: Calendar submissions must be received by noon Thursday for publication the following week. Send listings to calendar@coloradocommunitymedia.com. No attachments, please. Listings are free and run on a space-available basis.
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Community Subdivision Fri & Sat, May 12th & 13th 8am-4pm Numerous homeowners in the Pradera community will be participating in this event Major cross streets into Pradera are Bayou Gulch and Parker Road., Parker 80134 Call Dotson Skaggs, Kentwood Company, 303-909-9350 for more information.
Split & Delivered $275 a cord Stacking available extra $25 Call 303-647-2475 or 720-323-2173
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1990 Pro Star Mastercraft Ski boat & trailer Gray and Red 351 Ford Engine 600 hours, exc. cond. Cover and Canvas portable top $7,500 (303)421-9367 Arvada
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Arvada Press 33
LOCAL
7April 27, 2017
SPORTS
Faceoffs are where it all begins Valor Christian sophomore Eric Pacheco controls a faceoff against Ponderosa sophomore Andy Bauer during an April 11 game at EchoPark Automotive Stadium. Pacheco claims winning faceoffs in high school is about efficiency. JIM BENTON
Techniques to gain possession have huge influence on outcome in boys lacrosse BY JIM BENTON JBENTON@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
It might not look like a game of rock-paper-scissors when two players trot to the center of the field for a faceoff in boys lacrosse, but that’s a complicated form of what it is. The player who has the better plan to counter the other player’s move and is able to execute usually is the winner. And winning faceoffs is crucial to a team’s success. Teams face off at the start of the game, the beginning of each quarter and after every goal is scored. “Possession is a big part of the game,” Bear Creek coach Issac Nelson-Garner said. A faceoff starts with two players crouched with their sticks lying horizontally on each side of the midfield line. The ball is place between the head of each stick and the butt-end pointing down the midfield line. Once the whistle is blown, each
LEADING THE WAY The top boys faceoff percentage leaders from area schools, through games of April 20: • Nick Pacheco, Valor: .786 • Ryan Stewart, Cherry Creek: .780 • Brett Boos, Chaparral: .747 • Eric Pacheco, Valor: .722 • Mike Madayag, Golden: .719 • JT Simonton, Cherry Creek: .716 • Duke Hindman, Littleton: .713 •Shawn Casebolt, Lakewood: .694 • Alex Fielding, Heritage: .647 • Landon Nolta, Mountain Vista: .636 player fights for the ball in an effort to gain possession. “Winning face offs is a mixture of power and speed,” ThunderRidge senior Brett Naves said. “If you’re faster than the other guy, you can win, but if you are stronger than the other guy, you can also win. So it’s kind of like a rock-paper-scissors match.” Basic faceoff techniques include the clamp, jam and rake. The clamp can be neutralized by a jam. The rake usually loses to the clamp but the rake can beat the jam. “I start with the clamp, but if I’m getting beat with a clamp I usually like to switch it up and try jumping him,” Ponderosa sophomore Andy Bauer said.
ALL THE RIGHT MOVES Basic moves used by players taking faceoffs in boys lacrosse. Clamp: A player using the clamp quickly moves his wrists over so the pocket of the lacrosse stick is clamped down on the ball before the opponent can do so. Jam: The jam is a move where the stick is punched over the ball to block the opponent from any access. It is a defensive move to gain possession of the ball instead of creating a fast break. Rake: The rake is when the player moves his stick under the jam before the opponent gains possession. The ball is usually raked away from the opposing faceoff specialist. Jump: Used to counter almost any move by picking up the head of the stick and pushing it forward over the ball, with the stick usually under the stick of the opponent. Punch: A move to counter the jump where the ball is punched with the stick forward to be scooped up. Sources: www.coachup.com; Stack. com; blog.comlax.com/nation/articles/ thelacrosse-faceoff A jump is when a player holds down the stick of the opponent who has clamped. A player using the clamp quickly moves his wrists over SEE LACROSSE, P38
JEFFCO STANDOUT PERFORMERS Michael Thorne, baseball, sophomore, Faith Christian: He didn’t have an at bat during the 19-3 win over SkyView Academy on April 20 but he walked four times, scored four runs and stole three bases. Laryssa Hamblen, soccer, sophomore, D’Evelyn: Hamblen scored three of the Jaguars’ four goals in a
4-0 shutout of Green Mountain on April 21. Hamblen extended her goal scoring streak to eight games. Maddie DeHerrera, soccer, sophomore, Ralston Valley: She scored three goals and wound up with seven points in the Mustangs’ 6-0 triumph over Bear Creek on April 17. Dominic Baca, track, senior, Alam-
eda: He fashioned a time of 54.31 to win the 800 meters on April 18 at the Clear Creek Frontier League meet. Megan McGriff, lacrosse, sophomore, Bear Creek: McGriff scored three goals on seven shots and picked up 11 ground balls in the Bears’ 10-4 win over Wheat Ridge on April 20.
