Highlands Ranch Herald 1116

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A publication of

GET OUT TO PLAY: Holiday theater offerings abound all around town for all tastes P18

FREE

NOVEMBER 16, 2017

DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO

SALUTING THEIR SERVICE:

Highlands Ranch event honors veterans P6

‘A COMMON FOCUS’: New school board members aim to bring new direction to DCSD P4 Your newspaper is made possible by advertisers like this one, who support our efforts to keep you connected to your community!

STATING THEIR CASES: Local volleyball teams make runs in the state tournament P24 THE BOTTOM LINE

“America is incredibly divided, and we need to look for leadership to bring us back together.”

719 Wilcox Street Castle Rock, CO 80104

Jim Gunning, congressional candidate/former mayor of Lone Tree, P8 303-688-2202

INSIDE VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 18 www.OwnACOHome.com

| CALENDAR: PAGE 22 | SPORTS: PAGE 24

HighlandsRanchHerald.net

VOLUME 30 | ISSUE 52


2 Highlands Ranch Herald

November 16, 2017N

MY NAME IS

NEWS IN A HURRY Colorado Community Media is looking to help Integrated Family Community Services this holiday season by collecting donations of new clothing for teens and toys for kids for families in need. Please help us make this a special Christmas by dropping of your toy or clothing item to 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch on or before Dec. 1. IFCS provides basic hu-

MAJOR G. HEATH COPELAND

Dentist and owner of Copeland Family Dental, 206 W. County Line Road About me I’m from a small town in west Texas. I went to college at Abilene Christian University in west Texas and then to dental school at Baylor College of Dentistry. That’s where I met my wife, Amy. After dental school, Amy and I both got a health profession scholarship in the Air Force, so we were active duty for four years. We were stationed at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois and spent three years at Misawa Air Force Base in Japan. After four years, we decided to separate from active duty and move to Colorado. We love skiing, camping and hiking, so where else better to go? After moving here, we bought a dental practice from a retired dentist in March 2011. About that time, I joined the Air Force Reserve out of Peterson Air Force Base, where I’ve been a dentist for 302ASTS for about six years. My ranking is major. Our time overseas My wife and I were stationed in Misawa as general dentists and we absolutely loved it there. A lot of people don’t know that Japan is pretty mountainous, so we got to do a lot of skiing. We got to travel a lot, not only through Japan, but also through the rest of Asia. We spent a month in China and a month in Southeast Asia. Once we got out of the military, since we were overseas, the government held our household goods for six months while we found a place to live, so we backpacked around the world for five months. We’ve been to about 50 countries. My favorite was probably Laos in Southeast Asia. The people are so genuinely friendly and would do anything for you, even though they don’t have a lot of money.

CORRECTION Former captain in the U.S. Air Force, Major G. Heath Copeland, is a husband, father, world traveler and dentist of his family-owned business, Copeland Family Dental, in Highlands Ranch. COURTESY PHOTO A unique way to serve Both of my grandfathers served in the military and I wanted to do something to contribute to society. Doing what I do gives me a unique way to serve. I feel like I help out the military more than I feel like I am part of the military. It’s cool to know that I am contributing to the military in my career role. My roles as a dentist I go to Peterson Air Force base one weekend a month. A typical Saturday is reporting at the clinic at 6:30 in the morning, meetings with our team and then we basically do dental exams for reserve members from 7:30 a.m. until they quit coming in. At Copeland Family Dental, we are a family practice. We serve all ages — our oldest patient is 102. Amy and I both work there full time. If you have suggestions for My Name Is..., contact adewind@coloradocommunitymedia. com

Local Focus. More News.

The following photo caption had the subject’s last name misspelled in the Nov. 2 edition: Emily Rose Abruzzo learned how to play the piano when she was 8 years old. The now 18-year-old has a lengthy resume — she’s played at malls, nursing homes, a wedding and other venues. Her signature piece, a single rose in a glass vase, travels with her wherever she plays. ALEX DEWIND

CORRECTION In last week’s “My Name Is…” Copper Mesa Elementary physical education teacher Cheryl Wickoren should have been quoted as saying the following: “I would recommend that parents focus on limiting screen time by setting parameters.” She was misquoted as having said “perimeters.”

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Highlands Ranch Herald 3

7November 16, 2017

719 Wilcox Street Castle Rock, CO 80104

303-688-2202

www.OwnACOHome.com

RE/MAX Alliance Holiday Toy & Food Drive Through December 18th

WE NEED YOUR HELP! Join us in giving back to the community by dropping off nonperishable items or an unwrapped toy at: 719 Wilcox St, Castle Rock

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4 Highlands Ranch Herald

November 16, 2017N

New school board signals change of direction Priorities will include student achievement, teacher retention BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

The Douglas County school board may be getting four new members, but sitting member David Ray is excited about a camaraderie that he says already exists. “Whereas when we came on two years ago,” Ray said, “there was already — before we stepped on the dais — contentiousness.” After eight years of an often-controversial majority of reform-minded members, voters elected four new members to the Douglas County School Board on Nov. 7. Krista Holtzmann, Anthony Graziano, Kevin Leung and Chris Schor — who were known as “commUNITY” candidates and largely

oppose the reform measures implemented — each won with more than 57 percent of the vote. The four candidates ran against reform-minded candidates known as Elevate Douglas County — Grant Nelson, Debora Scheffel, Ryan Abresch and Randy Mills. “There is a common focus now,” said Ray, a former Douglas County principal who was elected in 2015 on a similar platform of reform opposition with Anne-Marie Lemieux and Wendy Vogel. “We are no longer distracted by what I would considered things that aren’t directly applicable to Douglas County kids.” The victory signals a change in direction for the school board that has been in the public eye since 2009, when candidates who espoused reforms such as pay-for-performance evaluations for teachers and a form of school choice that would later include

a controversial voucher program were elected. At an Election Night viewing party, all four “commUNITY” candidates said that as school board members, they will first and foremost focus on the 68,000 students in the school district. “Our community is expecting that from us,” said Schor, a former principal in the district. “We are the servants of the community and that is what we will do.” Priorities will dictate action The new board will have a list of priorities to tackle, Ray said, but the voucher program that has been tied up in the court system since 2011 — and is awaiting a second look by the Colorado Supreme Court — isn’t at the top. “The nonnegotiable for me is that it can’t cost taxpayers money for us to

defend it,” Ray said. “We haven’t had much conversation about what the next steps should be.” Focuses of the new board will be student achievement, staff retention and revenue, Ray said. He foresees the new board listening to and relying on committees, such as the Long Range Planning Committee, which studies district facility and capacity needs. He expects work to be done to establish a pay-for-performance model that recognizes experience in profession, as well as performance and skill. Ray is optimistic about looking at a tax measure that would generate more money for capital needs across the district. But, he said, that would first require “mass support” from the community. A mill levy override on the ballots in 2008 and 2011 failed both times. SEE CHANGE, P5

Is carpet cleaning on your holiday checklist?

As we prepare for guests this holiday season, many of our to-do lists include carpet cleaning. A simple thing like professional carpet cleaning could pollute our stormwater. Water used in the cleaning process contains yucky stuff that nobody wants in the waterways. If carpet cleaning is on your list, make sure the water is disposed of in the toilet or down a floor drain. Ask your professional how they dispose of the carpet cleaning liquid. And remember never dump it in the street. Local stormwater agencies are teaming together to bring you this message. We take this so seriously that we posted this ad rather than send you more garbage in the mail. One thing is clear: our creeks, rivers and lakes depend on you.

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Visit onethingisclear.org to: • Report accidental and illegal dumping to your local agency • Search local volunteer events • Find more helpful tips Give our streams a gift this holiday season by disposing of your cleaning solution properly. Colorado Community Media agrees: Please recycle this newspaper responsibly and partner with our communities for a better tomorrow. Campaign creative donated by Castle Rock Water, Stormwater Division.


Highlands Ranch Herald 5

7November 16, 2017

BOARD FROM PAGE 4

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School board president Meghann Silverthorn, who is term-limited and will not be part of the board when the new members are sworn in, which will likely be at a school board meeting on Nov. 28, said she hopes the new board values voices in the community and engages in thoughtful change. Another tax measure failure would be “three strikes in a row,” she said. “You can’t make anybody support a tax increase,” said Silverthorn, who has been among the board’s reformminded majority for eight years. “You can understand when the conditions are right to pursue one and run a campaign that respects people’s rights.” There will be pressure from the community for the new board to make changes, Silverthorn said. Over the past two years, she said, the board tried to move in the right direction with its implementation of policies and responsiveness, but “it wasn’t fast enough, it wasn’t big enough and the community did not feel satisfied for whatever reason.” She hopes to see “ongoing respect all around.” “I’d like to see members who don’t rush into anything simply because they feel like they have a mandate to do things,” Silverthorn said. “I’d like to see them take a step back from the overheated election and decide what they really want to see.” For six years, supporters of reforms held all seven seats on the Douglas County School Board. They introduced new policies that, in the eyes of many in the community, caused an exodus of hundreds of teachers and administrators. Some of those policies also effectively nullified the local teachers’ union. After the collective bargaining agreement expired in 2012, the union and district were unable to agree on a contract. Until then, the union and district had enjoyed a relationship that was acclaimed nationally for its collaboration and willingness to work together, helping produce one of the nation’s first pay-for-performance programs in 1994. Bringing the union back was a hot topic that reform-minded candidates outwardly opposed. In early October, a national teachers union, American Federation of Teachers, donated $300,000 to a Douglas County-based

committee that backed anti-reform candidates. Current board members don’t have plans to bring the Douglas County Federation back into the school district, Ray said. But he supports teachers who want to join the union. “None of us have the desire to have the union have a greater influence in terms of how decisions are made,” Ray said. “The bottom line is we are going to listen to everyone that has a stake in educating children.” The Douglas County Federation is a member-driven organization, said Kallie Leyba, president of Douglas County Federation and a former teacher. She declined to comment on the number of members. “What is most important is that all teachers and staff have the resources they need to serve their students,” she said. “... it will be up to our members to determine our path forward.” Looking ahead A shift in direction began to take place on the Douglas County School Board in 2015, when Ray, Vogel and Lemieux won the vote. The result since has been a divided board, with votes frequently falling 4-3 in favor of the reform-minded members — Silverthorn, James Geddes, Judith Reynolds and Steven Peck, none of whom ran for re-election. Reynolds had hoped for a different outcome on Election Night. “I’m disappointed, I thought it would be a lot closer,” she said. “My hope is that we continue to give our students an excellent education and we focus on our students and not the adults in the system.” Many parents, teachers and community members, however, are excited about what lies ahead. They are hopeful that the school board’s shift in power will bring back a district that they say focuses on students and staff. “The failed reform experiment conducted by the previous board members has underserved our children and resulted in the loss of valuable educational opportunities,” said Jason Virdin, spokesman of the activist group Douglas County Parents, formed in 2013 to represent parents and community members who oppose the reforms, in a statement following the Nov. 7 election. “We are excited to begin a new chapter in DCSD that puts students and learning at the center of all decision-making and leaves politics at the door.”

Strut your stuffing!

14 Years Strong! November 23, 2017 • Exhibits from local sponsors • Free swag • Free hot coffee and hot chocolate • Free pancake breakfast (suggested donation to the National Guard Foundation) • Music • Beer Garden • Strollers and dogs welcome

Thanksgiving Douglas County offices will be closed Nov. 23 & Nov. 24 for the Thanksgiving Holiday. Many county services are available online at www.douglas.co.us

Funds available to serve at-risk Veterans Emergency assistance is available to veterans struggling with housing (mortgage and rent payments), transportation, employment, healthcare or other emergency needs. To apply for the veterans assistance funds visit www.douglasveterans.org or call 303-

663.6200.

Apply for 2018 Community Safety Volunteer Academy The nine-week Academy is offered by the Douglas County Sheriff ‘s Department. Deadline for applications is December 31, 2017. For more information visit www. dcsheriff.net and search for CSV Academy.

Interested in becoming a foster parent or adopting a child? Attend a free information session from 6-7:30 p.m., Monday, Dec. 11 at the Children’s Hospital South Campus, 1811 Plaza Drive in Highlands Ranch. For more information call 303-636-1KID or to register online visit http://jeffco.us/ collaborative-foster-care/information-night/

Unclaimed funds posted on county’s website Unclaimed funds could be checks which have not been cashed, property tax overpayments or overages on foreclosed property. For more information visit www.douglas.co.us and search for Unclaimed Funds.

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9 A.M. Start Online registration open through NOON on November 20th. More information at: www.td5k.com

Request service, ask questions, share concerns, get involved.

Visit www.douglas.co.us


6 Highlands Ranch Herald

November 16, 2017N

Remembering their Service Community members honor veterans at annual metro district celebration

Highlands Ranch American Legion Post 1260 and Pax Christi Assembly 3353 Knights of Columbus lead the retiring of colors ceremony at a Veterans Day celebration on Nov. 11 at James H. LaRue Library, 9292 S Ridgeline Blvd. ALEX DEWIND

BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Veterans, families and community members filled rows of seats in James H. LaRue library on Nov. 11 for the annual Veterans Day Celebration, hosted by the Highlands Ranch Metro District. TaRhonda Thomas, a 9News reporter whose brother died in service, led the ceremony, which included the presentation of colors, national anthem, a history of Veterans Day, poster contest and more. Col. David Miller, commander of the 460th Space Wing of Buckley Air Force Base in Aurora, was the guest speaker of the evening. He noted the small percentage of people in the U.S. who are on active duty. “If not me, than who?” Miller said to the crowd of about 200 people. “That is what Veterans Day means to me.” Following the ceremony, guests shook hands with and thanked the veterans in the room. Douglas County Commissioner Lora Thomas was overcome with emotion. Her father served in Korea. “Freedom isn’t free,” said Thomas, tears welling in her eyes. “These guys are really incredible.” Located southeast of the library, the Highlands Ranch Veterans Monument has 561 tiles dedicated to friends and family members who have served. There is room for more. For information on how to purchase a tile, visit hrvets.org/ buy-a-dedication-tile.

Guest speaker Col. David Miller, commander of the 460th Space Wing of Buckley Air Force Base in Colorado, tells stories of his service at the Veterans Day Celebration on Nov. 11 at James H. LaRue, 9292 S Ridgeline Blvd. “We need to say thanks,” Miller said, “because not a lot of people step up.” PHOTOS BY ALEX DEWIND

Guests of the Veterans Day Celebration at James H. LaRue, 9292 S Ridgeline Blvd., applaud family members of the men and women who have served. The evening included speakers, a poster contest, music, presentation of colors, treats from Kneaders Bakery and Cafe in Highlands Ranch and more.

Highlands Ranch Concert Band performs at the Highlands Ranch Veterans Day Celebration, hosted by the Highlands Ranch Metro District on Nov. 11 at James H. LaRue, 9292 S Ridgeline Blvd.


Highlands Ranch Herald 7

7November 16, 2017

Brauchler drops governor bid, jumps into attorney general race District attorney moves to replace Cynthia Coffman BY STAFF REPORT

Citing the bowing out of state Attorney General Cynthia Coffman from the race to keep her seat, Republican George Brauchler announced his switch from the 2018 race for governor to vie for the attorney general spot. Brauchler, district attorney for the 18th Judicial District, has positioned himself, so far, as the only conserva- Brauchler tive in the race to replace Coffman, a Republican, in the November 2018 election. “Progressives on the other side of the political aisle had spent many

months raising mountains of cash to capture the position that plays such a vital role in protecting our state and way of life,” Brauchler said in an emailed statement. Brauchler presently faces five opponents, all Democrats, according to filings with the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office: Michael Dougherty, the assistant district attorney for the 1st Judicial District, which includes Jefferson and Gilpin counties; Brad Levin, an attorney in Denver; Amy Padden, former assistant Colorado attorney general and former executive assistant United States attorney for the District of Colorado; state Rep. Joe Salazar, a civil rights attorney from Thornton; and Philip Weiser, former deputy assistant attorney general in the Obama administration. Referencing concern from friends, supporters and members of the business community about the possibility of a progressive, activist attorney

general, Brauchler said the office is “a powerful position that must not fall into the hands of someone who would use it to advance extreme ideological positions, to legislate through litigation or to pick winners and losers in our economy.” Brauchler’s Nov. 13 annoucement came less than a week after Coffman announced her bid for governor Nov. 8. Brauchler was elected district attorney in 2012 and re-elected after running unopposed in 2016. The 18th Judicial District encompasses Arapahoe, Douglas, Elbert and Lincoln counties. He gained nationwide recognition for prosecuting the case against Aurora theater shooter James Holmes, calling the case “the biggest trial in the history of the state.”

Brauchler has lived in Colorado for 45 years, currently residing in Parker with his wife and four children. He attended the University of Colorado, Boulder, and later graduated from the University of Colorado School of Law. He is a colonel in the Colorado Army National Guard. Brauchler on April 5 had announced his candidacy for governor. He said Gov. John Hickenlooper has showed a “lack of real leadership at the state level.” Brauchler said he wants tougher sentences for violent criminals. During his run for governor, Brauchler said he would push for stronger minimum sentences for DUI and homicide offenders. Coffman enters a gubernatorial race that has more than 20 candidates seeking to replace John Hickenlooper, a term-limited Democrat.

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8 Highlands Ranch Herald

November 16, 2017N

Former Lone Tree mayor seeks place in Congress Jim Gunning announces his run for House District 4 position BY TABATHA DEANS STEWART TSTEWART@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Former Lone Tree Mayor Jim Gunning announced he is seeking the Republican nomination for Colorado’s 4th Congressional District seat, in a gathering of more than 50 people in front of the Freedom Keeper monument on Wilcox Street in Castle Rock on Nov. 10. “America is incredibly divided, and we need to look for lead- Gunning ership to bring us back together,” said Gunning, who is aiming to be the GOP nominee for the post in the November 2018 election. Supporters applauded Gunning as he declared his intentions to advocate on the behalf of 4th District residents. “Nuclear issues demand tough-

ness. At home we have a drug crisis that needs addressed, and Congress must find a solution to health care,” he said. “We won’t compromise our children’s future for political gain today.” District 4 includes Parker, Lone Tree, Castle Rock, Elbert County, much of Colorado’s Eastern Plains, and areas north of the Denver metro area. The sprawling district borders Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and New Mexico, and its 38,103-square-mile area covers more than a third of Colorado. It has been represented since January 2015 by Republican Ken Buck, of Windsor, who is in his second term. Gunning served two terms as the mayor of Lone Tree, where he has lived for 20 years, and said keeping in touch with residents is vital for any successful official. “When I was mayor of Lone Tree, citizen input made the difference in determining action and priorities. Government should serve us, not rule us,” he said. Gunning served in the Air Force for nearly 20 years, both on active duty and in the reserves. He served on the Lone Tree City Council before being elected twice as mayor. At his candidacy announcement, Gunning was joined by his wife of more than 30 years, Amy; son Alex, 28; and daughter Paige, 22.

