Lonetree voice 0905

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Voice

Lone Tree 9-5-2013

Lone Tree

September 5, 2013

A Colorado Community Media Publication

ourlonetreenews.com

Douglas County, Colorado • Volume 12, Issue 34

Pedestrian bridge to cross C-470 Benefits will extend to motorists, cyclists By Ryan Boldrey

rboldrey@ourcoloradonews.com A new pedestrian bridge to be constructed on the west side of Quebec Street over C-470 is in the final stages of design, and is expected to be complete in the fall of 2014. The walkway, which will be built in a similar fashion to the bridge that runs along the east side of Quebec over the highway, is being funded in part by federal grant money. The project, with the help of the Denver Regional Council of Governments, will receive $500,000 in federal funding, while Douglas County will pick up the remainder of the tab — estimated to be in the ballpark of an additional $600,000. The project is expected to go out to bid in late December or early January. “Once it gets underway, a lot of the work will occur off site, including the building

of all of the girders,” said Art Griffith, the county’s capital improvements projects manager. “After on-site construction begins, all of the major work will occur at night, and we will take traffic up the ramp and onto the on-ramps, keeping traffic flowing.” The bridge, being built along the northern border between Lone Tree and Highlands Ranch, will provide benefits for drivers as well as cyclists and pedestrians in the area. “When someone pushes that button to cross the C-470 Trail across Yosemite, for example, it can take 15 minutes before the signals sync back up,” Griffith said. “So, in addition to making the free flow on the trails a lot safer, there is an added benefit to the driving public as it allows the timing of the signals to stay in sync and limits congestion, especially during high-traffic times like the weekends and holidays.” Douglas County commissioners unanimously approved the allocation of funds for the pedestrian bridge at their Aug. 27 business meeting.

The Douglas County commissioners approved a second pedestrian bridge at C-470 and Quebec Street. The bridge, expected to be constructed in 2014, will be on the west side of Quebec, connecting Lodo’s to Le Peep. The design will be similar to the one on the east side, except there will be no adjoining bridge for vehicles. Photo by Ryan Boldrey

Monitors installed by airport

Douglas, Arapahoe each getting six noise gauges By Ryan Boldrey

rboldrey@ourcoloradonews.com

Archer Trevon Stoltzfus shot an arrow through a ribbon at the Lone Tree Cabela’s to signal the store’s Aug. 15 opening. Photo by Jane Reuter

Cabela’s could boost local economy Study funded by county sees $25 million in impact By Jane Reuter

jreuter@ourcoloradonews.com Lone Tree’s new Cabela’s will add an estimated $679,000 in annual sales taxes to the city, and a Douglas County-funded study shows the store will impact the local economy to the tune of about $24 million a year. Business-to-business transactions, store employee spending, money spent locally by shoppers traveling to the store and other exchanges will circulate more money throughout the area, according to a Cabela’s economic impact analysis written for Douglas County by Development Research Partners. Douglas County paid the company for the analysis to get a better feel for the 110,000-square-foot Lone Tree store’s effect. The store at Interstate 25 and RidgeGate Parkway opened Aug. 15, and its performance so far is exceeding the company’s

expectations. That could mean the study’s projections, which Development Research Partners president Patty Silverstein said are conservative, are low. Though Cabela’s officials won’t talk specific dollar amounts, spokesman Nathan Borowski said they’re happy in Lone Tree. “Early signs point to the fact it will be a great location for us,” he said. On opening day, “we were blown away by the support we received from our community and loyal customers. It’s continued ever since the doors opened.” The 2012 study estimates not only the store’s retail sales, but the balance remaining after Cabela’s pays for its inventory. Only that retailer’s margin, estimated at $16 million, “generates additional economic benefits throughout the region,” according to the report. The study considers not only what the corporation may spend locally on items like landscaping, office supplies and other products the company may not directly supply, but employees communitywide — hairdressers, grocery store clerks, waiters and others — who will benefit from money Cabela’s employees will spend in the area.

According to the study, local spending by Cabela’s and its employees will support the salaries of 43 employees working in other industries throughout the community. “Bottom line, the existence of Cabela’s in Douglas County supports the employment of 193 people — 150 direct plus 43 additional workers supported by that spending,” Silverstein said. “Some of those people … maybe they own the restaurant some of those employees are spending their money at. Maybe they are working for the bank that these people pay their rent and mortgage payments to. The whole idea is that it does really interconnect all throughout the economic system.” Lone Tree Mayor Jim Gunning said retailers like Cabela’s are vital in a city that has no municipal property taxes. “A lot of the amenities that Lone Tree benefits from are all based on the fact we have such tremendous retail sales,” he said. “It’s a well-kept city; we have the brick fencing, the medians, the arts center Cabela’s continues on Page 15

In a continued effort to keep the noise level down for people living and working in the flight path of Centennial Airport, the Arapahoe County Public Airport Authority is in the process of installing noise monitors in Arapahoe and Douglas counties. The authority began site selection in 2009, selecting six locations in each county. The airport has already put up five monitors, all of which are solar, two on airport property, one in Cherry Creek State Park, and one each in Lone Tree and Castle Rock. With the Aug. 27 approval by the Douglas County commissioners to allow for construction of a 22-foot tall monitor, similar in Noise continues on Page 15

This Centennial Airport noise monitor, at the west edge of the Family Sports Golf Course, is one of two that sits on airport property. Courtesy photo

Printed on recycled newsprint. Please recycle this copy.


2-Color

2 Lone Tree Voice

September 5, 2013

Display puts hunger in the picture The 22 8-by-10-inch photographs are simply set in a display case in the airy lobby of the Denver Public Library’s central branch. On an early Saturday afternoon, men and women, old and young, stroll by on the marble floors. A few glance at the images — portrayals of lives lived with hunger — but so far today no one stops. Most never see the stories just beyond the glass, much the way many never see the hunger hidden among us every day. “It’s something I hear a lot since I’ve been talking to people about poverty — `You’re not the average homeless person; you’re not the average hungry person,’” says Caroline Pooler, 53, who came to know hunger and homelessness after losing her job two years ago. Three of the photographs in the case are hers. “There really is no average hungry or homeless person. They can be someone who’s working full-time and they’re not going to get lunch that day because they have to give lunch to their kids.” Caroline and nine other women are participating in Hunger Through My Lens, an innovative project by the advocacy organization Hunger Free Colorado that gave them digital cameras to document how they see a world without consistent and healthy sustenance. The goal is simple, project manager Lauren Flax says: Give the experts, those who know what it’s like to be hungry, a platform to voice their opinions and help

shape answers to what should be a solvable issue. “We really believe there is a solution to ending hunger,” Flax says. “Just as there are many solutions, there needs to be multiple people coming up with them. Who better than the hungry?” The women are a diverse group. They are Latino, African-American and white, ranging in age from 22 to late 60s. They are mothers and grandmothers in Jefferson and Adams counties, Denver and Aurora. Some have lived in systemic poverty since they were children. Some live an “average, normal, middle-class life but they go to bed hungry every night, hiding it even from their church groups,” Flax says. Some have made bad choices, either through lack of education, access to resources or circumstances. But all share the common denominator of having experienced the isolating and desperate hunger that comes when you don’t know how or when you’ll have your

so much insiDe the Voice this week

Old and new. The power of classic mythology is on display as an area theater produces “Metamorphoses.” Page 17

Twelve years later. The 9/11 Memorial is a place for contemplation about what we’ve lost in the wake of the 2001 terror attacks. Page 7

Comeback by Jaguars. Rock Canyon High School came from behind to defeat Highlands Ranch in the football season opener. Page 21

next meal. Through their photographs, they hope to provide a glimpse for others — perhaps a dawning understanding — into that world. “It’s a way to put faces to statistics,” Flax says. “It’s easy to forget a number. It’s a lot harder to forget a face or a story.” First, the statistics, compiled from various federal and state reports: • One in six Americans in the U.S., and nearly one in four children, are foodinsecure. • More than 25 percent of working families in Colorado don’t have enough food to meet basic needs. • An estimated 270,000 children in Colorado, or 22 percent of all children, live in food-insecure households. • Colorado has the fastest-growing rate of childhood poverty in the country. The numbers are astonishing. And here are Caroline’s stories, told in her photographs, which she titled: • “Reverse Disparity,” a photograph of two banana clumps. One is full, fresh and smooth yellow, selling for 59 cents a pound in a grocery store in an affluent neighborhood. The other is in a smaller, privately owned grocery 30 blocks away in a neighborhood considered a “food desert” because it has no large supermarkets offering healthy options within a mile. These three bananas are slightly bruised, for sale at 89 cents a pound. “I’m certainly not faulting that grocer,” Caroline says. “We need that grocer in that area.” But lower quality food for higher prices is the reality. • “Farming for Food Sustenance for the Heart.” A close-up of an orange nasturtium, taken in an urban garden in which Caroline was working. “I really did find that while I was on my hands and knees trying to feed myself, people in suits and briefcases were looking in and wishing that was them. I am the lucky one in so many ways,” she says, “pulling my food from the ground.” • “Ancestral Meals.” A photo of a Cambodian family’s ceremonial meal, spread out in bowls and prepared in honor of ancestors for a holiday. “It’s an inside look at the diversity of the culture here in Denver and Colorado and how those cultural food needs must be met as well,” Caroline says. Although Caroline began struggling when she lost her job working in a medical research office, she initially resisted applying for food stamps, turning instead to urban gardening as a way to feed herself. She took the bottle cap- and cigarettestrewn lot of a friend and began tilling and planting the soil until it flowered into

an organic garden in which she harvests tomatoes for a nearby bodega, and lettuce, squash, eggplants and green beans for herself. A nonprofit restaurant, which operates on donations, uses her produce to cook her lunch. Local food banks also helped. But last November, one turned her and others away when it ran out of food. The memory still brings tears. “I just walked down the street and cried, more so for the thought of the moms that were turned away.” Shortly after that, she applied for food stamps. And “it has been a blessing to go to the grocery store and really meet my nutritional needs.” An artist also, she considers her work with Hunger Free Colorado among her most important. The organization offers training on how to advocate for hunger issues before local governments and agencies to those who, like Caroline, want their voices to be heard and want to make a lasting difference for others in their shoes. In October, Caroline starts a school program she hopes will lead to a job that can provide her with the stability to provide not only for herself, but also for her 24-year-old son, who despite his job still finds himself hungry at times. “I would like to buy groceries every two weeks and take them over to his house,” she says — just the way she used to. Back at the exhibit at the library, a woman glances at the photographs as she walks by. She slows down, and backtracks for a closer look. The photo of a hand-scrawled sign — “Will Work 4 Food” - caught her attention. “It just made me want to look,” Susan Wolinsky, 71, a retired lawyer, says. “I just think it’s pretty sad that in this country people don’t have enough to eat … People who have full stomachs have a better chance of being productive citizens and of helping others.” She was surprised to find out she was one of only two passersby in an hour who had studied the exhibit, which will travel to four Adams County libraries, the 16th Street Mall in Denver and Hunger Free Colorado’s Oct. 1 Hunger Summit. “It’s too bad,” Wolinsky says, “that some of the photographs aren’t on billboards towering over the city so that people have no choice but to look at them.” Indeed. That would put big faces on the big numbers that are hunger in Colorado. Ann Macari Healey’s column about people, places and issues of everyday life appears every other week. She can be reached at ahealey@ourcoloradonews.com or 303-5664110.


3-Color

Lone Tree Voice 3

September 5, 2013

Sheriff’s office gets new bomb robot Federal grant pays for Dragon Runner By Ryan Boldrey

rboldrey@ourcoloradonews. com The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office recently upgraded its resources with the addition of a Dragon Runner bomb robot. The robot, pack and remote included, weighs just 75 pounds, much smaller than its 500-pound predecessor, allowing it to get into harder-to-reach places as it keeps officers out of harm’s way while the bomb squad is deployed.

Purchased for $110,397, the robot — designed by the Marine Corps for use in Afghanistan and Iraq — was fully funded by a grant from the Department of Homeland Security. The appropriation of the grant money was approved by the county commissioners July 30 and the robot arrived in Castle Rock in early August. So far, officers have been thrilled at its capabilities. “It’s lightweight and portable and hooks right on the backpack,” said Lt. Tommy Barrella. “We

The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office’s new Dragon Runner bomb robot, unlike its 500-pound predecessor, has the ability to climb stairs and rough terrain and can be remote-controlled from out of sight. Photos by Ryan Boldrey

needed a small platform robot that we could deploy quickly. We can carry it with us into a school or neighborhood. You can’t do that with the big robot.” The big robot, which the department is keeping to conduct heavier, more time-consuming work, is used mainly for bomb disposal, Barrella said. However, it is clumsy and can’t climb steep terrain or stairs, and if something breaks on it, it takes at least a half a day just to take the robot apart. The new robot requires just five minutes to take apart, but perhaps more importantly in a SWAT situation, can approach a house within minutes while the officers keep their distance and can be stationed in their command van. “It goes over everything that is put in its way,” Barrella said. “It’s a good set of eyes for us, and instead of climbing a hill with the van and entering plain sight with the big robot, this one can climb the hill itself or in a backpack with an officer.” With the ability to operate remotely from up to a mile away, the robot transmits images back to its operators on a display screen located on the remote and can detect motion from up to 30 feet away. It also has the ability to detect and disrupt suspicious devices or disable them with wire cutters. “The ultimate (purpose) is taking the human element out of a dangerous situation,” Barrella said, adding that he expects the county to use it on 50 to 75 calls a year. Because the county obtained the robot through a federal grant, it must be shared with neighbor-

Douglas County Sheriff’s Lt. Tommy Barrella demonstrates the various capabilities of the department’s new Dragon Runner bomb robot, which was purchased with federal grant money for $110,397. ing law eonforcement agencies, said Sheriff David A. Weaver. The jurisdictions that will benefit directly from Douglas County’s new Dragon Runner include

Elbert and Lincoln counties, while it will serve as a backup for Arapahoe and Jefferson counties as well as Colorado Springs if they need a robot on call.

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4-Color

4 Lone Tree Voice

September 5, 2013

Castle View students help students Apprentice program idea gets attention of school district By Jane Reuter

jreuter@ourcoloradonews.com Less than 1 percent of Douglas County students drop out of school each year, but six Castle View High School students aim to drop that figure lower still. They’ve proposed an apprenticeship program designed to keep at-risk students in high school while they learn a trade. Douglas County School District officials are working with them to make that idea a reality. The program was inspired by the Center for Civic Education’s Project Citizen, which urges middle and high school students to learn about public policymaking through projects. Its focus on empathy and critical thinking dovetailed with the goals of a sophomore-level class taught by Michael Schneider and Christina Classen at the Castle Rock school. Six of those students, now juniors, saw a need among their peers. “We came up with the idea of helping students that are struggling in school find a way to have success in life,” student Madeline Morgan said. “These are our fellow classmates; we definitely care about them.”

From left, Castle View High School students Madeline Morgan, Kaden Russell, Greg Connelly, Alan Kopp and Lane Speas present their idea to the Douglas County School Board during an August meeting. Courtesy photo For at-risk students, success doesn’t necessarily entail post-secondary education. “Just because Douglas County is a prestigious school district, college is not really for everyone,” student Gregory Connelly said. “They feel like to have to make their own opportunities and find help themselves,” junior Lane Steas said. “It’s not offered to them, like it would be to other students.”

“This is not exactly helping them be on a college track, but helping them to succeed even without a college degree,” Morgan agreed. “You definitely still can be a helpful member of society without having a degree.” The students presented their idea at the spring 2013 Colorado Project Citizen contest at the Colorado Capitol, earning a

second place. At the invitation of Superintendent Elizabeth Fagen, they repeated that presentation to the DCSD cabinet. Two of the district’s top officials, director of operations and maintenance Bo Bacon and chief operations officer Bill Moffitt, now are working with the student team, hoping to begin implementing the program with the 2013-14 academic year. While students hope to rally businesses from throughout the county to offer apprenticeships, potential apprentices may not have to look far. DCSD’s own employees may take them under their wings. “Our operations and maintenance department consists of professionals that are electricians, heating and cooling (specialists), plumbers,” Bacon said. “They are willing to take on this responsibility.” The Castle View effort may serve as a pilot for a future districtwide apprentice program. Schneider and Classen are proud of and amazed by the students and their project, particularly since the class that sparked the idea has long since ended. “I think that’s what really makes these kids special,” he said. “No longer are they doing something for the class. They’re doing something in all truth for somebody else, because it’s something they found they had a passion for.” “We want kids to find their passion, to think bigger than themselves,” Classen said. “I am so incredibly proud of these kids. This is what makes teaching worthwhile.”

School NoteS Candidate forum planned

The Douglas County School District Accountability Committee will host a school board candidate forum from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Sept. 12 at Douglas County High School. The evening will begin with introductions from all candidates for the November 2013 election, followed by questions from former Parker Mayor David

Casiano. Douglas County High School is at 2842 Front Street in Castle Rock.

Panel seeks new members

The Douglas County School District Accountability Committee is seeking applicants to fill one parent and one community member vacancy, as well as a newly created middle school teacher position.

The electronic application is available at https://sites.google.com/site/dcsddac/ assignments/dachastwovacancies. The application submission period closes Sept. 15. For more information, call Dorinda Hedin at 303-387-0099.

Two new charters open

Saturday, Sept. 28th, 5-9pm ART SALE AND WINE TASTING Sample over 160 bottles of wine from around the world, delicacies from local restaurants and see regional artist demos. $35 – Members / $40 – Non-members Hotel packages available

For tickets call 720.488.3344 or visit thewildlifeexperience.org

Two new schools open in Douglas

County this month. Aspen View Academy in Castle Rock’s Meadows neighborhood opened Sept. 3. The second campus of American Academy in Parker will hold its first day of classes Sept. 23. The original American Academy is in Castle Pines. Both new facilities are charter schools.


