MARCH 30, 2017
See Special Insert Inside!
spring 2017
JEFFERSON COUNTY, COLORADO
A publication of
LONG TIME COMING: Vietnam vets from across metro area are honored in Lakewood for service P4 HELPING THE HURT: Volunteers clean up Lakewood medical home P9
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BIKING BELLAS: Friends, fun and fitness one pedal stroke at a time for Lakewood group P6 THE BOTTOM LINE
‘These kids are up against offenders who have planned how to hurt them. Kids often have no way of protecting themselves. It’s important for us, as adults, to protect them.’ Don Moseley | Executive director of Ralston House | P5 INSIDE
7112 W Jefferson Avenue #107
VOICES: PAGE 10 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 17 | SPORTS: PAGE 19
LakewoodSentinel.com
VOLUME 93 | ISSUE 33
2 Lakewood Sentinel
March 30, 2017M
MY NAME IS
LAKEWOOD NEWS IN A HURRY
EVAN CONANT
Lakewood resident Evan Conant, 52, was diagnosed with colorectal cancer stage one, but was able to beat it because doctors caught it early enough. Because of his experiences, he became an ambassador for the Fight Colorectal Cancer campaign.
Colon cancer survivor featured in national campaign About me … I’m one of the millions that migrated west from the East Coast — I’m originally from New Jersey, just outside of New York City. I came out here to attend the University of Colorado Boulder in 1983, fell in love with the beauty of the Rocky Mountains, and never left. After school, I became a professional salesman in the health care industry. I love it, and really enjoy the science behind it. I’m married and have a 17-year-old at Lakewood High School who is ready to graduate and to CU to study in the Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology program. Being diagnosed with colorectal cancer I was self-employed until July 2015, and struggling to make a living on my own, which meant it was difficult finding and keeping insurance. When I finally got a job with health care benefits, I went to get a physical and the doctor said I should have a colonoscopy, since I hadn’t had one before. I was healthy and had no symptoms, so I was expecting to be told I was fine, but the doctor told me they found a tumor, and at first I told them, “No you didn’t, I’m fine. I don’t have any history, you must have my results confused with someone else.” I got things in order and worked with doctors and went through a terrifying full day of diagnostics, but there was some good news — it was stage one, and since we’d caught it early, doctors were able to get rid of it with a few minor surgical procedures. Sharing my story After everything, I decided to become an ambas-
COURTESY PHOTO
sador with the Fight Colorectal Cancer campaign. I’m here to share my story, and hopefully still have a lot of living to do to spread the word. I was just in Washington, D.C. for the annual call on congress session where we were able to meet with legislators and tell them about the situation and help people need. I also recently went to the Colorado capitol as part of the Chronic Care Collaborative to talk about the issues facing people with these issues, including discrimination by insurance companies and employers. The importance of getting screened It’s very moving and emotional work — other ambassadors have stage two, three or four cancer, and as I go from meeting to meeting, sometimes people aren’t there any more. It weighs heavily over you, but it gives me more fuel to do what I can to raise awareness, and make sure other families don’t have to go through this. The bottom line is get your butt in there. You only have to do it a few times in your life, but the difference between getting screened and not is the difference between life and death. If you have suggestions for My Name Is ..., contact Clarke Reader at creader@coloradocommunitymedia.com.
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What children think of city The theme for Mayor Adam Paul’s Lakewood is the city through the eyes of a child, and to that end, Paul wants to know what the children of the city think about Lakewood. Children are encouraged to send thoughts and comments to Mayor Paul at Lakewood.org/YouthView, and some of their ideas will be shown on the page and posted to Facebook. Children should tell the mayor what they think about: what challenges do they face in Lakewood? What do they like the most? What don’t they like? Mayor Paul made this yearlong initiative of listening to what Lakewood kids have to say a centerpiece of his State of the City speech last week. TriceraTOTS Enjoy a story time and craft program geared toward 2-5 year old kids at Dinosaur Ridge. Siblings welcome. The event will be 10 a.m. at the Discovery Center — 17681 W. Alameda Parkway by Red Rocks Entrance #1 — on April 5. Non-members: $5/child. Members $3/child. Adults and 1 and under free. RSVP with Erin LaCount at tours@ dinoridge.org (or send us a message on our Facebook Page.) Happy Family Foods will be there with a toddler snack table and give-aways! Local author seeks input Lakewood children’s author Curt Fulster, who writes under the pen name C. Fulsty, is working with the Colorado Veterans Project on a book aimed specifically at military children. Fulster is seeking feedback from veterans on what they would like to see in a book for their children. The proceeds from the book will go to the Colorado Veterans Project. Anyone with comments can contact Fulster at cfulstybooks@gmail.com.