Jim Gunning speaks to a crowd of supporters in Castle Rock, as he announces he will be seeking the Republican nomination for the 4th Congressional District. The two-term Lone Tree mayor said “The government should work for us, not rule us.” TABATHA STEWART

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Highlands Ranch Herald 9

7November 16, 2017

MENTAL HEALTH STATISTICS According to the Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment, Vital Statistics survey, 2015:

8.1 Number of opioid deaths per 100,000 Colorado residents

4.6 Number of opioid deaths per 100,000 Douglas County residents

19.1 Number of suicide deaths per 100,000 in Colorado

17 Number of suicide deaths per 100,000 Douglas County residents Source: www.mentalhealthcolorado.org/dashboard/

Group aims to boost Coloradans’ mental health STAFF REPORT

Colorado routinely makes the list as one of the physically healthiest states in the union, but a new effort by the organization Mental Health Colorado strives to make Colorado the mentally healthiest state too. The group’s president, former Colorado state Rep. Andrew Romanoff, said the new data dashboard that just launched on the group’s website offers Coloradans a chance to see where they stand in terms of mental health and substance abuse disorders. “Previously you would have had to go to several dozen sources to get all this information,” said Romanoff. The dashboard — available at www.mentalhealthcolorado.org/dashboard/ — presents information including suicide rates and prevention, mental health issues, opioid overdose rates and even barriers to care. The information is sortable by county, and links to the source documents. The results are middling. Colorado continues to rank below average for psychiatric beds per captia, and has a persistently higher rate of drug and alcohol addiction, along with a higher suicide rate. “We’re also below the national average for funding on treatment,” Romanoff said. Mental Health Colorado’s intent in putting out the dashboard is to reduce the stigma and increase public awareness of mental health disorders, including substance abuse disorders like those caused by the opiate epidemic. A second goal, according to Romanoff, is to hopefully “accelerate a solution” by inspiring

‘We’re trying to show that if you treat mental illness you can save lives.’ Andrew Romanoff, President, Mental Health Colorado and former state representative

and empowering the public, mental health organizations and government at all levels into action. Last week Eagle County voters passed a marijuana tax measure by a nearly 3-1 margin, generating $1.2 million in new mental health funding. “We’re trying to show that if you treat mental illness you can save lives,” said Romanoff. In a press statement, Mental Health Colorado Research Director, Dr. Sarah Davidon said, “Our data dashboard will assess mental health and substance use issues facing children, adolescents, and adults in Colorado to inform policy decisions.” The group estimates more than one million Coloradans experience a mental health or substance use disorder each year. Fewer than half get treatment. Romanoff says the cause of improving mental health is personal for him. A cousin committed suicide on New Years

Day in 2015 after struggling with mental illness. “She hid those symptoms really well, even from us,” Romanoff said. “If she had any other condition, a bump, a lump, she wouldn’t have hid it from us, and we wouldn’t have hesitated to get her care.” The dashboard is not without its limitations. Romanoff acknowledges that some of the studies used to compile the data are not done annually, and some rely on self reporting. Overall, he said the size of Colorado’s mental health needs are probably only conservatively reflected in the dashboard figures. Beyond the data, the website includes a tab for individuals looking for ways to connect to local officials to advocate for change, and also a tab for people to share their personal stories of struggling with mental health — both things that Romanoff says the group hopes will spark real change for the better.

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10 Highlands Ranch Herald

November 16, 2017N

Study: Over-the-counter pain pills as effective as opioids ER patients were given acetaminophen, ibuprofen together BY LINDSEY TANNER ASSOCIATED PRESS

Emergency rooms are where many patients are first introduced to powerful opioid painkillers, but what if doctors offered over-the-counter pills instead? A new study tested that approach on patients with broken bones and sprains and found pain relievers sold as Tylenol and Motrin worked as well as opioids at reducing severe pain. The results challenge common ER practice for treating short-term,

severe pain and could prompt changes that would help prevent new patients from becoming addicted. The study has limitations: It only looked at short-term pain relief in the emergency room and researchers didn’t evaluate how patients managed their pain after leaving the hospital. But given the scope of the U.S. opioid epidemic — more than 2 million Americans are addicted to opioid painkillers or heroin — experts say any dent in the problem could be meaningful. Results were published Nov. 7 in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Long-term opioid use often begins with a prescription painkiller for shortterm pain, and use of these drugs in the ER has risen in recent years. Previous studies have shown opioids

were prescribed in nearly one-third of ER visits and about 1 out of 5 ER patients are sent home with opioid prescriptions. “Preventing new patients from becoming addicted to opioids may have a greater effect on the opioid epidemic than providing sustained treatment to patients already addicted,” Dr. Demetrios Kyriacou, an emergency medicine specialist at Northwestern University, wrote in an accompanying editorial. The study involved 411 adults treated in two emergency rooms at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City. Their injuries included leg and arm fractures or sprains. All were given acetaminophen, the main ingredient in Tylenol, plus either ibuprofen, the main ingredient in Motrin, or one of three opioids: oxycodone, hydrocodone or codeine.

They were given standard doses and were not told which drug combo they received. Patients rated their pain levels before taking the medicine and two hours later. On average, pain scores dropped from almost 9 on a 10-point scale to about 5, with negligible differences between the groups. Ibuprofen and acetaminophen affect different pain receptors in the body so using the two drugs together may be especially potent, said Dr. Andrew Chang, an emergency medicine professor at Albany Medical College in upstate New York, who led the study. He noted that a pill combining ibuprofen and acetaminophen is available in other countries; his findings echo research from Canada and Australia testing that pill against opioids for pain relief.

CLUBS Editor’s note: To add or update a club listing, e-mail calendar@ coloradocommunitymedia.com.

Service

Shabbat Dinner Club meets monthly for unaffiliated, cultural and secular leaning Jewish families in the area. Club would meet once a month at the rec centers for a potluck dinner, a brief secular shabbat service and social time for adults and kids. Organizer is a member and leader at Beth Ami, Colorado Congregation for Humanistic Judaism, but the majority of services and events are in North Denver and Boulder. She lives in Highlands Ranch and is interested in seeking out and creating community with families in this area. Go to www.shj.org to learn more about Humanistic Judaism; go to www.bethami.com to learn about the local congregation; or contact madrikhadavis@ gmail.com with any questions, ideas or interest. South Metro Newcomers Club We welcome women who are new to the area as well as women looking to meet new friends. We are a social organization with many

interesting and fun activities. For information, email our new member chairperson at southmetronewcomers@gmail.com or visit southmetronewcomersclub.com. Southridge Toastmasters meets at 7:30 p.m. the second and fourth Tuesday of each month at the Southridge Recreation Center, 4800 McArthur Ranch Road in Highlands Ranch. We are looking for new members. Come and join us and find out what Toastmasters can do for you. You can gain confidence while learning to be a better speaker. For further information call Yvette at 303-4707206 or dancerymg@aol.com. South Suburban Toastmasters is a high energy, fun, supportive learning place to practice speaking and leadership skills. Group meets from 7-8:30 a.m. Thursdays at Toast Restaurant, 2700 W. Bowles Ave. in Littleton. Contact Leigh Miller at 720-272-2853. Teen Library Council. Douglas County Libraries’ teen groups meet monthly to help plan events, weigh in on library materials and serve the library community. Members earn community

service hours toward graduation requirements. Call 303-791-7323 or visit with a youth librarian.

are open, nonsmoking, and not wheelchair accessible.

Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 1106 meets at 9 a.m. the first Saturday of each month at the South Metro Fire and Rescue Building, 9195 E. Mineral Ave., Centennial. Call 303-859-8867.

Adult Attention Deficit Disorder Support Group meets the fourth Monday each month from 6-7:30 p.m. at Christ Lutheran Church, 8997 S. Broadway St., Highlands Ranch. RSVP to 303-346-3338 or 303-596-4641.

Wesley Writers is a small group of vignette memoir writers who meet at 10 a.m. the third Saturday of each month at Littleton United Methodist Church, 5894 S. Datura St. Share stories of the joys and sorrows of our yesteryears. No fees.

Brain Injury Support Group meets every third Thursday of the month from 6:30-8:30 p.m. at St. Andrew United Methodist Church in Highlands Ranch. Contact Della at 303-949-1017 or Jan Herodes at 303-933-7417.

Support

Breast Cancer Support Group: Friends For Life meets from 7-9 p.m. the first Thursday of each month in the Fireside Room at Cherry Hills Community Church, 3900 Grace Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Meetings include information and discussion about treatment options. For information, visit chcc.org/care.

Find AA If you want to drink, that’s your business. If you want to stop, that’s ours. More than 1,000 AA meetings are offered in the Denver area every week. If you think you may have a problem with alcohol, come see us. To find a meeting near you, call 303-3224440, or go to www.daccaa.org. AA Highlands Ranch meets at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays at Abiding Word Evangelical Lutheran Church on Dad Clark Road. The meetings

Cancer Support Group. Gathering for individuals, family members and friends of those who have been touched by cancer in some way takes place at Cherry Hills

Community Church, 3900 Grace Blvd., Highlands Ranch Contact Shereice Godby at 720-937-8170 or shereice_godby@yahoo.com. Celebrate Recovery: Teens meets from 6-8 p.m. Sundays in Room 94 at Cherry Hills Community Church, 3900 Grace Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Designed for middle and high school students and provides a safe place to find healing in Christ by fostering authentic community and active service to Christ and others. Visit chcc.org/cr or contact us at 303-325-8242 or cr@chcc.org. Celebrate Recovery: Adults meets from 6-8 p.m. Sundays in Room 115. Potluck is the first Sunday of each month at 5 p.m. Celebrate Recovery addresses more than alcohol, drugs or other addictions. This biblically-based recovery program is also for those who desire healing from life’s hurts, habits and hang-ups. Visit chcc.org/cr or contact us at 303-325-8242 or cr@chcc.org. The meetings are at Cherry Hills Community Church, 3900 Grace Blvd., Highlands Ranch. SEE CLUBS, P11

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Highlands Ranch Herald 11

7November 16, 2017

Mark your calendar for family-friendly Turkey Day 5K BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

On Thanksgiving Day, before gorging on a turkey meal, residents are invited to take part in a south metro Denver tradition: the Turkey Day 5K. Signaling the beginning of the holiday season, the run/walk starts and ends near Shea Stadium, 3270 Redstone Park Circle, in Highlands Ranch. Hosted by the Highlands

CLUBS FROM PAGE 10

Colorado Symphony Guild, Highlands Ranch/Lone Tree chapter, meets at 1 p.m. the third Tuesday of each month at St. Luke’s United Methodist Church, Room 212, 8817 S. Broadway, Highlands Ranch. The group is the largest support group of the Colorado Symphony. Contact 303-308-2462, admin@coloradosymphonyguild.org or www. coloradosymphonyguild.org. Douglas County Association for Gifted & Talented is a nonprofit group of parents, educators and community leaders that supports the educational and emotional needs of gifted and advanced learners in Douglas County. Affili-

Ranch Community Association, the festive event attracts more than 3,000 participants every year. The course serves runners and walkers of all levels. Baby strollers and four-legged friends are welcome. The race begins at 9 a.m. and registration opens at 7:30 a.m. The cost for children ages 6 to 12 is $25, which includes a long-sleeved shirt. Standard registration for participants ages 13 years and older is $37

ate of the Colorado Association for GT and the National Association for GT. Find our mission, newsletters, events and general information at www.dcagt.org. EMPOWER Colorado, South Metro Support Group for parents of children with mental illness. Learn how to handle mental health challenges within the family and how to collaborate with the school system. Find out how to access resources for mental health care services. E-mail listserv and educational classes are also available. Meetings are from 6-8 p.m. the first and third Thursday of each month at Arapahoe/ Douglas Mental Health Network, 155 Inverness Drive West, 2nd floor, one block East of Dry Creek (next to DirecTV and the Light Rail) Englewood, CO 80112. Dinner will be served (usually pizza or

and includes a long-sleeved shirt. Performance registration for ages 13 and up costs $55 and includes a premium, long-sleeved tech shirt. Family registration for two adults and two children costs $110 and includes four long-sleeved shirts. Children ages 5 years and younger are free and can purchase a shirt for $10. New this year, commemorative branded merchandise, including

Subway). Contact Carol Villa at kyvilla@aol.com or 1-866-2134631. Food Addicts Anonymous meets at 6 p.m. Tuesdays at South Broadway Church, 23 Lincoln St. Call Anna at 303-733-0429 or Pamela at 303-322-3653. Friends for Life Breast Cancer Support Group meets from 7-8:30 p.m. the first Thursday of every month in the Fireside Room at Cherry Hills Community Church, 3900 Grace Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Meetings also include information and discussion about treatment options. Visit www. chcc.org or call 303-791-4100. Homecomings Adoption Waiting/Prospective Families meets at 6:30 p.m. the second Wednesday of each month in the Fireside

hoodies, hats and youth shirts, will be for sale, with a portion of the proceeds benefitting the Colorado National Guard Foundation. Residents who are unable to participate in the race can still support the cause by purchasing merchandise online at chamberofcommerceofhighlandsra.godaddysites.com. For information on the Turkey Day 5K, visit highlandsranchchamber. org/pages/annualturkeyday5k.

Room. Join us as we welcome a panel of adoptive parents who will share their experiences on their adoption journey. Each of these families has traveled different roads including adopting from foster care, international, and through domestic infant adoption. RSVP and reserve KidZone with Jennifer Kells at adoption@ chcc.org. This class is at Cherry Hills Community Church, 3900 Grace Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Littleton Lupus Support Group of the Colorado Lupus Foundation meets every third Saturday of each month in the greeting card section at the Tattered Cover in Highlands Ranch. Call 303-7719205 or 303-688-8047. Learning English? Douglas County Libraries offers Saturday morning practice sessions at which those

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learning English can engage in casual conversation with others. DCL also offers ESL Book Clubs, where English learners can read and discuss specific books. Both meetings are facilitated by trained volunteers. For dates, times and locations, call 303-7917323. Memory Care Monday’s offered at Clare Bridge in Highlands Ranch. Drop in from 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. any Monday and pick up information about preparing and caring for a loved one with dementia. Meningioma Mommas Inc., a nonprofit, online support group, was founded by Highlands Ranch resident and brain-tumor survivor Liz Holzemer for those who have experienced the same problem. Visit www.meningiomamommas. org for a calendar listing.

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12 Highlands Ranch Herald

LOCAL

November 16, 2017N

VOICES

It doesn’t matter what you say if what you say doesn’t matter QUIET DESPERATION

Craig Marshall Smith

Jennifer went shopping on her own, and picked up everything we needed for a wonderful homemade meal, including something called a “salad kit.” A salad kit comes in a clear bag, so you can see what’s in it. What’s in it is washed and chopped lettuce, and a number of washed and chopped vegetables, and a small plastic sleeve filled with dressing. All you have to do is empty the salad on the plates. Of course, you pay for the convenience. The vegetables, purchased separately, would cost half as much. But the vegetables would take far longer to wash and chop, and aren’t we all in a

hurry? “Edna. Where is he going with this one?” “I wish I knew, Merle.” Which brings me to an expression. It simplifies everything, just like a salad kit. It is inclusive, which saves you the trouble of a full, vivid explanation. Here it comes. Do you have a “go-to” restaurant? Do you have a “go-to” sweater, or a “go-to” purse? If you have been around the block with me, you already know how I feel about shortcuts when it comes to this blessed plot, this realm, this English.

Ixnay glib acronyms, is what I say. Ixnay truncations. When someone says “go-to,” sure, it saves words, but the art of conversation is reduced to a sleeve of Honey Mustard. I can’t track down the expression’s etymology anywhere. So I am going to blame it on New York City. That’s where a lot of these expressions get their start. The first time I heard “in a New York minute,” I thought it was clever. Now? Not so much. SEE SMITH, P13

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Time to get to work As the new school board of Douglas County takes office, it is time to put into action where they have complained for years about reform not working. Do they have a better plan? Do they have a plan to heal the wounds they complained about and unify the community so we can move forward to better educate our students? Some of the reform changes have been positive and hopes are that the new group doesn’t dismantle everything. Voters have given them an opportunity to put into action where their mouths have complained for years. For the sake of our students, hope is this change will move forward in a positive note and secure needed funds for our schools. Your chance is here to back up your complaints! Good luck! Dave Usechek Parker

WINNING WORDS

Michael Norton

O

9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210 Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 Phone: 303-566-4100 Web: HighlandsRanchHerald.net To subscribe call 303-566-4100

SEE LETTERS, P13

Be prepared for success or you’ll miss the chance

K, so here we go. Two weeks ago, we covered the role love plays in our past, present and future. Last week we took the same approach while we appreciated the history of our happiness. And today we wrap up the three-part series as we move into leveraging the successes of our past to pursue and drive our success now and in all of our future endeavors. As I was taking a walk this morning and collecting my

A publication of

Strive for excellence With the partisan rhetoric of the schoolboard elections behind us, it’s time to ask, “will changes proposed by either side actually improve our schools?” While the new, anti-reform board will surely work to erase missteps from the past years, I challenge them to become reformers themselves. There are deeper issues than school choice, teacher turnover and merit pay. This isn’t time for relativism; simply making the schools “better” than they were under the previous board won’t cut it. We need to strive for excellence in the absolute sense. One example that comes to mind is Thomas McLaren School in Colorado Springs. Despite being founded in 2009 as a charter with less per-student revenue and more minority and economically disadvantaged students than any DougCo high

thoughts for this column I remembered a story I had once been told. There was a young boy who would walk with his fishing pole, tackle box, and a large bucket. When asked why he was bringing such a large bucket, the young boy would optimistically and enthusiastically said that one day he had caught so many fish, but sadly he didn’t have a big enough bucket to carry the fish home. And he promised himself that he would

never let that happen again. Most days he came home with an empty pail or one or two fish, and a little downhearted, but day after day, he could be found walking enthusiastically with the same bucket, fishing pole and tackle box and when asked he would energetically respond with, “This will be the day that I catch enough fish to fill this big bucket.” You see, he had tasted success before and wanted to experience it again. He planned and prepared

for success, even though he had days where he fell short of his goal, not even catching one fish at all. Was it a trophy we won in our youth? Maybe a job promotion? A diploma? Did we complete a project that we were recognized for? Was it something we did in our everyday role that we found extremely rewarding?

Columnists & Guest Commentaries

JERRY HEALEY President

ERIN ADDENBROOKE Majors/Classified Manager

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Columnist opinions are not necessarily those of the Herald.

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We welcome letters to the editor. Please Include your full name, address and the best number to reach you by telephone.