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Lone Tree Voice 5

September 5, 2013

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Construction underway on I-25 Lane reductions planned for three-month project

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Staff report

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Work is underway on a $1.2 million project to replace the concrete slabs on the Interstate 25 bridges at Surrey Ridge Road and Happy Canyon Creek Road, as well as minor bridge work on I-25 at RidgeGate. The work, which began in late August, is expected to last through early to mid-November. During construction, both northbound and southbound I-25 from RidgeGate Parkway to Castle Pines Parkway will be reduced to three lanes 24 hours a day, seven days a week, to accommodate the work. “Our goal is to minimize the inconve-

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nience of construction to the traveling public ... to make it easier to drive through the construction zone,” said Colorado Department of Transportation project engineer Dole Grebenik, referring to a change in plans that originally called for an increased number of lanes being closed in each direction. During construction, traffic will be realigned to accommodate four phases of work, with three lanes in each direction available at all times. Drivers can also expect travel speeds reduced to 55 mph through the construction zone. The concrete slab replacement will eliminate bumps and improve the smoothness of the roadway. According to a news release issued by Douglas County, by spending now for maintenance, higher costs can be avoided in the future both for bridge replacement and wear and tear on vehicles.

a pi-From left, student Christian Ramirez, teacher Glenn Thompson, and students Aasal Rae, Kenna True and Ayla Blanton pro-display the book they helped create. Courtesy photo

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Students’ book aims to help soothe souls

Aurora, Newtown n, to said. shootings inspire Parker This children’s project By Jane Reuter

jreuter@ourcoloradonews.com In the wake of the July 2012 Aurora theater and December 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary mass shootings, students at Parker’s Challenge to Excellence Charter School experienced a wave of emotions. “We were all just really depressed,” said seventh-grader Ayla Blanton. “Then we were angry because we couldn’t believe somebody would do such a horrible thing, that they would destroy so many lives.” The then-sixth-grade students channeled those feelings into something tangible, the creation of a book filled with positive messages. “Colorado: A New Perspective” includes messages of hope, photographs and drawings from the members of Glenn Thompson’s 2012-13 sixth grade class. The 71-page book includes links and suggestions for inspirational and upbeat videos, movies, books and songs. “We were trying to counteract those horrible acts by choosing to do something and be positive,” Thompson said. “We’re very happy with the finished product, and

also with the idea our thoughts and actions could hopefully give some specific help to people that need it.” Parent Tracey Ramirez suggested the idea of a project after the Aurora theater shootings. The Newtown tragedy reaffirmed the need for such a book. “We felt really bad for the people involved in those incidents,” student Kenna True said. “We just wanted to make them happy. We were trying to help make it better.” The book’s intended reach goes far beyond the two communities. “We also wrote the book for anybody that was down, to let them know they’re loved,” True said. “To put a smile on the face of anybody going through a hard time,” added student Aasal Rae. “We tried to let them know they can be happy again,” Blanton said. The ultimate goal is to send copies of the book to the families of victims in both Aurora and Newtown, Conn. The hopedfor money to cover the costs of publication and send the books will come from book sales. “Colorado: A New Perspective” is a print-on-demand publication, which means it is not carried in stores but is printed upon order and mailed directly to the customer. It is available for about $15 plus shipping through Bookcrafters.net and Barnes and Noble.

WackyW bike ride slated for Sunday Event held at middle school will include four courses Staff report The third annual WackyW bike ride is Sept. 8. The one-day event is a fundraiser for Douglas County schools, and a familyfriendly celebration of health and wellness. This year’s event offers riders a six-, 45-, 62- or 100-mile course. The six-mile ride is designed for families. All courses start and end at Rocky Heights Middle School, south of McArthur Ranch Road on Monarch Boulevard. A portion of each registration fee is earmarked for the Douglas County school of the rider’s choice.

Each course includes aid stations, SAG wagons, medical assistance and law enforcement. A vendors’ area with food and activities also will be available. Siblings Ted and Susie Wargin, who both have children in Douglas County schools and are avid cyclists, launched the ride in 2011. Susie Wargin is 9News’ morning sports anchor. Registration is $30 for the six-mile ride on the day of the event, topping out at $110 for the 100-mile ride. Registration for the 45-, 62- and 100-mile rides includes a WackyW jersey. Discounts are available to those who register before the day of the event. To register, volunteer and find out more information, visit WackyW.com or email info@WarginEvents.com.

CRIME REPORTS Copper thefts on rise

Between Aug. 19 and 22, Douglas County sheriff’s deputies responded to four calls about crimes by copper thieves around the county, both at construction sites as well as residences. On Aug. 19, two large copper valves, each with seven feet of copper pipe and brass nipples, valued at $8,300, were removed from a construction site in the 1700 block of Shea Center Drive in Highlands Ranch. No other damage was discovered at the site. More copper was removed from a site on this same block three days later.

On Aug. 19, deputies responded to $2,000 worth of drywall damage in a home under construction in the 7200 block of North Delbert Road in Parker. There was copper sticking out from where the drywall had been damaged, but it was not taken. The victim believes it was either too difficult to remove or the suspects were interrupted and fled. On Aug. 21, a call came in from a residence in the Acres Green/Aires Court area, in which irrigation equipment made of copper had been stolen. This is the third call in that area in the past few weeks.

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Headline News 2013 Youth Congress Seeks Youth Delegates

twitter.com/douglascountyco

www.douglas.co.us

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Douglas County youth, 9-12th graders, have an opportunity to become involved as youth delegates at the Douglas County 2013 Youth Congress on Monday, Sept. 16 from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the State Capitol. To learn more about the 2013 Youth Congress please visit www. douglas.co.us/countyadmin/ youth/youth-congress/ or contact Marsha Alston, Youth Services Program Manager at 303.688.4825 ext 5327 or malston@douglas.co.us

Attention Douglas County Residents aged 60 and older Senior adults and their caregivers have the opportunity to share their vision for Douglas County communities. Visit www. douglascountyseniorinitiative. com for the list of meetings throughout Douglas County, as well as a link to the online survey.

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September is National Preparedness Month Are you ready should a local emergency occur? Make it a priority - prepare yourself and your family - including your pets and livestock. Stock your home with food, water, medicines, and other ongoing needs should you be asked to take shelter at home for up to five days due to a weather-related incident or other emergency. Also assemble a ‘To Go Kit’ should you be asked to leave your home - during an emergency or a disaster - to seek safety elsewhere. For detailed information please visit www. readycolorado.com or www. ready.gov or call 1-800-BEREADY.

TRANSPARENCY

PORTAL

www.douglas.co.us/transparency

Emergency Preparedness Training in September The Douglas County Office of Emergency Management invites citizens to Preparedness Training on Tuedays in September, which is National Preparedness Month. Topics of discussion will include Evacuations– People and Animals; Code Red—phone notifications and Go kits—what should you have ready. There is no cost or registration required to attend any of the training classes. For more information and to view dates and locations of the training please visit www.dcsheriff. net/emergencymanagement/ or call the Office of Emergency Management at 303-660-7589.

DOUGLAS COUNTY

TAX CALCULATOR

www.douglas.co.us/taxes

BusinessCONNECT Ready. Resourceful. Responsive. www.businessdouglascounty.com

For more online services please visit www.douglas.co.us


6-Opinion

6 Lone Tree Voice

September 5, 2013

opinions / yours and ours

Don’t let old chewing gum stick it to you I would venture to guess that at one time or another, all of us have either stepped on a piece of gum, or if we haven’t been so fortunate yet, will certainly step on a piece at some point in our lives. You know the kind I am talking about, right? It’s a hot day, someone has carelessly spit out a piece of chewing gum, the heat of the sidewalk or asphalt has baked it into a soft or even liquid-like substance, and then we are blessed enough to step right on it. We immediately know when it happens, too. We feel it, we look down at the strands that are partially stuck to our shoe and yet still connected to the ground behind us. We let out a sigh as we crinkle our nose, scowl at the mess, and maybe even utter a four-letter word or two. How about the other things that are keeping our feet stuck in one spot and that make us snarl with angst as they slow us down on what we really and truly want

to pursue? What kind of chewing gum is holding us back, holding you back? Is it a lack of a certain skill or knowledge? Is there a tainted experience or memory that has jaded our hope and inspiration for following through on our goals and dreams? What is causing us to look back or look down at the lack of achievement or missed opportunities? If you are like me, you also really hate gum on the bottom of your shoe. It’s not just the sticky strands and wondering

question of the week

Will the Broncos reach Super Bowl? With the NFL regular season getting underway, we asked area residents visiting Lone Tree for their take on the Broncos’ odds of reaching the Super Bowl this year.

“They’re kind of hurting with some of the players that are injured and out with other issues, but I think we’ve got a really great chance of at least making the playoffs and possibly going to the Super Bowl.” — Charlie O’Neal, Denver

“With that whole (Von) Miller thing going on, he’s not going to be there half of the season. They have a good chance, but I don’t think they’re going to blow it out of the water.” — Michelle Campbell, Denver

“I don’t know anything about football, but I think they’ve got a 50 percent chance. That’s based on nothing. ... No, I don’t think they’re going to go to the Super Bowl.” — Julie Schmidt, Colorado Springs

“With Peyton Manning and the receiving corps they have, I think they’re going to have a great chance of .... Without Von Miller for the first six games, it’s going to be tough ....” — Joel Monroe, Lakewood

A way to understand Douglas school board Citizens of Douglas County are confused about the present-day school board’s philosophy. To grasp the way this board makes decisions, we must go back to the theory of Milton Friedman, who was the economic adviser to President Ronald Reagan. Friedman was pure capitalist and did not like public institutions. For example, he believed in privatizing public lands like Yosemite, Yellowstone, Rocky Mountain National Park and even Central Park in New York City. Politically speaking, Friedman was quite successful in getting rid of the draft and turning the military into a volunteer force. It is critical to note that Friedman was quite correct about capitalism being the best way to organize production because it is, without doubt, the most efficient and effective way to manage work and profit in a society. Key ideas are to privatize, lessen government’s power, and avoid regulation wherever possible. In our case, the school board believes that economic model is the way to run a school system. This means that teachers

whose mouth germs are under our feet, but it’s also about how we are going to clean that mess up. Here is the better question, “How will we clean up the mess under our feet that is holding us back from everything that we want to be, do, or have?” What has to be untangled and scraped away so that we are free to increase our stride and move with the purpose and passion we once enjoyed? The tricky thing is that when we step on a piece of liquefied gum we immediately know it, but when we are stuck in other areas of our lives we either choose to ignore it or we just do not recognize what is keeping us on the periphery of moving up or ahead or maybe even greatness. A good first step is to list all of the things that we want to have in our lives or give of ourselves. Then next to each one list all the potential barriers, all the possible pieces of chewing gum that could take us away from our mission. Are they real-world barriers

Morris continues on Page 7

Michael Norton, a resident of Highlands Ranch, is the former president of the Zig Ziglar organization and CEO and founder of www.candogo.com

Mac and cheese: a six-part analysis Whenever something goes haywire in the Middle East, I write a column about food. In other words, about every two weeks. It takes my mind away from it for at least a couple of hours. “Imported from your childhood” is what it says on a box of Kraft macaroni and cheese. When I was in college I probably ate five boxes of it every week. Now? Practically never. But I still eat a lot of macaroni and cheese, mostly because of Jennifer. On your behalf, I decided to do some macaroni and cheese research. It can be one of our favorite, simple meals. But not always. I have no agility in the kitchen, and besides, the sublime convenience of a microwaveable container would keep me from assembling my own version, or yours, so don’t send me any recipes. In addition to Kraft, whose cheese powder color is very disturbing, I have sampled Michelina’s, Banquet, Stouffer’s, Lean Cuisine and Whole Foods, and here’s my report. Kraft’s pasta is the tiniest on the market. How the orange powder could become anything resembling a cheese sauce is one of the Three Secrets of Fatima, and I think Kraft is smart to market their product as a favorable childhood memory. Michelina’s is absolute glop. Their marketing strategy is to claim their product is “priced better” (i.e., cheap). All I saw under the list of ingredients were unpronounce-

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are no longer respected professionals; rather, they become classroom supervisors with students the equivalent of hourly workers and parents as ordinary consumers. In the business world one does not allow non-business people to tell them how to manage, and the school board necessarily had to obliterate the teachers union that might influence salaries and the educational model. Likewise, since the society is loaded with starving artists and musicians, those programs had to be downgraded. The board hired a new

or just things and obstacles we imagine or make excuses for that allow us to focus on the stickiness and scraping instead of the cleaning up and forging ahead? How about you, have you looked at the bottom of your own shoes lately? What do you see? Are they full of stringy attachments and forgotten dreams and visions, or have they been wiped clean and ready for the next journey and walk of your life? And maybe, just maybe you have one shoe stuck and one shoe clean, straddling the middle waiting and wondering which one will win the battle of will. Wherever you are in that part of your journey, I would love to hear all about it at gotonorton@gmail.com, and as we scrape the gum away it will definitely be a better than good week.

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able words. And good luck with removing the lid. I guess you could just leave it hanging on, but if you try to tear it off, well, you won’t be able to. Banquet is almost as frightening. But at least you can remove the film cover. Stouffer’s is in the ballpark. The elbow macaroni is good, and they use “100% real cheddar cheese.” Lean Cuisine is my choice when I want to make something quickly that’s tasty. The box says “tender macaroni in a creamy cheddar cheese sauce” and “no preservatives.” Lean Cuisine doesn’t try to market their macaroni and cheese as a nostalgia item or a thrifty alternative. Way out in front in quality, and cost, is Whole Foods’ macaroni and cheese. I brought some home for Jennifer and me one night, and since then she has written poems about it. Marshall continues on Page 7

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Columnists and guest commentaries The Lone Tree Voice features a limited number of regular columnists, found on these pages and elsewhere in the paper, depending on the typical subject the columnist covers. Their opinions are not necessarily those of the Lone Tree Voice. Want your own chance to bring an issue to our readers’ attention, to highlight something great in our community, or just to make people laugh? Why not write a letter of 300 words or fewer. Include your full name, address and the best number to reach you by telephone.

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7

Lone Tree Voice 7

September 5, 2013

A place and time for reflection

e or on he

the

chns, dy fe? This next Wednesday marks 12 years hoe since the day the Twin Towers fell and alhe Qaeda terrorists aimed their planes at the one Pentagon as well as the White House. Having been born in the ’70s, there ur are only two events that even come close it at to comparison for me — the Challenger ape explosion and the start of the Gulf War. ter Neither of those events holds a candle to those images we all witnessed a dozen years back; most of us on television, a s couple people I know who were unfortug nately there. der I never had the opportunity to see the towers while they stood tall, beacons in the New York City skyline. My first pilgrimage to Manhattan was just weeks ago, and along with thousands of others on an early Sunday morning, I filed into the land of what was, to see what it had become, as the foundations of the towers became a place to remember each and every life taken on that fateful morning. Moved to silence, and soon after tears, my mind drifted to a childhood friend, one of the 22 Navy SEALs shot down by Afghan insurgents on Aug. 6, 2011; the deadliest day for American forces in the now 12-year War on Terror. If it hadn’t been for the attacks that claimed the lives of 2,996 citizens that morning in 2001, my friend would never have been fighting on foreign soil, and the hundreds of lives that were affected and continue to be affected by his death would never have had the war and 9/11 put into perspective like they were. ng It’s that same perspective that friends angand family members of those 2,996 people you as well as the more than 5,200 American soldiers who have died since in the resultut at ing wars now experience each time they think of that morning. ow My friend, like many others, felt a call real of duty.

ant

Morris

amy vaket Continued from Page 6 ia

CEO (i.e. school superintendent) who shared the board’s philosophy — particularly vouchers, charter schools and anti-unionism. The primary consideration to this board is the bottom line. Therefore, the loss of experienced teachers who differ with this new philosophy happens to be a age 7 plus because new teachers can be hired at a lower rate. Similarly, students must pay a fare to get a ride on the school bus, charter school kids bring supplies to school like facial tissue, and art teachers must appeal to the public for materials. There is no doubt that the businessmen board know how to run a business. In each of their private lives this capitalist model works. Capitalism does provide employment, profit, and efficiency. Having gone to seminary and another three years in post-graduate studies in religion, my mind reflects on the history of heresy in the Christian faith. Inevitably, a heresy begins with one good truth and expands it to become the only truth. Balance is lost. Every dissenter to their faith

, I me en

Marshall Continued from Page 6

I have to warn you: It’s $6.99 a pound. An argument could be made that macaroni and cheese should be kept simple. I don’t agree. Whole Foods has taken something that is basically simple, and made it something profound. The sauce doesn’t look like aqueous yellow Crayolas (see: Banquet). It is bananacolored, thick, sophisticated and complex. I say this without wanting to sound like

The New York City skyline may no longer include the World Trade Center’s Twin Towers, but foundations of the two buildings have been turned into memorials commemorating all those who lost their lives in the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, including each of the flights, the Pentagon and the Twin Towers. Photo by Ryan Boldrey And as I stood there running my fingers over the names of lives lost — surrounded by a skyline once dwarfed by the towers — I began to understand that call more than ever before. These were the people he was fighting for. It was a similar call of duty felt by another friend of mine, Paul Palmisano, who runs an alternative school in Monument, Colo. My mind turned to him next. A native New Yorker, Palmisano spent five days, beginning moments after the attacks, working at Ground Zero, spending his time unloading equipment and donations from barges at nearby docks and the rest in a human chain carrying debris out from the destruction. “I just really felt it was my duty,” Palmisano said in a 2010 interview with Colorado Community Media. “That was why I was going south while everyone else becomes a sinner bound for the darkest hell or, in our case, subtle unionists influenced by the AFL-CIO. Our school board believes they are demonstrating a system that should become the model for schools throughout America and the world. They show no doubt in their faith. It does help the bottom line. Readers will note that there is no mention of education in the above reflections, especially in regard to the best pedagogy as our world lurches forward in this digital age. When classroom instruction becomes memorization for tests, three necessary ingredients for the emerging world are lost: curious creativity and openness, a mind trained to celebrate innovation and growth, and the ability to analyze the basic underlying premises of systems. For now, the capitalist form of education is set in Douglas County. Citizens and homeowners may question the direction, but only they can change it at the voting box. The Rev. Frank R. Morris is a Castle Rock resident who retired from the United Church of Christ and also worked many years as a psychotherapist.

one of the judges on “Chopped.” Macaroni and cheese is often a sideshow instead of the headliner. It goes great with barbecue and chicken wings. Finally, I bet you didn’t know that there’s a National Macaroni and Cheese Day in the United States. Whose idea was that? But now that you do know, next July 14, get yourself some. Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@comcast. net

was fleeing north. I was enraged. I’m still enraged that our country was attacked.” And as he recalled casualties covered in soot, fleeing Ground Zero, and offering assistance to them, he also recalled an overwhelming sensation of patriotism. “I’ve never seen that kind of patriotism before,” he said. “Besides the nightmares, that’s what I remember. I didn’t know if I had it in me until that day. Now I know I’m someone that can go in when others have to go out.” Everyone, no matter how patriotic, at some point, should do the same. Go there, see what he saw, and see what you have

inside of you. Because while that day may be 12 years gone, its images and impact have stayed with most all Americans ever since. And while some of us have turned a blind eye to the Middle East, the war still rages on, and in the quietest place in all of New York, there serves a memorial of not just what happened, but that soldiers are still fighting, and lives are still being lost. Ryan Boldrey is a reporter for Colorado Community Media and a Castle Rock resident. He can be reached at rboldrey@ ourcoloradonews.com

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8

8 Lone Tree Voice

September 5, 2013

Crunch time at hand for legislators Two recall elections set in response to gun-control measures By Vic Vela

vvela@ourcoloradonews.com The term “the third rail of American politics” has long been associated with politicos who talk about cutting Social Security — a charged issue that could lead to severe consequences for any elected official who dares to touch it. But soon, a couple of Democrats in Colorado could end up learning the hard way about another “third rail” issue, as two state lawmakers face recall elections over their votes on gun legislation that was passed this year. The stakes couldn’t be higher for John Morse of Colorado Springs, who is the Senate president, and state Sen. Angela Giron of Pueblo. And their potential ousters could have lasting ramifications in the state and across the nation. “The message could be that it is just political poison to support any form of gun control, no matter how reasonable it may

look to people,” said Bob Loevy, a political scientist at Colorado College. “If either is eliminated, the message is going to be: No matter how big or politically strong you are, you can be knocked out over gun issues,” Loevy said. Morse and Giron are the first lawmakers to face a recall in Colorado. Their district-only elections are scheduled for Sept. 10. Both supported legislation that requires universal background checks on all gun sales in the state, and were behind a separate law that places limits on high-capacity ammunition magazines — such as the ones used in mass killings at an Aurora theater and at Connecticut’s Sandy Hook Elementary School. Morse also sponsored a bill that would have placed liability on assault weapon owners and manufacturers whose guns are used in crimes. However, Morse ended up killing his own legislation. Republicans were unanimous in their opposition to the gun bills. The gun debate stirred passions like no other issue this legislative session. “In my seven years in office, I’ve never seen an issue have this kind of emotion,” said Rep. Frank McNulty, R-Highlands Ranch, a former House speaker.