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Many First-Time Buyers and Veterans Are ‘Leaving Money on the Table’ This may sound too good to be true, but Let’s say your initial mortgage is $375,000 you can trust me that it is actually true. As a and you stay in that home for the full 30-year first-time homebuyer or qualified veteran with term of a 4.25% mortgage. You’ll have paid income under $100,000 purchasREAL ESTATE $289,116 in interest, but with ing a home under $424,100, you your MCC, you would get TODAY $57,824 of that interest refundmay be eligible to receive a refund of 20 percent of the intered to you over 30 years through est you pay for the life of the a credit against your federal inloan. The refund comes to you come tax liability. as a federal tax credit which can The income and purchase price be carried forward up to 3 years. limitations vary by county and by “First-time home buyer” is family size. I’ll post the chart with defined as anyone who has not county-by-count limits at www. JimSmithColumns.com. In been on the title of a home for Jefferson County, the income three years prior to closing on limits are $80,100 for a 1-2 pertheir new home. “Qualified vetson household, and $92,100 for a eran” is defined as a veteran By JIM SMITH, ® Realtor larger household, and the purwho left the service with an other chase price limit is $424,100. than dishonorable discharge. If you purchase in the only “targeted” For most taxpayers, the interest paid on our primary residence is tax deductible, but census tract in Jeffco — a multi-block area under the Mortgage Credit Certificate pro- between Colfax and 20th Avenue around gram (MCC), 20% of your interest is a tax Casa Bonita — the income limit increases to credit, which is many times more valuable $96,100 for 1-2 persons and $112,100 for that a tax deduction. The other 80% of your larger households. The purchase limit is still $424,100. paid interest is still a tax deduction. A “targeted” area is one which could How much money are we talking about?
Find 15 Educational Videos for Buyers and Sellers on Our Website
As you’ve noticed by now, I like creating my own content, but occasionally I come across great outside material to share with readers and clients. On our website, www.GoldenRealEstate.com, you can watch over a dozen informative videos by trainer David Knox on a variety of real estate topics, including how to select a listing agent, how to price your home, etc. Take a look, and give me feedback.
Westminster Home Just Listed by Jim Swanson This super-nice 2-story patio home at 5700 W. 71st Ave. is located in the Patio Subdivision, a few blocks west of 72nd and Sheridan. You will enjoy the south facing Trex deck and low maintenance yard that backs to a pasture. $275,000 There’s a good sized living room, kitchen with eating space, and half bath on the main level. Upstairs you will find Video at www.WestminsterHome.net three bedrooms, a full bathroom, and a 3/4 bath off the master bedroom. The garden level basement has a good sized living area and possible 4th bedroom or office space. This well-maintained home has central air conditioning, a new roof and a 2-car attached garage. The low HOA fee of $65/month includes tennis courts and community pool. Ready for quick possession, it’s open Sat. 1-3 pm
benefit from enhanced home ownership, which is expected in turn to improve the quality of housing over time. Since the interest on your loan is biggest during the first several years, you get the biggest tax credits in your early years of home ownership, which could be a huge help to a new homeowner with that lower income. This program comes and goes, and is not permanent, and it recently came back on March 6th. It ends when the IRS allocation is exhausted. Your lender, not you, applies for the MCC certificate up-front. There’s a $200 application fee, and an additional $250 to $1,000 fee at closing, depending on the type of loan. To retain the tax credit for the life of your loan, you must continue to live in the property as a primary residence. If you sell it in less than 9 years, there is the possibility of a re-
capture tax depending on the type of loan, household income and your gain on the sale. Other requirements of the MCC program are that you complete a homebuyer education program and that your credit score be at least 620. The program is administered by the Colorado Housing Finance Authority (CHFA), a non-governmental non-profit, but you can use any of 25 qualified mortgage brokerage companies. Not all lenders are authorized to participate in this program, so be sure to ask the lender your are planning to use. You don’t want to give up tens of thousands of dollars in tax credits! My thanks to Bruce Gustafson of Universal Lending, one of our preferred lenders, who reminded me of this awesome program. He is certified to participate in the MCC program.. You can reach him at 303-596-0780.
Fairway Vista Home Just Listed by Carrie Lovingier This meticulously maintained 4-bed, 3.5-bath home at 10707 W. Cooper Dr. backs to a greenbelt, has over 2,400 finished square feet, and an attached 2-car garage. Uniquely located near great trails, a golf course, two rec centers, Hine Lake, and highly ranked schools, this home features hardwood floors, plantation shutters, an eat-in kitchen with island and maple cabinets, a formal dining room, a family room with gas fireplace and inVideo at www.FairwayVistaHome.info wall speakers, a main floor office/study with French doors and main floor laundry with washer & dryer included. Upstairs you’ll love the master bedroom with 5-piece master bath, oversized jetted tub & walk-in closet with built in shelving, and two spacious guest bedrooms and a great loft area. In the basement is a 4th bedroom and bathroom, plenty of storage and a workshop area (workbench included). The home has newer A/C, exterior paint, a concrete patio, garden area with a fruit bearing peach tree, rose bushes, sprinkler systems, a whole house water purifier and a reverse osmosis filtration system. The HOA is only $40 per month that includes trash removal. Showings begin Friday at noon. Open this Saturday, 1-3 pm.