STANDOUT PERFORMERS are five athletes named from south metro area high schools. Preference is given to those making their debut on the list. To nominate an athlete, contact Jim Benton at jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com
Pushing through the pain can pay off
W
hile talking with Jack Huber, I could only think about how it takes a few steps to get everything working after sitting for a while and how things I used to be able to easily do are now harder. And I’ve never had a OVERTIME major injury. Jack Huber, a senior wrestler and football player at ThunderRidge, has undergone surgeries for injuries to his shoulder, knees and chest. Despite pain plus long rehabilitation stints, he kept grinding and qualiJim Benton fied for the state wrestling tournament three straight seasons. He finished fifth at 182 pounds in the 2017 Class 5A tournament. “The injuries started my sophomore year,” he said. “I had to decide if I wanted to keep doing this because of all the money spent for the surgeries, and it was painful. I decided to stick it out, one more year, one more time.” Huber signed a letter of intent to wrestle at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo during an April 27 signing ceremony at ThunderRidge. He will join his brother Joe on the Mustangs’ wrestling team. Joe Huber was a 2015 Ponderosa High graduate. “A year ago, I didn’t know if I would be able to wrestle,” Jack said. “I didn’t know with the surgery if it was going to work. I feel good now. I feel normal again.” No mercy for boys volleyball bid Boys volleyball took a called third strike at the Colorado High School Activities Association’s Legislative Council meeting on April 20. The club-level Colorado Boys High School Volleyball Association and the CHSAAsanctioned Tri-Peaks League prepared a proposal requesting that boys volleyball be sanctioned as a two-classification spring sport. But, for the third time in recent years, a bid to have the sport sanctioned was denied when 54 percent of the 72-member council voted to not even open the classification and League Organizing Committee report for consideration. Also at the meeting, a mercy rule for all levels of boys and girls basketball was considered by the council and approved by a 59-11 vote. If a team has a 35-point lead after three quarters, a running clock will start and only stop for timeouts, injuries and free throws. In hockey action, Chaparral and Woodland Park will be added as new teams for the 2017-18 season. Former swim coach honored Former Littleton boys and girls swim coach Maurice “Stringy” Erwin will be one of six people inducted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame. The 53rd annual induction banquet, set for SEE BENTON, P39
34 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
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Arvada Press 35
7April 27, 2017
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36 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
Services Landscaping/Nurseries
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Arvada Press 37
7April 27, 2017
Arvada West victim of walk-off infield single versus Dakota Ridge Arvada West junior Vinson Britton (22) is forced out at second base by Dakota Ridge senior Jake Starkey (8) during a Class 5A Jeffco League game April 22 at Dakota Ridge High School. The Wildcats suffered a 3-2 loss in extra innings.