That’s about the only area of gun legislation that McNulty and state Sen. Evie Hudak agree on. The Westminster Democrat voted for each one of her party’s gun-control bills this session. Her own bill, which placed stricter limits on domestic violence offenders’ access to guns, also became law. “I received so many threatening emails, with extremely bad language used against me,” Hudak said. “My best friend thought I should wear a bulletproof vest.” Recall organizers initially targeted Hudak as well, but that effort failed. McNulty Since then, Hudak says she’s been knocking on doors in Pueblo and Colorado Springs, in support of her colleagues’ efforts to thwart the “ludicrous” attempts at recall. Hudak and state Sen. Linda Newell, DLittleton, point out that Morse is term-limited and will be out at the end of next year, regardless of what happens Sept. 10. Giron is up for re-election next year. “If it’s just about a vote, you have elections and term limits,” Newell said. “It’s not a wise use of taxpayer dollars.

We take about a thousand votes every single session. If you are recalled over every single vote? Oh my gosh. It would be dysfunctional.” But McNulty believes that recalls are “a longstanding right in the state of Colorado.” McNulty also notes that, for as much attention as the recall elections are getting, they are rare and difficult to pursue. “I don’t think people take this lightly,” he said. “But if (elected officials) are out of step with their district, then the recall election should be there.” Like Loevy, McNulty thinks the recalls could have a lasting impact on future guncontrol efforts. “I think it certainly does send a message to folks who push policies that infringe on law-abiding citizens’ ability to hold firearms, that you will need to think twice,” McNulty said. Newell disagrees. “I’m not concerned about the policy issues at all,” she said. “The recalls send a message of fringe, special-interest groups being obtrusive.” Regardless of what happens, a precedent may already be set. “People are going to realize that there is this other way of punishing politicians over doing something they don’t like,” Loevy said.

Castle Rock to get Tractor Supply By Virginia Grantier

vgrantier@ourcoloradonews.com Tennessee-based Tractor Supply Co., which has more than 1,200 stores in 46 states, picked Castle Rock for its first Colorado store, and in early August began grading the five-acre site for a store of about 22,000 square feet. “It’s exciting to be moving dirt and getting under construction in Castle Rock,” said Ray Hix, founder of Hix Snedeker Companies. The Alabama firm owns the property, is developing the site, and then will lease the space to Tractor Supply Co. There won’t be any tractors, however. Tractor Supply Co., which started in the 1930s as a mail-order tractor-parts business in Chicago, has since phased out its tractor supply, Hix said. “They sell all the stuff that goes with the lifestyle … of a hobby farmer,” he said. Hix said the site at 959 Plum Creek Blvd. is great, across the street from the Douglas County Fairgrounds, which is a landmark

easy to describe to people. And the type of customer that needs what Tractor Supply sells is “well-represented in the area.” “We thought this would be a good market to have the store,” said Hix, who has developed Tractor Supply Co. stores across the country. Hix said animal feed is probably the store’s top product as well as “various things for small farms.” “It has a little bit of everything,” Hix said. The site, which is in the southwest corner of the intersection of Plum Creek Boulevard and Plum Creek Parkway, is also just north of Daniel C. Oakes High School. He said the lot will be fenced and screened. Hix said Tractor Supply, which is typically the second-best-performing stock on NASDAQ, second only to Apple, is a wellrun, conservative company that caters to customers’ needs. “Life is pretty simple: Say what you’re going to do and exceed expectations,” he said. Construction time for this store, which will employ about 20 people, will take about six months, it’s estimated.

Tractor Supply Co., which has stores in 46 states, has picked Castle Rock for its first store in Colorado. Grading began in August on the five-acre site located just north of Daniel C. Oakes High School, which is pictured in the background. Photo by Virginia Grantier

Investors want to build Stroh Road to create link with I-25, ease traffic Representative presenting plan to public officials By Chris Michlewicz

cmichlewicz@ourcoloradonews.com Where some people see an expanse of untouched land, others see economic opportunity.

The renewed effort to connect Stroh Road to Interstate 25 could be gaining traction as a group of investors makes its case to turn the road into a commercial corridor. The investors say the development of Stroh Road could bring employment centers closer to the suburbs and alleviate traffic congestion on the southern edge of the metro area. The corridor could also provide an “eco-

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nomic windfall,” particularly for Parker, said Paul Weaver, a retired Air Force general turned consultant and lobbyist for Virginiabased PAW & Associates. Weaver is representing the dozen or so unnamed investors as he presents the plan to elected officials in Douglas County to secure letters of support. He spoke to Parker Town Council during a study session Aug. 26.

“The first people you want to get on board are the government bodies,” Weaver said, before noting that landowners who would be affected by potential development have not yet been contacted. The Stroh Road alignment was previously approved by Douglas County and the Army Corps of Engineers, but an updated environmental impact study would be required.

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9-Color

Lone Tree Voice 9

September 5, 2013

09/12/13

Todd Jilbert, owner of Golden Toad Inc., flips sausage and shrimp kabobs during the Smokin’ Brew BBQ on Sept. 1.

To advertise your restaurant in this section, call:

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blowout The success of the fifth annual Smokin’ Brew BBQ Aug. 30-Sept. 1 caused some vendors to reduce their menu options, as they ran out of their most popular items on the final day. Thousands flocked to the Parker Station parking lot for barbecue delicacies, cooling drinks and plenty of entertainment. Children screamed with glee on the bungee jump trampoline, while others danced to live music or attempted to get more ice cream in their mouths than on their faces.

Photos by Chris MiChlewiCz

Bailey Saul, 6, giggles uncontrollably on the bungee jump trampoline at the Smokin’ Brew BBQ on Sept. 1 as her dad’s best friend, Larry Young, of Highlands Ranch, looks on.

Youngsters have adventure on the brain Outdoor fest gets kids

t on into new activities eaver who By Chris Michlewicz elop-

cmichlewicz@ourcoloradonews. com

revid the It’s a way for kids to experience dated something new. e reThe Outdoor Adventure Fest, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sept. 7, was created to further The Wildlife Experience’s mission of inspiring respect for wildlife and the outdoors through adventure and education. Introduced last year as the Big Bash, a celebration to mark the museum’s 10th anniversary, the Outdoor Adventure Fest has been renamed and grown to even bigger proportions in 2013. “It’s not just wildlife and the outdoors,” said Christopher Goetz, events and promotions coordinator for The Wildlife Experience. “It’s getting people out to do things.” That especially goes for children, whom statistics show are spending less time playing outside than ever. The Outdoor Adventure Fest is loaded with activities, from a backyard bass casting game to spin art to birdhouse building. Visitors will also become enthralled with dog training demonstrations, archery classes, whitewater rafting discussions and mixed martial arts seminars. And perhaps the most enticing aspect — at least to penny-wise parents — is the low cost. Admission to the festival is $1 and includes access to the museum and all of its exhibits, as well

More than 3,000 people attended the Outdoor Adventure Fest at The Wildlife Experience last year. The event, set for Sept. 7, focuses on hands-on experiences and adventure learning. Courtesy photo as the Extreme Screen theater. “For people who have never stopped by, this is their chance to try it out,” Goetz said. “We believe these folks will come back and sign up for memberships.” Other “adventure activities,” like the zip line, bungee jump, climbing wall and hamster balls, require two to five tickets. The $1 tickets can also be used to purchase kettle corn, barbecue, cotton candy and other food. The fest is meant, in part, to promote The Wildlife Experience’s fall lineup of classes and excursions. There is already tremendous inter-

est in fly fishing and ice fishing classes, and plans are being finalized for snowshoeing, hiking and camping trips, including an overnight stay at Castlewood Canyon State Park near Franktown. The Wildlife Experience partnered with like-minded organizations with similar philanthropic missions. Westminster’s Butterfly Pavilion was invited to teach people about the gentle insects, and the Wolf Sanctuary from LaPorte will talk about the dangers facing some of North America’s most elusive creatures. For more information, visit www. thewildlifeexperience.org.

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10-Color

10 Lone Tree Voice

September 5, 2013

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11-Color

Lone Tree Voice 11

September 5, 2013

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Piano & Organ lessons. Contact John Schaller 720-314-0674. Beginner to Advanced.

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Ages 7+ All Levels Adult Beginners Welcome!! Nationally Certified Instructors Members, National Guild of Piano Teachers and Music Teachers National Association NOW IN PARKER! Dr. Stephen Fiess Mr. Neal Wegener (303) 791-6473 Email: hrpiano@juno.com Website: www. HighlandsRanchPianoLessons.com

Piano or Guitar lessons

4/13

NEEDED NOW!! On Every Person, In Every Vehicle, In Every Home, In Every Business. Easily Give them what they need & earn thousands monthly! 800-961-6086

Home Improvement

PIANO INSTRUCTION

At your home or my Parker studio by experienced, patient teacher. Parker, Highlands Ranch, S. Aurora. We can also work singing or songwriting into the lessons, and can include music that the student loves to keep it fun. Visit musictreecolorado.com or phone John at 303-521-8888.

4/11

Business Opportunity

Misc. Notices ADOPTION- A loving alternative to unplanned pregnancy. You chose the family for your child. Receive pictures/info of waiting/approved couples. Living expense assistance. 1-866-236-7638

Financial CREDIT CARD DEBT? Discover a new way to eliminate credit card debt fast. Minimum $8750 in debt required. Free information. Call 24hr recorded message: 1-801-642-4747 _____________________________ GET FREE OF CREDIT CARD DEBT NOW! Cut payments by up to half. Stop creditors from calling. 877-8581386 _____________________________ Cut your STUDENT LOAN payments in HALF or more Even if Late or in Default. Get Relief FAST Much LOWER payments. Call Student Hotline 877-295-0517 _____________________________ Guaranteed Income For Your Retirement Avoid market risk & get guaranteed income in retirement! CALL for FREE copy of our SAFE MONEY GUIDE Plus Annuity Quotes from A-Rated companies! 800-669-5471

_____________________________ All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing ? Finishing ? Structural Repairs ? Humidity and Mold Control FREE ESTIMATES! Call 1-888-6988150 _____________________________ Appliance Repair - We fix It no matter who you bought it from! 800934-5107 _____________________________ One call, does it all! Fast and Reliable Electrical Repairs and Installations. Call 1-800-908-8502 _____________________________ One call, does it all! Fast and Reliable Plumbing Repairs. Call 1- 800796-9218 Business Opportunity Make Up To $2,000.00+ Per Week! New Credit Card Ready DrinkSnack Vending Machines. Minimum $4K to $40K+ Investment Required. Locations Available. BBB Accredited Business. (800) 9629189 ____________________________ **ATTENTION: JOB SEEKERS!** MAKE MONEY! Mailing Postcards! www.PostcardsToWealth.com NOW ACCEPTING! ZNZ Referral Agents! $20-$60/Hour! www.FreeJobPosition.com HOME WORKERS! Make Money Using Your PC! www.SuperCashDaily.com Earn Big Paychecks Paid Every Friday! www.LegitCashJobs.com _____________________________ ____ Denver MountainAires Barbershop Chorus and Quartets

"Rocky Mountain High"

Misc. Notices My Computer Works Computer problems? Viruses, spyware, email, printer issues, bad internet connections - FIX IT NOW! Professional, U.S.-based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help. 1-866-998-0037 _____________________________ Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in up to 12 million households in North America's best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 815 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Avenue at 888-486-2466 or go to www.classifiedavenue.net _____________________________ Dish Network lowest nationwide price $19.99 a month. FREE HBO/Cinemax/Starz FREE Blockbuster. FREE HD-DVR and install. Next day install 1-800-375-0784 _____________________________ *REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL! * Get a 4-Room All-Digital Satellite system installed for FREE and programming starting at $19.99/mo. FREE HD/DVR upgrade for new callers, SO CALL NOW. 1-800-699-7159 _____________________________ SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-Digital Phone-Satellite. You`ve Got A Choice! Options from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 877-884-1191 _____________________________ Alone? Emergencies Happen! Get Help with one button push! $29.95/month Free equipment, Free set-up. Protection for you or a loved one. Call LifeWatch USA 1-800-3576505 _____________________________ ADOPTION- A loving alternative to unplanned pregnancy. You chose the family for your child. Receive pictures/info of waiting/approved couples. Living expense assistance. 1-866-236-7638 Want To Purchase minerals and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: P.O. Box 13557 Denver, CO 80201

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

With John Denver tribute artist John Adams Saturday Sept. 14 Wheat Ridge High - 2:00 PM

JOHN DENVER "THE TRIBUTE" At the door: $15 In advance: $10 Seniors/Students: $8 Ticket Reservations: 303-233-6234 (Tony) 303-973-9217 (Dick)

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For All Your Real Estate Advertising Needs

Call 303-566-4100

Local Focus. More News. 23 newspapers & websites. Connecting YOU to your LOCAL community.

OurColoradoNews.com 303-566-4100

.co


S

12-Color

12 Lone Tree Voice

September 5, 2013

ourcolorado

.com TO ADVERTISE YOUR JOBS, CALL 303-566-4100

.com

EMERGENCY DISPATCHER Communications Officer (Emergency 911 Dispatcher), City of Black Hawk. Hiring range is $42,437 - $48,803, DOQ/E. Position is responsible for the operation of the emergency communications console including the receipt of calls and proper dispatch of appropriate equipment and personnel to provide assistance to the citizens and visitors of Black Hawk in the areas of Police, Fire and Emergency Medical Services. Requires high school diploma or GED; valid Colorado driver’s license with a safe driving record; ability to work a variety of shifts, including days, evenings, weekends, and holidays. Must be at least 18 years of age. Applicant must successfully complete several preemployment tests including but not limited to typing, mathematical and multi-tasking skills, psychological exam, physical exam, drug testing and background investigation as conditions of employment. If you are interested in serving a unique historical city and enjoy working with diverse populations visit www.cityofblackhawk. org for application documents and more information on the Black Hawk Police Department. To be considered for this opportunity, please forward a completed City application, Police Background Questionnaire, and copies of certifications and driver’s license to Employee Services, City of Black Hawk, P.O. Box 68, Black Hawk, CO 80422, or by fax to 303-582-0848. Please note that we are not accepting e-mailed application documents at this time. We will begin processing your application upon receipt of all application documents. EOE.

Help Wanted

Hotel Opportunities, All Depts.

JOB FAIR Residence Inn by Marriott, Denver Tech Center 6565 S Yosemite St, Englewood ph: (303) 740-7177 fax: (303) 741-9426

Seeking friendly, outgoing & customer-service-minded individuals to join our team.

FT & PT Opportunities ALL DEPARTMENTS • All Shifts Our employees enjoy an excellent starting wage, benefits (FT employees) & growth opportunities. EOE If you cannot attend, apply in person anytime oremail your resume to: denverhoteljobs@gmail.com

Priority Plastics, a manufacturer of plastic products and with five locations nationwide, is currently seeking candidates for TRIMMER/ PACKERS at our Arvada, CO plant. Individuals will be responsible for trimming, visually inspecting, and packing plastics containers. Candidates must be able to stand for long periods of time, lift up to 40 pounds, have great attendance, and work a rotating 12 hour shift.

You’re invited!

We offer medical, dental, vision, disability, and life insurance, 401k, and other great benefits to our employees. Qualified candidates should send resumes to: jobs@priorityplastics.com

Children’s Hospital Colorado

South Campus Career Fair WHEN Monday, Sept 9, 2013 from 4pm – 8pm WHERE Highlands Ranch Recreation Center at Southridge Wild Cat Auditorium 4800 MacArthur Ranch Road Clinical Supervisors • OR Nurses • Medical Technologists • Lab Assistants • Pharmacy Techs Hospital Operations • Food Service • and more! Come meet our hiring managers and find out more about a career at our South Campus in Highlands Ranch! With Children’s, you’ll enjoy working with a team devoted to pediatrics, and thrive among 102 of Denver’s Top Doctors, as ranked by 5280 Magazine. Opening December 19, 2013, this facility will offer in-patient and urgent care, outpatient services, a sports medicine program, four operating rooms, numerous laboratories, imaging and diagnostics. It will also have play areas, short-term sibling care, a family hospitality area, and a healing garden. A career at Children’s Hospital Colorado will challenge you, inspire you, and motivate you to make a difference in the life of a child. For more information, please visit and register:

childrenscolorado.org/Careers

Colorado Statewide Classified Advertising Network

COSCAN

To place a 25-word COSCAN network ad in 83 Colorado newspapers for only $250, contact your local newspaper or call SYNC2 Media at 303-571-5117.