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4 Lakewood Sentinel
March 30, 2017M
‘The welcome home that Vietnam veterans have been waiting for’ Congressman hosts commemoration ceremonies for veterans BY CHRISTY STEADMAN CSTEADMAN@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
For Vietnam veteran Abe Alonzo, the March 24 ceremony honoring him and 53 others for their service in an unpopular and devastating war was long overdue. “We weren’t accepted or received after our tour in Vietnam,” said the 68-year-old Lakewood resident, who served in the Marines from 1968 to 1970. “We were never appreciated for the sacrifices we made. It was a tough time.” U.S. Rep. Ed Perlmutter, D-7th District, has partnered with the governor’s office to honor men and women who served during the Vietnam era from Nov. 1, 1955 to May 15, 1975, the beginning and end of U.S. involvement in the war. The commemoration ceremony is part of an ongoing series of events across the country leading up to the 50th anniversary in 2025 of American withdrawal from the conflict. Response to Perlmutter’s event, first announced in February, has been so overwhelming that his office
expanded the number of ceremonies from one to eight, said Ashley Verville, Perlmutter’s director of communications. About 600 Vietnam veterans from across the state expressed interest in participating, she said. So seven more commemoration ceremonies have been scheduled through August, to keep the numbers small and the event more intimate. The first ceremony took place March 24 at Red Rocks Community College in Lakewood, to coincide with Vietnam Veterans Day, which is celebrated annually on March 29. Each of the 54 veterans received a lapel pin and a certificate of commendation. The commemoration does not distinguish between veterans who served in-country, in-theater or who were stationed elsewhere during the Vietnam War period. Vietnam was an unpopular war, said Jim Falk, 68, of Northglenn who served the in the U.S. Navy from 1969 to 1973. And many veterans returned home to disapproval and recrimination, rather than celebration. “People blamed the service men and women,” Falk said. “But it wasn’t their fault — they were just serving.” Evan Louis Totten, 75, a Parker resident who served in the Navy
from 1964 to 1974, remembers the hostility as well. “That lingers in the minds of all of us,” he said. “If it had not been for our loved ones at home, we would not have been able to sustain ourselves.” The Department of Veterans Affairs estimates there are 7 million men and women across the country still living who served during the Vietnam era. As of 2014, more than 127,000 are in Colorado. More than 58,000 people lost their lives in Vietnam and about 1,600 people are still missing, Brigadier Gen. John P. Rose told those at the March 24 event. “The bottom line is that we have not forgotten,” he said. “We will not forget.” This event, specifically, lets every Vietnam veteran and his or her family know that their service is appreciated, said Jeanette Early of Aurora, a member of Gold Star Wives of America, a support organization for those whose spouses or children have died while serving in the Armed Forces. “It means so much to say welcome home,” she said. Because of unforeseen legislative obligations in Washington, Perlmutter was unable to attend the event, his wife Nancy said. But in an email, Perlmutter said
IF YOU GO… Seven additional Vietnam War 50th Commemoration Ceremonies will take place. The events are free and open to the public. The April 7 and April 12 ceremonies will take place 9:30-11:30 a.m. at Red Rocks Community College, 13300 W. 6th Ave. in Lakewood. The other dates, with time and locations to be announced, are as follows: June 1, July 6 and 21, and Aug. 3 and 17.
MORE INFORMATION For more information, times and dates of upcoming ceremonies, or to request to take part, go to U.S. Rep. Ed Perlmutter’s website at http://perlmutter.house.gov/ the lapel pins symbolize the service and sacrifice of Vietnam-era veterans. “I am honored to be able to recognize these veterans and thank them for their service to our country,” he wrote. For most Vietnam veterans, this commemorative ceremony is a first, said Joe Lucero, 69, a Broomfield resident who served in the Army from 1970 to 1971. “It is,” he said, “a welcome home that we as Vietnam veterans have been waiting for.”