BY DENNIS PLEUSS JEFFCO PUBLIC SCHOOLS
LITTLETON — A high chopper over the mound for an infield single April 21 put Dakota Ridge baseball in prime position atop the standings of the wild Class 5A Jeffco League. Senior Greg McNulty hammered a pitch from Arvada West pitcher Ethan Schmitz into the ground just in front of home plate in the bottom of the eighth inning on the Eagles’ home field. McNulty beat out the throw to first base, while junior Jake Collins scored from third base for a walk-off 3-2 victory against A-West. “I was just shaking up there,” McNulty admitted. “I was ready to get the ball in play. I knew once I got the ball in play something would happen for me.” It wasn’t the first time McNulty has managed a walk-off single this season for Dakota Ridge (8-7, 4-2 in 5A Jeffco). “He (McNulty) had one in Arizona too where he dribbled it about 10 feet,” Dakota Ridge coach Jeff Legault said. “That’s two walk-off singles that probable went a total of 100 feet. I’ll take.” The Eagles also took a share of the top spot in the conference with the victory. Ralston Valley defeated league-leading Chatfield (7-7, 4-2) early in the day to hand the Chargers their second straight conference loss. A-West (6-9, 2-4) actually edged Chatfield 5-4 two days earlier to
PHOTOS BY DENNIS PLEUSS/JEFFCO PUBLIC SCHOOLS
help reel the Chargers back to the pack in the league standings. Through six conference games, all eight 5A Jeffco teams are separated by just two games. Dakota Ridge players were well aware in the dugout of their opportunity to leap into a tie for lead in the conference. “It’s huge,” Collins said. “With the league and everyone being so close together every game counts, especially with Ralston Valley defeating Chatfield.” “These last two weeks are going to be crazy,” Legault said. “Anybody can beat anybody on any given day. Everyone is in the thick of it. The
league is wide open for anybody.” Dakota Ridge received a strong pitching performances from Cooper Legault and Ryan Stohr. Legault, the coach’s son, went six innings. He gave up an RBI single by Ian Forbes in the top of the second inning and a solo home run by A-West’s Raul Villarreal in the top of the sixth inning that tied things up at 2-2. Stohr picked up the win striking out three in two innings of work. A key strikeout of A-West’s Tony Cass stranded a Wildcat runner at third base in the top of the eighth inning. “We are up and down right now,” A-West coach Matt McDougal said.
“We are having a hard time driving in runs. Our kids are playing hard. We are just trying to figure that thing out.” Jered Kennedy went the first five inning on the mound for the Wildcats. Schmitz took the loss on the hill for A-West. A-West hosted rival Ralston Valley (8-7, 3-3) on April 25 after print deadline. The Wildcats must now wait to see where they are seeded for the end-of-season tournament. Dennis Pleuss is a communications specialist for Jeffco Public Schools with a focus on athletics and activities. For more Jeffco coverage, go online at CHSAANow.com/Jeffco.
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38 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
LACROSSE FROM PAGE 33
so the back of the head is clamped down on the ball before the opponent. The jam is a move where the head and shaft are punched over the ball to block the opponent from any access. The rake is when the player moves his stick under the jam before it can disable him. “You have to have the right body and special muscles. You need special reflexes and you need more shoulder power to press and you need good foot movement,” Wheat Ridge sophomore Tanner Spirek said. But physical attributes just might be secondary. “The most important quality for a faceoff player is competiveness,” Littleton coach Andrew Paredes said. “If that player has a refuse-to-lose attitude, he will fight and scrap for every loose ball and win them more often than he loses them.” Paredes also points out that, as in hockey, other players need to be involved in gaining possession following a faceoff. “An excellent faceoff unit can control the game for its team,” Parades said. “While the faceoff player himself is the central part of that unit, the three players combined really make a difference. There will be games when your faceoff
player wins most of the balls himself.” Good faceoff players are specialists and FOGO (faceoff and get off) has become a revered position. Valor Christian sophomore Eric Pacheco is one of the state’s top faceoff specialists. “At the high school level, everyone is really an elite faceoff guy,” said Eric Pacheco, whose senior brother Nick also takes faceoffs. “You are not really going to run into anyone with faster hands or quicker reaction time. It’s more about efficiency. Nick and I really work to be efficient on faceoffs. We work on not having wasted movements and being technical.” Chaparral junior Brett Boos is second in the state in winning faceoff percentage and leads in ground balls. But he also plays some as a defensive midfielder. In a recent game against Ponderosa, he won 15 of 19 faceoffs by pushing the ball downfield and picked up six ground balls. “Quickness and strength are the keys to winning faceoffs,” he said. “And ground balls help the team keep possession.” A winning faceoff percentage can usually be traced to winning teams. Once a team scores, wins a faceoff, keeps possession and has another chance to score, it often leads to scoring sprees. “If you don’t have the ball,” Valor coach John Grant Jr. said, “you can’t score.”
Girls game features a different move
Answers
THANKS for
PLAYING!
© 2016 King Features Synd., Inc.