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SEE NORTON, P16

Highlands Ranch Herald A legal newspaper of general circulation in Highlands Ranch, Colorado, the Herald is published weekly on Thursday by Colorado Community Media, 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129. Send address change to: 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129


Highlands Ranch Herald 13

7November 16, 2017

E

Keep an eye on what’s important in retirement

veryone is afraid of the unknown. And since we will retire very differently from our parents or our grandparents, there are a lot of unknowns for baby boomers planning or entering retirement. The questions are getting Patricia Kummer advisors lately have turned from numbers to feelings. In the last 30 years of preparing people for retirement, the trend has shifted from “Will I have enough money?” to “Will I have enough time?” This sounds strange at first, since the money question is normal, but don’t you have more time than ever in retirement? And time for what? You fill in the blank. Enough time to find purpose again. Enough time to make an impact, to pass

on knowledge, a legacy, to share ideas. Enough time to get things in order to pass along, to spend meaningful time with family and friends or just to do the things you always dreamed of. No matter what resources you need in retirement — time, money, knowledge, health or activities, it will work out best if you plan for it. That’s right, retirement planning is not just about money. Yes, it is important to have a nest egg and a source of income, but more and more, people are seeking purpose. Will they be able to create, improve, teach, help or care for someone? These ideas may take a different view of resources and what they are meant to provide. Money, after all, is just a tool to get you the things you want and need. If you adjust your wants and needs to match your resources, you can focus on the fun things. Many retirees find their regular needs have changed and they like to have something of interest to replace

SMITH

It’s called “phonetic reversal.” David Lynch experimented with it in “Twin Peaks.” You can also find it in “Amadeus.” Mozart says a number of phonetically reversed phrases, and many of them are vulgar. There’s a woman who works at my grocery store who says, “Have a good one, hon,” to every man, woman, and child she sees. Doesn’t she know? Doesn’t she know that there are a million and one things she could say? “Only in the agony of parting do we look into the depths of love.” (George Eliot) “The pain of parting is nothing to the joy of meeting again.” (Charles Dickens) “What’s so good about good-bye?” (Smokey Robinson and the Miracles) If she started to say things like that, I would shop there twice a day. “Have a good one, Honey Mustard.” Even that is an improvement. Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@ comcast.net.

FINANCIAL STRATEGIES

FROM PAGE 12

And neither is “not so much.” Don’t get me wrong. If I were on an airplane and we were headed into a mountain, I would truncate all over the place. Have you ever had a disagreement with someone that ended when he said or she said, “Whatever”? Don’t try that around me. It’s very dismissive. Americans keep it simple. The English, on the other hand, value words. I admit that I can’t always understand what they are saying, but it sure sounds eloquent. Whenever I watch a film that features English actors, I turn on the closed caption feature. It’s a must. “Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government,” comes from Monty Python, and until I read the caption it sounded like something being said backwards.

LETTERS FROM PAGE 12

school, it has shown that fostering a true love of learning translates into achievement. Students are instructed to “know truth, create beauty, and practice goodness.” Their teachers are committed to a mission more than to a paycheck (starting teachers are paid about 30 percent less than starting DougCo teachers). While I think top teachers should be paid $80,000-plus, having teachers passionate enough to teach for beans is more of a justification for high pay than simply logging 20 years of “experience.” As long as we keep an isolated view of our own school system’s potential, our schools – and students – will not

truly be able to succeed. We have to push them well-beyond today’s low bar. Sometimes the best system is entirely different than the current one. Nathan Faber Parker Kudos to band Congratulations to the Rock Canyon High School marching band for getting into the semifinals of the State Marching Band Competition at the Air Force Academy. Under the direction of the new band director, Zachary Fruits, their music was inspiring and their marching was impeccable. These kids put in countless hours and they put their hearts and souls into a wonderful performance that I wish everyone could have experienced. Shirley Baudek Castle Rock

that need with. Maybe they are down to one or two cars — instead of three or four. Maybe they find they don’t use all the things they have stored for 30 years and those can be used to provide for someone else. Maybe they have books or memoirs that can help educate others. There are many ways retirees can be challenging themselves. And this often changes the focus to more pleasant alternatives than worrying about the next stock market event. The baby boomers will be the most educated generation to retire. This is also a group of people who grew up with investing. Therefore, the idea of their money working for them when they are not, is not foreign. Our financial advisors don’t spend as much time working on explaining the time value of money as they do about mapping out a strategy to attain holistic goals. This may be turning a hobby into a business; volunteering at a school or helping family. Many of our clients have artistic tal-

ent and are painting, playing the piano and teaching grandchildren their skill. Many are engineers and consultants, allowing them to be productive long after the stressful job ends. Every person’s vision of life after work is different. One thing I have learned is that the need to find purpose and add value never ends. Many health experts claim this purposeful outlook adds health and longevity. In that case, plan well. You may have many more years than you thought to spend that time the way you want. Patricia Kummer has been an independent Certified Financial Planner for 31 years and is president of Kummer Financial Strategies Inc., a Registered Investment Advisor in Highlands Ranch. Kummer Financial Strategies Inc. is a seven-year 5280 Top Advisor. Please visit www.kummerfinancial.com for more information. Any material discussed is meant for informational purposes only and not a substitute for individual advice.

OBITUARIES Scott Hardy Scott Hardy, 61, of Littleton passed away October 13, 2017. A Life Celebration reception will be held November 17 from 3-6 pm at 3400 East Geddes Drive, Centennial.

We now publish: Arvada Press, Castle Pines News Press, Castle Rock News Press, Centennial Citizen, Denver Herald Dispatch, Douglas County News Press, Elbert County News, Englewood Herald, Golden Transcript, Highlands Ranch Herald, Lakewood Sentinel, Littleton Independent, Lone Tree Voice, Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel, Parker Chronicle, South Platte Independent, Westminster Window, and Wheat Ridge Transcript.

In Loving Memory Place an Obituary for Your Loved One.

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Funeral Homes Visit: www.memoriams.com


14 Highlands Ranch Herald

November 16, 2017N

Members of the senior club listen to classic rock music performed by the Home Brood Band.

Veterans were asked to stand at the November luncheon of the Highlands Ranch Senior Club.

Senior club honors veterans at monthly luncheon

The Highlands Ranch Senior Club recognizes veterans at its November luncheon Nov. 8 at Southridge Recreation Center.

Members enjoy Thanksgiving meal, music by local band BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

On Nov. 8, about 160 seniors filled the auditorium of Southridge Recreation Center, 4800 McArthur Ranch Road, for the largest Thanksgiving luncheon the Highlands Ranch Senior Club has had to date. The club is about 14 years old and quickly growing. “To have the crew come in here and knock it all out is amazing,” said Ron Winter, the club’s president. The monthly luncheon is a team effort. The Highlands Ranch Community Association allows the senior club to use the space and the Highlands Ranch Metro District coordinates and helps set up the event. At the Thanksgiving lunch, members enjoyed a feast from Safeway, listened to classic rock tunes performed by Littleton-based Home Brood Band and acknowledged about 40 veterans in the room. “It’s kind of a good fit,” said second vice president Del Miller, “because Army and first responders are the guys we should be most thankful for.”

The Home Brood Band performs classics by Bob Dylan, the Eagles, Jimmy Buffett and others at the Nov. 8 senior luncheon at Southridge Recreation Center, 4800 McArthur Ranch Road. About 160 seniors in the community attended. PHOTOS BY ALEX DEWIND

Time is a gift and one short hour can provide priceless moments for others. This holiday season, give the gift of your time to Bonfils Blood Center and we’ll transform it into the gift of life for patients in need. GIVE BLOOD. Highlands Ranch Community Donor Center 541 W. Highlands Ranch Pkwy. Open Monday through Saturday 7 am - 7 pm & Sundays 7 am – 3 pm

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Highlands Ranch Herald 15

7November 16, 2017 Lakewood Elks

Annual Holiday Craft Fair Saturday November 18th 9am-4pm & Sunday November 19th 10am-4pm 1455 Newland St.

Santa Clause • Face Painter • Raffles • Food Booth Crafters and Unique Christmas Gifts Free Admission • Open to the public Free Parking • Handicap Access

Auctions

Arts & Crafts

500 9th st golden Estate Saddle Auction Friday November 17th 7 pm American Legion Hall 500 9th st Golden 80401 All must sell, now available for immediate liquidation, . Nothing held back including : Billy Cook, Saddle King, Circle Y, Felts , custom made cowboy saddles, Weaver , Herford and more. You bid you set the price. All must go 60 top quality saddles including: Roping, Wade, Full Silver Show Saddles, Pleasure Saddles, Pony, Barrel, Australian 100: wool saddle blankets, memory core pads , 100% wool saddle pads , gel core saddle pads and many other style saddle pads.Lots of Leather goods of all kinds; over 200 bridles and breast collars - Cowboy halters , Bronc halter, bling halter, leather horse Harness, fancy Show Headstalls, and Several nice pack Saddle's saddle stand and Saddle Carts stable and grooming tools lots of winter and stable blanket sizes from 40 inch to 94" and much more Fill a store or tack room for pennies on the dollar Doors open 6 PM for preview" auction starts at 7 PM Mark your calendar Murphy's estate auctions'

Gift/Craft/Bake Sale and Café

Bicycles

Cash for all Vehicles!

Saturday, November 18th

Cars, Trucks, Vans, SUV’s

At St. Stephens Lutheran Church

Want To Purchase minerals and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: P.O. Box 13557 Denver, CO 80201

Farm Products & Produce Grain Finished Buffalo

quartered, halves and whole

719-775-8742

Antiques & Collectibles Must sell by December 1st

50,000 baseball cards STAR cards, Rookie cards, Rockie cards Mostly 1990's complete collated sets + duplicates I MAY HAVE THE CARD YOU'RE LOOKING FOR BUY ONE CARD OR BUY THEM ALL GREAT STARTER COLLECTION Many special subsets from all companies Some minor league sets 303-471-9248

Any condition • Running or not Under $700

(303)741-0762

Split & Delivered $300 a cord Stacking available extra $35 Call 303-647-2475 or 720-323-2173

Corner of Huron & Kennedy Northglenn

9am-4pm

Cell: (303)918-2185 for texting

Bestcashforcars.com

Jewelry

Autos for Sale

Just in time for Christmas

1996 Ford Couture 4 door, auto transmission very good condition 137,000 miles $2000 (303)422-4871

2.82 caret yellow gold diamond ring appraised value at $13,350 asking $7,000 720-822-7423

Misc. Notices OPOCS SINGLES CLUB-55 PLUS A CIRCLE OF FRIENDS Social hours monthly 4-6p Lakewood Chad's 4th Tuesday of the month Hostess Darlene @ 720-233-4099 4th Thursday Denver - Baker Street Pub 8101 East Bellview Host Harold @ 303-693-3464 For more info and monthly newsletter call JoAnn membership chairman 303-751-5195 or Mary President @ 303-985-8937

TRANSPORTATION

Firewood

New & Used Electric Bikes & Trikes December 2, 2017 • 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Hand-Crafted Jewelry • One-of-a-Kind Bags &Totes Music • Handmade Christmas Stockings Food • Other Unique Gifts

All by Local Artists FREE ADMISSION

Castle Pines Community Center 7404 Yorkshire Drive | Castle Pines, CO

Starting at $995 The Largest ebike Store in the Country Best Selection & Discount Prices

720-746-9958

West 6th Ave. & Indiana St. Golden, Colorado

Admission $2.00

Companion interment sites with 3 Granite Placements 40% off of Horan and McConaty price of is $7,686 at County Line Rd. and Holly St.

Call 303-551-4930

1919 Federal Blvd. Denver, CO 80204 ElectricBicycleMegaStore.com

RV’s and Campers Your Vacation Home away from Home Take your pets along Damon Ultrasport Motorhome 38' diesel pusher Cummins transmission New Drapes, Very Clean 56K miles, barely broke in $29,000 for quick sale too See Call Mark 720-351-9597

ADVERTISE IN THE MARKETPLACE 303-566-4091

Friday,December December 1, Friday, 4,2017 2015 9:00a.m. am to 9:00 to 5:00 5:00p.m. p.m. Saturday,December December 2, Saturday, 5,2017 2015 9:00 am to 4:00 9:00 a.m. 4:00p.m. p.m. Exhibit Hall at Jefferson County Fairgrounds (15200 West 6th Avenue)

Miscellaneous

Sell your merchandise on this page $25 for 2 weeks in 16 papers and online 303-566-4091 Wanted DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK, BOAT, RV; Running or not, to www.developmentaldisabled.org Tax deductible! 303-659-1744. 19 years of service (go onto website to see 57 Chevy)

Autos for Sale

FOR SALE

by

ENGLEWOOD PUBLIC SCHOOLS

303-934-3171

Arts & Crafts Annual Holiday Open House on Saturday,Nov 18th from 9 am - 4 pm off 128th & Holly - Thornton We have Crafts & variety of Home Based Businesses present Come get a start on your holiday shopping in one location! 12695 Locust Way, Thornton, 806024664 Questions - call Ange 3-862-6681 See you there!

Springwood Retirement Craft & Vendor Fair 2017

6550 Yank Way, Arvada CO Saturday, November 25th 9:00 am to 3:00 pm Resident Handicrafts, Avon, Organo Coffee, Paparazzi Jewelry, Lularoe, Magnolia & Vine, Rodan & Fields, Gold Canyon Candles, Tupperware And more!

Spreader Sold as is $500.00 OBO

1990 Ford with Plow. Sold as is. 68,000 miles. Comes with plow. Truck Needs some Repair. $2000.00 OBO

2003 Chevy 2500 Box Truck. 153,684 Miles. Sold as is, needs some repair. $2000.00 OBO

FOR INFO CONTACT: Ariel Ramos • Supervisor of Facilities and Operations • Englewood Public Schools

Office- 303-806-2015 • Cell- 303-910-1520


16 Highlands Ranch Herald

November 16, 2017N

NORTON FROM PAGE 12

Somewhere along the way, we caught so many fish we couldn’t fill our bucket. We tasted success and we knew what we did to achieve that success. It probably included planning, preparing and expecting to win. So today, right now, right in this very moment, each and every one of us has the ability to succeed as we pursue our worthy goals. And remember that Earl Nightingale defines success this way, “Success is the progressive realization of a worthy goal or ideal.”

Back to our fishing story. On one side of the lake we have the young optimistic boy and his large bucket. On the other side of the lake we have a man catching fish and only keeping the small fish, throwing all of the larger fish back into the lake. When a confused fellow fishing enthusiast questioned the man throwing back the larger fish, the fisherman reached into his backpack and displayed a very small frying pan. He shared that he couldn’t keep the larger fish because he was only prepared to catch and cook the smaller fish. I am confident that you have connected the dots here. As we plan and prepare for future success, we need to keep our success bucket available.

Local Focus. More News.

We need to plan, prepare, and expect to win. We need to know that there will be some days where we get shut out, meet with setbacks, and we need to remind ourselves that failure is an event, and it doesn’t define who we are as a person. We need to remind ourselves that if we expect only little wins, that is exactly what we will achieve. Now little wins are OK, they do add up over time. However, if we are planning for future success, a bigger job, a larger home, a significant role in our community or church, a substantial change in our earnings or income, whatever that big success looks like in our future, let’s make sure we are carrying our success bucket with us as we travel to fish in

all of the ponds, lakes and oceans of our life. How about you? Can you build upon your successes of yesterday? Are you properly positioned to succeed today? Are you planning, preparing, and expecting to win tomorrow? I would really love to hear all of our community success stories at gotonorton@gmail.com and when our success bucket is ready to be filled, it really will be a better than good week. Michael Norton is a resident of Castle Rock, the former president of the Zig Ziglar Corporation, a strategic consultant and a business and personal coach.

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Highlands Ranch Herald 17

7November 16, 2017

First area Smoothie King opens in Highlands Ranch STAFF REPORT

Smoothie King opened in early November at the Highlands Ranch Town Center. A second store is set to open in December, with four additional stores planned in the next five years. COURTESY PHOTO

The first Smoothie King franchise in the Denver area opened in early November in Highlands Ranch. The nation’s originator in offering “Smoothies with a Purpose” will open a second location in December in Castle Rock, and plans to add four additional stores in the next five years. “The Denver Metro area has been an appealing location for Smoothie King to develop for a number of years due to the active and healthy lifestyles that many people embrace here,” Kerry Dray, Denver operator for Smoothie

King, said in a news release. Dray is a fitness enthusiast and certified yoga instructor. She has partnered with her aunt, Susan Dray, to open the Denver-metro franchises. The two plan to help provide Denverites with meal replacement and snack solutions that are purposeful, no matter what goal someone is trying to achieve, whether it be to lose weight, gain muscle, stay well or simply take a break. Located in the Highlands Ranch Town Center, Smoothie King is at 1100 Sgt. Jon Stiles Drive, Suite 101. The Castle Rock store is at 1341 New Beale St., Suite 130.

Both locations are accepting applications for employment. The stores offer sports beverages, energy bars, vitamin supplements and more. As part of its healthfocus, Smoothie King also recently announced its Cleaner Blending initiative. At the centerpiece of the new initiative, Smoothie King will remove added sugar from more than 50 smoothies and will remove artificial flavors, artificial colors, artificial preservatives, and added hormones from all smoothie ingredients and introduce non-GMO fruits and veggies. Go to www.smoothieking.com.

E-470 freezes ExpressToll rates for up to three years BY STAFF REPORT

A toll adjustment announced Nov. 9 by the E-470 Board of Directors would freeze toll rates for ExpressToll drivers through 2020. That means ExpressToll users driving the 47-mile roadway can lock in the rates they are paying today, according to the board. Additionally, the toll rate on E-470 between I-70 and Peña Boulevard (Toll Plaza C) will be reduced by 25 cents to align the toll pricing with demand in the area and further ease congestion on the neighboring roadways.

ExpressToll customers on E-470 now pay $1.25 to access the roadway via the tolled on- and off-ramps and $2.70 to $2.95 per toll plaza. With the toll adjustment, License Plate Tolls will be adjusted to cover the higher cost of collections associated with that option. “It takes a large amount of resources and manpower to maintain the cameras, look up each license plate, cross reference the plate with the state DMV for verification, send out printed bills and continue to collect on those tolls,” said Tim Stewart, E-470 executive director.

Stewart is excited about passing savings on and rewarding new and existing ExpressToll customers. “This should incentivize drivers to sign up for an ExpressToll account to benefit from the huge savings,” he said. The ExpressToll and license plate adjustments will go into effect Jan. 1. E-470 is the 75-mph toll running along the eastern perimeter of the Denver metropolitan area. E-470 is a user-financed roadway, receiving no local, state or federal funds for financing, construction, operations or maintenance.

E-470 is a political subdivision of the state governed by the E-470 Public Highway Authority Board, which includes eight local governments — Adams, Arapahoe and Douglas counties — and the municipalities of Parker, Thornton, Aurora, Brighton and Commerce City. E-470 also operates ExpressToll, the all-electronic toll collection system available on E-470, Northwest Parkway and Colorado’s Express Lanes. Additional information on ExpressToll and License Plate Toll can be found at ExpressToll.com or by calling 303-537-3470.