Lakewood Sentinel 5
7March 30, 2017
How to get involved
More than 200 participants made the half-mile walk up to the Jefferson County Courage Garden in 2013, raising thousands for crime victims and victim advocates during the annual Courage Walk. GLENN WALLACE
Learning more about sex assault this month BY CHRISTY STEADMAN CSTEADMAN@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
A woman is forced to have intercourse while on a date. She says no, but he says her provocative clothing suggested otherwise. A child is inappropriately touched by a trusted adult while getting dressed before school in the morning. A young man in his teens takes a jog at dusk. Moments later, he is attacked, disrobed and fondled. All of a sudden, those individuals feel unsafe in their world. And more likely than not, none of them would report the offense. The above scenarios are not unrealistic. Each is an example of a sexual assault. Often it’s a hidden crime, leaving the victim silenced and traumatized while the perpetrator remains in the community, without ramifications for his or her actions. The Jefferson County Sheriff ’s Office states that a sexual offense can be any form of non-consensual sexual activity. This includes rape, statutory rape and sexual touching and photographing. Crimes of moral turpitude, such as obscenity, pandering, pimping, prostitution and indecent exposure, can also be considered a sexual assault. “Public awareness is the only way the community can address these issues,” said Allison Boyd, director of the 1st Judicial District’s Victim Assistant Unit. “Only by victims coming forward can we make the community a safer place.” April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month. Nationally and across the globe, people are banding together to bring awareness to sexual assault, child abuse prevention and crime victims’ rights. Cities will be making proclamations to address these issues and advocates are organizing call-foraction movements. • • • Ralston House, which has three locations and serves Gilpin, Adams, Jefferson and Broomfield counties, is
a nonprofit agency that provides a safe place for child and teen survivors of abuse to tell their stories and begin the healing process. The organization expects to talk to 1,200 children and teens this year. “We would love for less kids to show up at our door,” said Don Moseley, executive director of Ralston House. But unfortunately, “child abuse does happen in our communities.” Moseley said many vicitms of childhood sexual assault do not report it until much later in life. “These kids are up against offenders who have planned how to hurt them,” he said. “Kids often have no way of protecting themselves. It’s important for us, as adults, to protect them.” In general, Moseley said, the perpetrator will take six months to a year to figure out how to get the child not to tell. Most of the time, the child is led to believe that it is his or her fault. For example, Moseley said, an adult may tell the child that her nightgown was arousing. These techniques make a child feel guilty, Moseley said. A 2003 study by the National Institute of Justice found that 3 of 4 juvenile sex assaults are done by somebody that the child knows and trusts. Sometimes threats are involved, such as telling the child that if he or she says anything to someone, the adult perpetrator will kill himself. “It’s a very planned activity,” Moseley said. “Most of these kids sit silent.” One way that Ralston House helps raise awareness is by being an advocate for the Jefferson, Gilpin, Adams and Broomfield county communities to plant pinwheel gardens in April. Blue pinwheels are a symbol of child abuse prevention awareness across the nation. The gardens remind child abuse survivors that they are not alone, and that the community supports the child victims, Moseley said. SEE ASSAULT, P13
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March 30, 2017M
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During their years participating in competitive cycling events the world over, Lea and Sabra Davison saw plenty of little girls standing on the side of the track. “We’d see them there, but they were never all that engaged,” Sabra said. “Biking is something you can do your whole life, and it promotes good health. So we thought, let’s solve it.” The result was Little Bellas, an organization created in 2007 in Vermont by the Davisons and Angela Irvine, a prominent member of the local cycling community and advocate of women’s cycling. It hosts fun group activities to encourage young girls, ages 7 to 18, to get into cycling and mountain biking. “We started with 12 girls in Vermont, but once we started taking them on the road, people wanted to start their own chapters,” Sabra explained. “We put ourselves in the mindset of being 8 again, and what kind of fun stuff would we like to do?” One of the organization’s most active chapters is in Lakewood, which often has a wait list for events in the community. Each chapter has mentors who work with the girls, help host activities and provide education and knowhow when it comes to cycling. “It’s just a super-fun way to support the bike community and support
cycling,” said Karen Goodman, lead mentor for the Lakewood chapter. “Every week we do something different, from games to obstacle courses and exercises.” In addition to the weekly events, Little Bellas works with partner organizations to host special larger events with multiple sessions, giveaways and snacks. An event scheduled for the spring at Bear Creek Lake Park filled up in an hour, but there are still some spaces for an August event at the park. “We have this network of about 220 mentors all over the country who help us with our events,” Sabra said. “It’s such an amazing team of women, and we’re all about having girls trying as much as is possible.” The freedom to trying cycling comes from an environment that is safe and nurturing, Goodman added. “We have all different ages and abilities coming to us,” she said. “The parents realize this is a great way to get their daughters’ empowerment up.” Learning how to ride a bike is such an important step for so many children, the organizers say, and Little Bellas wants to use that achievement to encourage girls to take charge in all areas of their lives. “Learning to ride a bike is such a rite of passage because everyone can do it,” Sabra said. “I love being part of these girls’ development. And riding a bike is something they will always have.”