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Arvada Press 39
7April 27, 2017
BENTON
FACEOFF! ThunderRidge senior Brett Naves wins a faceoff against Bear Creek’s Charles Peterson during a April 10 game at Shea Stadium. Naves says faceoffs are one of the lesser known but most important parts of a lacrosse game. JIM BENTON
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Legal Notice No.: 47103 First Publication: April 20, 2017 Last Publication: April 27, 2017 Publisher: Golden Transcript Wheat Ridge Transcript and the Arvada Press Public Notice NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT Notice is hereby given that disbursements in final settlement will be issued by the Arvada Finance Director at 10:00 a.m., May 9, 2017 to Excavation and Construction Specialists Inc. for work related to Project No. 15-ST-19 – West 60th Avenue Street Improvements Between Sheridan Boulevard and Fenton Street and performed under that contract dated June 20, 2016 for the City of Arvada. Any person, co-partnership, association of persons, company or corporation that furnished labor, material, drayage, sustenance, provisions or other supplies used or consumed by said contractor or his sub-contractors in or about the performance of the work contracted to be done
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT Notice is hereby given that disbursements in final settlement will be issued by the Arvada Finance Director at 10:00 a.m., May 9, 2017 to Excavation and Construction Specialists Inc. for work related to Project No. 15-ST-19 – West 60th Avenue Street Improvements Between Sheridan Boulevard and Fenton Street and performed under that contract dated June 20, 2016 for the City of Arvada. Any person, co-partnership, association of persons, company or corporation that furnished labor, material, drayage, sustenance, provisions or other supplies used or consumed by said contractor or his sub-contractors in or about the performance of the work contracted to be done by said Excavation and Construction Specialists Inc. and its claim has not been paid, may at any time on or prior to the hour of the date above stated, file with the Finance Director of the City of Arvada at City Hall, a verified statement of the amount due and unpaid on account of such claim. Dated this April 7, 2017 CITY OF ARVADA /s/ Kristen Rush, City Clerk
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Notice is hereby given that disbursements in bePlease this box to receive breaking news, newsletters, exclusive offers and special events via email. final settlement will issued check by the Arvada Finance Director at 10:00 a.m., May 9, 2017 to Insituform Technologies LLC for work related to Project No. 16-SR-02 – 2016 Trenchless Sewer Main Replacement and performed under that contract dated May 23, 2016 for the City of Arvada. Public Notice Any person, co-partnership, association of persons, company or corporation that furnished labor, material, drayage, sustenance, provisions ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS or other supplies used or consumed by said Sealed bids for the construction of City of contractor or his sub-contractors in or about the Arvada, Project No. 16-ST-07, Project Title performance of the work contracted to be done Carr Street Sidewalk Improvements - W. 52nd by said Insituform Technologies LLC and its Avenue to south of W. 54th Place, will be reclaim has not been paid, may at any time on or ceived at the office of the City Engineer until prior to the hour of the date above stated, file 11:00 AM on May 17, 2017 and then publicly with the Finance Director of the City of Arvada at opened and read aloud. City Hall, a verified statement of the amount due The BID DOCUMENTS, consisting of Advertiseadvertise your public notices call 303-566-4100 and unpaid on account of such claim. ment for Bids, Information forTo Bidders, Special Conditions, Addendum when issued, Bid Bond, Dated this April 7, 2017 Bid Proposal, Bid Schedule, and the Project CITY OF ARVADA Drawings may be examined at the following loc/s/ Kristen Rush, City Clerk ations: Public Notice City of Arvada Engineering Division Legal Notice No.: 47102 - 8101 Ralston Road, Arvada, Colorado 80002 First Publication: April 20, 2017 AMENDED NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Dodge Plan Room – www.construction.com Last Publication: April 27, 2017 ISqFt Plan Room – 1030 West Ellsworth Ave., Publisher: Golden Transcript NOTICE is hereby given pursuant to Section 32Unit G, Denver, Colorado 80223 Wheat Ridge Transcript 1-204(1), C.R.S. that on Monday, May 15, 2017, Reed Construction Data - www.reedpsp.com and the Arvada Press at 6:00 p.m., or as soon as possible thereafter, a Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System at public hearing will be conducted at the Arvada www.rockymountainbidsystem.com City Council Chambers, City Hall, 8101 Ralston Public Notice No cost bid documents may be obtained at Road, Arvada, Colorado, or at such other time www.rockymountainbidsystem.com on or after and place as the hearing