EVENTS

HELP WANTED

SALIDA FIBER FESTIVAL September 7-8, 2013. Riverside Park, Salida, CO. The Heart of the Rockies! Dozens of vendors, fiber, fleece, yarns, rovings. Demonstrations and childrens activities! www.salidafiberfestival.org

PAID CDL TRAINING! No Experience Needed! Stevens Transport will sponsor the cost of your CDL training! Earn up to $40 first year - $70K third year! Excellent benefits! EOE 888-993-8043 www.becomeadriver.com

HELP WANTED

REAL REAL ESTATE ESTATE

HIRING Local, OTR & O/O DRIVERS local Driver’s live within 50 miles of Pierce. Class-A-CDL Plus 2 yrs Exp. Pay $53-65k/yr. Benefits, No Touch, Paid/Home weekly, 877-273-3582

BUSINESS FOR SALE Hi Tech Running & Tennis Store located on Main Ave in the Resort Town of Durango, CO. In business for 10(+) years with solid reputation. Turn-key, cash flow operation, $120,000. Owner retiring. Call 970-247-1551

HELP WANTED 25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED! Learn to drive for Swift Transportation at US Truck. Earn $750 per week! CDL & Job Ready in 3 weeks! 1-800-809-2141

Help Wanted

SYNC2 MEDIA Buy a statewide 25-word COSCAN classified line ad in newspapers across Colorado for just $250 per week. Maximize results with our Frequency Deals! Contact this newspaper or call SYNC2 Media at 303571-5117

Help Wanted

Academy for Dental Assisting Careers

LITTLETON Open House Wed., September 18th, 6:30pm-8pm. Come, tour & enroll in our 8 Saturday ONLY Fall Session 12999 W. Bowles Dr

Caregivers to provide in-home care to senior citizens who need assistance with activities of daily living. Call Today 303-736-6688 www.visitingangels.com /employment

(2 blks E. of C470) 303-774-8100

Children’s Hospital Colorado is an equal opportunity employer.

Drivers: $2,500.00 Orientation Completion Bonus! $2,500.00 Driver Referral Bonus! Great Pay, Benefits! Excellent Home-time! CDL-A OTR Exp. Req. Employment Opportunity Call Now: 1-855-314-1138 Employment Opportunity ____________________________ Employment Opportunity ____________________________ PAID IN ADVANCE! MAKE $1000 A Employment Opportunity ____________________________ PAID IN ADVANCE! MAKE $1000 A WEEK mailing brochures from ____________________________ PAID IN ADVANCE! MAKE $1000 A WEEK mailing brochures from home! Helping Home-Workers A PAID IN ADVANCE! MAKE $1000 WEEK mailing brochures from home! Helping Home-Workers since Genuine Opportunity! WEEK2001. mailing brochures from home! Helping Home-Workers since 2001. Genuine Opportunity! No experience required. Start Imhome! Helping Home-Workers since 2001. Genuine Opportunity! Noe experience m d i 2001. a t e l yGenuine ! required. w w w Opportunity! . w oStart r k i nImgsince No experience required. Start Imm e d i a t e l y ! w w w . w o r k i nImgcNo eenexperience m dt iraatle. cl yo!m required. w w w . w oStart rkingc e n t r a l . c o m _____________________________ m c eendt iraatle. cl yo!m w w w . w o r k i n g _____________________________ central.com _____________________________ NOW HIRING!!! $28/HOUR. Under_____________________________ NOW HIRING!!! $28/HOUR. UndercoverHIRING!!! Shoppers$28/HOUR. Needed ToUnderJudge NOW cover Shoppers Needed To Judge RetailHIRING!!! and Dining Establishments. NOW $28/HOUR. cover Shoppers Needed To UnderJudge Retail and Dining Establishments. Genuine Opportunity. PT/FT. Excover Needed To Judge Retail Shoppers and Dining Establishments. Genuine Opportunity. PT/FT. Experience not required. If You Can Retail andOpportunity. Dining Establishments. Genuine PT/FT. Experience not required. If You Can S h o p - Ynot o u required. A r e QPT/FT. u aYou l i f i eCan d!! Genuine Opportunity. Experience If S h o p Y o u A r e Q u a l i f i e d!! www.AmericanShopperJobs.com perience S h o p - Ynot o urequired. A r e Q If u aYou l i f i eCan d!! www.AmericanShopperJobs.com _____________________________ S hop- You Are Qualified!! www.AmericanShopperJobs.com _____________________________ NOW HIRING! LOCAL PEOPLE www.AmericanShopperJobs.com _____________________________ NOW HIRING! LOCAL PEOPLE NEEDEDMen & Women In De_____________________________ NOW HIRING! LOCAL PEOPLE NEEDEDMen & Women In Demand Simple Work. P/TNOW For HIRING! LOCAL PEOPLE NEEDEDMen & Women In F/T. Demand For Simple Work. P/TF/T. Can BeFor Done From Home.P/TAcceptNEEDEDMen & Work. Women In F/T. Demand Simple Can Be Done From Home. Acceptance GuaranteedNo Experience mandBe For Simple P/TF/T. Can Done FromWork. Home. Acceptance GuaranteedNo Experience R e q u i r e d , A l l W e l c o m e! Can Be Done From No Home. Acceptance GuaranteedExperience R e q u. iEr ae sd y, P a A l l NooWrExperience e o m e! w w k .ll ccc o om me ance R e qwuGuaranteedi r e d , A yl lW We ! w w w . E a s y P a y W o r k . c o m _____________________________ Rw e qwu. iEr ae sd y, P a A yl lW oWr e w k .l c o m e ! _____________________________ __ www.EasyPayWork.com _____________________________ __ AIRLINES ARE HIRING – Train for _____________________________ __ AIRLINES ARE HIRING – Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA ap__ AIRLINES ARE HIRING – Train for hands onprogram. Aviation Career. FAA approved Financial aidapif AIRLINES ARE HIRING –EVENTS Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA proved program. Financial aid if qualified -Aviation Job placement assisthands onprogram. Career. FAA proved Financial aidapif qualified Job placement assistance. Aviation Institute provedCALL program. Financial aid of if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of SALIDA FIBER FESTIV Maintenance 877-818-0783 qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 877-818-0783 September 7-8, 2013. Riverside ance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 877-818-0783 Maintenance 877-818-0783 ida, CO. The Heart of the Rock of vendors, fiber, fleece, yarns Demonstrations and childrens www.salidafiberfestival.

COSCAN

HELP WANTED Full-time, benefited Application Specialist – Public Works & Utilities HIRING Local, OTR & O/O D $51,488 - $65,909/year calCloses: Driver’s live within 50 mile 9/9/13 Class-A-CDL Plus 2 yrs Exp. P Deputy Court Clerk $38,554 - $49,353/year yr. Benefits, No Touch, Paid/Ho Closes: 9/16/13 877-273-3582 Police Officer – Entry $49,082 - $54,177/year HELP WANTED Closes: 9/9/13 Police Officer/Senior Police Officer - TRAINEES Lateral 25 DRIVER NEEDED $51,566 - $61,081/year drive for Swift Closes: 9/9/16Transportation a Earn $750 per week! CDL & Jo Utilities Technician – 3 weeks! Water/Wastewater Plants $44,554 - $57,033/year 1-800-809-2141 Closes: 9/9/13 Hourly, non-benefited Retail Shop Clerk $8.39 - $9.65/hour Closes: 9/9/13 Submit City of Westminster online applications thru 8:30 a.m. on close date http://www.cityofwestminster.us/jobs EOE

GAIN 130 LBS!

academyfordentalassistingcareers.com

Medical Needed full time MA, LPN or RN in Ken Caryl area for busy pediatric office. Includes Saturday mornings Please fax resume to Nita 303-791-7756

Arapahoe County Public Airport Authority Airport is currently accepting applications for a dependable full-time general laborer to perform a variety of semi-skilled & unskilled general labor duties including grounds & building maintenance, carpentry, plumbing, electrical, landscaping, sprinkler repair, preventive vehicle maintenance & radio communications. A viable candidate must be fluent in both written and spoken English; able to perform strenuous activity for long periods of time in various weather conditions from extreme hot to extreme cold; have the flexibility to be on-call during inclement weather and to work alternate shifts including weekends for snow removal, mowing and other special projects that may arise. Typical work schedule: 7 am – 3:30 pm, Monday – Friday. A valid Colorado Driver’s license and HS diploma or GED required. Experience in building or construction maintenance including heavy equipment operation a plus. Starting hourly wage is $14.35 -$14.80. Excellent benefits after 60 days. Apply in person to the Airport Authority at 7800 S. Peoria St., Englewood, CO 80112 or obtain an application at www.centennialairport.com. EOE

Restaurant Waitstaff Dishwashers - Bartender & Cocktail - Reservationist and Janitor fill out application at 18301 W. Colfax Ave. after 9am daily.

Savio House needs foster parents to provide temporary care for troubled teens ages 12-18. Training, 24 hour support and $1900/month provided. Must complete precertification training and pass a criminal and motor vehicle background check. Call Michelle 303-225-4073 or visit saviohouse.org.

LEGITIMATE WORK AT HOME No Sales, no Investment, No Risk, Free training, Free website. Contact Susan at 303-646-4171 or fill out form at www.wisechoice4u.com

Part Time, 24 hours a week in-

cluding Saturday. Donations/Intake, Douglas/Elbert Task Force Thrift Store. Apply 1638 Park Street, Castle Rock (303)688-6129


13-Color

Lone Tree Voice 13

September 5, 2013

ourcolorado

.com

TO SELL YOUR GENTLY USED ITEMS, CALL 303-566-4100 Farm Products & Produce Grain Finished Buffalo

quartered, halves and whole

719-775-8742

HILL’S HARVEST

Fresh Farm Produce 3225 E 124th Ave - Thornton Veggies • Peaches • Preserves Roasted Green Chili & More Pumpkin Patch

www.hillsharvest.com 303.451.5637

Locally raised, grass fed and grain finished Beef & Pork. Quarters, halves, wholes available. Can deliver 720-434-1322 schmidtfamilyfarms.com

Garage Sales Arvada Fri, Sat, Sun Sept 6th, 7th, 8th 9am-4pm 10869 W 65th Pl Ralston Rd & Oak St furniture, stove, and many other household items

Garage Sales

Firewood

Miscellaneous

Arvada 6 Family Garage Sale September 6th & 7th 9am-? Tools, Collectibles, Housewares, Women's / Kids Clothes & toys, books, CD's, art, Christmas, Halloween outdoor decor, Vintage Playboy, new space heaters in boxes, new jeep tires, 11834 W. 76th Lane, Arvada

Split and dry hardwood $200 a cord Free delivery w/in 10 miles of yard 303-424-7357

*OLD ROLEX & PATEK PHILIPPE WATCHES WANTED!** Daytona, Sub Mariner, etc. TOP CASH PAID! 1-800-401-0440

Parker

Arvada West Woods Community Garage Sale & Fall Festival is Saturday September 7 from 8:00am-2:00pm Come for the great deals throughout the neighborhood then stop by the West Woods Elementary School for refreshments and a bouncy castle for the kids. Sponsored by The Ribble Group

moving must sacrifice 2 beautiful PA house cherry cabinets $250/each. Mission dining table & chairs for 6 $475. huge old west style buffet $1200. mid-evil style metal trunk $525. All in perfect condition. Selling for a fraction of purchase price 303-526-1507

Westminster Saturday September 7th 8am-3pm 9846 West 106th Avenue Roll Top & Computer Desks, Book Shelves, Furniture, Washer/Dryer, Antique Dining Table/Chairs, Power Tools, Kitchen Appliances, Clothing, Etc.

Health and Beauty

Estate Sales Arvada

Huge moving sale Sept 12th, 13th,14th,15th 8am-5pm 12554 W 61st Ave All oak furniture, tile inlaid 6 person table and chair, curio cab., book cases, oak entertainment center w/tv, roll top desk/ chair, file cab. Barn Wood furniture Call 303-550-9143 to see

Wheatridge Fri & Sat 9-3 13551 W 43rd Dr across from Mt Olivett antiques, collectables, Ethan Allen and mid-century modern furniture, tools, jewelry, rare books and more. visit nostalgia-plus.com for photos and map cash and credit cards

MERCHANDISE 100+ SALES!

HUGE Multiple Community Garage Sale!

Thornton: 128th Ave & Colorado Blvd 9/6 to 9/7 ~ 8-5pm

Sponsored by Shelli Dore, REALTOR® 303-931-9944

Made in USA - Traditional Sofa & Loveseat, perfect condition $175 1 coffee table, 2 end tables, solid oak $90 (303)422-7839

Friday September 6th & Saturday September 7th from 10am-4pm Lots of Misc. + Xmas Decorations - 2 families Rowley Downs Sub Division 20825 East Parliament Court CASH ONLY

Arvada

Huge Garage Sale Corner 66th & Newland Friday & Saturday September 6th & 7th 9am Everything priced to go Oak dining room table / 6 chairs / hutch / beds / dressers / sofa / lamps / pictures Lots of misc. Something for everyone

Furniture

Arts & Crafts Sons of Italy annual Craft and Gift Fair

Holiday Crafters Wanted November 8th & 9th Friday 9-5 Saturday 9-4 5925 West 32nd Ave Wheat Ridge 80033 Applications now available www.osiadenver.org or call 303-462-0985

ourcolorado

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800418-8975, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. _____________________________ ATTENTION SLEEP APNEA SUFFERERS with Medicare. Get CPAP Replacement Supplies at little or NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, prevent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 1-866993-5043 _____________________________ Medical Alert for Seniors - 24/7 monitoring. FREE Equipment. FREE Shipping. Nationwide Service. $29.95/Month CALL Medical Guardian Today 866-992-7236 _____________________________ CASH for unexpired DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! Free Shipping, Friendly Service, BEST prices and 24hr payment! Call today 1- 877-588 8500 or visit www.TestStripSearch.com Espanol 888-440-4001 Looking to lose weight, get healthy or desire more ENERGY? WE CAN HELP! If you have been thinking about becoming a healthier, happier you but haven't had the time, motivation or know how...then we are here to help you! Find out how to get healthy, feel great and lose 5-15 pounds in 8 days with a one of a kind program! We have 2 events coming to Parker and NOW IS THE TIME!! Sept. 13th 6:30 PM AND Sept. 14th 2:00 PM Holiday Inn 19308 Cottonwood Dr. Parker Co Call for more Details (970)324-5097

100% Guaranteed Omaha Steaks SAVE 69% on The Grilling Collection. NOW ONLY $49.99 Plus 2 FREE GIFTS & right-to-the-door delivery in a reusable cooler, ORDER Today. 1- 888-697-3965 Use Code:45102ETA or www.OmahaSteaks.com/offergc05 _____________________________ DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/month PLUS 30 Premium Movie Channels FREE for 3 Months! SAVE! & Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL - 877-992-1237 ____________________________ KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor. Odorless, Non-Staining, Long Lasting. Kills Socrpions and other insects. Effective results begin after the spray dries! Available at Ace Hardware, The Home Depot or Homedepot.com _____________________________ KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS! Buy a Harris Bed Bug Kit, Complete Room Treatment Solution. Odorless, Non-Staining. Available online homedepot.com (NOT IN STORES) _____________________________ DirecTV - Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Call Now! Triple savings! $636.00 in Savings, Free upgrade to Genie & 2013 NFL Sunday ticket free!! Start saving today! 1-800-279-3018

PETS

Autos for Sale

CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Truck TODAY. Free Towing! Instant Of- Re fer: D 1-888-545-8647 Add _____________________________ P SAVE $$$ on AUTO INSURANCE from the major names you know and trust. No forms. No hassle. No One fR obligation. Call READY FOR MY QUOTE now! CALL 1-877-890- 3036843 720 _____________________________ Got junk cars? Get $ PAID TODAY. FREE towing. Licensed towers. $1,000 FREE gift vouchers! ALL Makes-ALL Models! Call today 1-888-870-0422

Horse & Tack Moving - Rubbermaid Water Tank 70 gal. $40, gates 4'-10' $35-$65, chain link panels 6' $45 ea., Poly Well Feeder $60, Sinking Tank Heaters 1500 watts $15 ea., 5' bunk feed w/rack (mini) $125 ea., T posts $3 ea. (303)232-7128

Lost and Found

Collector Only: 1979 VOLVO 242 DL,2.1, Mint Condition, 50,517 Miles, Always Garaged, $7100 (303)841-2682

Motorcycles/ATV’s

Lost Sheltie / Shetland Sheep-

dog / Miniature Collie. Looks like mini Lassie. Brown and white. Very timid, do not approach, he will run. Please call immediately and try to get a picture of him for identification purposes, if possible. 303-8098222 or 720-212-8269 anytime 24/7.

AMERICAN MOTORCYCLE COMPANY.com Investor Relations $25k - $5mil / Direct: 719.252.0909

Tickets/Travel All Tickets Buy/Sell

NFL-NBA-NHL-NCAA-MLB WWW.DENVERTICKET.COM (303)-420-5000

2011 Snug Top Topper Large windows, excellent condition all accessories included White, '07-'13 GMC 6ft bed Dry $600 720-454-7043 • Ho an • 30 Class A motorhome- Like new con- • In dition, less than 10k miles. 2005 • Sa G Georgetown forest river XL, 2 slide outs, color back up camera w/mic, Hi V10 motor, full tub w/shower, 2 roof a/c, sleeps 5, gas stove/oven + microwave, corian counter $44k Call Barb 303-988-6265 or Tom Cal 720-940-7754 PRICED REDUCED

AP

04 Nissan 350Z silver convertible. Unique gold tan interior, cover & snow tires! One owner. $12,500 Call 970-215-1471 1983 GMC Vandera sleeper van 120,000 miles, $1400 (303)688-6737 cell 303-668-3644 2000 Chev Trailblazer, 116,000 miles, very good condition. Priced to sell at $3945. Call 719-689-5959 / 303-941-0446 to view denver.craigslist.org/cto/3915391879.html

Cash for all Cars and Trucks Under $1000 Running or not. Any condition

bestcashforcars.com

Top Cash Paid for Junk Cars Up to $500 720-333-6832

Residential • Commercial Move Outs • New Construction

Carpet/Flooring

Joes Carpet Service, Inc. Joe Southworth

Commercial & Residential Sales

New Carpet Sales • Wholesale Pricing Installation • Restretch • Repairs Call foR youR fRee eStImate

Cleaning

Ali’s Cleaning Services

Residential and Commercial Cleaning • 15yrsexperience •WindowCleaning • Detailed,Honest, •Insured&Bonded Dependable •GreatCustomerService

Call Ali @ 720-300-6731

Concrete/Paving

~ Carpet Restretching ~ Repair ~ Remnant Installs In home carpet & vinyl sales

Residential & Commercial

303-781-4919

When “OK” Just isn’t good enough -Integrity & Quality Since 1984 For more information visit: JustDetailsCleaningService.com Call Rudy 303-549-7944 for free est.