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Lakewood Sentinel 9
7March 30, 2017
Women’s Day volunteers help MCionmeer sP lAalyl ei ny Pt hl ea yAhlol ue ys !e prepare new Chanda Plan building BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
With the great early spring weather Jeffco has been receiving, a lot of people are spending weekends enjoying the outdoors. But on March 25, volunteers from as far away as Colorado Springs and Greeley spent their day at the new home of the Chanda Plan at 1630 Carr St. in Lakewood painting, picking up trash, and getting the building ready for its opening. “We’re here as part of Women’s Day of Service,” explained Alex Gallegos, who was painting one of the building’s with friends Megan Gallegos, Hannah Lamb and Camita Marberry. “We wanted to come out and support local groups and show our activism,” Marberry added. The Chanda Plan was founded by sisters Chanda Hinton-Leitchtle and Crystal Hinton to provide direct access to integrative therapies for treatment of spinal cord injuries muscular dystrophy, cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, spina bifida and brain injury. In September, the organization began work on its new Patient Centered Medical Home, which will house all services under one roof, as well as primary care options from the Metro Community Provider Network, and work is nearing its completion.
“I’ve been overwhelmed by all the community support,” said HintonLeitchtle, who was on site for the volunteer day. “So many have donated months of their time to getting us to where we are.” The day of volunteerism was arranged with Rebuilding Together Metro Denver, a nonprofit that works with sponsors and volunteers to provide home repairs, safety modifications and energy efficiency upgrades. “We have about 20 volunteers with us today, and that’s out of about 2,500 volunteers who are doing projects across the metro area as part of the Women’s Day of Service,” said Carrie Packard, executive director of Rebuilding Together. “It’s a great way to teach people about the organizations out there, and do a fun project at the same time.” Volunteers were working under the direction of Bob Myers, project superintendent with Hensel Phelps Construction, all with the goal of making the building a welcoming place for participants. “Every week that goes by is exciting but a little sad, because it means we’re almost done working with many of the people who have been helping us,” said Hinton-Leitchtle. “This has all been to redefine how health care looks, and what it feels like for people when the roll up here.”
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10 Lakewood Sentinel
LOCAL
March 30, 2017M
VOICES Great expectations and 30 minutes can achieve lifelong results
M
HITTING HOME
Michael Alcorn
y teaching partner, Pattie Nelson, is a prime example of a 100-percenter. She comes to work every day with an inexhaustible supply of energy. She puts time and thought preparing for every day, and she takes her role as a teacher of music very seriously. These are the attributes that she has control over, and she brings it, every day. On top of that, she is a talented musician, a smart person and has a great natural ability to connect with students. When she is in front of students, she demands a great effort. It’s impossible to say
that every student in the room is firing at 100 percent, but it’s a great bet that all of them are working beyond their 70 percent “cruise-control” setting. The problem is that, the nature of the job that Pattie and I do, she’s only in front of the kids for 30 minutes, twice a week. Now, for some of them, that’s enough — they go off on their own and work and stay above 70 percent (in their music) most of the time. But, let’s be real, they’re 10 and 11 years old — most of them downshift pretty quickly, and by the time lunch recess is
over, they don’t even remember where they left their instrument. On top of that, if we consider our “hollow person,” 11-year olds grow at an amazing rate: a big dinner, a good night of sleep, and the hollow person wakes up larger than they were yesterday, and 80 percent of yesterday’s person is only 70 percent of today’s. That’s not to say that teachers at the younger ages don’t have influence, or even to say that teachers who get very little instructional time have little influence. SEE ALCORN, P11
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Increasing transparency in our health care spending GUEST COLUMN
Chris Kennedy
T
here’s a reason health care policy is a hot topic right now, and it’s not that “Obamacare is exploding.” Health care costs have been growing faster than inflation for as long as I can remember. When I was working at my engineering firm in the mid2000s, I remember the broker coming by every year to tell us how much our premiums would be going up. After the passage of the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare), premiums continued to rise, although not as quickly as before. Millions more people had coverage,
A publication of
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which insurance companies could no longer deny to people with preexisting conditions. But the fact remains that premiums are rising too quickly, and every voter I met last year knows it. That’s a big part of why I requested to serve on the Health, Insurance, and Environment Committee this year. I started the legislative session hoping to identify some concrete steps we could take to address the growing cost of health care, but as I started to dig, I
Wait on the repeal I understand that Republican lawmakers are eager, and in a hurry to repeal the ACA, but I am concerned that their haste to accomplish their goals may do more harm than good. It may leave a lot of people uninsured who really need the coverage. I find it difficult to believe that in the eight years they have been fighting to repeal the ACA, none of those opposed ever thought to come up with a decent replacement, and a way to smooth transition to a replacement more favorable to them, but that seems to be the case. Most feel it would better to modify rather than repeal the ACA, but if repeal is unavoidable, can we at least expect lawmakers to have the foresight, and the sympathy to prepare a decent, favorable replacement instead of something thrown together in just a few weeks? The present replacement plan just doesn’t cut it for most Americans, especially for the poor and the elderly, and I’m afraid it will be a disaster for all but the most wealthy, and a disaster for those who need healthcare the most. Stan Dyer, Arvada