may be continued. A NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING April 21, 2017. Bid documents may also be obpublic hearing will be heard upon the applicaA public hearing will be held before the Arvada tion on file, where same may be examined, with tained at the office of the City Engineer upon Planning Commission on May 16, 2017, at the Arvada City Council, by the Board of Directpayment of $30.00 per set, which is non-refund6:30 p.m., Arvada Municipal Building, 8101 Ralors of Westown Metropolitan District for the apable. ston Rd., Arvada, when and where you may proval of a Second Amended and Restated SerESTIMATED QUANTITIES OF THE MAJOR speak on the matter to rezone (and amend the vice Plan of Westown Metropolitan District. The ITEMS OF WORK ARE: official zoning maps) from City of Arvada R-M affected property is generally located south of 220 TON HOT MIX ASPHALT (Residential Multi-Family) to PUD-R (Planned W. 66th Drive, west of Kendrick Dr., north of W. 800 LF CURB & GUTTER Unit Development-Residential), 23.1 du/ac, and 64th Avenue and east of McIntyre St., City of Ar425 SY CONCRETE SIDEWALK consider a preliminary development plan for vada, County of Jefferson, State of Colorado. 200 LF SLOTTED DRAIN OLDE TOWN COMMONS TOWNHOMES, TRAFFIC CONTROL located at 5417 Allison St. Additional informaNOTICE IS HEREBY FURTHER GIVEN that all Bidders, subcontractors and suppliers must be tion can be obtained from the Community Develprotests and objections must be submitted in familiar with the current City of Arvada Enginopment Dept. or written comments may be filed writing to the Arvada City Council at or prior to eering Code of Standards and Specificatherewith no later than 8 days prior to the hearthe hearing or any continuance or postponetions for the Design and Construction of ing. ment thereof in order to be considered, and that Public Improvements, dated January 12, 2016, CITY OF ARVADA PLANNING COMMISSION any protests and objections to the Second which will be combined with the Bid Documents /s/ Patricia Connell, Secretary Amended and Restated Service Plan of Westto form the Contract Documents for the Project. A copy of the Standards may be obtained from own Metropolitan District, as proposed, shall be Legal Notice No.: 47149 the office of the City Engineer upon a non-redeemed to be waived unless presented at the First Publication: April 27, 2017 fundable payment of $50.00. Holders will be notime and in the manner as specified above. Last Publication: April 27, 2017 tified when supplemental revisions and addiPublisher: Golden Transcript tions are available as they are adopted. The Reason: Second Amended and Restated Wheat Ridge Transcript Standards are also available at no cost on the Service Plan of Westown Metropolitan District and the Arvada Press City's web site at www.arvada.org. Holders are Project Name: Westown Metropolitan District responsible for keeping current their City of ArType of District: Metropolitan Public Notice vada Engineering Code of Standards and SpeMaximum Debt Mill Levy: 50 mills cifications. Maximum Period of Time Such Mill Levy ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS The Project Engineer for this work Shall be Imposed: Sealed bids for the construction of City of is Trang Tran, at 720-898-7646. 40 years Arvada, Project No. 16-ST-07, Project Title CITY OF ARVADA General/Operations Mill Levy: 40 mills Carr Street Sidewalk Improvements - W. 52nd /s/ Timothy R. Hoos, P.E., City Engineer Original Notice Published In: Avenue to south of W. 54th Place, will be reArvada Press and Wheat Ridge Transcript ceived at the office of the City Engineer until April 20, 2017 Legal Notice No.: 47106 11:00 AM on May 17, 2017 and then publicly Amended Notice Published In: Arvada Press First Publication: April 20, 2017 opened and read aloud. and Wheat Ridge Transcript Last Publication: May 4, 2017 The BID DOCUMENTS, consisting of AdvertiseApril 27, 2017 Publisher: Golden Transcript ment for Bids, Information for Bidders, Special Wheat Ridge Transcript Conditions, Addendum when issued, Bid Bond, Legal Notice No.: 47163 and the Arvada Press Bid Proposal, Bid Schedule, and the Project First Publication: April 27, 2017 Drawings may be examined at the following locLast Publication: April 27, 2017 ations: Public Notice Publisher: Golden Transcript City of Arvada Engineering Division Wheat Ridge Transcript - 8101 Ralston Road, Arvada, Colorado 80002 AMENDED NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING and the Arvada Press Dodge Plan Room – www.construction.com ISqFt Plan Room – 1030 West Ellsworth Ave., NOTICE is hereby given pursuant to Section 32Unit G, Denver, Colorado 80223 1-204(1), C.R.S. that on Monday, May 15, 2017, Reed Construction Data - www.reedpsp.com at 6:00 p.m., or as soon as possible thereafter, a