UTDOOR

R ba

No

Driveways, Sidewalks, Patios Tear-outs, colored & stamped concrete. Quality work, Lic./Ins. Reasonable rates "Small Jobs OK!" 303-514-7364

Deck/Patio

BEST PRICES

30+ years experience Spr Clem: 303-973-6991 10%

All Phases of Flat Work by

T.M. CONCRETE

303-471-2323

FREE ESTIMATES Colorado #1

Deck & Fence Restoration & Refinishing

3

For

PRoFessional

Please Recycle this Publication when Finished

Denver’s Premier Custom Deck Builder

720-635-0418 Littleton

www.decksunlimited.com

303-261-6163 • Repairs • Sanding • Stain • Pressure Washing • Paint & Seal • FREE ESTIMATES • www.coloradodeckandfence.com

Deck Restore

• DepenDable • • Thorough • • honesT •

Repair • Power Wash Stain • Seal Free Estimates 17 Years Experience Licensed & Insured Driveways, patios, stamp & colored concrete. All kinds of flat work. Let us do good work for you! (720)217-8022

Aff

ESIGNS, INC

• Decks • Fences • Stairs • Overhangs •

FBM Concrete LLC.

12 years experience. Great References

Deck/Patio

“Specializing in Composite Redwood and Cedar Construction for Over 30 Years”

Concrete/Paving

720.227.1409

Thomas Floor Covering

720.283.2155 Just Details Cleaning Service

References Available

Lic

Lo Sco

A continental flair

1297 S. Perry St. Castle Rock, Colorado 80104 303-688-2500 telephone 303-688-2600 fax

G

Reside

Detailed cleaning at reasonable rates.

Honest & Dependable

I

Cowb & ga

TO ADVERTISE YOUR SERVICES, CALL 303-566-4100

Dedicated to Life and Living Rehabilitation experts providing opportunities that lead to independence

FREE Est

(303)741-0762

SERVICES Cleaning

Sa

Aco 2007 Suzuki DR650 Rep Less than 5k miles, Many new parts, runs good, extras, free trailer Inte w/no title $3600 (720)347-9686

Wanted Spinet Baldwin Piano- Walnut Excellent condition Includes bench $125 303-346-3402

We Ac All M Credit C

RV’s and Campers

Autos for Sale

Musical

303-

For Local News Anytime of the Day Visit OurColoradoNews.com

Free Estimates Highly Experienced

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14-Color

14 Lone Tree Voice

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15-Color

Lone Tree Voice 15

September 5, 2013

Feds won’t block Colorado pot rules Justice Department memo clarifies stance By Vic Vela

vvela@ourcoloradonews.com The federal government finally provided clarity on Colorado’s marijuana laws on Aug. 29, with the Department of Justice issuing guidance saying that prosecutors will not seek to block recreational pot use and sales here — so long as the newly created industry abides by state regulations. However, the memo does spell out priority cases involving serious marijuana-related offenses that federal prosecutors will continue to investigate, regardless of state laws. And it maintains that possession, cultivation and distribution of the drug will remain a federal crime. Still, the memo makes it clear that feder-

Cabela’s Continued from Page 1

and newer amenities like the (Cook Creek) pool and tennis courts. People love those things, but to have those things, you have to have a tax base. “The other part is that to have the mall, Cabela’s and all these nice retail outlets, you still have to have jobs with pretty good in-

Noise Continued from Page 1

stature to a telephone pole, on public land along Fifth Street in Parker’s Grandview’s Estates, the airport authority now has clearance for all 12 monitors, the last of which will be installed this September. “It will give us the capability to measure the actual noise of aircraft departing from and arriving at the airport,” said Michael Fronapfel, deputy director of planning and development with Centennial Airport. “Having a noise system is not necessarily a requirement; however it’s one of the things the FAA is willing to fund to assist airports with addressing some of the noise impacts on the community.” Fronapfel said the sites were selected to give a wide representation of flight paths into the airport as planes head over local communities, in addition in areas where the airport has received complaints of too

al prosecutors won’t be beating down doors of most recreational pot users in Colorado any time soon. The clarity provided by Attorney General Eric Holder’s office has been a long-timecoming for many around the state, who have sought guidance from the feds ever since Colorado voters passed Amendment 64 — the ballot measure that legalized recreational pot use and sales — last year. “This is a good thing,” said state Sen. Cheri Jahn, D-Wheat Ridge. Jahn played an instrumental role in crafting regulations associated with Amendment 64 during this year’s legislative session. “It’s not a matter of this being something that was statuatorial,” she said. “This was citizen-driven and put into the (state) Constitution. How do you not respect that?” The AG’s Office memo reiterates that “the federal government has traditionally relied on states and local law enforcement

agencies to address marijuana activity through enforcement of their own narcotics laws.” The memo also says that the federal government has left “lower-level or localized (marijuana) activity to state and local authorities (to deal with).” But the guidance from the Justice Department makes it clear that federal prosecutors will continue to make marijuana enforcement determinations, depending on the seriousness of the case. The department laid out eight “enforcement priorities” where the feds will continue to devote resources, “regardless of state law.” They include cases where drug money goes to gangs or cartels and cases involving drug trafficking. The feds also make it clear that they do not want marijuana distributed to minors. The guidance memo says it’s up to states that legalize the drug to ensure there are

strong enforcement laws. “The Department’s guidance in this memorandum rests on its expectation that states and local governments that have enacted laws authorizing marijuana-related conduct will implement strong and effective regulatory and enforcement systems that will address the threat those state laws could pose to public safety, public health and other law enforcement interests.” Rep. Dan Pabon, D-Denver, who was the chairman of the legislative select committee that drafted Amendment 64 legislation this year, said that’s exactly what the Legislature accomplished this session. “We drafted the most robust marijuana regulations in the country because public safety is our top priority,” Pabon said through a statement. “The feds’ action validates all our hard work to protect public safety, comply with the will of the people of Colorado and keep marijuana out of the hands of kids and criminals.”

comes, things like (Charles) Schwab, Time Warner and the hospital. You want the city to be comprehensive. You want it to be well distributed. I think when you look at Lone Tree, that’s true.” The city offered Cabela’s a $7.2 million incentive in the form of infrastructure improvements. Cabela’s hired about 200 employees at its Lone Tree store, a mix of full-time, parttime and seasonal workers. Silverstein’s analysis is based on a conservative estimate of 150 employees.

much noise in the past. “This study allows us to be able to go back to the FAA and say if a particular route is problematic for us,” Fronapfel said. “It’s good to have a historical picture of where we are making improvements or if we are going in the wrong direction.” In addition to the Grandview Estates noise monitor, the remaining seven locations where monitors will be installed include the Meridian area, Surrey Ridge and at E-470 and Parker Road in Douglas County, as well as Greenwood Village, Aurora’s Sagebrush Park and Hunter’s Hill in Centennial in Arapahoe County. With the exception of a solar install in Surrey Ridge, the others will all be electric. The expected lifespan of each monitor is 20 years, Fronapfel said, adding that the airport spent just $75,000 on the entire project, with the remaining $1.5 million coming from a Federal Aviation Administration grant. No local tax dollars are being spent on the project.

LET US CELEBRATE WITH YOU Have a wedding, anniversary, engagement, birth or special occasion coming up? Share it! Colorado Community Media invites you to place an announcement to share your news. Go to ourcoloradonews.com/celebrations for package and pricing information. Deadline is 10 a.m. Tuesdays the week preceding the announcement.

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16 Lone Tree Voice

September 5, 2013

Foundation builds ramp for Ranch teen Organization helps boy who battles rare syndrome By Ryan Boldrey

rboldrey@ourcoloradonews. com For as long as he has been alive, Highlands Ranch 14-year-old Adam Encrapera has been challenged by Alstrom syndrome, a disorder that affects every organ in his body with the exception of his brain. One of just 500 people in the world diagnosed with the disorder, Adam has gone through numerous battles in his lifetime. He was declared legally blind at a young age and lost all his hearing by age 9. He has struggled with kidney issues, heart complications and diabetes. But ask his mother, Susan Encrapera, and she will tell you that “intellectually, he’s pretty normal,” and per the physical challenges? “He rolls with the punches.” Being confined to a wheelchair for the past 2½ years has made life all the more difficult for Adam, who in that time frame has had multiple back surgeries and been forced to move his bedroom from upstairs to the family’s formal living room.

‘It’s rewarding to see the quality of life eased from start to finish.’ Beth Forbes, foundation executive director Aside from having to set aside physical activities such as adaptive baseball, parasailing, horse riding and adaptive ice hockey, Adam was subjected to a type of sleep disorder that made it appear he was having seizures, and the family was forced into more than 15 trips to the emergency room in the last three years. Susan said they had to call emergency responders to help with him, because there was no adaptive wheelchair ramp at the house, Adam, weighing 200 pounds and standing a proud 5-foot-11, was too much for his parents to carry. Enter the Home Builders Foundation, a metro Denver-area nonprofit that partners with the homebuilding industry to provide home modifications at no cost for individuals with physical disabilities and financial need On Aug. 23, as part of a threeday “Blitz Build,” the foundation sent 100 volunteers to 13 homes in the metro area, including Adam’s. At each home they built a ramp, as in Adam’s case, or made modifications in the bathroom to make life

easier for someone with a disability. “Having access to your home is not something you think about until you have to think about it,” said HBF executive director Beth Forbes. “Being part of all the different site visits you really see how difficult it can be to get in and out of the home and (around) one’s bathroom. It’s rewarding to see the quality of life eased from start to finish.” Adam, an eighth-grader at Cresthill Middle School, was in school while the construction was going on, but Susan said he is extremely grateful for all the help. “We had called the state about getting help with home modifications but he doesn’t qualify, because his IQ is too high. He doesn’t have a developmental disability,” Susan said. “A friend told us about Home Builders and they have been just wonderful.” To learn more about HBF or to volunteer, visit www.hbfdenver. org. HBF is always seeking skilled and non-skilled volunteers to help out with projects.

Adam Encrapera, 14, of Highlands Ranch, tries out his new ramp built by the Home Builders Foundation on Aug. 23. Encrapera is challenged by Alstrom syndrome, which affects every organ in his body except his brain. Courtesy photo

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South Metrolife 17-Life

Lone Tree Voice 17 September 5, 2013

Fossil Trace makes quite an impression

Zachary Andrews and Jamie Morgan perform various parts in “Metamorphoses,” vignettes from classic mythology, at the Aurora Fox. Courtesy photo by A&J Photography

Classic myths still speak today ‘Metamorphoses’ plays at Aurora Fox Studio Theatre

IF you go “Metamorphoses” runs through Sept. 22 at the Aurora Fox Studio Theatre, 9900 E. Colfax Ave., Aurora. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays. Tickets, $22 to $26: 303-739-1970, aurorafoxartscenter.org.

By Sonya Ellingboe

sellingboe@ourcoloradonews.com “Enchanting!” said a friend as we exited the Aurora Fox Studio Theatre still under a spell, while those who sat in the front row returned the ponchos they had been issued. “Metamorphoses,” Mary Zimmerman’s beautifully crafted play based on ancient Greek and Roman mythology, is graced with an excellent cast, imaginative direction by Geoffrey Kent and an especially fine set design by Charles Dean Packard. Zimmerman had drawn on writings by Ovid and other classical and contemporary authors, including Rainier Maria Rilke. The set, with its cleverly lit pool of blue

water, is almost another character in the script, certainly important to the sounds one hears throughout. It splashes, rains, has a waterfall and is deep enough for characters to disappear underwater and exit backstage. One keeps wondering: “How did they do that?” The pool is surrounded by wooden columns that suggest Greek predecessors — and walls with openings where gods and men (and women) appear to present a collection of stories and characters that are part of our cultural fabric — and the source for many contemporary tales: Orpheus and Eurydice, Narcissus, Aph-

rodite, Erysichthon and Ceres, Phaeton, Baucis and Philemon, Eros and Psyche … We first meet a modern King Midas (a skilled Michael Morgan), who talks like self-centered billionaire seen in the news today. A god, pleased with him, offers a wish and he asks that everything he touches might turn to gold. Although he has been shushing his active daughter, he is heartbroken when she leaps into his arms and we all know what happens to her. Staging of this scene and those that follow is carefully and precisely carried out, with musical background, extraordinary lighting and sound. Every splash — and there are many — has a part in the characters’ story and elegant language. A sense of humor is emphasized throughout by Kent’s expert direction. His experience as a classical actor is apparent. Lovers of theater will not want to miss this fascinating production.

‘Autumn Boutique’ boosts arts center Lone Tree event will offer variety of goods By Sonya Ellingboe

sellingboe@ourcoloradonews.com With the opening of the Lone Tree Arts Center, the LTAC Guild was formed to support and promote the center and its activities. The guild has held fundraising events at the center and elsewhere, and on Sept. 14, members will sponsor their first preholiday “Autumn Boutique” at the arts center, 10075 Commons St., Lone Tree. The event will run 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., offering goods by a number of vendors, including custom women’s and children’s clothing, jewelry, accessories, art, childrens’ gifts, furniture, gourmet food items, home decor, pet products and more. Deborah Ortiz, one of numerous vendors, is a longtime resident of Denver’s Highland neighborhood who started painting as therapy after a serious acci-

dent and “discovered her artist within.” She created floral designs for family and friends for years before she began showcasing her art in local shows. She paints unique floral art in homes and businesses and on up-cycled glass pieces. She uses an enamel-based glass paint, which she heat-cures for durability. The fundraiser is open to the public and no reservations are required, according to LTACG president Maggie Eichenlaub, who says concessions will be available at the center for shoppers who need a bit of sustenance. Admission is free. The guild is actively seeking new members and interested parties are invited to call Eichenlaub at 303-525-4744.

Deborah Ortiz’s hand-painted glassware will be available at the Lone Tree Arts Center Guild’s “Autumn Boutique” on Sept. 14. Courtesy photo

Fossil Trace Golf Course in Golden is listed among the “10 most unusual U.S. golf courses,” according to Forbes magazine contributor Larry Olmsted. The writer raves about course designer Jim Engh, calling him “one of my favorite golf architects and way underrated by the general public, though the industry holds him in high acclaim.” Olmstead also notes Fossil Creek’s preservation of rustic mining equipment and the history lesson the course provides with prehistoric dinosaur tracks through holes 11 to 15 left some 64 million years ago. “Triceratops footprints have been well marked next to the 12th green so golfers can take a look, and more fossils, plaster footprint casts, and ancient history are in the clubhouse,” Olmstead notes. He forgets the great views the course offers from every direction, especially from holes No. 1 and 10, and the commune next to the 16th tee box. Read about all 10 courses and Fossil Trace at www.forbes.com/sites/ larryolmsted/2013/08/23/10-most-unusual-us-golf-courses/.

PGA Tour is on the ball

The PGA Tour is not run by a slew of stooges. Witness the television commercial already out touting the 2014 BMW Championships, part of the FedEx Cup playoff tournament series that will be played at Cherry Hills Country Club in Cherry Hills Village. The advertisement features four of Denver’s best-known sports figures, from the Broncos: John Elway, Peyton Manning and John Lynch and ex-Denver Nuggets star Chauncey Billups (now with the Detroit Pistons but a Denver resident and native). So Todd Helton and Joe Sakic are chopped liver? The BMW Championship is the next to the last tournament of the FedEx Cup series that narrows the field to the final 30 that play at The TOUR Championship the following week. Next year’s BMW Championship will be played Sept. 4-7 at Cherry Hills. Tickets are already available at https://tickettapp.com/wms/buy/ bmw/2014 for the 2014 BMW Championship. Check out the video at www.youtube. com/watch?v=iEeVNzcrYZU.

Decadent and delightful

The fourth edition of Penny Parker Presents The Fourth Evening of Decadent Delights on Sept. 30 will take your taste buds on a culinary adventure while supporting Sense of Security, the Colorado nonprofit that covers non-medical expenses for breast cancer patients (www.senseofsecurity.org). The enchanting evening begins at 6 p.m. at Balistreri Vineyards (66th and Washington) with a cocktail party sponsored by Downslope Distilling followed by a multi-course dinner at 7. Some of Denver’s finest chefs who will blow your culinary mind are: Troy Guard (TAG, TAG Parker continues on Page 18


18

18 Lone Tree Voice

September 5, 2013

Parker

new customers. We have expansion plans for Seattle and Southern California.” More information at www. patxispizza. com.

Continued from Page 17

Raw Bar, TAG Burger Bar), Tyler Wiard (culinary director for Elway’s restaurants), Michael Bortz (City Bakery), Alex Seidel (Fruition), Brian Laird (Sarto’s), Sean Yontz (formerly with El Diablo) and Lance Barto (The Social). Robert Eldridge is back for the fourth year performing acoustic guitar during dinner. Emcee Les Shapiro is sure to get the party rolling and pump up the live auction. Tickets are limited and available at www.blacktie-colorado.com. Enter event code SOS930. Our friends at Uber are providing $40 off one ride for new users. To claim your discounted ride, sign up for an Uber account by downloading the app to your iPhone or Android and enter the code DDELIGHTS under “promotions” or sign up at www.uber.com/go/ddelights. For more information, contact event manager Trisha Lindeman at 720985-6947 or at trilind@hotmail.com.

Englewood goes to the dogs

Dogs will be taking a dip at the sixth annual Freedom Festival & Doggie Plunge on Sept. 7 at Englewood’s Pirates Cove Aquatic Park. The event benefits Freedom Service Dogs of America, which rescues shelter dogs and trains them to assist veterans. The festival is free to the public. The dog plunge is $15 per dog and all dogs must be spayed or neutered and up to date on vaccinations. Pirates Cove, an Englewood Parks and Recreation Department facility, is located at 1225 W. Belleview Ave., east of Santa Fe Drive. The event will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and will feature hundreds of dogs splashing and diving in the pools, dock dog demos, dog ice cream eating contest, fastest dog competition and a Buckley Air Force Base Police K9 Unit demonstration.