SEE KENNEDY, P16
Columnists & Guest Commentaries
Editor’s Note: On Friday, March 24, House Republicans and the Trump administration announced that they were tabling efforts to pass a replacement plan for the Affordable Care Act indefinitely. A bad budget The Environmental Protection Agency, the State Department, and the Agricultural Department will be hit the hardest by Trump’s disastrous budget. It discontinues funding for international climate change programs. How will we protect our planet for future generations if we aren’t working to combat climate change? It reduces funding for U.N. peacekeeping. How will we protect ourselves from terrorism if we aren’t working for peace? The Agriculture Department’s funding will shrink by 21 percent. How will we sustain ourselves without the agricultural sector? It is so important to pay attention to our leaders and to make our voices heard. Call your members of congress to urge them to vote NO on this budget. Tell them that you value the environment, peace among nations and agriculture. Rachael Smallwood, Arvada
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Lakewood Sentinel 11
7March 30, 2017
ALCORN FROM PAGE 10
But, I would submit, the influence of the younger ages and the parttime teachers is more one of teaching students where their floor is — that point at which they can get away with not giving any additional effort. Let me put that in real world terms: There is nothing more important for a young student than to know that there is a point at which a teacher is going to call them out for their lack of effort — especially
students from difficult circumstances, who often are looked at by adults with pity and indulgence. Teachers like Pattie Nelson push those students to, for at least 30 minutes at a time, work at the same level as or higher than everybody else in the room. But it is with older students, mostly-formed hollow people students, where teachers have the real opportunity to push them to exceed their own expectations. The staff that put together “The Little Mermaid” worked with those kids four hours a day for six weeks to put that production together — that’s a lot of opportunities to ask
a student to give a little more. And, done consistently over that stretch of time, a student will change their expectations for themselves — it can’t help but happen. And, when they receive that applause on opening night? That’s like the firing process that turns a piece of hard clay into beautiful piece of pottery. It locks it in. What of coaches and teachers who get to work with the same students every day for hours for many years? These are the people we hear the great stories about: the coach who took his junior high player off the streets and gave him a home, some
clothes and a purpose; the teacher who recognized a hidden talent; the principal who made a kid sit in her office every day to get the grades to stay eligible. Kids begin to grow towards being 100-percenters with that direction. Pattie Nelson is, sadly, retiring at the end of this year. Her passion for her students and music will be missed, but the legacy of her teaching will carry on. Those 100-percenters tend to do that to the world. Michael Alcorn is a teacher and writer who lives in Arvada with his wife and three children. His novels are available at MichaelJAlcorn.com
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12 Lakewood Sentinel
A
POINT/COUNTERPOINT
‘We will do all we can to ensure the best education’
s your Jeffco Board of Education, we make it our core mission to provide a quality education that prepares all children for a successful future. Funding challenges at the state level (Colorado owes K-12 education over $800 million a year, and that amount is growing) and locally (Jeffco’s 3A & 3B failure was the lone defeat while five other metro Denver districts won voter approval) mean now, more than ever, we need our community to understand the value of providing a high-quality education for our students. We are committed to an open, transparent process to determine how Jeffco Public Schools can continue to be a strong district despite diminishing resources. Jeffco is committed to its 2020 Vision, which recognizes our children are more than a single score. Our board supports delivering a 21st centuryready education, including content mastery, critical thinking and creativity, self-direction and personal responsibility, and civic and global engagement. We aligned our board goals to this vision, and we are working to preserve proven supports. That includes literacy interventionists delivering real results in growing young readers, and social emotional learning specialists building wellness, care and prevention for all students’ learning readiness. While we are proud of Jeffco’s accomplishments, we are mindful that continuous improvement is the definition of excellence. Jeffco is cel-
T
March 30, 2017M