Careers Help Wanted Eng 2, SW Devel & Engin – Comcast Cable Comm, LLC, Englewood, CO. Develo, maintain & support enterprise big data app w/I Hadoop ecosystem. Reqs: Bach in CS, Engin or rltd & 1 yr. exp devlop big data apps util these techs: Hadoop, Hive, Pig, Java & SQL. Apply to: shalona_douglas@cable.comcast.com. Rfer to Job ID#1461

Eng 4, SW Development & Engineering – Comcast Cable Comm, LLC, Englewood, CO. Provide tech leadership w/i teams resp. for bldng & mantain apps & dtbases used for determine Serviceability of Co’s Resident & Bus prdcts. Reqs. Bach in CS, Engin or rltd & 5 yrs. exp. of SW Dvlpmnt Lfcycle using Objct Ornted Progrmng & Oracle DB w/ PL/SQL; of which 3 yrs. must include bldng UIs & Web Services utlzng Java & J2EE Suite, of which 6 mnths must include usng Spring MVC, Jenkins, GtiH u b & C l o u d F o u n d r y . A p p l y to: Shalona_douglas@cable.comcast.com. Refer to Job ID #6556

LEGITIMATE WORK AT HOME

No Sales, no Investment, No Risk, Free training, Free website. Contact Susan at 303-6464171 or fill out form at www.wisechoice4u.com

Help Wanted

NCS Pearson, Inc. seeks Software Developer in Centennial, CO to maintain existing complex sftwr products; Code, test & debug new sftwr or making enhancements to existing sftwr; Mnge the full sftwr dvlpmnt lifecycle which includes testing, implmntation & auditing independently; Work on problems of moderate to complex scope where analysis of situations or data reqs a review of a variety of factors; Provide 24/7 oncall support during 1 week shifts; Troubleshoot staging & production issues; & work w/ other teams to provide integrated soltns. Min. req. Bach’s deg in Comp Sci or Eng’g or rel’d field or frgn equiv together w/ 2 yrs exp dvlpng high quality web apps using javascript, html, css. 1 yr exp w/ React & Node.js. 1 yr exp w/ unit testing frameworks, build tools & bundlers like gulp, webpack, & browserify. 1 yr exp w/ continuous integration, build, testing, & reporting using Jenkins or equiv. Send resume to: NCS Pearson, attn.: Adithya Connerton, 5601 Green Valley Dr., Bloomington, MN 55437.

RN or LPN nurse(s) needed, PT or FT. Night shifts. One on one patient care. North Parker. Seeking caring, dependable nurses to help keep the family together. Active license required – all nurses welcome to apply (retired, empty nester, those seeking a slower pace, peaceful home, etc). Call 303-646-3020 and leave a message or text 303-919-5339 if we are unavailable

PLACE YOUR AD TODAY!

303-566-4091 Colorado Statewide Classified Advertising Network

Help Wanted NCS Pearson, Inc. seeks Sr. Software Quality Engineer in Centennial, CO to guide the planning, creation & execution of automated tests using a test automation tool incl’g: Selenium WebDriver, TestNG, & Java based open source test frameworks. Lead a small agile team & work well w/ other departments –Dev/PM/PdM, etc. Contribute to the dvlpmnt of other team members & facilitate troubleshooting & solve technical problems. Plan, schedule & implement testing for projects, define test objectives, write scripts (manual & automated). Formulate test plans incl’g systems analysis, risk analysis, dependency analysis, writing & plotting test strategies, & determines how to report defects (pre/postproduction). Investigate & report project issues w/ Dvlpmnt, Product, Project Mngmnt, Systems & Apps support groups, Network Eng’g, etc., as well as other project teams. Provide training & mentoring to Sftwr Quality Engrs. Identify opportunities & lead the roll out of inventive tech ideas & implement solutions w/ other projects teams, the SQE department, as well as other departments. Analyze & ensure reqrmnts/User Story acceptance criteria are acceptable for test case creation. Min. req. Bach's degre in Comp reltd field or frgn equiv together w/ 5 yrs’ exp in the Quality Eng’g organization mentoring multiple teams. 5 yrs’ exp or knwldge req’d in: Core Java, Selenium WebDriver2.0, Appium, TestNg/Junit, Maven, SauceLabs, GitHub. 5 yrs’ exp w/ JMeter for performance testing. 5 yrs’ exp w/ continuous Integration using Jenkins/Travis. 5 yrs’ exp w/ Code Coverage Tools like Cobertura, JaCoCo. Send resume to: NCS Pearson, attn.: Adithya Connerton, 5601 Green Valley Dr., Bloomington, MN 55437.

To place a 25-word COSCAN Network ad in 91 Colorado newspapers for only $300, contact your local newspaper or call SYNC2 Media at 303-571-5117. OPPORTUNITY AVAILABLE WANTED Cash for Mineral Rights Established accounting/tax preparation Free, no-risk, cash offer. Contact us practice needs seasoned accountant with the details: able to prepare 1040 to 1120, Call: 720-988-5617 Quickbooks efficient, Write: Minerals, PO BOX 3668, current with CPEs. Littleton, CO 80161 75 minutes to Denver. Email: Ownership possible, salary negotiable. opportunity@ecmresourcesinc.com 970-370-4241 or 303-228-1665. SYNC2 MEDIA Buy a 25-word statewide classified line ad in newspapers across the state of Colorado for just $300 per week. Ask about our frequency discounts! Contact this newspaper or call SYNC2 Media, 303-571-5117

Help Wanted SOFTWARE Inovant, LLC, a Visa Inc. company, currently has openings in our Highlands Ranch, Colorado location for: - Senior Software Engineers (RF5185F) to be responsible for the development of interfaces from internal and external systems to support the organization’s middleware application, architecture, and standards. Apply online at www.visa.com and reference the above job number. EOE

Help Wanted Weekly Carrier Routes Available West Metro Lakewood, Parker & Centennial areas Part-time hours Adaptable route sizes No suit & tie required! Previous carrier experience encouraged: reliable vehicle and email access required no telephone inquiries – but email us at: snevins@coloradocommunitymedia.com


18 Highlands Ranch Herald

LOCAL

November 16, 2017N

LIFE

Get into the holiday spirit with music, food

D

Theatrical options for the holiday season The Arvada Center is celebrating the holiday season with a classic family story, “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.” BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

T

he holidays mean something different to everyone, but if there’s one thing that most can agree on, it is that they should be spent with the people who mean the most to us. And as far as activities go for the holidays, few are better than sharing the community and thrill of live theater. “The holidays are the time of year when people are busiest, so it’s really special that they make time to be together at the theater,” said Josh Hartwell, a playwright

and actor who has written two holiday shows this season — one at Lakewood’s The Edge Theater and Golden’s Miners Alley Playhouse. “It makes you feel closer to the people you care about when you make time to do things with them.” This time of year, theater-goers have a variety of options to select from — more traditional to dark comedies and shows that highlight holiday themes, like “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,” which is playing at the Arvada Center. “’Joseph’ is a great family-oriented show, with some wonderful

COURTESY PHOTO

messages,” said Stephen Day, who plays Jacob and Potiphar in the show. “There’s powerful moments of redemption, and a great exploration of family dynamics.” The musical brings together all kinds of genres, from pop and country to rock. Which means there’s something for everyone to enjoy in the show, said Sarah Rex, the narrator in “Joseph.” Another show that embraces the theme of the season is “Seussical,” which is plays at Littleton’s Town Hall Arts Center. The show is an amalgamation of several of Dr. SEE THEATER, P19

espite all the shoppers big box stores see on Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving wasn’t allt hat special for Angelo Coiro, owner of Angelo’s CDs and More. But when Record Store Day started making exclusive releases on Black Friday, everything changed. “It’s been a big helpto use, and we do triple what we used to on that Friday,” he said. “Suddenly, Black Friday is relevent to us again.” During the Record Store Day Black Friday event, independent record COMING like all three ATTRACTIONS stores of Angelo’s locations, Twist and Shout, Black and Read, Wax Trax, and others will be opening at much more reasonable hours (usually around 8 a.m. or so) to sell limited versions of unique releases on vinyl, Clarke Reader tapes and CDs. Some items sure to go first include a 7-inch single of “Baby It’s Cold Outside” by local favorites Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats, Neil Young’s “Harvest Moon” on two LPs, and Gorillaz’s latest album, “Humanz,” on two LP picture discs. “We have donuts and other treats for the first people who arrive, and there will be live music at some locations,” Coiro added. “There are also sales and specials we’ll have going all weekend.” Go to www.recordstoreday.com to find the record nearest you, compile your wishlist, and make a plan for the day. An album listening party at a movie theater Denver-based Vinyl Me, Please, a record-of-the-month club where subscribers are sent one record each month, has been growing by leaps and bounds since it was first created in 2013. To coincide with the release of its album of the month, the company started The Spins, listening parties where people can party while checking out the album. For November, Vinyl Me, Please, selected St. Vincent’s latest album, “Masseducation,” and to celebrate, are hosting a listening party at the BarFly, located in Sloan Lake’s new Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, 4255 W. Colfax Ave. Beginning at 6 p.m. on Nov. 17, the event will feature a mixology class, SEE READER, P19


Highlands Ranch Herald 19

7November 16, 2017

THEATER FROM PAGE 18

Seuss’ most popular stories, including “Horton Hears a Who,” “The Cat in the Hat,” “The One-Feathered Tail of Miss Gertrude McFuzz” and “Horton Hatches an Egg.” “Christmas and the end-of-year holiday celebrations are all about family, and there is a long-time tradition of families sharing certain productions together, passing the experience on to new generations to share,” said Bob Wells, director of the show. “’A Christmas Carol’ and ‘The Nutcracker’ are the champions, and I hope ‘Seussical,’ with its story, music, dance, sets and costumes, will become part of the merry tradition.” Those looking for more off kilter fare can check out “The SantaLand

Diaries” at The Jones at the Denver Center for Performing, based on David Sedaris’ experiences from his stint as a Macy’s elf in New York City, and the world premiere of “Resolutions,” written by Hartwell and directed by Missy Moore at The Edge. “The idea was to create a holiday show that wasn’t really about the holidays,” Hartwell said. “It’s kind of a Quentin Tarantino holiday show. It’s something unlike everything else out there.” The show is about three middleaged couples who meet up after the holidays at a cabin in Vail. Each year their social event includes exchanging white elephant gifts, making their resolutions for the upcoming year and, of course, some drinking. But as relationships change, so does the event. “It’s a black comedy, but it has some grimness, too,” Hartwell

added. For the traditionalists, the Denver Center for the Performing Arts’ production of “A Christmas Carol” is a perennial favorite, and hard to top. But for a more personal approach, Hartwell adapted Charles Dickens’ classic for Miners Alley in Golden. His version follows six local actors who challenge each other to bring Dickens’ classic to life as swiftly and simply as possible. This allows for a blending of the classic elements of the fable to mix with modern sensibilities. “The journey is so interesting, and I think Scrooge is more complex than people realize,” said Jim Hunt, who plays the miser in the production. “People who come to our show are going to see something fresh and new. In the end, it’s about family and coziness, and that fits with the holiday season.”

HOLIDAY THEATER OPTIONS Arvada “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” Nov. 17 through Dec. 23 Arvada Center 6901 Wadsworth Blvd. 720-898-7200 www.arvadacenter.org Denver “A Christmas Carol” Nov. 24 through Dec. 24 Stage Theatre at the Denver Center for Performing Arts Speer Boulevard and Arapahoe Street 800-641-1222 www.denvercenter.org

“ELF The Musical” Dec. 13 through 17 Buell Theatre Speer Boulevard and Arapahoe Street 800-641-1222 www.denvercenter.org “The SantaLand Diaries” Nov. 24 through Dec. 24 The Jones at the Denver Center for Performing Arts Speer Boulevard and Arapahoe Street 800-641-1222 www.denvercenter.org Lakewood “Resolutions”

READER FROM PAGE 18

movie screening and a silent disco curated by DJ Details and the Vinyl Me, Please staff. “We have a relationship with our members where we say, ‘Here is this thing that was really moving to us and we actually spend a lot of time writing about it … and we’d love for you to give it a listen,’ “ explained Tyler Barstow, one of the founders of the company, in an interview from earlier this year. “Our goal is to illuminate and shed some light on where this album comes from, because there are so many albums that aren’t just another pop record or another rap record or another indie rock record.” For more information, visit www. drafthouse.com/denver/theater/ sloans-lake. A musical Thanksgiving tradition On Thanksgiving Day 1976, The Band — the musical group responsible for classics like “The Weight” and “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down” — played its final concert at San Francisco’s Winterland Ballroom, with visits from rock royalty like Bob

Dec. 1 through 31 The Edge Theater 1560 Teller St. 303-232-0363 www.theedgetheater.com Littleton “Seussical: The Musical” Nov. 10 through Dec. 30 Town Hall Arts Center 2450 W. Main St. 303-794-2787 www.townhallartscenter.org Lone Tree “Home for the Holidays” Dec. 7 through 17 Lone Tree Arts Center 10075 Commons St.

Dylan, Van Morrison, Joni Mitchell and more. The ensuing film, directed by Martin Scorsese, and live album have gone down as one of the best live recordings in rock history. In 2005, Polytoxic, a jam band based in Denver, came up with the idea of reenacting the movie on stage to highlight the quality of area musicians. That first concert on May 25 included 16 guest musicians and a four-piece horn section, and sold out in minutes. So the group decided to hold a repeat performance the night before Thanksgiving — and they’ve been doing it ever since. Now in its 13th year, The Last Waltz Revisited will be on Friday, Nov. 17, at the Boulder Theater, 2032 14th St., and on Nov. 22 (the night before Thanksgiving) at the Fillmore Auditorium, 1510 N. Clarkson St. The show will feature more than 50 musicians and a full horn section, all from the Denver music scene. A portion of the proceeds go to support the Denver Rescue Mission, and more information and tickets can be found at www.lastwaltz revisited.com. A how-to for a snack for the holidays Thanksgiving is so centered on food

$150 GIFT CARD

720-509-1000 www.lonetreeartscenter.org Parker “The Nutcracker of Parker” Dec. 14 through 17 PACE 20000 Pikes Peak Ave. 303-805-6800 www.parkerarts.org Wheat Ridge “A Christmas Carol” Dec. 8 through 16 The Curtain Playhouse 6990 W. 38th Ave., No. 102 720-308-2920 www.thecurtainplayhouse.com

that having a few easy, go-to recipes in your pocket is always a good idea. The Museo de Las Americas, located at 861 Santa Fe Drive, can help you prepare a delicious snack with a Caliente: Craft Your Own Salsa class from 10 to 11 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 18. Students will learn how to develop their own salsa recipe, and take it home with them after the class. To claim a spot in the class, call 303571-4401 or visit www.museo.org. The holiday blues Teller’s Tap Room is a hidden gem in Wheat Ridge, and in addition to its top-notch food and drinks, it’s a great place for live music on the weekends. At 7 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 19, the Delta Sonics band will be playing a show at the bar and grill at 1990 Youngfield St. The group has been named the best blues band in Denver during the Westword Magazine Music Showcase every year from 2011 through 2016. Go to www.tellerstaproom.com for information. Clarke Reader’s column on culture appears on a weekly basis. A community editor with Colorado Community Media, he can be reached creader@ coloradocommunitymedia.com.

Test your Turkey Day knowledge for a chance to win a $150 gift card from Tattered Cover Bookstore.

Visit HighlandsRanchHerald.net

to play Turkey Day Fun and enter to win!


20 Highlands Ranch Herald

November 16, 2017N

Castle Pines venue to host photographer John Fielder The Castle Pines Arts and Cultural Foundation will again present an evening with Colorado nature photographer John Fielder, presenting a program about his latest book, “A SONYA’S Colorado Winter,” SAMPLER and providing copies of other Fielder titles for sale. The event will be held December 1 at Castle Pines North Metropolitan District, 7404 Yorkshire Dr., Castle Pines. Doors will open at 6 p.m., at which time, Fielder Sonya Ellingboe publications may be purchased and autographed by Fielder. The program will start at 7 p.m. and a registration is required for it, as seating is limited. (Register online: castlepinesarts.org) Admission is free, but donations will be welcomed to support Foundation programming for children’s music and adult programming. Littleton Ballet Academy Littleton Ballet Academy will present an evening with Clara and the Nutcracker Dec. 1-3 (7 p.m. Dec. 1 and 2; noon and 4 p.m. Dec. 3) in the Joanna Ramsey Theatre at Westminster High School, 6933 Raleigh St., Westminster. Tickets: $20 to $36 in advance, $2 more at the door: 303-794-6694, littletony-

outhballet.org. Parking is free. Colorado Ballet Colorado Ballet’s annual traditional production of “The Nutcracker” will run from Nov. 25 to Dec. 24 at the Ellie Caulkins Opera House, Denver Center for Performing Arts, 14th and Champa streets in downtown Denver. It’s the 56th season for this elegant production, with performances in the afternoons and evenings. See coloradoballet.org or call 303-837-8888, ext. 2, for tickets and information. Littleton Museum holiday event “A Holiday’s Evening 2017” will be presented at the Littleton Museum, 6038 S. Gallup St. from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Dec. 10. Dress warmly — this is an outdoor event enhanced by the light of candles and bonfires. Refreshments, music, Santa. Tickets are on sale Nov. 18 for members of the Friends of the Littleton Library/Museum and Nov. 25 for the general public. ($7/$3 members; $10/$4 non-members; cash or check only.) Available at Bemis Library, 6014 S. Datura St. or Littleton Museum, 6028 S. Gallup St., both in Littleton. Information: 303-795-3950. Holiday music in Lone Tree The Lone Tree Symphony Orchestra will perform in concert: “Sleigh Ride in Winter,” at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 1 and 2:30 p.m. Dec. 2 at the Lone Tree Arts Center, 10075 Commons St., Lone Tree,

with a program of holiday favorites and a medley from “Frozen” and three arrangements of “Sleigh Ride.” St. Nicholas will appear. Tickets: 720-5091000, lonetreesymphony.org. The LTSO will also appear at the 6:30 p.m. Dec. 1 tree lighting ceremony at the Lone Tree Arts Center. MOA added hours The Museum Outdoor Arts will be open from noon to 4 p.m. Nov. 18 — a rare Saturday for the museum — for visitors to the “Counterpoints” exhibition, with art by father/son team Charles and Colin Parson. This will coincide with the “Harp Trios With Emily Levin” performance in the next-door Hampden Hall. Gallery admission is free, concert tickets, $16/$20. (MOA closed Nov. 23-24.) The MOA and Hampden Hall are both on the second floor of the Englewood Civic Center, 1000 Englewood Parkway. PACE Center show Lloyd J. Schwartz’s “Dinner at Five” plays through Nov. 19 at the PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker. This new comedy stars television performers Kathy Garver, Fred Grandy, Christopher Knight and Caryn Richman as two middle-aged couples who consider a bit of swinging. Tickets $36-$39, parkerarts.org, 303-805-6800.

ta in residence, hot drinks and lovely winter walks are available for visitors to Hudson Gardens, 6115 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton, starting Nov. 24, on selected evenings. Tickets are available at Altitudetickets.com. See hudsongardens.org for information on dates, ticket prices. (Hudson Gardens is a collection point for Operation Christmas Joy, a gift drive for families of men and women deployed during the season, through Dec. 6. Books, toys, games, children’s clothes, gadgets … at the welcome center/gift shop, which is stocked for gift shoppers.) Holiday Express at Depot The annual Holiday Express has arrived at the Depot Art Gallery, 2069 W. Powers Ave. in Littleton. Original arts and crafts gifts made by Littleton Fine Arts Guild members. Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays, 11 a.m.to 4 p.m. Sundays, through Dec. 30. 303-795-0781.