The seen

Actor Kurt Russell and a group tastetesting his GoGi wine line at Elway’s Patxi’s on the grow Cherry Creek on Aug. 28. He’s named the Inc. Magazine ranks Patxi’s Pizza No. Chardonnay “Goldie” after forever girl24 on its annual list of fastest growing friend Goldie Hawn. food and beverage companies in 2013’s The Viognier is called LuLu after his Inc. 5,000 — up from the No. 32 ranking in mom. And the Pinot Noir is called Bosty 2012. Boy in honor or his son, Boston. Read The annual ranking system lists the more about GoGi wines at www.facebook. fastest growing privately held companies com/pages/Kurt-Russell-Wines-Goin the United States. gi/202104946484539. Patxi’s Pizza, with Colorado locations Meanwhile in downtown Denver, forin Cherry Hills Village and Cherry Creek, mer Doobie Brother Michael McDonald, ranked 1,217th overall, making it in the top in town Aug. 28 for a Denver Botanic Gar25 percent of growth businesses this year, dens concert with local vocal Hazel Miller, and the company has experienced 342 To Whom It May Concern: 7/11/2013 sipping cocktails in the bar at wasOnspotted theyears. undersigned Public Trustee caused percent growth in the last three Panzano inside the Hotel Monaco. the Notice of Election and Demand relating to locathe Deed of Trust described below Patxi’s owns and operates nine to be recorded in Douglas County. tions in the Bay Area and two in Denver Original Grantor: TERRANCE D SHUMPERTmarkets AND DEQUITA SHUMPERT with plans for expansion in both Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, this year. Penny Parker’s “Mile High Life” column INC., AS NOMINEE FOR COUNTRY“Patxi’s Pizza is once again excited to be WIDE HOME LOANS,gives INC. insights into the best events, resCurrent Holder of Evidence of Debt: THE a part of such a legendary list,”BANK saidOF CEO taurants, businesses, parties and people NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTWilliam Freeman. throughout the metro area. Parker also EE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS “We have been working hard grow OFto THE CWMBS INC., CHL for MORTwrites Blacktie-Colorado.com. You can GAGE PASS-THROUGH TRUST 2006our business and have been extremely well subscribe OA5, MORTGAGE PASS THROUGH and read her columns (Monday, CERTIFICATES, 2006-OA5 received in our newest markets in Denver SERIES Wednesday Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 1/25/2006 and Friday) at www.pennypand San Jose. Our fresh authentic pizza Recording Date of DOT:arker.blacktie-colorado.com. 2/10/2006 She can be Reception No. of DOT: 2006011954 seems to speak for itself and we are look-in Douglas DOT Recorded County. at penny@blacktie-llc.com or at reached Original Principal Amount of Evidence of ing forward to bringing it to even more 303-619-5209. Debt: $617,600.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $654,378.26 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 other violations of the terms thereof. 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 62, THE FAIRWAYS FILING NO. 1C, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 8432 Fairview Court, Lone Tree, CO 80124

Public Trustees PUBLIC NOTICE Lone Tree NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2013-0473 To Whom It May Concern: On 7/11/2013 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: TERRANCE D SHUMPERT AND DEQUITA SHUMPERT Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS, INC. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF THE CWMBS INC., CHL MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH TRUST 2006OA5, MORTGAGE PASS THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-OA5 Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 1/25/2006 Recording Date of DOT: 2/10/2006 Reception No. of DOT: 2006011954 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $617,600.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $654,378.26 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 other violations of the terms thereof. 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 62, THE FAIRWAYS FILING NO. 1C, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 8432 Fairview Court, Lone Tree, CO 80124 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, October 30, 2013, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle

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, October 30, 2013, 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. First Publication: 9/5/2013 Last Publication: 10/3/2013 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 7/17/2013 GEORGE J KENNEDY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: ALISON L BERRY Colorado Registration #: 34531 999 18TH STREET SUITE 2201, DENVER, COLORADO 80202 Phone #: (303) 865-1400 Fax #: (303) 865-1410 Attorney File #: 08-12958R *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/

Public Trustees

Legal Notice No.: 2013-0473 First Publication: 9/5/2013 Last Publication: 10/3/2013 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Misc. Private Legals Public Notice DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO Douglas County, CO 80109 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: ANDREW RODARTE D.O.B. 10-15-99, SERGIO RODARTE JR. D.O.B. 11-23-97, Children, And concerning: LINA KARINA NAVARRO, a/k/a LENA KARINA NAVARRO, a/k/a LIMA KARINA NAVARRO, Mother,

Painter Pixie Gore is shown on the Riviera. Her work is exhibited at the Town Hall Arts Center in Littleton. Courtesy photo

Gallery opens window on France Town Hall Arts Center also stages musical

IF you Go

By Sonya Ellingboe

sellingboe@ourcoloradonews.com “La Soleil du le Riviera” is the title for Pixie Gore’s and Kathy Dawson’s joint art exhibit in September in the Stanton Gallery at Littleton’s Town Hall Arts Center. Paintings of the beautiful South of France by two artists who have traveled there many times will bring the color and sunshine into the gallery for a month, while “Dirty Rotten Scoundrels,” the onstage musical, tells a lighthearted tale of two (singing and dancing) con men who agree to cooperate in bilking wealthy tourists, especially women, who are visiting the Riviera. Kathy Dawson is a travel agent who specializes in art-related touring and will actually be on the Riviera when the play opens on Sept. 13. She grew up in an artistic family in Colorado, received a master of arts from University of Northern Colorado and has lived in Germany and toured Europe, Mexico and the Caribbean as a group escort in “The Fine Art of Travel.” She is especially recognized for her You are notified that a paintings ofhereby European villages on sheet petition has been filed which alleges that

“La Soleil du le Riviera” is exhibited through September at Town Hall Arts Center, 2450 W. Main St., in downtown Littleton. Gallery hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays and during performances. Art will be for sale. “Dirty Rotten Scoundrels,” a musical set on the French Riviera, plays Thursdays through Sundays. Information: townhallartscenter.com, 303-794-2787.

music, maps, blueprints and foreign currency. Wall murals, including a mural of the Paris Opera House at the Buell Mansion, and faux finishes are a specialty also. Pixie Gore grew up in western Utah in rural areas and was led on many world travels by a sense of adventure. She lived on the Cote d’Azur for eight months, where she enjoyed the same sunny days that influenced the French Impressionists. She also lived in Spain, where she staged an art festival in Marbella. She has been a part-time Spanish teacher at Alameda High School, guest artist at Denver School of the Arts and in earlier years worked as a graphic artist. The duo will meet art lovers at a public reception from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 25.

the above-named children are dependent or neglected as per the facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the office of John Thirkell, at the above address.

A hearing has been set for the 16th day of September, 2013 at 1:30 p.m. in Division 2, Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, 80109.

Public Notice DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO Douglas County, CO 80109 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: ANDREW RODARTE D.O.B. 10-15-99, SERGIO RODARTE JR. D.O.B. 11-23-97, Children,

Misc. Private Legals

And concerning: LINA KARINA NAVARRO, a/k/a LENA KARINA NAVARRO, a/k/a LIMA KARINA NAVARRO, Mother, SERGIO RODARTE, Father, MARIA HERAKOVICH, guardian PAULO HERAKOVICH, guardian Respondents. Attorney for Department: John Thirkell 4400 Castleton Ct. Castle Rock, CO 80109 (303) 663-7726 FAX 303- 688-5894 Atty. Reg. #: 13865 E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us CASE NUMBER: 13JV131 DIVISION: COURTROOM 2 DEPENDENCY SUMMONS This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2011. TO THE RESPONDENTS NAMED ABOVE: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed which alleges that the above-named children are dependent or neglected as per the facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the office of John Thirkell, at the above address. A hearing has been set for the 16th day of September, 2013 at 1:30 p.m. in Division 2, Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, 80109. Your presence before this court is required to defend against the claims in this petition. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABSENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, TO CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY HEARING AND MAY ENTER A JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUDICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEPENDENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN. You have the right to request a trial by jury at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also have the right to legal representation at every stage of the proceedings by counsel of your own choosing, or if you are without sufficient financial means, appointment of counsel by the Court. Termination of your parent-child legal relationship to free your children for adoption is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If

Your presence before this court is required to defend against the claims in this petition. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABSENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, TO CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY HEARING AND MAY ENTER A JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUDICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEPENDENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN. You have the right to request a trial by jury at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also have the right to legal representation at every stage of the proceedings by counsel of your own choosing, or if you are without sufficient financial means, appointment of counsel by the Court. Termination of your parent-child legal relationship to free your children for adoption is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If that remedy is pursued, you are entitled to a hearing before a Judge. You also have the right, if you are indigent, to have the Court appoint, at no expense to you, one expert witness of your own choosing at any hearing on the termination of your parent-child relationship. If you are a minor, you have the right to the appointment of a Guardian ad litem to represent your best interests.

Misc. Private Legals

You have the right to have this matter heard by a district court judge rather than by the magistrate. You may waive that right, and in doing so, you will be bound by the findings and recommendations of the magistrate, subject to review as provided by sec. 19-1-108(5), C.R.S. 2009, and subsequently, to the right of appeal as provided by Colorado Appellate Rule 3.4. This summons is being initiated by the Douglas County Department of Human Services through its counsel. Dated: August 27, 2013 John Thirkell, #13865 Assistant Douglas County Attorney Legal Notice No.: 924030 First Publication: September 5, 2013 Last Publication: September 5, 2013 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

Government Legals PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF CONTRACTORS SETTLEMENT COUNTY OF DOUGLAS STATE OF COLORADO NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Section 38-26-107, C.R.S., as amended, that on the 7th day of OCTOBER 2013, final settlement will be made by the County of Douglas, State of Colorado, for and on account of a contract between Douglas County and WHITE CONSTRUCTION GROUP for INVITATION FOR BID (IFB) #010-13, HERITAGE MEMORIAL PLAZA, PHASE I (PO#33300), in Douglas County; and that any person, co-partnership, association or corporation

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF CONTRACTORS SETTLEMENT COUNTY OF DOUGLAS STATE OF COLORADO NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Section 38-26-107, C.R.S., as amended, that on the 7th day of OCTOBER 2013, final settlement will be made by the County of Douglas, State of Colorado, for and on account of a contract between Douglas County and WHITE CONSTRUCTION GROUP for INVITATION FOR BID (IFB) #010-13, HERITAGE MEMORIAL PLAZA, PHASE I (PO#33300), in Douglas County; and that any person, co-partnership, association or corporation that has an unpaid claim against said WHITE CONSTRUCTION GROUP for or on account for the furnishing of labor, materials, team hire, sustenance, provisions, provender or other supplies used or consumed by such contractor or any subcontractors in or about the performance of said work, or that supplied rental machinery, tools, or equipment to the extent used in the prosecution of said work, may at any time up to and including said time of such final settlement on said 7th day of OCTOBER 2013, to file a verified statement of the amount due and unpaid on account of such claim with the Douglas County Government, Board of County Commissioners, c/o Fairgrounds Manager, 100 Third Street, Castle Rock, Colorado 80104.

Government Legals

Failure on the part of the claimant to file such statement prior to such final settlement will relieve said County of Douglas from all and any liability for such claimant’s claim. The Board of Douglas County Commissioners of the County of Douglas, Colorado, By: Carolyn S. Riggs, CPPB, Purchasing Supervisor, Douglas County Government. Legal Notice No.: 924038 First Publication: September 5, 2013 Last Publication: September 12, 2013 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press Public Notice REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL (RFP) #035-13 BANKING SERVICES The Treasurer’s Office, in conjunction with multiple departments/offices of Douglas County Government, hereinafter referred to as the County, respectfully requests proposals from responsible and qualified financial institutions to provide banking services for the County. Specific requirements and services are contained within the RFP document. The County reserves the right to award all requested bank services to a single financial institution or specific services to selected banks. You may respond to all required services included within the RFP or just those specific services applicable to your banking operation. While price is an important factor in determining the most advantageous banking services for the

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL (RFP) #035-13 BANKING SERVICES The Treasurer’s Office, in conjunction with multiple departments/offices of Douglas County Government, hereinafter referred to as the County, respectfully requests proposals from responsible and qualified financial institutions to provide banking services for the County. Specific requirements and services are contained within the RFP document. The County reserves the right to award all requested bank services to a single financial institution or specific services to selected banks. You may respond to all required services included within the RFP or just those specific services applicable to your banking operation. While price is an important factor in determining the most advantageous banking services for the county, the financial institution(s) recommended by the Bank Selection Committee to the Board of County Commissioners may not necessarily be the financial institution that submitted the lowest cost proposal response.

Government Legals

The RFP documents may be reviewed and/or printed from the Rocky Mountain EPurchasing System website at www.rockymountainbidsystem.com. RFP documents are not available for purchase from Douglas County Government and can only be accessed from the above-mentioned website. Proposal responses will be received until 4:00 p.m. on Tuesday, October 1, 2013 by Douglas County Government, Finance Department, Purchasing Division, 100 Third Street, Suite 130, Castle Rock, Colorado 80104. The copies of your proposal response shall be submitted in a sealed envelope, plainly marked “Request for Proposal (RFP) #035-13, Banking Services” and mailed or hand-carried to the address shown above prior to the due date and time. Electronic/faxed proposals will not be accepted. Proposals will not be considered which are received after the time stated, and any proposals so received will be returned unopened. Douglas County Government reserves the right to reject any and all proposals, to waive formalities, informalities, or irregularities contained in a said proposal and furthermore, to award a contract for items herein, either in whole or in part, if it is deemed to be in the best interest of the County to do so. Additionally, we reserve the right to negotiate optional items and/or services with the successful firm. Please direct any questions concerning this RFP to Carolyn Riggs, Purchasing Supervisor at 303-660-7430 or criggs@douglas.co.us, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. Legal Notice No.: 924041 First Publication: September 5, 2013 Last Publication: September 5, 2013 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press


19

Lone Tree Voice 19

September 5, 2013

Byers-Evans displays winning art Karen Fisher, Scott Ruthven and Paul Smallwood won awards in the 2012 Plein Air Arts Festival’s Emerging Artists category, and their works are exhibited at the ByersEvans House Gallery, 1310 Bannock St. in Denver, through Sept. 28. A free First Friday reception will be open from 5 to 9 p.m. Sept. 6, and gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays. Gallery admission is free. There is a charge to tour the mansion. Byersevanshousemuseum. org, 303-620-4933.

Artfest returns in Castle Rock

The annual Colorado Artfest at Castle

photoRock will feature 178 juried artists on Wil-

cox Street, in historic downtown Castle Rock, on Sept. 7 and 8, with bands, strolling entertainers, food and children’s activities. Tickets: $5/$3/free under 12, at the gate or at Castle Rock Chamber of Commerce, 420 Jerry St. Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sept. 7; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sept. 8.

Ragtime in Centennial

The Ragtime Society of Colorado will present pianist Scott Kirby at 3 p.m. Sept. 8 at Forte Academy of Music, 8030 S. Holly St., Centennial. (Note that this is a new time and place.) Kirby has appeared at ragtime festivals across the nation and in Europe, and in recent years has taken up painting as well as performing, composing and teaching. Tickets to the concert cost $15 for

members, $20 for non-members, and may be reserved at 303-979-4353 or purchased at the door. Future concerts: Oct. 6, Frank French; Nov. 3, The Big Little Ragtime Band.

New surroundings at Swallow Hill

The Café at Swallow Hill Music, 71 E. Yale Ave., Denver, is newly renovated and will feature the Discovery Series: affordable concerts every Thursday at 7:30 p.m., starting with Matt Haslett on Sept. 5 and The Delta Sonics on Sept. 12. Tickets: $7, $5. Swallowhillmusic.org, 303-777-1003.

Big night for Big Band

A Big Band Dance Night is planned at the Highlands Ranch Mansion, 9900 S. Ranch Road, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. on Sept. 13. The Metropolitan Jazz Orchestra will play. Tickets cost $25 in advance, $30 day of event if not sold out. Cash bar. Hrcaonline. org, 303-791-0177.

“Morrison Mountain” by Paul Smallwood was a winner in the Emerging Artists category of the Plein Air Arts Festival 2012. It is exhibited at the Byers-Evans House Gallery. Courtesy image

Friendship Powwow returns

Denver Metro CU Alumni Partner with Tilted Kilt for Watch Parties A partnership intended to build camaraderie amongst Buffs in the Denver Metro area. In the true spirit of building Remarkable Relationships, the Denver Metro CU Alumni Chapter has partnered with the Tilted Kilt Pub & Eatery in Greenwood Village for the upcoming football and basketball seasons. Watch parties will begin one hour prior to game start time and seating is on a first come, first serve basis. There will be door prizes and CU swag, as well as some fun surprises. Guests will enjoy a custom menu, created especially for Buff fans. Any money raised from these events will benefit the CU Boulder Scholarship Fund for Denver area students. CU selected the Tilted Kilt after meeting with Owners Lisa and Mark Voss. This husband and wife team is wholeheartedly committed to offering CU Alumni top notch customer service. Tilted Kilt will offer Buffs an exclusive menu, signature cocktails, premium seating, swag, a great view of HD TV’s throughout the venue, discounts and

more. Also available to CU Alumni at the Tilted Kilt is the “Buff Brew Mug.” This mug is personalized and offers a 10% discount on beer. Mugs will be showcased in a permanent display in the restaurant. “I’ve been a part of the CU Boulder Alumni Association since I graduated in 1983”, said Kimbirly Orr, Board Chair of the Denver Metro CU Alumni Chapter. “Meeting Lisa and Mark Voss, owners of the Tilted Kilt, has taken partnership with a venue to a new level for our chapter. Their commitment to CU Alumni, our Scholarship Foundation and our local CU sports watch party events is unprecedented for our chapter. We welcome all CU Alumni, family and guests to join us to cheer in CU Athletics throughout the year. You never know who you will meet at a CU Alumni event!” “We are tremendously excited about this partnership and look forward to serving the Denver area CU alumni!” said Lisa Voss.

by 2015, executive vice president Phil Fasano said. “South Denver is thrilled to welcome Kaiser Permanente and its new IT center to our business community,” South Metro Denver Chamber President & CEO John Brackney said. The Kaiser Permanente IT center is located at 6560 Greenwood Plaza Blvd. “There is an increased demand for IT solutions and support to deliver quality patient care,” Fasano said. “This new IT location is a center of excellence where best in class employees

Books make cents

The Arapahoe Library District’s Annual Used Book Sale will be held at Centennial’s Koelbel Library from Sept. 5 (9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.) through Sept. 6 and 7 (9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.) and Bag Day Sunday, Sept. 8 (1 to 4:30 p.m.). For information, call 303-LIBRARY or go online to arapahoelibraries.org.