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NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT Notice is hereby given that disbursements in final settlement will be issued by the Arvada Finance Director at 10:00 a.m., May 9, 2017 to Symmetry Builders, Inc. for work related to Project No. 11-ST-24 – West 74th Avenue Pesestrian-Bike Bridge Over the Croke and Farmers’ High Line Canals, Trail, and Road Improvements and performed under that contract dated November 10, 2014 for the City of Arvada. Any person, co-partnership, association of persons, company or corporation that furnished labor, material, drayage, sustenance, provisions or other supplies used or consumed by said contractor or his sub-contractors in or about the performance of the work contracted to be done by said Symmetry Builders, Inc. and its claim has not been paid, may at any time on or prior to the hour of the date above stated, file with the Finance Director of the City of Arvada at City Hall, a verified statement of the amount due and unpaid on account of such claim. Dated this April 7, 2017 CITY OF ARVADA /s/ Kristen Rush, City Clerk
April 27 at the Denver City Marriott, is sold out and Erwin’s family and friends have reserved three tables to honor the longtime coach. The three-sport letterman at Litteton was a Lions coach for 46 years. He coached baseball and football in addition to swimming. His boys swim teams won seven state titles and the girls squads captured five state crowns. Valor Christian quarterback Dylan McCaffrey will be honored as Boys High School Athlete of the Year. Jim Benton is a sports writer for Colorado Community Media. He has been covering sports in the Denver area since 1968. He can be reached at jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com or at 303-566-4083.
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City and County
FROM PAGE 33
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Arvada * 1
40 Arvada Press
April 27, 2017A
Jeffco narrows superintendent search
Field of candidates down to six
“I’d like to remind the public that to some extent we don’t make the rules on this process.”
BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
A nationwide search involving hundreds has narrowed to just six contenders to be Jefferson County Schools newest superintendent. At the April 20 study session of the Board of Education, the public was told that out of more than 800 potential applicants, 69 decided to apply. From that group, a consulting firm winnowed down the list to 11 “top candidates.” The candidates come from Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Tennessee. The hiring firm Ray & Associates Inc. presented resumes and information about the 11 to the Jeffco Board at the meeting, but the names and resume details were kept from the public. The five-member board then entered into an executive session where they selected six individuals to interview over the coming days. The Colorado Open Records Act
Brad Rupert Jeffco School Board President (CORA) requires school districts to make public the names of finalists for positions such as superintendent, at least 14 days prior to an offer of employment. Colorado Community Media filed a CORA request for the names of the six candidates selected to be interviewed. The district denied that request on Monday, claiming that the board had not selected finalists yet. The CORA statute define a finalist as “a member of the final group of applicants,” from which the board chooses. In the 2014 superintendent search, also handled by Ray & Associates, the board interviewed five candidates,
before announcing a single “finalist.” The first round of candidate interviews is scheduled for this week, including an executive session April 26. A second round of interviews is optional, according to the Ray & Associates timeline. The timeline calls for the board to meet with the consultants this week. The district website says the board hopes to select a candidate in May. “We’ve done some hard work on this, yours is about to begin,” Bill Newman, of Ray and Associates, told the board before it adjourned to executive session to review the applicants. “Tonight’s goal is to get this down to who you would like to bring in to meet in person.”
Before the board adjourned to executive session, board member Brad Rupert reminded the public about the district’s use of confidentiality for the process. “I’d like to remind the public that to some extent we don’t make the rules on this process,” Rupert said. “Many of the candidates we will be talking to already have excellent jobs and they don’t want to alienate themselves from that job. So there is some need for confidentiality.” The district’s 2014 choice of superintendent was Dan McMinimee, who was approved on a 3-2 vote. McMinimee served three years. The Jeffco school board voted Jan. 12 to not renew his contract, which was to expire in July, and begin a search for a new superintendent. In March, McMinimee stepped down from his position as active superintendent of Jeffco Schools and took on an advisory position. He announced earlier this month that he would be taking the superintendent position with the New America School network of schools for the Denver Metro Area, beginning July 1.
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