Englewood-area author honored Leslee Breene, who lives just outside Englewood, received an Anthology Award from the Colorado Independent Publishers Association for her 2016 collection of five holiday stories, “Christmas in My Heart” — a secondplace EVVY Book Award at the 23rd annual awards banquet at Denver’s Forney Museum. The attractive paA Hudson Christmas perback book, with a Christmas tree LTAC_CCM_11.3.17 draft.pdf breath, 1 11/2/2017San11:08:01 AM Twinkling lights, frosty on the cover, is available at Bookies

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Highlands Ranch Herald 21

7November 16, 2017

Book sale kicks off season with treasured titles Event at library in Littleton lasts five days; cash or check SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Throughout the year, Sue McNamee and her Friends of the Littleton Library/Museum Book Sale Committee save some special books that come in as donations — save them for the annual FOL/M Holiday Book Sale, which starts Nov. 18 and runs through Dec. 23 at Bemis Public Library, 6014 S. Datura St., Littleton. She says that in addition to these special books, “there will be thousands of books covering a wide array of topics.” The selection of books on the tables on the first floor at Bemis are updated daily — so shop early and often! Some bibliophiles, as well as ordinary shoppers, seek leather-bound editions of classics: “Huckleberry Finn” by Mark Twain, for example. Also books by Charles Dickens, a copy of “Wuthering Heights” and one of “Madame Bovary,” are available, among others. Some visitors seek out autographedby-the-author copies, or first editions — also to be found at Bemis.

 

Generally available: multiple categories including: poetry, Christmas and other holiday books, cookbooks, knitting and other craft books (big selection), interior decorating, photography, art, travel, science and animals, sports, biography and autobiography, history from all periods, children’s and young adult titles, Colorado books and religious and inspirational titles and more … Important: Note that purchases must be by cash or check — no credit or debit cards. Volunteers will be available to help with sales much of the time. Or purchases can be made through the circulation desk. For information, see the Friends of the Library and Museum Facebook page or the website: friendsofthelibraryandmuseum. org or call Bemis Library: 303-7953961. The FOL/M Used Book Sale is maintained all through the year, with hundreds of titles available at any one time for browsers. Proceeds are used by the library and museum to fund speakers and other programs for adults, teens and children, as well as needed materials and equipment — and an occasional cow! Over the years, that program support has amounted to many thousands of dollars. Funds are also raised by booth fees at the annual Friends’ Craft Fair on

The Friends of the Littleton Library/Museum will have thousands of interesting titles available at their annual holiday sale, starting Nov. 18 at Bemis Library. COURTESY PHOTO the first Saturday in October, members’ dues, donations and occasional

other events, such as the recent “A Holiday’s Eve at the Museum.”

Parker

   



Serving the southeast Denver area

 Castle Rock/Franktown Castle Rock/Franktown  

    4825 N. Crowfoot Valley Road Castle Rock, CO. 80108  303-663-5751 www.CanyonsCC.org

    Sunday  Services: 9:30am – Traditional 11:00am – Modern Traditional

Trinity Lutheran Church & School

Sunday Worship 8:00 & 10:45 a.m. Sunday School Bible Study 9:30am Trinity Lutheran School & ELC (Ages 3-5, Grades K-8)

  303-841-4660   www.tlcas.org WORLD MISSION CHURCH First United (KOREAN CHURCH)   (Nursery & Sunday School offered during 11am service)

Methodist Church

Greenwood Village

St. Thomas More

Connect – Grow – Serve

Catholic Parish & School

Sunday Worship

Seven Sunday Masses Two Daily Masses Confessions Six Days a Week STM Catholic School Preschool – Grade 8

8035 South Quebec Street Centennial, CO 80112 303.770.1155

www.stthomasmore.org

Parker evangelical Presbyterian church

8:45 am & 10:30 am Congregation Beth Shalom Serving the Southeast Denver area

Call or check our website for information on services and social events!

9030 MILLER ROAD PARKER, CO 80138 3038412125 www.pepc.org

www.cbsdenver.org

303-794-6643

Littleton

DUE TO THE FIRE, MEETING TO BE HELD AT

LIVING WATER CHRISTIAN CHURCH

7049 E PARK DR., FRANKTOWN, CO 80016  1200 South Street TIME: 12:30 PM PHONE: 303-688-1004 Castle Rock, CO 80104  303.688.3047 ENGLISH EVERYONE TRANSLATION IS WELCOME! www.fumccr.org  Services:  Sunday Worship 9:00am & 10:45am    9:00am - Sunday School

Little Blessings Parents Day Out www.littleblessingspdo.com

Centennial

To advertise your place of worship in this section, call Karen at 303-566-4091 or email kearhart@ColoradoCommunityMedia.com

South Denver Humanistic Judaism

Parker

Find us on meetup and facebook!

meetup.com/South-Denver-Humanistic-Judaism/ facebook.com/SouthDenverHumanisticJudaism/ Michelle Davis Community Leader

720-284-2231

madrikhadavis@gmail.com

A home for secular, cultural Jews

Sunday Services - 10 a.m. Cimarron Middle School 12130 Canterberry Parkway Parker, CO 80138 www.CSLParker.org

Pine Lane Elementary South 6475 E Ponderosa Dr. Parker, CO 80138 303-941-0668


22 Highlands Ranch Herald

THINGS to DO

THEATER

Sideshows, Oddities and Spirits: 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 17 at Theatre of Dreams, 735 Park St., Castle Rock. Reservations required; call 303-660-6799 or go to http://Tickets.AmazingShows. com. Dinner at Five: 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday through Nov. 19 at the PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker. Go to www.parkerarts.org or call 303-805-6800 Pump and Dump Show: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 29 at Comedy Works South, 5345 Landmark Place, Greenwood Village. Band of Mothers national tour. Call 720274-6800 or go to https://www. comedyworks.com/comedians/ the-pump-dump. Go to facebook. com/thepumpanddump. Seussical, The Musical: 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays through Dec. 30 at Town Hall Arts Center, 2450 W. Main St., Littleton. Additional sows at 2 p.m. Nov. 25 and Dec. 2, and 6:30 p.m. Dec. 10. No show on Dec. 24. Tickets available at the arts center box office, by calling 303-794-2787 ext. 5, or at townhallartscenter.org/seussical.

ART

this week’s TOP FIVE Joe Peterson Orchestra: 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 18 at Bemis Public Library, 6014 S. Datura St., Littleton. Nine-piece band and vocalists perform patriotic songs honoring veterans. Call 303-7953961. Castle Rock Starlighting: 2-7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 18 in Historic Wilcox Square. Ceremony begins about 5:30 p.m. Go to https://castlerock.org/castle-rockstarlighting/ Holiday Celebration: 3-5:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 18 at Centennial Center Park, 13050 E. Peakview Ave., Centennial. Local school choirs perform holiday songs. Santa will visit. Free cookies and hot chocolate. Enjoy the park’s lights. Bring your camera to get photos with Santa. Bring gently worn or new coats for Coats for Colorado, or socks for donation to homeless shelters. Holiday Y’ART Sale: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and

Castle Rock. Kick off Starlighting weekend with an evening of dance, dance lessons and demos presented by Arthur Murray Dance Studio. Registration is required at 303-791-7323 or DCL.org.

Craft Lab: 2-4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 19 at the Lone Tree Library, 10055 Library Way. Contact 303-7917323 or DCL.org.

Children’s Concert with Dr. Noize: 2-3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 19 at Koelbel Library, 5955 S. Holly St., Centennial. Go to arapahoelibraries.org

Inuit Crafts and Games: 2-3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 25 at Koelbel Library, 5955 S. Holly St., Centennial. Make an Inuit themed craft and play authentic games inspired by the culture. Go to arapahoelibraries.org.

Patriotic Concert: The John Philip Sousa Band: 1-2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 26 at Koelbel Library, 5955 S. Holly St., Centennial. Concert features colonial-era patriotic and holiday tunes. Go to arapahoelibraries.org. Children’s Concert with Dr. Noize: 2-3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 26 at Smoky Hill Library, 5430 S. Biscay Circle, Centennial. Go to spot at arapahoelibraries.org

MUSIC

Daydreams and Nightmares: 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 17 at First Plymouth Congregational Church, 3501 S. Colorado Blvd., Englewood; and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 18 at Augustana Lutheran Church, 5000 E. Alameda Ave., Denver. Featuring the Stratus Chamber Orchestra. Call 303-388-4962 or go to www. AugustanaArts.org. Dancing in the Starlight: 6 p.m. Friday, Nov. 17 at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St.,

READING/WRITING Local Author Showcase: 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 18 at the Parker Library, 20105 E. Mainstreet. Meet 16 local authors and learn more about their individual work. Registration required at 303-791-7323 or DCL.org.

EVENTS

Lifetree Café: 5-6 p.m. Monday, Nov. 13 (Smile: Even When You Think You Can’t); Monday Nov. 20 (Lonely: Secrets Learned in Solitary Confinement); Monday Nov. 27 (Religious Freedom: Standing For What You Believe) at DAZBOG, 202 Wilcox St., Castle Rock. Call 303-814-0142. Go to LifetreeCafe.com. Starlighting Santa and Puppet

Sunday, Nov. 18-19 at Willow Creek 1 Clubhouse, 8050 E. Jamison Drive, Centennial. Willow Creek Rob Davidson with Betsy Buckner and other artists will show art works and lots more. Mayor’s Holiday Lighting: 5:30-7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 24 in O’Brien Park, Parker. Go to http://www.parkeronline.org/172/Mayors-Holiday-Lighting.

Shows: 2-4:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 18 at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. Kids enjoy a pre-Starlighting visit with Santa and entertaining puppet shows. No registration required; contact 303-791-7323 or DCL.org. Santa’s Big Day: 8:30 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 18 at the Outlets at Castle Rock, 5050 Factory Shops Blvd. Go to www.outletsatcastlerock.com. Proceeds benefit Special Olympics Colorado. BINGO: 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 18 at the Roxborough Library, 8357 N. Rampart Range Road, Ste. 200. All ages. Registration is required at 303-791-7323 or DCL.org. Life-Size Game Day: 2-4 p.m. Sunday, Nov 19 at the Roxborough Library, 8357 N. Rampart Range Road, Ste. 200. All ages. Contact 303-791-7323 or DCL.org. Veterans Tribute: 7-8:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 20 at Southridge Recreation Center, 4800 McArthur Ranch Road, Highlands Ranch. Honor Bell will be on-site. American Legion Color Guard flag presentation. A sing-along of “God Bless the USA.” Go to http:// thehrhs.org/ Kindness Superstars: 4-5 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 21 at Castlewood Library, 6739 S. Uinta St., Centennial. Go to arapahoelibraries.org. Help with U.S. State Genealogy Research: 9:30-11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 21 at Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit, 6400 S. University Blvd., Centennial. Contact ColumbineGenealogy@gmail.com.

The WASP Ferry Pilots of World War II: 1-3 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 21 at Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit, 6400 S. University Blvd., Centennial. Presented by Sarah Byrn Rickman, WASP author and historian. Contact ColumbineGenealogy@gmail.com. Mayor’s Holiday Lighting: 5:30-7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 24 in O’Brien Park, Parker. Go to http://www. parkeronline.org/172/MayorsHoliday-Lighting. Holiday Carriage Rides: 3:30-8:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 24, Saturday, Nov. 25, and Sunday, Nov. 26 at Discovery Park in downtown Parker. Reservations required. Go to http://co-parker.civicplus. com/1723/Holiday-CarriageRides. A Hudson Christmas: 5-8 p.m. select evenings from Nov. 24 to Dec. 31 at Hudson Gardens and Event Center, 6115 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton. Outdoor holiday walking tour. Share Christmas wishes with Santa; take a photo on Santa’s sleigh. Tickets available at www.altitudetickets.com, or in person on event nights. Go to www.hudsongardens.org. Santa’s Village: Fridays to Sundays, Nov. 24 to Dec 24 at Chatfield Farms, 8500 W. Deer Creek Canyon Road, Littleton. Replaces Trail of Lights. Admission includes a hayride, short holiday movies at Santa’s Cinema, live reindeer, crafts with Mrs. Claus, pictures with Santa and craft vendors in Santa’s workshop. Food and beverages may be purchased. Go to https://www.botanicgardens. org/chatfield-farms

November 16, 2017N

HEALTH

Advance Care Planning Basics: 1-2 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 16, at the James H. LaRue Library, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Presented by Frances Myers, founder and executive director, The Center for Advance Care Planning. Review the basics of advance care planning and explore the questions you need to ask yourself to be able to plan. Call 720-595-5451 to RSVP or if you have questions. Go to www.centerforadvancecareplanning.org Anticoagulation Basics: Through Thick & Thin: 1:30-2:30 p.m. Nov. 20 at South Denver Heart Center, 1000 SouthPark Drive, Littleton. Learn to live with Warfarin/Coumadin. Call 303-744-1065 or go to www.southdenver.com to register or for details. Spice Rack Medicine: 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Nov. 22 at South Denver Heart Center, 1000 SouthPark Drive, Littleton. Presented by Susan Buckley, RD, CDE. Call 303-744-1065 or go to www. southdenver.com to register or for details. Turkey Day 5K Fun Run/Walk: 8 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 23 at the Parker Recreation Center, 17301 E. Lincoln Ave., Parker. Go to http:// parkerrec.com/1167/TurkeyDay-5K-Fun-RunWalk

EDUCATION

Learn Pro Magic Tips: 3:30-5 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 22 at Smoky Hill Library, 5430 S. Biscay Cir., Centennial. Learn sleight-of-hand tricks from pro magician Shawn Preston. Go toarapahoelibraries. org. Practice Your English: 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 25 at the Parker Library, 20105 E. Mainstreet. Lively, informal conversation on everyday topics for intermediate to advanced English learners. Ages 17-plus. Registration is required at 303-791-7323 or DCL.org. Editor’s note: Calendar submissions must be received by noon Wednesday for publication the following week. Send listings to calendar@coloradocommunitymedia.com. No attachments, please. Listings are free and run on a space-available basis.


Highlands Ranch Herald 23

7November 16, 2017

Lone Tree Arts Center offers sensory friendly show BY TABATHA DEANS STEWART TSTEWART@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

The Lone Tree Arts Center wants to make sure every family has the chance to enjoy a holiday show at the center, including those with members who have sensory issues. So the Dec. 10 production of “Home for the Holidays” will be adapted to accommodate -people who might have problems with loud noises, bright or dim lights, or sitting still. “We started the sensory friendly programming almost five years ago, after a magician, Kevin Spencer, came through and did a show for us,” Executive Director Lisa Rigsby Peterson said. “His act was sensory friendly, and he got through to some of these kids that were hard to reach. It was a changing point, and we knew we needed that here.” During a sensory friendly show, per-

formers modify the performance by removing startling noises or visually over-stimulating components. Arts center employees lower the sound levels, and the audience lights are not as dim, so attendees can see each other. Audience members are also allowed to leave and return, and a quiet room is available for those who need it. They also can use earphones or iPads as well. “For most of these families, going to any kind of theater hasn’t been possible,” Peterson said. “But here, everyone can enjoy it. If someone needs to leave or be alone, there’s a safe place for that, and the rest of the family can stay and watch the show.” Tickets can purchased at www. lonetreeartscenter.org. Look for the SF Family Tree logo on the show listing page to see which shows are sensoryfriendly performances.

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24 Highlands Ranch Herald

LOCAL

November 16, 2017N

SPORTS

Roy Halladay left good memories through years in baseball

R

Rock Canyon beat Coronado, 25-20, in a tiebreaker but then lost, 23-25, to Castle View, which went on to win the state championship. Rock Canyon senior Keely Davis had 82 kills in 12 sets during the championships, including 38 of the team’s 63 kills in the first match against Castle View. Sophomore Kaylee Mejia had 55 assists in the two matches and two tiebreakers. “I’m very proud of the girls,” said Rock Canyon coach Angela Nylund-Hanson. “The girls fought hard. To come in as the tenth seed and play like we did and beat the top seed in our pool when we first came out was huge. They accomplished a lot of things. Obviously we wanted more but we should be proud and not hang our heads.” Rock Canyon concluded the season with a 20-9 record. Mountain Vista, the top-seeded Class 5A team, was upset by Cherry Creek, 3-2, in the first match of pool play on Nov. 10 when the Golden Eagles dropped the

alston Valley baseball coach Brad Madden grew up playing baseball with Roy Halladay. It didn’t take Madden long to realize that Halladay, who was his teammate at Arvada West, was a special player. Halladay, 40, was killed Nov. 7 when the OICON A5 sport aircraft he was piloting crashed into the Gulf of Mexico. He was a 1995 graduate of Arvada West and was a 17th-round draft pick of the Toronto Blue Jays. He was an eight-time all-star with Toronto and Philadelphia and a Cy Young Award winner in both the American and National Leagues. “From the time I met Roy as a 9-year-old, he was a dominant pitcher, player and a fierce competitor,” Madden said. Halladay, who is one of only two pitchers to throw a post-season no-hitter, had a 203-105 major league pitching record with a 3.38 earned run average. He Jim Benton was inducted into the ColoOVERTIME rado Sports Hall of Fame in 2015 and likely will be a future inductee into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. “Baseball players in Colorado now could learn from him,” said Adams State baseball coach Jim Capra, who was Halladay’s coach at Arvada West. “Everything you hear about him at the major league level are the same as when he was young. He was as good off the field as he was on the field. He was very coachable and a good teammate. He was very level-headed about the things he might do in the future.” Halladay was one of the reasons that pro baseball scouts and college recruiters now pay more attention to Colorado prospects. “Roy’s success paved the way for Colorado players past and future to get a chance,” added Madden. “Before him it was unheard of for pro scouts to come to Colorado to find players. He put Colorado on the baseball map. Roy was the hardest-working person I have ever known and he dedicated all his effort to making himself one of the best pitchers in Major League baseball history and a future Hall of Famer.” Halladay led Arvada West to the 1994 Class 6A state championship. The Wildcats lost to Cherry Creek in the 1995 5A title game but Halladay didn’t pitch because he was used in the semifinals. “He pitched as a freshman but his sophomore year is when he really opened eyes of coaches and players,” recalled Capra. “It was like going from high school to the major leagues in one year. He has a great high school career and was

SEE VOLLEYBALL, P25

SEE BENTON, P26

Rock Canyon’s Keeley Davis smashes the ball past a Castle View defender on Nov. 11 at the Denver Coliseum.