Calendar of Events For a complete calendar of South Metro Denver Chamber events or more information, visit our web site at www.bestchamber.com or call 303-795-0142.

Thursday, September 5th Healthcare Policy Taskforce The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Tailgate Party hosted by Century Cancer Centers 5275 DTC Parkway, Greenwood Village

2013 University of Colorado Football Schedule: *-watch party Aug. 31 vs. Colorado State* Sept. 7 vs. Central Arkansas Sept. 14 vs. Fresno State Sept. 21 bye Sept. 28 at Oregon State* Oct. 5 vs. Oregon Oct. 12 at Arizona State* Oct. 19 bye Oct. 26 Arizona (homecoming) Nov. 2 at UCLA* Nov. 9 at Washington* Nov. 16 vs. Cal Nov. 23 vs. Southern Cal Nov. 30 at Utah*

Kaiser Permanente Opens IT Center in Greenwood Village The South Metro Denver Chamber joined Kaiser Permanente executives to celebrate the grand opening of Kaiser’s new information technology center in Greenwood Village. The health care provider is employing 350 workers at the new technology center and is expected to hire an additional 95 people by the end of the year. Officials expect to have about 700 employees when the center is completely filled out

this event. Denverartmuseum.org.

The 24th Annual Friendship Powwow and American Indian Cultural Celebration will begin at 10 a.m. Sept. 7 on the Acoma Plaza between the Denver Art Museum and Denver Public Library. The Grand Entry is at noon. Watch dancing, see artist-in-residence Marie Watt in a community sewing circle and enjoy fry bread. This is First Saturday, so museum admission is free, as is

use technology to ensure the delivery of high-quality, affordable health care to Kaiser Permanente members living in Colorado and across the country.” Kaiser Permanent is one of the largest private employers in the state with more than 6,000 employees in Colorado. Later this year, the health care provider will open a multi-specialty clinic in Lone Tree and hire an additional 130 positions there. As Kaiser Permanente continues to add new membership in Colorado, it’s estimated that hundreds of additional jobs could be created in the state in the next three to five years. “We are pleased to provide a sustained boost to Colorado’s economy,” said Donna Lynne, president of Kaiser Permanente Colorado.

Officials from the City of Littleton, Littleton Public Schools and The South Metro Denver Chamber cut the ceremonial ribbon officially opening the new location of The Littleton Preparatory Charter School at 5301 S. Bannock Street. The school offers an academically rigorous curriculum, direct instruction, positive discipline and a precision placement system. www.littletonprep. littletonpublicschools.net

FastTracks New Investor Orientation The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Grand Opening Celebration for DSW Shoes 8055 W. Bowles Ave., Littleton

Friday, September 6th BLRG: Meet Cathy Noon, Centennial Mayoral Candidate The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial

Saturday, September 7th Fashion Fabulous at Park Meadows Retail Resort 8401 Park Meadows Center Drive, Lone Tree

Tuesday, September 10th Business Bible Study The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial The Impact of Colorado’s Water Scarcity: A Panel Discussion The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Business After Hours hosted by the Marriott DTC 4900 S. Syracuse St., Denver

Wednesday, September 11th Business Watch Seminar with Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Meet Centennial City Council Candidate Doris Truhlar The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Professional Development Seminar: Maximizing Your Communications The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial

Friday, September 13th Economic Development Group Monthly Investor Meeting The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Colorado Center for the Blind Celebrates 25 Years 2233 W. Sheppard Ave., Littleton Greater Littleton Youth Initiative The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial


20

20 Lone Tree Voice

Shows flow in Spark exhibits By Sonya Ellingboe

IF YOU GO

sellingboe@ourcoloradonews.com As sculptor Barbara Baer placed finishing touches on her installation “Pleasure Ground” at Spark Gallery on Aug. 27, she planned to set the gallery lighting the next day. “We should get some good shadow play,” she said, talking of her process in placing the new work in Spark, where she will collaborate with two artists whose work is remarkably compatible with hers, although each has a distinctive style. Baer’s “Pleasure Ground” fills half the main gallery space as one enters Spark, at Ninth Avenue and Santa Fe Drive. Kelly Cannon’s “Imagined and Observed” — work based on maps, data and landscapes — flows across walls to meet Baer’s installation. Annalee Schorr’s mathematical “Rhomboid” in the North Gallery is glimpsed through a doorway. It includes four Plexiglas rhomboid structures, each striped with precisely patterned duct tape, a patterning that extends to the floor. Baer said the cooperative gallery plans its exhibits for the year with hopefully compatible combinations of members’ artworks. This combination is particularly pleasing to a viewer’s eye. Baer started planning in early spring, taking careful measurements of the gallery and its movable wall panels, forming an agreement with Cannon about placement of the large moving panels, which cannot

Castle Rock

Spark Gallery is located at 900 Santa Fe Drive in Denver’s Arts District. (Some parking at rear.) Gallery hours: noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays; 1 to 4 p.m. Sundays; 6 to 9 p.m. Friday evenings. Baer’s exhibit and the others listed run through Sept. 22. A coffee with the artists is scheduled from 1 to 4 p.m. Sept. 22. Sparkgallery.com, 720-889-2200.

“Pleasure Ground” is a new installation by sculptor Barbara Baer, exhibited through Sept. 22 at Spark Gallery in Denver. There are public art pieces by Baer throughout the south area as well as nationally. Photo by Dustin Ellingboe be stored elsewhere. She has put them flat against the walls. She built a small model and planned her “Pleasure Ground,” inspired by memories of historic gardens she has visited, including Versailles. “I love old gardens,” she said. Human-scaled figures are placed along a curving path, which was designed after drawings made by the original garden plan-

Highlands Ranch

Littleton

ners at Versailles centuries ago. The path’s all-over black and white pattern comes from repeats of a photograph of Baer’s lawn grass, copied onto sheets of mailing labels and pieced together. Areas of this grass image flow up onto the walls in geometric forms that continue the garden path look. The individual figures are varied in size as human visitors would be and invite a

Parker

1200 South Street Castle Rock, CO 80104 303.688.3047 www.fumccr.org

Services:

Saturday 5:30pm Sunday 8am, 9:15am, 10:30am Sunday School 9:15am Little Blessings Day Care www.littleblessingspdo.com

Open and Welcoming

Sunday Worship 8:00 am Chapel Service 9:00 & 10:30 am

Sunday School 9:00 & 10:30 am

www.st-andrew-umc.com

Presbyterian Church

Sunday Worship 10:30 North Crowfoot Valley Rd.  4825 Castle Rock • canyonscc.org  303-663-5751

“Loving God - Making A Difference”



A place for you

worship Time 10:30AM sundays

303-794-2683 Preschool: 303-794-0510

9:00am Spiritual Formation Classes for all Ages 90 east orchard road littleton, co

9203 S. University Blvd. Highlands Ranch, 80126

303 798 6387

Abiding Word Lutheran Church 8391 S. Burnley Ct., Highlands Ranch

(Next to RTD lot @470 & University)

www.gracepointcc.us

pastor@awlc.org www.awlc.org

Lutheran Church & School

Trinity Lutheran School & ELC (Ages 3-5, Grades K-8)

 www.tlcas.org  

303-841-4660

LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA

4391 E Mainstreet, Parker, Colorado 80134 Church Office – (303) 841-3836

www.parkerbiblechurch.org

SErviCES:

Saturday 5:30pm

Sunday 8:00 & 10:30am

Education Hour: Sunday 9:15am Joyful Mission Preschool 303-841-3770 7051 East Parker Hills Ct. • Parker, CO 303-841-3739 www.joylutheran-parker.org

Parker evangelical Presbyterian church Connect – Grow – Serve

Sunday Worship

8:45 am & 10:30 am 9030 Miller road Parker, Co 80138 303-841-2125 www.pepc.org

Parker

Community Church of Religious Science Sunday services held in the historic Ruth Memorial Chapel at the Parker Mainstreet Center

...19650 E. Mainstreet, Parker 80138

New Thought...Ancient Wisdom

First Presbyterian Church of Littleton

Sunday Service

& Children’s Church 10:00 a.m.

Visit our website for details of classes & upcoming events.

303.805.9890

www.P a r k er C C R S.org

Worship Services Sundays at 9:00am

P.O. Box 2945—Parker CO 80134-2945

Sunday

8:30 a.m. 11:00 a.m.

Hilltop United Church Of Christ 10926 E. Democrat Rd. Parker, CO 10am Worship Service www.hilltopucc.org 303-841-2808

Greewood Village

Pastor David Fisher Fellowship & Worship: 9:00 am Sunday School: 10:45 am 5755 Valley Hi Drive Parker, CO 303-941-0668

www.SpiritofHopeLCMC.org

1609 W. Littleton Blvd. (303) 798-1389 • www.fpcl.org

Trinity

Sunday Worship 8:00 & 10:45 a.m.

 

Weaving Truth and Relevance into Relationships and Life

303-791-3315

 Franktown

  

Welcome Home!

Sunday Worship: 10:45AM & 6PM Bible Study: 9:30AM Children, Young People & Adults

Parker

Joy

Where people are excited about God’s Word.

Open hearts. Open minds. Open doors.

viewer to walk around and between them. “We connect to objects that resonate,” she observed. They are created from a weatherproof foam board and covered with an outdoor fabric, all cut with scissors and stitched in varied designs. (Individual weatherproof pieces will be for sale and can be placed in outdoor gardens.) Above them float a series of brightly colored shapes, cut from transparent plastic, each centered with a small repeat of the standing figures’ motif. They move with air currents and suggested a floating poppy field to me. Baer’s public art works are found through the south suburban area: floating high at Littleton’s city hall (“Open Skies”), at South Suburban’s Goodson Center in Centennial (“Life in Motion”) and seated in ground locations at the Englewood Transit Plaza, Pine Grove Elementary School in Parker and in the Douglas County Art Encounters collection at Lone Tree. Baer, a Denver resident, grew up in Louisiana.

Parker

First United Methodist Church

 An Evangelical

September 5, 2013

GRACE PRESBYTERIAN

Acts 2:38

Alongside One Another On Life’s Journey

www.gracecolorado.com

You are invited to worship with us:

Sundays at 10:00 am

Grace is on the NE Corner of Santa Fe Dr. & Highlands Ranch Pkwy. (Across from Murdochs)

303-798-8485

60 W Littleton Blvd, Unit 101 Littleton CO 80120 303 523 7332

Sunday School

(for children and adults)

9:00 am

Morning Worship Service 10:30 am Evening Worship Service 6:30 pm

Erev Rosh Hashanah - September 4, 7:00 pm First Day Rosh Hashanah - September 5, 9:30 am Second Day Rosh Hashanah - September 6, 9:30 am Kol Nidre / Erev Yom Kippur - September 13, 7:00 pm Yom Kippur - September 14, 9:30 am

Join us at Sheraton Denver Tech Center

7007 S Clinton Street in Greenwood Village, CO 80112 (right off of I25 and Arapahoe).

303-794-6643

shalom@cbsdenver.org • Like us on Facebook

Breakfast 8:15 am Prayer 6:00 pm

Bible Study

Prayer 5:45 pm Dinner 6:15 pm Additional Meeting Times: Friday 6:30 pm Prayer Saturday 10:30 am—12:00 noon Open Church (Fellowship/Canvassing)

7:00 pm

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


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Lone TreeSportS 21-Sports-Color

Lone Tree Voice 21 September 5, 2013

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Rock Canyon quarterback Ryan Hommel, shown here scrambling for yardage in the first quarter, helped carry the Jaguars to a season-opening victory over Highlands Ranch on Aug. 30. Photo by Chris Rotar

Comeback cats: Jaguars take opener Rock Canyon overcomes Highlands Ranch Falcons’ large lead By Jim Benton

jbenton@ourcoloradonews.com Rock Canyon junior quarterback Ryan Hommel sparked a three-touchdown comeback in the Jaguars’ Aug. 30 seasonopening victory over Highlands Ranch at Shea Stadium. The Jaguars can tote the confidence in their ability to respond from a deficit into the rest of the season after rallying to pull out a 24-21 victory over the Falcons in front of a standing-room crowd. “I think we can always say we are never out of it,” said Brian Lamb, who earned his first victory as Rock Canyon’s new head coach. “We are always going to fight to the

end and keep playing. We will hopefully be in good enough shape to win the fourth quarter and that’s what it is all about.” Rock Canyon trailed 21-3 with 5:59 left in the third quarter but Hommel got untracked to spark the three-touchdown rally to pull out the win with 15-yard TD pass to Jack Lamb with 36.9 seconds remaining in the game. John Riley’s 2-point conversion run gave Rock Canyon a 3-point lead after the Jaguars failed on a conversion attempt after second touchdown. Highlands Ranch could not get past its own 40-yard line in the waning seconds. Rock Canyon’s winning 67-yard touchdown drive took only 47 seconds and Hommel connected on two of three passes for 26 yards and scrambled twice for 19 yards including one run for 15 yards on a thirdand-three play. Hommel completed 12 of 28 passes for 111 yards and two touchdowns. Under heavy pressure from the Falcons’ defense,

he hit on only one of 11 pass attempts early in the game. “That’s part of being a quarterback,” said Hommel who passed for 1,462 yards during his sophomore campaign. “You have to do anything you can to help the team win. We knew we were down 20 points but we could come back. This will do a lot for us the rest of the season.” Rock Canyon hosts Arvada West on Sept. 5 while Highlands Ranch entertains Ponderosa on Sept. 6 at Shea Stadium. Highlands Ranch played a bunch of young players in going 2-8 last season but the Falcons looked like a team that benefitted from gaining experience until appearing to wear down late in the game. Falcons junior quarterback Keaton Thames completed seven of 12 passes for 141 yards and two touchdowns. At least two of his incompletions were passes he intentionally threw away. He also rushed for a touchdown as he was involved in all three of his team’s touchdowns.

Thames’ 74-yard TD strike to Eric Dynes in the third quarter appeared to give the Falcons a comfortable 18-point lead. “I still had confidence,” said Lamb. “I knew we were making plays. We just had to shore up our mistakes. We made many mistakes in the kicking game and we definitely have things to work on. “I felt we kept up the pressure and we slowly wore them down and started to gas them a little bit in the run game and finally in our pass game they couldn’t rush our quarterback as quick. We were able to get some passes off.” Lamb replaced Tom Lynch as Rock Canyon football coach last March and said it “felt great” to get his first Jaguars win under his belt. “We’re a young team with new systems,” he said. “We started from scratch almost like coaching freshman football. The kids have really worked hard, wanting to improve, wanting to get better, wanting to embrace what we want to teach them.”

Mountain Vista boys win invitational Cross country meet delayed by lightning By Tom Munds

tmunds@ourcoloradonews.com A true cross country course with hills and water jumps is a trademark of the Warrior Invitational, and this year, lightning that forced a reshuffling of the schedule and rain compounded the tests for the runners. This is the 47th year for the invitational at DeKoevend Park in Centennial and, for the first time in recent memory, Mother Nature dictated changes in the schedule. About 50 teams entered the invitational and most were warming up for activities to start at 4 p.m. with the boys junior varsity race, when everyone was sent to buses or other shelters after Chuck Lutz, Arapahoe cross country coach

and event organizer, called a 30-minute delay because of lightning in the area. The delay stretched to more than an hour and the event schedule was reshuffled with the boys varsity race starting at 5:15 p.m. and the girls varsity at 5:30 p.m. About 6 p.m., the boys JV and C team runners were combined and sent out on the course. Five minutes later the girls JV and C team runners’ race began. The Arapahoe coach said this was probably the largest field of races in Colorado history and there might be a couple thousand runners on the course at the same time. But the event was run and Cerake Gabveikidane of Denver East was medalist in the varsity boys race, with a time of 15:10. Connor Weaver of Mountain Vista was second and helped his team to win the title with 65 points. Arapahoe was second with 144 points.

After finishing the race in 16:06, Weaver said he was sure the delay and change in schedule had an impact on everyone, but everyone still pushed hard during the race. “It was OK anyway,” he said. “The course was a little wet but it wasn’t too bad. I feel I ran pretty well. I would have liked to have won the race, but I set my own pace and l felt my time was good. This was a challenging field, I feel I did well, so it is a good way to start the season and work to get better.” In cross country, a runner receives points based on his finish in the race. The first place runner gets one point and the 15th runner gets 15 points. A team can enter seven runners and the points of the top five are totaled to determine the team score. Behind Weaver, the next four teammates were Andrew Walton in fifth place, Blake Graf in 16th place, Tyler Matzke in 19th place

Mountain Vista’s Connor Weaver is the first of his team and the second runner across the finish line during the boys varsity race at the Warrior Invitational Cross Country Meet. Photo by Tom Munds and Carson Hart in 23rd place. In the varsity girls race, Monarch won the team title with 53 points. Mountain Vista was sixth with 239, and Emily Wolff’s seventh-place finish helped the Arapahoe Warriors to finish seventh with 289 points. Wolff said no one liked the schedule shift or going back to the buses because of the lightning,

but none of that mattered when it came time to run. “It is a good course and it is a good race,” she said after crossing the finish line. “It was a big field, and maneuvering through runners was challenging, particularly when the trail narrowed down. But it was great weather for running and that helped make it a good run.”