Stevens Rupert Harmon Mitchell Lasell teachers willingly took pay cuts and ebrating positive accomplishments in freezes at the height of the recession early literacy, but variation and gaps when other districts cut programs, persist for some students. Strong math and the impact of this sacrifice has not growth and achievement is coupled with a need to have on-grade-level math been fully restored. Consequently, Jeffco has lost too learners match the success of accelermany of its well-trained and highly efated learners. Finally, Jeffco is focused fective educators to nearby school dison every student reaching college, tricts. Jeffco Public Schools must offer career and life readiness. competitive compensation to ensure we We aim to increase the number of don’t lose any more of our best people students who match Jeffco’s strong to other districts. And now is the time reading and writing ACT and PSAT reto seek a new superintendent with sults across all content areas. Whether a proven track record, the ability to college, the workplace or military listen to all community voices, and the service is a student’s aspiration, our educational expertise required to push board has set a goal of high levels of Jeffco to new heights as we navigate readiness for all students. Jeffco’s difficult budget constraints. graduation rate has increased steadily Great people make great schools. since 2010, representing thousands of diverse, unique students who are assets In 2016, Jeffco’s average ACT scores reached an all-time high. Our seniors and contributors to our community. earned $80 million in college scholarWe know strong teachers, leaders ships — including seven Daniels Scholand staff make the critical difference ars and two Boettcher Scholars — and for our students’ success. 22 Jeffco students were named NationWhile 99 percent of Jeffco teachal Merit Scholar semifinalists. We’ve ers are highly qualified, Jeffco’s celebrated Devinny Elementary and salaries fall below the average of Evergreen High’s National Blue Ribthe five most comparable nearby bon Awards, 25 John Irwin Awards for districts; some teachers could make academic achievement, 16 Governor’s $8-10,000 more per year in neighborDistinguished Improvement Awards, ing districts. We are here because
and eight Jeffco high schools among the 50 Top High Schools in Colorado. Jeffco educator recognition includes: Milken Educator, Presidential Award for Excellence in Math and Science Teaching, Amgen Science Teaching Excellence, and Olmsted Excellence in Secondary Teaching and more. And a principal received the Patriot Award from the U.S. Department of Defense, Employer Support of National Guard and Reserves. By investing in Jeffco, we invest in our future and our community. After voters failed to support Jeffco’s 2016 mill and bond proposal, district staff presented $20.4 million in budget reductions for the school board’s review. Budget cuts dating back to 2009 still have impacts, and now too many students risk not getting the opportunities they deserve, while some of our beloved schools operate in aging buildings with a growing backlog of muchneeded repairs and maintenance. As we, your Board of Education, spend the next few months working to balance the budget and find Jeffco’s next superintendent, we will do all we can to ensure the best education for our students, learning environments where they can thrive, and a competitive compensation model for our educators. Let us hear from you, and know that we welcome different approaches and voices to the discussion. If Jeffco can come together in the best interest of all 86,000 students, our entire community will benefit.
Jeffco school leaders are fiddling while Rome burns his year’s self-inflicted budget “crisis” is part of a larger calamity that we’ve seen developing in Jeffco schools since we moved here from Alberta Canada seven years ago. Unfortunately, it is one that district management and boards have been singularly unwilling to face. The key elements of the strategic challenge facing Jeffco include the following: First, the certainty of another teacher pension (PERA) funding crisis; Second, continuing stagnation of student achievement results at time when changes in the economy are raising the bar for true “college and career readiness” at an exponential rate, thus every year leaving more of our kids grossly unprepared for the harsh competitive world they will face after graduation; Third, the high probability that substantial increases in state K-12 funding will not be forthcoming, because of competing demands from a backlog of infrastructure projects and an explosion in social safety net spending to support the rising number of people who lack the skills needed to succeed in today’s economy; Fourth, voter resistance to paying higher taxes unless and until governments (and our schools in
particular) significantly improve the value they provide; and Fifth, a strong teachers union and deeply rooted district culture that are both very resistant to change. Rather than face this fundamental strategic challenge, this year the Jeffco board has supported the teachers union’s demand for a $25 Coyne million pay increase, and told district management to identify spending cuts to pay for it. The justification for this raise is, to put it mildly, highly questionable. Given that only 32 percent of Jeffco 11th graders met the ACT’s college and career ready benchmarks in 2016, the proposed raise (which will be distributed on the basis of teacher seniority, not results) cannot be a reward for superior performance. Claims that the pay increase is an incentive are equally vacuous. Paying poor teachers more money will not make them better. The assertion that in the absence of higher paid good teachers will flee was dismissed by Amy Webber, Jeffco’s human resources director at a recent board meeting. And despite past turnover, virtually all Jeffco teachers are still rated Effective or Highly
Effective (even though the latest data show that 1,416 of them use 10 or more personal and sick days each year, the point at which the US Department of Education says significant negative impacts on student achievement occur). And no board member wants to admit that this raise will further increase Jeffco’s 1.5 billion dollar unfunded PERA liability – which will one day require either a massive tax increase, large K-12 spending reductions, and/or significant cuts in teachers’ pension benefits. The spending cuts initially proposed by management to fund the teacher pay increase were also painfully revealing. They want to eliminate literacy interventionists, even though over 46,000 Jeffco students did not meet grade level English Language Arts standards on the 2016 CMAS assessment. They propose to severely cut spending on student mental health services, even though this is a top priority in the district’s Unified Improvement Plan. They propose sharp cuts to programs serving Jeffco’s 11,000 gifted student, even though two thirds of them still fail to reach their full potential and score at the advanced level on achievement tests.