PAUL DISALVO

Local teams fall just short Valor drops 4A title game, while in 5A, Rock Canyon, Mountain Vista experience some drama JIM BENTON JBENTON@COLORDOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Coach Kaitlyn Hastings’ Valor Christian volleyball team didn’t stop believing until the end. Top-seeded and undefeated Lewis-Palmer downed the secondseeded Eagles 3-0 in the Class 4A state championship match Nov. 11 at the Denver Coliseum, but Valor didn’t accept the runner-up trophy without a fight against the seventime state champion Rangers. Lewis-Palmer won the first two sets, 25-22 and 25-18, but the Eagles kept their hopes alive in the dramatic third before finally losing, 35-33. “We made those Lewis Palmer fans say `it’s over’ about 15 or 16 times,” Hastings said. “We kept playing hard. We had the prize in mind (state title) from the start. “I know the girls believed that they could beat them and I believed them. We played like that and we showed we can compete with them. It was a tough loss but we wanted to be here and almost expected to be here because of the

talent of these girls.” Valor, which finished with a 23-6 record, won its pool with a pair of 3-1 victories over Cheyenne Mountain and Pueblo West. Last season, the Eagles lost to Holy Family in the semifinals but edged the Tigers 3-2 in this year’s semifinals to advance into the title match. There was only one senior that was a regular player for the Eagles this season. “We definitely have a lot of players returning for next year, which is exciting,” Hastings said. “We need to have that belief from the start with all the talent we have. We certainly have the firepower and talent. “The girls played their hearts out this season, they did their roles and each player did a fantastic job of stepping up to the plate.” In other action involving teams from Highlands Ranch, Rock Canyon upset third-seeded Castle View, 3-2, in its first Class 5A pool game but the lost to Coronado, 3-2, which forced a three-team, one-set playoff to see which team advanced to the semifinals.


Highlands Ranch Herald 25

7November 16, 2017

Valor, Cherry Creek roll to first-round football wins STAFF REPORT

Valor Christian and Cherry Creek, two schools that have had success over the years in the state football playoffs, notched Class 5A first-round wins on Nov. 10. Top-seeded and defending state champion Valor, which is seeking its eighth state crown in the past nine seasons in three classifications, toppled Chaparral, 35-7. The Eagles (11-0) will face Grandview (9-2) in a 7 p.m. quarterfinal contest on Nov. 17 at Valor Christian. Valor has won the past three games played against the Wolves and holds a 4-2 advantage in the series. Cherry Creek, a nine-time state champion and a semifinalist last season, downed Ralston Valley, 34-21. The Bruins (9-2) will play unbeaten Eaglecrest (11-0) in a 7 p.m. game quarterfinal game Nov. 17 at Legacy Stadium in Aurora. Creek has won nine of 12 games played against Eaglecrest, including the last three. Valor was only ahead of Chaparral 14-7 at halftime but outscored the Wolverines 21-0 in the second half to secure the victory. Quarterback Blake Stenstrom passed for 56 yards and a touchdown in the Eagles’ victory. Luke McCaffrey, the second half of Valor’s dual quar-

VOLLEYBALL FROM PAGE 24

decisive fifth set, 15-7. Vista defeated Rocky Mountain 3-0 and then had to wait to see if Rocky Mountain could defeat Creek in the final pool match on Nov. 11. The Vista team was cheering for the Lobos but Creek rallied in all three sets to advance into the semifinals with a 3-0 victory which ended the Golden Eagles’ season with a 22-5 record. Last season, the Golden Eagles had to play two tiebreakers, one against

terback system, passed for 67 yards and rushed for a touchdown. Ryan Thibault had three receptions for 66 yards and a TD, in addition to making six solo tackles. Cherry Creek jumped to a 17-0 lead over Ralston Valley but had to stave of the Mustangs with 10 points in the final six minutes to advance. Quarterback Alex Padilla completed 16-of-23 passes for 201 yards and two touchdowns, including a scoring strike to Dimitri Stanley with two minutes to play to seal the win. Stanley caught six passes for 82 yards and two scores. In another 5A game, Columbine rolled to a 45-14 opening-round win 5A win over Highlands Ranch. Columbine led 31-0 at halftime and rushed for 253 yards and five TDs to end the season for the Falcons. Highlands Ranch lost its final four games to finish with a 6-5 overall record. Dominic Bettini rushed for both Falcons touchdowns. In the first round of the 4A playoffs, Loveland ousted Ponderosa, 31-6, as the Mustangs lost for the second straight time after starting the season with a 9-0 record. Mustangs quarterback Sterling Ostdahl threw for the lone touchdown, and his brother Quinton led the Pondo defense with 15 tackles.

Creek, to gain the semifinals and finals before losing in five sets to 2016 state champion Fossil Ridge. “It would have been good to play a tiebreaker this year,” coach Doug Schafer said. “We played well for about 80 percent of the time against Creek. But that 20 percent was enough to lose it. “We just didn’t have enough in the fifth. We probably lost it earlier when we let up on the gas. Then Creek started playing better. “This group of girls were great all season. We got better as the season progressed. That’s what got us to No. 1 coming into state and it just didn’t go well for us at state.”

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26 Highlands Ranch Herald

November 16, 2017N

Jeffco League all-conference selections 6. Trevor White, junior, Valor 7. Nolan Miller, junior, Evergreen 8. Nick Mancini, senior, Golden 9. Clayton Whitton, sophomore, Evergreen 10. Chance Sundarapura, junior, Golden

Here are the top boys golfers for the 4A Jeffco League’s 2017 season: Individuals 1. Gabe Goodman, senior, Green Mountain 2. Jake Welch, junior, Valor 3. Bridger Tenney, senior, Evergreen 4. Ty Findlow, junior, Valor 5. Alexander Anderson, senior, Evergreen

Teams 1. Valor 1752 2. Evergreen 1772

BENTON FROM PAGE 24

one of the best players to come out of Colorado.” Phil Ross, a retired former high school and college umpire, called Halladay an exemplary individual who was universally well-liked by his peers and fans. He recalls working two games in which Halladay played. “The first time in did a Wildcats game he was a sophomore, playing first base and I was the base

umpire,” recalled Ross. “He was the best player I officiated in a two-decade umpiring career but also the most polite. The following season I was behind the plate when Roy pitched a no-hitter. I didn’t realize it. As I was walking towards the parking lot an excited man exclaimed, “Do you know you just called a nohitter?” I saw the line score the next day. I felt good.” Enrollment numbers Enrollment splits to determine which classifications schools will play in for the 2018-20 cycle were set by the Classification and League Organizing Committee on Nov. 7. I often hear coaches commenting about school size

Local Focus. More News.

3. D’Evelyn 1891 4. Golden 1898 5. Green Mountain 1931 6. Conifer 2088 7. Littleton 2105 8. Standley Lake 2144 9. Wheat Ridge 2200 10. Arvada 2816

especially when playing a bigger school, so it was nice to see some figures, although enrollment numbers don’t always translate into athletic success, especially with open enrollment. So to start with an easy question, what school has the largest enrollment? Yep, Cherry Creek with 3,654 students but which school is second? That would be Montbellow in far northeast Denver with 2,964. 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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Highlands Ranch Herald 27

7November 16, 2017

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November 16, 2017N

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7November 16, 2017

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30 Highlands Ranch Herald

Notices

November 16, 2017N

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BEAMISH GROUP, THE BEST CHOICE WELDING INC BEYOND TECHNOLOGY INC BJORK, PATSY LEE BLACK HILLS ENERGY BLEGER, JUSTIN SPENCER BLUE360 MEDIA BOBCAT OF THE ROCKIES

625.00 1,350.00 4,953.11 694.97 25,703.09 112.17 203.60 137.97

BODY, KATHY LEE BOUGHN, TRISHA LOIS BOWMAN CONSULTING GROUP LTD BOY SCOUT TROOP #780 BRADLEY, MICHELLE SAMANTHA BRIDGEVIEW IT INC BRODY CHEMICAL INC BROWN, DAVID D & KATHRYN BROWN, KELLY F BROWN, KELLY F BURNS, WALTER O BUSINESS INK COMPANY BUTTON, ANGEL MARIE CALIBRE PRESS INC CAMPBELL, DRU (PETTY CASH) CANDELARIA, SCOTT

19.90 39.48 767.49 2,175.90 98.44 21,632.50 186.27 82.57 150.00 118.00 4,137.32 812.10 365.83 2,790.00 279.16 500.00

CAPSTONE GROUP LLC 4,500.00 CARDELL CLOCKTOWER LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 4,500.00 CARNER, JAMES (JAY) EDWARD 118.15 CARRELL, HOLLY 88.49 CASEY, JAMES C 27.82 CASTLE ROCK CONSTRUCTION 161,722.73 CASTLE ROCK HOME CARE INC 936.00 CASTLE ROCK ROCK INC 1,856.00 CASTLE ROCK SENIOR CENTER 11,743.80 CASTLETON CENTER WATER & SANITATION 456.29 CATHOLIC CHARITIES OF CENTRAL COLORADO 587.75 CBM CONSULTING 7,045.25 CCMSI 64,359.66 CCP INDUSTRIES INC AKA TRANZONIC COMPANY 311.00 CDIA-COLO DRUG INVESTIGATORS 1,590.00 CED (CONSOLIDATED ELECTRIC) 377.50 CENTENNIAL PRINTING CENTURY LINK CGRS INC CH2M HILL CHARRY, JORGE A CHEMATOX LABORATORY INC CHERRY CREEK STEWARDSHIP PARTNERS CHERRY CREEK WATER BASIN AUTHORITY CHURCHICH RECREATION LLC CINTAS CORPORATION CITY OF AURORA CITY OF CASTLE PINES CITY OF CASTLE PINES CITY OF CASTLE PINES CITY OF LITTLETON CITY OF LONE TREE CITY OF LONE TREE CITY OF WOODLAND PARK UTILITIES CL CLARKE INC CL CLARKE INC CLAUDIO JR, FELIX L

250.00 23,831.36 7,238.32 3,550.23 4,000.00 4,534.40 2,500.00 10,747.60 900.00 10,692.00 7,250.20 95,000.00 86,983.88 23,961.84 8,519.87 29,566.26 163,385.19 67.24 7,076.75 966.37 265.50

Description Due to 18th Judicial District-VALE Building/Land Lease/Rent County Fair Service/Fair Guest Clothing & Uniforms Fleet Tanks Fuel Escrow Payable Operating Supplies Other Professional Services Reimburse/Postage Other Repair & Maintenance Service Traffic Signal Parts Employee Assistance Program 4Q 2017 Aggregate Products Other Professional Services Security Deposit Refund Travel Expense Consulting Fees Other Repair & Maintenance Service Other Purchased Services Other Professional Services Equipment & Motor Vehicle Parts Community Outreach/Youth Congress Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Traffic Signal Parts Service Contracts Operating Supplies Interpreting Services Other Professional Services Other Professional Services Travel Expense Other Professional Services Other Professional Services Landscape/Architectural Services Armored Car Services Travel Expense Travel Expense Operating Supplies/Equipment Telephone/Communications Douglas County Intersection Studies Predictive Risk Model Consultation Software Upgrade Surveying Services Veteran Stipend Travel Expense Travel Expense Other Professional Services Emergency Response Supplies Travel Expense Recruitment Costs Travel Expense OS 2012 Refunding Bond Principal/ Interest Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Other Professional Services Office Supplies Metro Area Meeting Expense Utilities/Gas Clothing & Uniforms Books & Subscriptions Other Construction/Maintenance Materials Travel Expense Travel Expense Roads, Street, Drainage-Engineering Security Deposit Refund Travel Expense Contract Work/Temporary Agency Operating Supplies/Equipment Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Clothing & Uniforms Travel Expense Wildfire Deployment Expenses Printing/Copying/Reports Travel Expense Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Travel Expense Supplies/Fair Marketing & Sponsorship Other Professional Services Escrow Payable Travel Expense Travel Expense Travel Expense Concrete Pavement Project Senior Services Grant Aggregate Products Transportation Grant Services Water & Sewer Utility Assistance Other Professional Services Workers Compensation Claims Clothing & Uniforms Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies Printing/Copying/Reports Telephone/Communications Fuel System Removal Other Professional Services Other Professional Services Medical, Dental & Vet Services Professional Membership & Licenses Due to State-Cherry Creek Basin Other Professional Services AED Leases Due to Aurora - MV License Fee Castle Pines Improvement Project Donation Due to Castle Pines MV License Intergovernmental-Castle Pines Due to Littleton-MV License Due to Lone Tree-MV License Intergovernmental-Lone Tree Bulk Water Other Professional Services Travel Expense Travel Expense

CMG MORTGAGE INC 50.75 CNDC-COLO NONPROFIT DEVELOPMENT CENTER 8,041.25 CO CORNHOLE EVENTS LLC 200.00 COFFEY, RYAN 699.33 COLAO, KATHLEEN 116.77 COLORADO ARABIAN HORSE CLUB 354.76 COLORADO ASSESSORS ASSOCIATION 400.00 COLORADO BOYS RANCH YOUTH CONNECT 100.00 COLORADO BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION 11,421.00 COLORADO CODE CONSULTING LLC 1,920.00 COLORADO CODE CONSULTING LLC 3,750.00 COLORADO CODE CONSULTING LLC 4,827.50 COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA 7,298.40 COLORADO CORRECTIONAL MEDICAL GROUP PLLC 169,146.75 COLORADO COUNTIES INC 3,850.00 COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 184.00 COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & ENVIRONMENT 561.00 COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES 2,730.00 COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES 3,740.00 COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE 2,610,343.06 COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE 25,699.90 COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE 500.00 COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF STATE 13,112.00 COLORADO DESIGNSCAPES INC 420.00 COLORADO DESIGNSCAPES INC 12,904.00 COLORADO DOORWAYS INC 7,369.28 COLORADO JAIL ASSOCIATION COLORADO JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT COLORADO PUMP SERVICE & SUPPLY CO COLORADO SADDLE MAKERS ASSOCIATION COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY COLUMBINE PAPER & MAINTENANCE COMMERCIAL FENCE & IRON WORKS COMPRI CONSULTING COMPUTRONIX INC CONTINUUM OF COLORADO CONTINUUM OF COLORADO CONTROLLED F.O.R.C.E. INC COOK STREET CONSULTING INC COPLAND, ANDREW CORUS360 COURSEY, KEVIN JAMES CREDITRON CORPORATION CROP PRODUCTION SERVICES CSM CONCRETE CUMMINS ROCKY MOUNTAIN LLC CUNNINGHAM, DWIGHT CUNNINGHAM, DWIGHT D2C ARCHITECTS INC D’AMBROSIO, JENNIFER ANN DAWN B HOLMES INC DBO CONSTRUCTION INC DC GROUP INC DEAN, TYLER WILLIAM DEDERICK, JIM DEEP ROCK WATER DELL MARKETING LP DENOVO VENTURES LLC DENVER INDUSTRIAL SALES & SERVICE CO DENVER SOUTH ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP DEPPERMANN, ANNE DESIGN CONCEPTS CLA INC DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH PARTNERS INC DEVELOPMENTAL PATHWAYS INC DIEXSYS LLC DILLIE AND KUHN INC DIMMICK, KARI LYNN DINO DIESEL INC DIRECTIONS ON MICROSOFT DISCOVERY BENEFITS INC DISTRICT ATTORNEY DODGE DATA & ANALYTICS DONALDSON, RONALD & IRINA DORSEY, JAMES MARTIN DORTCH, JERRY DOUGLAS COUNTY DEPUTY SHERIFF’S ASSOCIATION DOUGLAS COUNTY EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATION DOUGLAS COUNTY INMATE WELFARE ACCOUNT DOUGLAS COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT DOUGLAS COUNTY SCHOOLS RE-1 DOUGLAS COUNTY SEARCH & RESCUE DOUGLAS COUNTY SEPTIC DOUGLAS COUNTY TEMPORARY SERVICES DOUGLAS COUNTY TREASURER DRAKE, BARBARA DUBOIS CHEMICALS INC DUDLEY, MELISSA LEANNE DUMB FRIENDS LEAGUE E-470 PUBLIC HIGHWAY AUTHORITY EBY, JENNIFER ECKHARDT, MARK E ECONOLITE CONTROL PRODUCTS INC EF JOHNSON COMPANY EIDE BAILLY LLP ELBERT CONSTRUCTION INC ELDRIDGE, CYNTHIA ELKHORN HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING ELMORE, WAYNE ELSE, KAREN EMBASSY SUITES HOTEL DENVER EMPLOYERS COUNCIL SERVICES INC EMPLOYERS COUNCIL SERVICES INC EMPLOYMENT LAW SOLUTIONS INC ENGLUND, GARTH ENNIS PAINT INC ENTERPRISE ENTERSECT ENVISION IT PARTNERS ERO RESOURCES CORPORATION ERO RESOURCES CORPORATION EROSION CONTROL SOURCE LLC ESSENTIAL SAFETY PRODUCTS EST INC

Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Transportation Grant Services Security Deposit Refund Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Security Deposit Refund Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Other Professional Services Due to CBI - Concealed Handgun Elevator Witness Test New Elevator Installations Plan Review Services Newspaper Notices/Advertising Medical, Dental & Vet Services Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Laser Certifications

1,529.60 1,742.86 15,439.31 10,401.91 1,397.54 1,559.54 15.30 8,600.00 2,500.00 66,947.95 17.33 115.56 163.07 14,712.39 630.00 112.50

Due to State-PH Marriage Licenses Due to CBI - Concealed Handgun Due to State-PH Marriage Licenses Due to State - MV License Fees Due to State -Drivers License Professional Membership & Licenses Due to State - eRecording Contracted Snow Removal Pinery Loop Repairs Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies Professional Membership & Licenses Due to State - Family Friendly Court Other Professional Services Security Deposit Refund Soil Testing Janitorial Supplies Fence Replacement Other Professional Services Other Professional Services Transportation Grant Services Other Professional Services Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Other Professional Services Travel Expense Contract Work/Temporary Agency Clothing & Uniforms Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance Operating Supplies Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Service Contracts/Maintenance Other Professional Services Travel Expense Design Services Travel Expense Medical, Dental & Vet Services Escrow Payable Service Contracts Travel Expense Travel Expense Operating Supplies/Equipment Computer Supplies Other Professional Services Asphalt & Asphalt Filler

1,200.00 13.91 6,745.00 1,650.00 7,243.14 4,140.00 63,000.00 218.92 5,000.00 3,995.00 54,000.00 607,185.16 120.38 139.30 145.00 17.99

Metro Area Meeting Expense Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Design Services Other Professional Services Mill Levy Distribution Sep 2017 Roads, Street, Drainage-Engineering Parker Road Bridge Project Travel Expense Repairs-Equipment/Motor Vehicle Books & Subscriptions 2018 FSA Prefund Legal Services Newspaper Notices/Advertising Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Professional Membership & Licenses Clothing & Uniforms

2,240.00 10,000.00 3,132.00 200.00 285.00 14,338.00 14,992.00 4,888.14 8,601.75 249.60 6,703.02

Security Services 8th Grade School Expo Patrol/Security Services Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Youth Box Lunches DOLA Contribution Other Repair & Maintenance Service Contract Work/Temporary Agency County Fair Awards/Fair Livestock Travel Expense Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies Travel Expense Other Purchased Services Due to E-470 Authority Metro Area Meeting Expense Travel Expense Traffic Signal Parts Radio Repair Accounting & Financial Services Escrow Payable Insurance Claims-Property Other Repair & Maintenance Service Professional Membership & Licenses Security Deposit Refund Travel Expense Other Training Services Recruitment Costs Other Training Services Professional Membership & Licenses Paint & Road Striping Travel Expense Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance Architectural/Design/Planning Other Professional Services Monitoring Airport Road Janitorial Supplies Design Services