22-Color

22 Lone Tree Voice

September 5, 2013

A

HigH ScHool SportS roundup Football

ThunderRidge 30, Dakota Ridge 7: Brody Westmoreland is back for his senior year as ThunderRidge’s quarterback and he passed for 204 yards and two touchdowns plus he ran for 84 yards and a score in the Grizzlies 30-7 non-league win Aug. 29 over Dakota Ridge at Shea Stadium. Mark Hopper caught seven passes for 153 yards and two TDs. Grand Junction 49, Mountain Vista 13: Brock Rubley took over for his graduated brother Ryan as Mountain Vista’s quarterback. He connected on 12 of 26 passes for 99 yards but threw two interceptions in a 49-13 loss to Grand Junction Aug. 31 at Shea Stadium. Tanner Smith rushed 21 times for 113 yards and a TD for the Golden Eagles. Douglas County 47, Fruita Monument 19: Trey Smith had 350 all-purpose yards in Douglas County’s 47-19 win over Fruita Monument Aug. 29 at Douglas County Stadium. Smith, who has verbally committed to play at Colo-

rado State, rushed for 191 yards and two touchdowns, caught two passes for 73 yards and a touchdown and had 86 yards in kickoff returns. Castle View 27, Brighton 14: Castle View overcame 14 penalties and an almost 11-minute deficit in time of possession to defeat Brighton 27-14 in an Aug. 30 game at Douglas County Stadium.

Softball

ThunderRidge and Heritage took a road trip to Colorado’s Western Slope and came back from Grand Junction with three victories in the Deke DeCrow Memorial Tournament. The Grizzlies lost 3-2 to Grand Junction Aug. 30 but downed Fruita Monument 13-3 and whipped Grand Junction Central 9-3 in Aug. 31 games. Lauren Ballard collected one of ThunderRidge’s three hits in the loss to Grand Junction, walked, scored a run, stole a base and made two key defensive plays. Heritage lost 11-3 to Fruita Monument, 14-4 to Grand Junction but

notched a 12-2 win over Palisade. Rock Canyon played in the Erie Tournament of Champions, winning three of five games, in the event held Aug. 29-31. The Jaguars edged Arvada West 10-9, beat Skiatook, Okla., 14-5 and routed Chatfield, 17-2. Ralston Valley beat Rock Canyon 10-4 and Broken Arrow, Okla., escaped with a 6-5 win over Rock Canyon. In six games this season, Rock Canyon senior Lauren Paige is hitting .583 with five doubles, five home runs and 16 runs batted in. Douglas County (7-0) scored nine runs in the fifth inning in a 15-10 triumph over Legend Aug. 31 to win the Don McCall tournament championship game at Douglas County High School. Rachel Johnson went 3-for-4 with an RBI in Mountain Vista’s 15-7 setback to Arvada West in a game played Aug. 28. Valor Christian went 2-3 in the Triple Crown tournament held Aug. 30-31 at Rocky Mountain High School. Freshman Ashlynn Kruger pitched seven innings and delivered

a key two-run hit in the fourth inning as Arapahoe defeated rival Heritage 9-5 on Aug. 29.

Volleyball

Unbeaten Arapahoe won the Regis Volleyball Jam with wins over Air Academy, Highlands Ranch, Chaparral and Regis Jesuit. The Warriors outlasted the Raiders, 15-9, in the fifth set to win the championship. In five matches this season, Arapahoe senior Whitney Krantz has 61 kills and 30 digs. Senior Kate Gibson had 13 kills as Valor Christian opened its season Aug. 29 with a 3-0 win over Conifer. In the season opener for both teams, Cherry Creek beat Mountain Vista 15-9 in the fifth set to earn a 3-2 victory on Aug. 30. Douglas County also captured a fifth set decision in a 3-2 win over Dakota Ridge. Junior Mattison DeGarma had 27 kills and 29 digs in the Aug. 30 seasonopening victory. Littleton edged Green Mountain 15-13 in the fifth set to collect a 3-2 win on Aug. 29. Natasha Habert

had 26 kills in the Lions’ opening victory. Defending Class 2A champion Lutheran won the Glenwood Springs Invitational Aug. 30-31 with 2-0 wins over Aspen, Vail Christian, Nucla and Glenwood Springs. Senior Connie Olson led the way for Lutheran, averaging 5.1 kills per set.

Tennis

Sophomore B. Jaye Johnson won a second-set tiebreaker 7-6 and a third-set tiebreaker 7-5 to win in No. 1 singles but Valor Christian dropped a 4-3 match to Alameda Aug. 28. Castle View lost 5-2 to Chaparral on Aug. 28 and 7-0 to Regis Jesuit Aug. 29. Junior Greg Connelly won his No. 3 singles match against Chaparral’s Hayden Dalton with a 10-8 win in the third-set tiebreaker. Heritage beat Chaparral 4-3 Aug. 27 and Ponderosa 7-0 Aug. 29. The Eagles won all three doubles matches to clinch the win over the Wolverines. Chaparral lost 4-3 to Heritage Aug. 27, beat Castle View 5-2 Aug. 28 and lost 6-1 to Mountain Vista

Aug. 29. No. 1 singles player senior Eric Kwiatkowski has gone 2-1 in the first three Non matches. Mountain Vista racked ham up 6-1 wins over Rock scho Canyon and Chaparral on Aug. 27 and 29 and senior By V No. 1 singles player Vignesh vgra Senthilvel had a pair of straight-set wins in the two So victories. arou Rock Soccer see a Senior Paul Grizzle out-o and sophomore Brendan ham Clark each had two goals that while Connor Georgopulos lives and Brennan Veen posted N the goalkeeping shutout grou in Valor Christian’s 7-0 spen win Aug. 29 over Conifer. at th Georgopulos made seven — en saves as the Eagles shutout year’ D’Evelyn 2-0 Aug. 30. Clark a me had one of the Valor goals thing against D’Evelyn. Artfe Colton West scored on a help free kick in Castle View’s 1-0 “T win over Dakota Ridge on Chris Aug. 30 and Kiley O’Connor who had the Sabercats’ goal in a 1-1 tie with Mountain Range on Aug. 31. Douglas County beat Vista Ridge 4-1 on Aug. 29 and came back to tie Palmer 2-2 in a contest SepT. played Aug. 31.

Highlands Ranch third at league golf tourney ridgegate.com

A more natural approach to new urbanism.

By Nick Puckett

npuckett@ourcolorado news.com Seniors Jake Kelley and Spencer Painton of Regis Jesuit High School took the top two spots during a Continental League tournament at the Lone Tree Golf Club on Aug. 26. Kelley shot a 6-underpar 66 and Painton a 4-under 68. Regis, reigning class 5A team state champions three years running, won the tournament with a score of 280 and a 20-stroke lead over runner-up Heritage (300). Heritage was paced by Nick Leibold, who recorded a round of 70. Despite a ninth-place team finish for Douglas County (338), defending class 5A state champion and leading team scorer Kyler Dunkle, a senior, placed third with a score of 69. Highlands Ranch, led by Tyler Zhang’s 74, took third place, shooting a collective

Jesuit, 73 10. Tyler Zhang, Highlands Ranch, 74

Team scores

1. Regis Jesuit, 280 2. Heritage, 300 3. Highlands Ranch, 316 4. Castle View, 324 5. Rock Canyon, 325 6. Mountain Vista, 329 7. ThunderRidge, 330 8. Chaparral, 331 9. Ponderosa, 333 10. Douglas County, 338 11. Legend, 344

Send uS your newS Colorado Community Media welcomes event listings and other submissions. Please note our new submissions emails.

It’s so refreshing to be connected to Denver, but have your own urban oasis outside of the chaos. This is the mixed-use sustainable community of RidgeGate. Light rail for an easy commute. Bikeable and walkable paths. Oh yeah, and 1,000 acres of preserved natural open space for your backyard. Come check out the homes. The shops. And the wildlife. Just south of Lincoln Avenue in Lone Tree.

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Allianc The wo nonpro wants Seating first wo What, tion to 316. 9-11 a Dos an Top 10 individual scores 1. Jake Kelley, Regis Jesuit,market inform 66 2. Spencer Painton, Regisworksh Jesuit, 68 SepT. 3. Kyler Dunkle, Doulgas CHem County, 69 cals 4. Nick Leibold, Heritage, 70 at T5. Josh Yovich, Chaparral,3 p.m. Kellogg 72 T5. Hunter Lee, Heritage, 72Utilitie T5. Max Pederson, Rockpolluti contrib Canyon, 72 T8. Chris Korte, Regis Jesuit,costs o asked t 73 T8. Bennett Rogers, Regisregiste

events and club listings calendar@ourcoloradonews.com School notes, such as honor roll and dean’s list schoolnotes@ourcoloradonews.com Military briefs militarynotes@ourcoloradonews.com General press releases Submit through our website Letters to the editor letters@ourcoloradonews.com Fax information to 303-566-4098 Mail to 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Ste. 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129


23-Color

Lone Tree Voice 23

September 5, 2013

Artfest to make for lively weekend Nonprofit selling hamburgers to fund schooling for kids By Virginia Grantier

vgrantier@ourcoloradonews.com Some of the people wandering around the Colorado Artfest at Castle Rock in 2012 had the opportunity to see and buy tons of art from local and out-of-state artists. But it was that hamburger or hot dog they bought that made the difference in 27 kids’ lives in Haiti. Now, the Calvary Chapel youth group, based in Castle Rock, which spent two days at the barbecue grill at the 2012 Artfest and raised $5,000 — enough to enable 27 kids to have a year’s school, uniforms, materials and a meal a day — plan to do the same thing at the upcoming Sept. 7 and 8 Artfest. But they hope to make more to help more kids. “They’re precious little kids,” said Chris Kroger, a Calvary Chapel pastor who has spent time in Haiti helping,

with different funds, to build a school there. And had moments weeping because of his huge wish to be able to bring them all home. So, in addition to seeing art from about 180 artists — about 45 percent from other states — there are other types of opportunities. Kid artists will be able to create artwork at the Imagination Zone, sponsored by Castle Rock Adventist Hospital. The hospital will take their work, make get-well cards and use them at the hospital. On Sept. 7, there will be a high school chalk-art competition, sponsored by Lone Tree’s Sky Ridge Medical Center. It’s expected some kids will take hours that morning to create, and then the awards ceremony will be at 3 p.m. Pam Ridler, president of the Castle Rock Chamber of Commerce, which sponsors the Artfest, said the biggest thing they’re seeing is that the quality of art at the juried Artfest has “substantially raised to different level, more so in the last five years, six years.” Only about half of the artists that apply get

in. There’s also a diversity of art, in type and price range. She said prices will range from about $25 to $13,000. One Florida painter, specializing in wildlife and recognized by the Audubon Society, will be at the Artfest — as will the artist who created the large bronze sculpture of horse and cowboy at the corner of Fifth and Gilbert streets. Among the live entertainment, Phat Daddy, a rhythm and blues band that draws a large crowd, will be back. Ridler said the event draws about 20,ooo to 25,000 people and has a “very good reputation.” The event will take place from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sept. 7, and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sept. 8, in the parking lots of Castle Rock Town Hall, 100 Wilcox St., and Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St. Tickets are $5 for adults, $3 for seniors over 60, and kids under 12 are free. For more information, go to http:// www.castlerockculture.com/colorado-artfest-at-castle-rock/eventguide/.

THINGS TO DO SEPT. 5 EMAIL MARKETING. The South Metro Health

Alliance presents two workshops on email marketing. The workshops are designed for anyone working in a nonprofit organization or small business who uses or wants to use email to reach their intended audience. Seating is limited and reservations are requested. The first workshop, from 9-11 a.m. Aug. 22, is “The Who, What, Why of Email Marketing” and is an introduction to email marketing. The second workshop, from 9-11 a.m. Sept. 5, is “Email Marketing Strategy, Plus Dos and Don’ts” and it dives into the technical and marketing strategy details. For reservations and more information, www.southmetrohealthalliance.org/ workshops.

SEPT. 7 CHEMICAL ROUNDUP. Dispose of unwanted chemicals at the household chemical roundup from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 7 at the Castle Rock Utilities Building, 175 Kellogg Court. It is a joint effort between the Town’s Utilities Department and Tri County Health to prevent pollution and protect people handling garbage. A contribution of $25 is requested to help offset the high costs of hazardous waste disposal. Participants will be asked to verify residency. Residents are encouraged to register in advance online, www.tchd.org/household-

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chemical.htm. Also, please note that the event ends promptly at 3 p.m. Volunteers are greatly needed to help with registration, vehicle off-load, and waste processing. Volunteers get free food throughout the day, a gift for helping out at the event, and are allowed to dispose of their waste for free. Individuals and groups interested in helping with this event should call 720200-1592. Visit www.tchd.org/householdchemical. htm or call 720-200-1592.

SEPT. 8 CELEBRATE GRANDPARENTS. South Suburban Parks & Recreation District will present an oldfashioned fair to celebrate grandparents, families and the community on National Grandparents Day from noon to 4 p.m. Sept. 8 at Lone Tree Recreation Center and Prairie Sky Park, 10249 Ridgegate Circle, Lone Tree. Activities will include live bluegrass music, carnival-style games, delicious treats, hula hoop contests, face painting, a bouncing castle, kissing booth with a special guest, storyteller, art project, lawn games, Zumba Gold demonstration and much more. Admission to the event is just $1 for families, and each family member will receive five carnival tickets. Additional tickets for activities, food and drinks will be available for purchase. Call Kim Amidei at 303-7083516 for information.

SEPT. 10 FOOD DETECTIVES. The Amazing Food Detective

takes an idle family around the globe in an interactive play that helps young students understand the importance of a healthy diet and exercise. Kaiser Permanente’s troupe of professional actor-educators engage students in kindergarten to third grade as they discover together what foods give lasting energy and what it means to be physically active. The program takes place at 10 a.m. Sept. 10 on the Main Stage at the Lone Tree Arts Center, 10075 Commons St. The program is a free community service by Kaiser Permanente. Visit www.LoneTreeArtsCenter.org.

adindex The Lone Tree Voice is made possible thanks to our local advertisers. When you spend your dollars near your home – especially with these advertisers – it keeps your community strong, prosperous and informed. AUTO Auto MEDVED ...........................................................................24 AUTO Community ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION ....................................... 3 DOUGLAS COUNTY COMMISSIONERS .................... 5 SOUTH METRO CHAMBER ........................................... 9 AUTO Dining HICKORY HOUSE RIBS ................................................... 9 AUTO Entertainment DENVER GEM & MINERAL SHOW.............................. 2 WILDLIFE EXPERIENCE ................................................. 4 AUTO House & Home APPLEWOOD PLUMBING .............................................. 8 J & K ROOFING................................................................23 ROCKY MOUNTAIN SHUTTERS & SHADES............. 3 SPLIT RAIL FENCE CO .................................................... 2 AUTO Medical DERMATOLOGY & LASER INSTITUTE ...................... 5 NATIONAL JEWISH HEALTH ......................................16 AUTO Real Estate PEGASUS REALTY CORP ................................................ 3 RIDGEGATE INVESTMENTS .......................................22 AUTO Shopping PARK MEADOWS............................................................15 AUTO Transportation GIANT CYCLING WORLD ............................................15

SEPT. 10, SEPT. 17, SEPT. 24 PREPAREDNESS TRAINING. Douglas County Office of Emergency Management plans citizen preparedness training classes at 6 p.m. Sept. 10 at the Larkspur Fire Station, 9414 S. Spruce Mountain Road; at 6 p.m. Sept. 17 at the Highlands Ranch Substation, 9250 Zotos Drive; and at 6 p.m. Sept. 24 at Douglas County Sheriff ’s Office Jury Assembly Room, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock. The classes will cover evacuations (people and animals), Code Red (phone notifications), and Go Kits (what you should have ready). Visit www.dcsheriff.net/emergencymanagement or call 303-660-7589.

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24 Lone Tree Voice

September 5, 2013

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MSRP $39870. Sale price $32778 after rebate. Residual $23124. 39 months-10K miles per year. $5745 due at signing. OAC ALL MAKES / ALL MODELS

20% OFF

2011 FORD EXPEDITION - Only 16k miles, Extra Clean Inside and Out! Priced to sell at $31,999 F2339TA 2012 FORD EXPEDITION EL - Only 39k miles this S.U.V. is ready to go, only $33,999 P2387 2012 FORD EXPLORER - Save Thousands off of new only 11k miles $29,999 D5840A 2012 CHEVROLET TAHOE - Extra clean inside and out take, only 29k miles, priced to sell at $42,999 G3349TA 2009 GMC YUKON - PLENTY OF ROOM FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS EXTRA CLEAN INSIDE AND OUT $29,999 F2369A 2006 BUICK RANIER - Don’t miss this one, Extra Clean AWD only 64k miles and ready to go $14,999 F2850TA

NEW 2013 FORD Focus

LEASE

MONTH + TAX

ANY REPAIR OR

MAINTENANCE (max savings of $150.00)

$32.95

$189.95

(up to 6 qts. of oil. diesel and synthetic extra. Shop supplies and disposal fees extra.)

Shop supplies and disposal fees extra.

• OIL CHANGE • ROTATE • INSPECTION

• DIESEL OIL CHANGE • FUEL FILTER

REPLACEMENT

$189/mo

F2806T WAC MUST QUALIFY FOR REBATES AND 84 MO FINANCING $3,499 DUE AT SIGNING

2013 Chevrolet Volt

PURCHASE not a LEASE!

LEASE

MONTH + TAX Stk# G3561 MSRP $35,105 INCLUDES CCR, GM COMPETETIVE LEASE CONQUEST $1000 due at signing 39 months 10,000 miles year .25 per mile overage o.a.c.1.05 rate residual 60%

NEW 2013 FORD Fusion

$218/mo

F2745, WAC MUST QUALIFY FOR REBATES AND 84 MO FINANCING $3,499 DUE AT SIGNING

2013 Chevrolet Malibu

LEASE

MONTH + TAX

MSRP $22,945 39 MONTHS $1000 DUE AT SIGNING 10,000 MILES YEAR .25 PER MILE OVERAGE O.A.C. .00035 MONEY FACTOR INCLUDES CCR, AND USAA PRIVATE MEMBER OFFER STK# G3554T

PURCHASE not a LEASE!

LEASE

MONTH + TAX

MSRP $39,415 39 MONTHS INCLUDES CCR AND GM TRUCK LOYALTY INCENTIVE O.A.C. 10000 MILES YEAR .25 PER MILE OVERAGE .00008 MONEY FACTOR $1000 DUE AT SIGNING Stk# G3395

NEW 2013 FORD F-150

$10,500 Off

Discount off MSRP make the discount big MSRP $36070.00 Medved Discount $10500.00 Your Price$26570.00 dealer to retain all rebates..

Peyton Manning Quarterback for the Denver Broncos

Medved Chevy Buick/GMC 1506 S Wilcox Castle Rock, CO 80104 (720) 733-7114. www.MedvedSouth.com

1404 S Wilcox Castle Rock, CO 80104 (720) 733-7119. www.MedvedSouth.com


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