120.00 258.00 15,963.88 285.00 441.00 128.82 5,068.00 26,880.00 149,288.75 18,500.00 4,050.00 1,740.00 12,500.00 145.52 13,072.00 140.00 10,825.16

142.27 7,679.00 209,598.50 376.42 58.86 685.00 1,925.56 1,105.00 10,888.00 154.14 12,032.00 199.00 300.00 4,402.00 2,100.00 485.00 2,000.00 270.00 22,800.00 2,035.15 158.00 2,412.00 541.10 6,696.00 98.00 122.50 77,638.83

ESTATES AT CHATFIELD FARMS LLC EVANS, SANDRA A EVANS, SANDRA A EVIDENT CRIME SCENE PRODUCTS FACILITY SOLUTIONS GROUP FADDAH, ZAFER ADNAN FASTENAL COMPANY FASTER ASSET SOLUTIONS

5,000.00 8,182.50 533.35 112.00 103.75 309.55 539.24 500.00

FEDEX FELSBURG, HOLT AND ULLEVIG FINKENBINDER, JEREMY D FIRE ALARM SERVICES INC FLASHFILL SERVICES LLC FLEMING, MARLENE FLIMP MEDIA INC FLINK COMPANY FLYING HORSE CATERING INC FOOTHILLS PAVING & MAINTENANCE INC FORENSIC ITC SERVICES FRAILEY ROOFING LLC FRANKTOWN ANIMAL CLINIC FRANKTOWN ANIMAL CLINIC FREDERICKS, FRANK FREEMAN, ABIGAIL VINITHA FREMONT COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE FRONT RANGE TIRE RECYCLE INC FRONTIER FERTILIZER & CHEMICAL COMPANY

532.65 26,915.08 204.00 3,259.50 770.00 115.35 8,000.00 7,285.94 276.00 52,742.46 565.00 2,600.00 893.48 2,196.89 708.27 237.06 38.21 356.00 8,438.66

FURNELL, DALE GADES SALES COMPANY INC GADZIALA, CAMILLE LOUISE GALLS LLC GARDNER, BETHANY GARDNER, JOHN M GARINER, TRAVIS G GARLAND, KEVIN S GATES, CHRISTOPHER JAMES GATES, PETE GEORGE, PETER GILA LLC DBA MUNICIPAL SERVICES BUREAU GIRARD, DAVID E GLIDE, MARIA LOUISE GMCO CORPORATION GO VOICES LLC GOEBEL, BREANN GOLD SPUR PRODUCTIONS LLC

572.19 6,995.00 279.75 5,616.30 300.00 267.35 35.95 19.05 245.00 390.00 136.14 22.18 500.00 20.54 65,434.60 402.50 19.90 500.00

GORMAN, THOMAS J GORMAN, THOMAS J GOULD, STEVEN & LYNDSEY GOVCONNECTION INC GRAINGER GRANT, CANDACE GRIFFITH, ART GROUND ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS INC GROUP14 ENGINEERING PBC GUNIAS, JENNIFER OR CHRIS H2O CAR WASH HANSON, TOMMY HARBISON EQUIPMENT REPAIR INC HARPER, TRACY J HARTIG, JAMIE CHRISTINE HAYWARD BAKER INC HEALTHCARE MEDICAL WASTE SERVICES LLC HELENA CHEMICAL COMPANY HENDRICKS, JOHN M HEYDEN, BRADLEE HILL COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION HIRSCH, KIMBERLY HITACHI DATA SYSTEMS HITTLE, JEREMY HML TRAINING INC HML TRAINING INC HODITS, SARAH HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS LAYTON HOME CARE ASSISTANCE OF DOUGLAS COUNTY HORIZON VEGETATION MANAGEMENT HRMD HIGHLANDS RANCH MANSION HSS - HOSPITAL SHARED SERVICES HUDICK EXCAVATING INC HUMANE SOCIETY OF PIKES PEAK IAFE INT’L ASSOCIATION OF FAIRS & EXPOSITION ICON ENGINEERING INC ID EDGE INC ID INVESTIGATIVE SERVICES LLC IMPROVE GROUP IMSA ROCKY MOUNTAIN SECTION INCAPTION INC

14,146.83 429.00 393.82 78,117.60 110.55 31.46 434.97 46,754.50 600.00 2,500.00 318.00 86.40 21,993.32 1,600.00 67.57 31,044.62 196.00 8,453.50 189.97 32.00 2,500.00 239.58 33,094.95 200.00 7,076.75 288.13 223.10 1,369.94 645.00 38,944.00 3,800.00 56,523.12 5,000.00 31,808.34 598.00 5,371.00 320.00 3,764.75 5,949.33 400.00 29,991.00

INFOMEDIA INC Services INSIGHT PUBLIC SECTOR INC

3,750.00

Escrow Payable Other Professional Services Travel Expense Operating Supplies/Equipment Operating Supplies/Equipment Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Sign Parts & Supplies Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance Postage & Delivery Service Roads, Street, Drainage-Engineering Travel Expense Other Repair & Maintenance Service Other Professional Services Travel Expense Other Professional Services Equipment & Motor Vehicle Parts Catered Meal Service Surface Treatment Project Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Other Repair & Maintenance Service K9 Food Medical, Dental & Vet Services Travel Expense Travel Expense Process Service Fee Scrap Tire Recycle Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies Insurance Claims-Property Traffic-School Flasher Parts Travel Expense Clothing & Uniforms Security Deposit Refund Building Permit Refund Travel Expense Travel Expense Clothing & Uniforms Security Deposit Refund Clothing & Uniforms Banking Service Fees Veteran Stipend Travel Expense Dust Suppressant Voice Over Services Travel Expense Advertising/Fair Marketing & Sponsorship Other Professional Services Travel Expense Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Computer Supplies Operating Supplies/Equipment Travel Expense Travel Expense Construction Inspection Services Design Services Escrow Payable Fleet Car Wash Services Travel Expense Repairs-Equipment/Motor Vehicle Other Professional Services Metro Area Meeting Expense Emergency Street Repair Biohazard Waste Removal Operating Supplies Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Travel Expense Escrow Payable Travel Expense BPPT Tax Rebate Operating Supplies Other Professional Services Travel Expense Travel Expense Travel Expense Senior Services Grant Noxious Weed Control Services Facility Rental Security Services & Supplies Escrow Payable Animal Control Services Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Design Services Operating Supplies/Equipment Other Professional Services Other Machinery & Equipment Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance Website Maintenance/Design

11,161.84 Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance INTEGRATED CLEANING SERVICES 27,326.45 Service Contracts INTELLECTUAL TECHNOLOGY INC 1,773.62 ITI MV Kiosk Fees Payable INTERMOUNTAIN RURAL ELECTRIC ASSOCIATION 500.00 Design Fee/Salt & Sand Shed INTOXIMETERS 266.50 Operating Supplies/Equipment IREA 163,300.37 Utilities/Electric IRELAND, LORI 1,690.55 Insurance Claims-Property IRON MIKE CONSTRUCTION LLC 2,500.00 Escrow Payable ISC - INFORMATION SYSTEMS 33,047.52 Computer Supplies ISENHART, CLYDE 135.00 Insurance Claims-Property ITS PLUS INC 4,515.00 Traffic Signal Parts J P MORGAN CHASE BANK 643,650.41 Purchasing Cards 09/05/17-10/04/17 JAMES R PEPPER LLC 7,875.00 Roof Inspections JANEDIS, STEVE 336.74 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder JARAMILLO, RUBEN 81.21 Travel Expense JAY DEE CLEANING & RESTORATION INC 5,346.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service JE DUNN CONSTRUCTION 114,358.00 Retainage Payable JEFFERSON COUNTY HUMAN SERVICES 19,857.44 Other Professional Services JOHN ELWAY CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM 983.35 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder JOHNSON, JOI MARIE 181.37 Travel Expense JOHNSON, STEVEN P 96.00 Travel Expense JOHNSTON, DAVID 59.70 Travel Expense JORDAN PHD, KENYON P 900.00 Recruitment Costs JULIE A HARRIS ALTERATIONS 883.50 Clothing & Uniforms K2 CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT LLC 2,500.00 Escrow Payable K-9 SERVICES LLC 18,000.00 K9 Service Dog Purchase KALLASH, JACOB ROBERT 188.70 Travel Expense Continued to Next Page 932080 and 932081

Highlands Ranch * 1


Highlands Ranch Herald 31

7November 16, 2017 Douglas County Payments Continued From Last Page... Page 2 of 2 KALLWEIT, ZACHARY ARTHUR 83.46 Travel Expense KAMINSKY SULLENBERGER & ASSOCIATES INC 4,925.00 Conference, Seminar, Training Fees KANSAS SALT LLC 103,934.80 Salt & Other Ice Removal KARLSTRUM, PAUL MICHAEL 118.27 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder KEITH, JIM 884.81 Other Professional Services KENNEDY - COLORADO LLC 11,159.31 Building/Land Lease/Rent KENNEDY, MICHELE A 140.00 Books & Subscriptions KIEWIT INFRASTRUCTURE COMPANY 17,336.70 Asphalt & Asphalt Filler KIMLEY-HORN & ASSOCIATES 4,965.00 Design Services KIRCHHEIMER, KATHLEEN 252.48 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder KITSON, FREDERICK & TAMI 6,037.06 Escrow Payable KLAFKA, CHUCK 65.94 Clothing & Uniforms KLOTZ, MERLIN -- PETTY CASH 63.00 Other Professional Services KLUTH, MICHAEL A 125.80 Travel Expense KONNECH INC 27,333.00 Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance KORF CONTINENTAL STERLING 119,054.00 Cars, Vans, Pickups KOS FITNESS PRODUCTS INC 250.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service KULA, DEBORAH E 115.56 Travel Expense LAMLE III, ALVIN ROGER 113.21 Clothing & Uniforms LANDS END BUSINESS OUTFITTERS 242.00 Clothing & Uniforms LAW OFFICE OF JEFFREY J TIMLIN 19,436.40 Legal Services LAWRENCE, KEVIN & JACQUELINE AMEZCUA 531.73 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder LAWYER, MINETTE 300.00 Security Deposit Refund LEARY, LAURA 211.20 Conference, Seminar, Training Fees LEFEVER VENTURES LLC 18,977.00 Escrow Payable LEHMAN, ELMER 2,500.00 Escrow Payable LENNAR COLORADO LLC 2,500.00 Escrow Payable LETT, JUSTIN JEFFREY 145.00 Professional Membership & Licenses LEVEL 3 COMMUNICATIONS 4,098.43 Telephone/Communications LEXISNEXIS RISK SOLUTIONS 2,363.40 Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance LEY, TREVOR 1,768.00 Escrow Payable LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE GROUP 14,041.59 Insurance Claims-Property LIFELOC TECHNOLOGIES INC 346.00 Operating Supplies/Equipment LIGHTING ACCESSORY & WARNING SYSTEMS 9,465.00 Vehicle Up fitting LINCOLN STATION INVESTMENT PARTNER LP 30,909.80 Escrow Payable LINCOLN STATION METRO DISTRICT 739.56 Sales Tax Revenue Aug 2017 LITESYS INC/INTELICOM INC 1,660.39 Equipment & Motor Vehicle Parts LITTLETON HOSPITAL 1,650.00 Medical, Dental & Vet Services LIVING CENTER LLC 1,000.00 Medical, Dental & Vet Services LOEWECKE, TRACEY 6,013.25 Other Professional Services LONER, FRANK H 500.00 Veteran Stipend LORD, EMILY MARY 411.45 Travel Expense LOUVIERS WATER & SANITATION 8,420.66 Water & Sewer LOVEJOY, LAUREN 223.53 Travel Expense LYLE SIGNS INC 4,050.00 Sign Parts & Supplies LYLES, CELESTENE (TENA) 812.03 Metro Area Meeting Expense MACDONALD EQUIPMENT COMPANY 24,762.68 Equipment & Motor Vehicle Parts MADSEN, SCOTT T 100.50 Travel Expense MAGIC RABBIT CAR WASH & DETAIL 462.00 Fleet Car Wash Services MAHLE, CHARLSEY P 115.20 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder MAKELKY, DAN 411.90 Travel Expense MALONEY, PATRICK JOSEPH 82.38 Travel Expense MANNING, MIKE 500.00 Insurance Claims-Property MARINER BUSINESS SOLUTIONS 2,040.00 Software/Hardware Subscription MARSHALL, ELIZABETH 185.33 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder MARTIN MARIETTA MATERIALS INC 737,336.60 Asphalt Overlay Project MASTER’S TOUCH, THE 49.18 Printing/Copying/Reports MATABI, JOTHAM 514.72 Travel Expense MATT’S MAINTENANCE TREE SERVICE 2,096.00 Other Professional Services MAZZA DESIGNS INC 195.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service MCC DRUG & ALCOHOL SCREENING 66.00 Other Purchased Services MCMAHAN, ROBERT 204.00 Travel Expense MCMILLAN, DANIEL G 76.70 Travel Expense MENDELSON, ROBIN 58.41 Travel Expense MERITAGE HOMES OF COLORADO INC 2,500.00 Escrow Payable METRO MIX LLC 12,919.00 Concrete Services METRO TAXI 2,010.00 Transportation Grant Services MEYER, DIANA & MICHAEL 562.19 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder MILLER WENHOLD CAPITOL 10,000.00 Other Professional Services MILLER, ROBERT 335.00 Security Deposit Refund MILLS, DEBORAH M 100.00 Douglas County Fair Royalty Luncheon MOONEY, SCOTT 250.00 Insurance Claims-Property MOORE, CRYSTAL 53.13 Insurance Claims-Property MOORE, TIMOTHY 32.00 Travel Expense MOREHART II, MORGAN THOMAS 125.00 Clothing & Uniforms MORELAND, KATHLEEN G 227.43 Travel Expense MOTOROLA SOLUTIONS INC 6,061.99 Radio Equipment/Repairs MOUNTAIN SCREEN IMPRESSIONS 15.08 Clothing & Uniforms MOUNTAIN VIEW ELECTRIC INC 679.04 Utilities/Electric MTM RECOGNITION 1,600.85 Recognition Programs MUELLER, MEGAN 44.52 Travel Expense MULLER ENGINEERING COMPANY INC 15,938.50 Design Services MULLER, JAKE ADAM 61.78 Clothing & Uniforms MULLIGAN, JOHNNY 40.00 Operating Supplies N & D MECHANICAL LLC 450.00 Tree Chipping Services NATIONAL ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION INC 3,453.00 Other Professional Services NATIONAL SHERIFFS’ ASSOCIATION 338.00 Employee Recognition Supplies NCAFC GROUP LLC 5,387.38 Other Professional Services NET TRANSCRIPTS 628.81 Other Professional Services NEVE’S UNIFORMS INC 1,375.58 Clothing & Uniforms NICHOLSON-KLUTH, HOLLY 44.00 Travel Expense NICOLETTI-FLATER ASSOCIATES 1,130.00 Other Professional Services NILEX INC 387.80 Other Construction/Maintenance Materials NMS LABS 4,858.00 Forensic Testing NORCHEM DRUG TESTING 394.40 Medical, Dental & Vet Services NORTH STAR ACADEMY 4,990.00 Escrow Payable NORVILLE, BLAKE J 715.93 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder O’CONNOR SMITH, KATHRYN REBECCA 211.34 Travel Expense ONE WAY ROOFING & REMODELING 90.51 Plan Checking Fees Refund ORMSBEE, SONIA 68.69 Travel Expense OSTERHOUDT, MONA ELIZABETH 566.15 Travel Expense OSTLER, CLAUDIA 306.56 Travel Expense OUTREACH SMARTPHONE MONITORING 86.00 GPS Monitoring Fees OWENS, SEAN 1,156.02 Travel Expense PACIFIC OFFICE AUTOMATION INC 6,837.62 Equipment Rental/Copier Charges PAC-VAN INC 388.00 Equipment Rental PALEOCULTURAL RESEARCH GROUP 4,754.00 Consulting Services PALMER, NICOLE ELIZABETH 64.14 Travel Expense PARKER SENIOR CENTER INC 1,665.00 Transportation Grant Services PARKER WATER AND SANITATION 3,027.15 Water & Sewer PARKS, COLORADO STATE 570.00 Due to State - State Park Pass PATEL, JULIE LYNN 296.00 Travel Expense PAUL, ALLISON NICOLE 228.92 Travel Expense PEAK OFFICE FURNITURE INC 23,026.48 Furniture/Office Systems PEREIRA, BRIAN L 203.70 Travel Expense PEREZ, ANTHONY 137.02 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder PERRY PARK WATER & SANITATION 5,373.75 Bulk Water PFANNENSTIEL, JAMIE 15.81 Travel Expense PHOENIX SUPPLY LLC 1,057.37 Prisoner Maintenance Supplies

PINERY HOMEOWNERS PINERY WATER & WASTEWATER PINYON ENVIRONMENTAL INC PIPES, CONNIE PITNEY BOWES INC

617.57 5,820.67 1,638.50 15.47 296.52

PLACE I GO LLC, THE PLANET TECHNOLOGIES INC PLUM CREEK CATERING PMAM CORPORATION POSTMORTEM PATHOLOGY SERVICES INC POWER EQUIPMENT COMPANY PRECISION FIRE PROTECTION INC PRO COM - PRO COMPLIANCE PRO DISPOSAL & RECYCLING PRO FORCE LAW ENFORCEMENT PROFESSIONAL RODEO COWBOYS ASSOCIATION

480.00 175.00 860.00 3,223.24 6,450.00 7,057.00 3,500.00 6,569.55 3,758.13 188.43 500.00

PROFICIENT MEDICAL IMAGING PRUETT, CHRISTIAN PUBLIC AGENCY TRAINING COUNCIL PUBLIC TRUST ADVISORS LLC PURPLE COMMUNICATIONS INC QUALITY LANDSCAPE AND SOIL PRODUCTS

290.00 800.00 700.00 11,666.66 255.00 3,354.00

QUINN, TERENCE T QUINTANILLA, ATILIO QUINTERO, CAITLIN ANNE R.E. MONKS CONSTRUCTION RAMPART HELICOPTER SERVICE LLC RED WING SHOE STORE REGAN, DARCY REPORTS NOW INC

560.31 57.20 440.31 13,705.89 3,485.00 170.99 79.77 11,280.00

RESPEC CONSULTING & SERVICES REVISION INC RHINEHART, THERESA RICE, YVETTE M RICHEY, GAREY & JUNE RICHLAND TOWERS-DENVER LLC RIDER, KATHERINE RIGHT ON LEARNING RIGHTMIRE, KATHERINE RK WATER RMAF ROCKY MTN ASSOCIATION OF FAIRS RMOMS ROBENSTEIN, BRAD ROBERT HALF TECHNOLOGY ROBERT, MARISOL ROBERTS, DANIEL ROY ROBERTS, SONYA DAWN ROBISON, ANDREW JOEL

7,620.00 4,822.50 295.80 583.69 50.00 2,315.00 98.17 13,046.80 9.20 1,613.34 605.00 1,465.00 83.25 10,224.00 58.31 537.62 240.65 86.50

ROCK, THE 1,710.75 ROCKY MOUNTAIN AIR SOLUTIONS 33.60 ROCKY MOUNTAIN DOCK & DOOR 1,704.25 ROCKY MOUNTAIN ELK FOUNDATION 270.00 ROCKY MOUNTAIN MAIL SERVICES 41,015.28 ROGERS, DANIEL J & KRISTINE M 100.27 ROONEY, JIM 348.01 ROSE, CORINNA 300.00 ROSE, JENNIFER 86.40 ROUPP CONSTRUCTORS 1,275.00 ROYAL PROCESS SERVING & PARALEGAL SERVICES 110.00 RUNBECK ELECTION SERVICES INC 55.42 RUNNING CREEK COUNSELING 404.00 RYAN, KEVIN 80.57 SAFARILAND LLC 79.69 SAFE SOFTWARE INC 900.00 SAFETY AND CONSTRUCTION SUPPLY INC SAFETY KLEEN CORPORATION SAFRAN, JAMES SALZMANN, CHARLENE TERESE SATHER, ELIZABETH L PSY D SCHMIDT, SANDRA SUE SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC SOFTWARE SCHULTZ, KAREN YVONNE SCHWEIZER EMBLEM COMPANY SCOTT, EVAN LAWRENCE SECURITY TRANSPORT SERVICES SEDALIA LANDFILL SEDALIA WATER & SANITATION

11,976.33 352.34 2,500.00 137.70 600.00 3,916.90 3,000.00 1,834.73 291.90 292.33 4,732.25 1,088.14 4,464.00

SEMPERA SENTER, GOLDFARB & RICE LLC SHADY TREE SERVICE LLC SHEA HOMES LP SHILOH HOME INC SHILOH HOME INC SHIMIRAK, MELISSA ANN SKY CLIFF CENTER

28,680.00 7,932.00 12,232.00 84,250.00 1,320.00 31,635.00 34.47 1,676.25

SKYE TEAM LLC SKYLINE STEEL

1,400.00 20,105.70

SKYVIEW WEATHER SLATE COMMUNICATIONS SLOAN, BEN

5,750.00 4,256.00 86.50

SMITH, ALLEN R & BRENDA J SMITH, CHUCK SOTOMAYOR, NANCY SOURCE OFFICE PRODUCTS SOUTH METRO FIRE RESCUE AUTHORITY

15.00 620.42 112.89 5,379.42 2,906.24

SOUTH METRO FIRE RESCUE AUTHORITY SOUTHLAND MEDICAL LLC SPRADLEY BARR FORD LINCOLN OF GREELEY STANLEY CONSULTANTS INC STANLEY M SLOWIK INC STARKEY, VICTORIA STATEWIDE INTERNET PORTAL AUTHORITY STATEWIDE INTERNET PORTAL AUTHORITY STELLAR CARE AND SERVICES LLC STEWART, KENNETH & KERRY STONE PC, PATRICIA JO STONEGATE VILLAGE METRO STROUSE, KELLY A STUART, RAVEN SUDS FACTORY CAR WASH & DETAIL CENTER SUMMIT MAST SERVICES LLC SUMMIT PATHOLOGY

533.34 2,019.38 154,046.00 15,943.25 350.00 134.55 8,580.00 1,701.21 200.00 424.62 13.00 12,741.30 61.13 152.60 225.00 425.00 695.50

Security Services Water & Sewer Other Professional Services Metro Area Meeting Expense Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance UA Testing System Support Metro Area Meeting Expense Alarm Administration Expenses Medical, Dental & Vet Services Equipment Rental Other Repair & Maintenance Service Medical, Dental & Vet Services Waste Disposal Services Computer Supplies Advertising/Fair Marketing & Sponsorship Other Professional Services Insurance Claims-Property Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Accounting & Financial Services Interpreting Services Other Construction/Maintenance Materials Travel Expense Travel Expense Travel Expense Moore Road EVOC Project Range 5 Fire Incident Services Clothing & Uniforms Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance Roads, Street, DrainageEngineering Douglas Co Innovation League Travel Expense Instructor Travel Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Building/Land Lease/Rent Metro Area Meeting Expense Other Professional Services Travel Expense Service Contracts Conference, Seminar, Training Fees UA Testing Travel Expense Contract Work/Temporary Agency Travel Expense Travel Expense Travel Expense Professional Membership & Licenses Other Professional Services Operating Supplies Other Repair & Maintenance Service Security Deposit Refund Postage & Delivery Service Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Reimburse for Fire Deployment Security Deposit Refund Travel Expense Escrow Payable Postage & Delivery Service Operating Supplies/Equipment UA Testing Travel Expense Operating Supplies/Equipment Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance Clothing & Uniforms Equipment & Motor Vehicle Parts Escrow Payable Travel Expense Other Training Services - Booking Fees Other Professional Services Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Travel Expense Clothing & Uniforms Travel Expense Transportation of Prisoners Waste Disposal Services 2015 Sedalia Water Line Improvements Consulting Fees Legal Services Property Maintenance Services Escrow Payable Building/Land Lease/Rent Other Professional Services Employee Recognition Supplies Development Disability Grant-Agriculture Program Leadership Academy Other Construction/Maintenance Materials Other Professional Services Other Professional Services Professional Membership & Licenses Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Travel Expense Travel Expense Office Supplies Emergency Response/Range 5 Fire Incident Other Purchased Services Operating Supplies/Equipment Cars, Vans, Pickups Roads, Street, DrainageEngineering Conference, Seminar, Training Fees Travel Expense Contract Work/Temporary Agency Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance Security Deposit Refund Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Water & Sewer Travel Expense Travel Expense Fleet Car Wash Services Fleet Outside Repairs Forensic Testing

SWARCO REFLEX LLC SWARTWOOD, MICHAEL SWARTZ, RICHARD S SWEEP STAKES UNLIMITED T D MERTLICH INC T D MERTLICH INC TAYLOR, VIVIAN A TAZI, KAMIL TELERUS INC TELLIGEN TERRACARE ASSOCIATES LLC THIRKELL, JOHN A THOMA, JASON V THOMAS, LORA L THOMPSON, STACY THOMSON REUTERS WEST THORESON, ERICA ELIZABETH TIERRA GROUP INTERNATIONAL LTD TILLSON, JENNIFER M TO THE RESCUE TODD COMPANIES INC TOWN OF CASTLE ROCK TOWN OF CASTLE ROCK TOWN OF CASTLE ROCK TOWN OF CASTLE ROCK

21,160.00 241.46 208.97 450.00 6,240.00 288.14 9,807.58 45,099.22 750.00 4,083.32 93.00 68.48 86.40 637.14 137.50 9,590.42 40.00 2,004.57 274.83 15,485.00 1,150.00 573,222.80 297,474.24 10.00 178.38

TOWN OF CASTLE ROCK TOWN OF CASTLE ROCK FIRE & RESCUE TOWN OF LARKSPUR TOWN OF LARKSPUR TOWN OF PARKER TOWN OF PARKER TOWN OF PARKER POLICE DEPARTMENT TPM STAFFING SERVICES TRACKER SOFTWARE CORP TRAFFIC SIGNAL CONTROLS INC TRI-COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT TRI-COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT TRINITY SERVICES GROUP INC TSIOUVARAS SIMMONS HOLDERNESS INC TWOPENNY PRODUCTIONS LLC TYLER TECHNOLOGIES INC ULTRAMAX AMMUNITION UMB BANK UMB BANK UNCC UNIFIRST CORPORATION UNITED RENTALS NORTHWEST INC UNITED REPROGRAPHIC SUPPLY INC UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT DENVER

125.00 62.50 294.21 8,595.97 331,219.51 228,260.90 1,577.93 4,195.98 7,432.00 430.00 553,858.00 20,666.66 52,969.93 847.86 4,000.00 16,500.00 8,070.00 1,757.56 1,500,600.00 4,106.40 1,619.29 4,894.34 145.15 1,412.81

UNOA UTAH NARCOTIC OFFICERS ASSOCIATION 3,050.00 US ARMOR CORPORATION 1,240.06 US BANK 3,506.75 US BANK EQUIPMENT FINANCE 295.00 VAN WINKLE, CHERI A 250.00 VANBIBBER, JACOB 425.00 VERIZON WIRELESS SERVICES 4,187.55 VERSEMAN, SHARI AND JEFF 82.77 VIA WEST 67,411.68 VIGIL, KATRINA RAE 624.60 VISITING ANGELS OF DENVER 2,588.25 VONAGE BUSINESS 3,598.67 W.E. O’NEIL CONSTRUCTION 611,133.00 WAGNER EQUIPMENT COMPANY 137,300.00 WAHLSTROM, JACQUELINE 435.00 WALTER, GARY 111.28 WALZ, ELIZABETH ANN 499.90 WEITKUNAT, CURT 434.83 WELLS FARGO BANK 1,854,481.25 WELPTON, TRACY WEMBER INC WES TEST WESTERN EQUIPMENT & SUPPLY CO WESTERN PAPER DISTRIBUTORS INC WESTERN STATES FIRE PROTECTION CO WESTSIDE TOWING INC WETHERBEE, ERIN LEIGH WILCOX CAPITAL LLC WILDCAT SHOPPING CENTER LLC WILLIAM MRK HOMES WILLIAMS, KELLY ANN WILLIAMS, MATT WILLSON, AMY KATHRYN WILSON, CHRISTOPHER WINSLOW, CODIE LEE WINSTON MICHAEL CONTRACTING LLC WITTNER, MATTHEW E WIZ-QUIZ DRUG SCREENING SERVICE WIZ-QUIZ LAKEWOOD WL CONTRACTORS INC WOMMACK, ANDIE WORTH, WILLIAM J WRENN, EMILY JEAN XCEL ENERGY XCEL ENERGY XENTITY CORPORATION XPERIENCE PROMOTIONS YAMADA, JILL - PETTY CASH DCSO YATES, ANDREW LEE YOUNG WILLIAMS PC ZAPFE, MIKE ZAPFE, TINY ZIA CONSULTING INC TOTAL AMOUNT OF DISBURSEMENTS FOR THE MONTH OF OCTOBER 2017

22.00 26,127.69 20,055.00 916.30 6,454.24 440.00 512.00 287.08 1,283.66 9,744.54 2,500.00 451.01 507.50 368.89 215.90 92.02 22,150.00 240.00 745.00 1,125.00 3,319.00 300.16 32.21 29.48 3,723.19 102.67 8,276.24 6,586.25 145.26 18.51 113,487.81 36.81 945.00 64,900.00

Paint & Road Striping Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Travel Expense Process Service Fee Other Professional Services Travel Expense Other Professional Services Escrow Payable Telephone/Communications Wellness Portal Support Other Professional Services Travel Expense Travel Expense Travel Expense Inmate Hair Care Software/Hardware Support CJS-Fees Refund Storm water Services Travel Expense Transportation Grant Services Septic System Services Due to Castle Rock-MV License Intergovernmental-Castle Rock Liquor License Metro Gang Task Force SWAT Assistance Professional Membership & Licenses Building Permit Due to Larkspur-MV License Intergovernmental-Larkspur Due to Parker - MV License Intergovernmental-Parker Metro Gang Task Force SWAT Assistance Contract Work/Temporary Agency Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance Traffic Signal Parts 4th Quarter Contribution Waste Disposal Services Inmate Meals Roads, Street, DrainageEngineering Training Services - Booking Fees Other Professional Services Firearm Supplies Other Bank Fees Road Improvement Bond Principle & Interest Other Professional Services Clothing & Uniforms Equipment Rental Operating Supplies/Equipment Investigation of Red Rock Drive Culvert Instructor Travel Clothing & Uniforms Banking Service Fees Service Contracts Other Professional Services Security Deposit Refund Cell Phone Service Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder BPPT Tax Rebate Travel Expense Senior Services Grant Telephone/Communications Parker Service Center Project CAT Backhoe Purchase Security Deposit Refund Travel Expense Travel Expense Travel Expense Principal & Interest Open Space Bond Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder Design Services Road Repair, Maintenance & Overlay Equipment & Motor Vehicle Parts Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies Service Contracts Vehicle Tow Services Travel Expense Property Utilities Building/Land Lease/Rent Escrow Payable Travel Expense Travel Expense Travel Expense Insurance Claims-Property Travel Expense Larkspur Salt & Sand Shed Instructor Travel UA Testing UA Testing Traffic Signal On-Call Service Travel Expense Travel Expense Travel Expense Traffic Signal Utilities Utilities/Gas Other Professional Services Operating Supplies Books & Subscriptions Travel Expense Contract Work/Temporary Agency Travel Expense Tuition Reimbursement Software/Hardware Support/ Maintenance

$16,870,902.45

THE ABOVE AND FOREGOING IS A CONDENSED STATEMENT OF THE BILLS APPROVED FOR PAYMENT DURING THE MONTH OF OCTOBER 2017 BY THE DOUGLAS COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS UNDER WHOSE DIRECTION THIS NOTICE IS PUBLISHED. N. ANDREW COPLAND, CPA, DIRECTOR OF FINANCE Legal Notice No.: 932080 and 932081 First Publication: November 16, 2017

Last Publication: November 16, 2017 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

Highlands Ranch * 2


32 Highlands Ranch Herald Public Trustees PUBLIC NOTICE Highlands Ranch NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2017-0207 To Whom It May Concern: On 9/11/2017 10:39:00 AM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County.

Original Grantor: DARREN A. CHAMBO Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR UNIVERSAL LENDING CORPORATION Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 7/29/2004 Recording Date of DOT: 8/3/2004 Reception No. of DOT: 2004080365 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $211,019.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $208,055.78

Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: the failure to make timely payments required under said Deed of Trust and the Evidence of Debt secured thereby. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 10, BLOCK 2, HIGHLANDS RANCH FILING NO. 68A, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 6281 Yale Drive, Highlands Ranch, CO 80130 NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, January 3, 2018, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

Public Trustees

The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust.

First Publication: 11/9/2017 Last Publication: 12/7/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Which has the address of: 9878 Aftonwood Street, Highlands Ranch, CO 80126

Dated: 9/19/2017 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: EVE GRINA Colorado Registration #: 43658 7700 E. ARAPAHOE ROAD, SUITE 230, CENTENNIAL, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (877) 369-6122 Fax #: Attorney File #: CO-17-780591-LL *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website : http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2017-0207 First Publication: 11/9/2017 Last Publication: 12/7/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press PUBLIC NOTICE Highlands Ranch NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2017-0217 To Whom It May Concern: On 9/20/2017 3:31:00 PM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: BRIAN J. BRADFORD Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR RBC MORTGAGE COMPANY, AN ILLINOIS CORPORATION Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 3/24/2005 Recording Date of DOT: 4/8/2005 Reception No. of DOT: 2005030751 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $238,000.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $196,854.32 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and/or other violations of the terms thereof.

The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust.

First Publication: 11/9/2017 Last Publication: 12/7/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Which has the address of: 9878 Aftonwood Street, Highlands Ranch, CO 80126

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

EVE GRINA Colorado Registration #: 43658 7700 E. ARAPAHOE ROAD, SUITE 230, CENTENNIAL, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (877) 369-6122 Fax #: Attorney File #: CO-17-780591-LL

Legal

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/

Legal Notice No.: 2017-0207 First Publication: 11/9/2017 Last Publication: 12/7/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Public Trustees

If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38-103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.

If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38-103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.

Dated: 9/19/2017 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and/or other violations of the terms thereof.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 130, HIGHLANDS RANCH FILING NO. 122-A, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO.

NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, January 10, 2018, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended. If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38-103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process. First Publication: 11/16/2017 Last Publication: 12/14/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 9/22/2017 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: SCOTT TOEBBEN Colorado Registration #: 19011 216 16TH STREET SUITE 1210, DENVER, COLORADO 80202 Phone #: (720) 259-6710 Fax #: Attorney File #: 15CO00875-4 *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website : http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2017-0217 First Publication: 11/16/2017 Last Publication: 12/14/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Phone #: (720) 259-6710 Fax #: Attorney File #: 15CO00875-4 *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/

Public Trustees

Legal Notice No.: 2017-0217 First Publication: 11/16/2017 Last Publication: 12/14/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press PUBLIC NOTICE Highlands Ranch NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2017-0206 To Whom It May Concern: On 9/5/2017 3:15:00 PM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: MARJO TONER AND BRITT H. LITTLE JR Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN MORTGAGE NETWORK, INC. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 4/22/2004 Recording Date of DOT: 5/21/2004 Reception No. of DOT: 2004052176 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $231,726.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $201,768.18 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: the failure to make timely payments required under said Deed of Trust and the Evidence of Debt secured thereby. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 33, HIGHLANDS RANCH FILING NO. 73-A, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 9516 S Sherrelwood Lane, Highlands Ranch, CO 80126 NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, January 3, 2018, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

November 16, 2017N

Public Trustees

If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38-103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process. First Publication: 11/9/2017 Last Publication: 12/7/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 9/6/2017 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: EVE GRINA Colorado Registration #: 43658 7700 E. ARAPAHOE ROAD, SUITE 230, CENTENNIAL, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (877) 369-6122 Fax #: Attorney File #: CO-17-780051-LL

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website : http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2017-0206 First Publication: 11/9/2017 Last Publication: 12/7/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

City and County Public Notice NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE PLANNING COMMISSION AND THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS

A public hearing will be held before the Planning Commission on December 4, 2017 at 7:00 p.m. and before the Board of County Commissioners on December 19, 2017 at 2:30 p.m. in the Commissioners’ Hearing Room, 100 Third Street, Castle Rock, CO, for approval of a preliminary plan located in the Sterling Ranch Planned Development, South of Sterling Ranch Filing No. 1 and Sterling Ranch Filing No. 2 and approximately 4,000 feet South of Titan Road, 1,400 feet West of Moore Road and 2,600 feet East of Roxborough Park Road. For more information call Douglas County Planning, 303660-7460. File #/ Name: SB2017-018 / Sterling Ranch Preliminary Plan No. 4. Legal Notice No.: 932078 First Publication: November 16, 2017 Last Publication: November 16, 2017 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38-103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.

Balancing Government Actions....

Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 130, HIGHLANDS RANCH FILING NO. 122-A, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO.

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, January 10, 2018, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended. If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38-103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.

Notices

....With your right to know! First Publication: 11/9/2017 Last Publication: 12/7/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 9/6/2017 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

And all from your own home!

EVE GRINA Colorado Registration #: 43658 7700 E. ARAPAHOE ROAD, SUITE 230, CENTENNIAL, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (877) 369-6122 Fax #: Attorney File #: CO-17-780051-LL

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/

Read the Legal Notices.

Legal Notice No.: 2017-0206 First Publication: 11/9/2017 Last Publication: 12/7/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

You’ll be up to date each week!

First Publication: 11/16/2017 Last Publication: 12/14/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 9/22/2017

Highlands Ranch * 3


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