And they wanted to close five schools (since reduced to one), based not on poor achievement results, but on the size of expected cost savings. Incredibly (or arrogantly, take your pick), Jeffco’s leaders want voters to believe that, in terms of their negative impact on student achievement results, these are the least harmful cuts they can make in a billion-dollar budget! Seriously? Jeffco’s real crisis is not about its budget; rather, it is fundamentally about the badly broken state of its governance and management processes, and the continuing unwillingness and/or inability of the district’s “leaders” to confront the real and worsening strategic challenge we face. If a billion-dollar private sector company had such incompetent governance and management it would quickly go bankrupt or be taken over. Sadly, this is not the case for our public school district, where (at least until the November election) parents and voters can only angrily watch as Jeffco’s “leaders” fiddle while Rome burns. Tom Coyne is a political Independent and member of Jeffco’s District Accountability Committee. These are his personal views.
Lakewood Sentinel 13
7March 30, 2017
ASSAULT FROM PAGE 5
“Pinwheels are a way for the whole community to say, `We understand that child abuse happens and we are going to try to stop it,’ ” Moseley said. • • • A common misconception is that sexual assault is only a woman’s issue, said Katie Schmalzel, Colorado School of Mines’ prevention programs manager and deputy Title IX coordinator. But that is not true, she said. “It impacts an entire community.” The Mines campus is active throughout April to bring awareness to sexual assault, Schmalzel said. Among its campus activities is a clothesline project and Wear Denim Day. The clothesline project gives everyone an opportunity to decorate a T-shirt to commemorate a sexual assault survivor. The shirts will hang in the student center for the entire month. Wear Denim Day is an international movement that takes place the on the last Wednesday in April every year. It is based on a a decision by the Supreme Court of Appeals in Rome that overturned a rape conviction of a driving instructor against a young woman, saying she must have helped him remove her tight jeans, therefore giving consent to sex. “The case made international headlines,” Schmalzel said, “and the young woman’s jeans became a symbol of awareness that what someone wears is never an excuse for rape.” There isn’t a good answer on how to prevent sexual assaults, but Schmalzel suggests “bystander intervention” is one way to fight back. Be aware that sexual assaults do occur and that anyone can be a victim, she said. Educate yourself, learn to identify what the red flags are and step in when
it’s safe for you to do so. “Don’t assume that it’s not your problem because of the assumption that somebody probably already did something,” Schmalzel said. Often, she added, that’s not the case. • • • The Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) reports that out of 193,112 total crimes reported by law enforcement agencies across the state, 3,275 of the crimes were rape. And of the 3,275 total rape reports, 141 of them were attempted offenses, meaning nearly 96 percent of the rapes were reported as completed rapes. The above statistics are reporting only rape cases, and do not include other sexual offenses. And, it is important to remember that the frequency and actual number of sexual assaults are difficult to pinpoint because it is a crime that is often underreported, Boyd said. This could be for a number of reasons, she said — victims might think nothing can or will be done about it, or they may think no one will believe them because generally there are no witnesses. Because sexual assault is a traumatizing experience, Boyd said, it is difficult to make decisions on what to do. “Fear is a huge issue,” Boyd said. Victims may be afraid that if they come forward, the perpetrator will retaliate. “It’s very important that victims feel supported,” Boyd said. To show that support, the 1st Judicial District Attorney’s Office hosts the annual Courage Walk during National Crime Victims’ Rights Week, which takes place this year on April 2-8. The walk happens on April 8 and the entire community is invited to honor victims’ courage. “By raising awareness,” Boyd said, “we can help victims feel safe enough to come forward, break the silence and end the violence.”
Doral charter to lease old Zerger site BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Doral Academy of Colorado, a charter school that emphasizes the arts, will have a new location next school year. The Jefferson County Board of Education approved unanimously March 23 a one-year lease agreement with Doral Academy to occupy the Zerger Elementary School building at 9050 Field St. in Westminster. Zerger Elementary School closed in 2012 following budget cuts. The district was approached by Doral Academy Building Corp. regarding a one-year lease of the Zerger building for the 2017-18 school year for Doral Academy of Colorado. The charter school is currently located at 7100 Wadsworth Blvd. in Arvada and serves 176 students in kindergarten through seventh grade. Next year, the school will add eighth grade and expects to serve between 200 and 260 students. Because of timing, the approval of
the lease agreement was made by the board at the March 23 study session instead of waiting until the next regular board meeting. “For those families wondering where the school will be located next year, it’s important they know that now,” said Jeffco’s acting interim superintendent Terry Elliot. The board brought up two concerns — the ability to still market the property for sale and the proximity of the charter with neighborhood schools. District staff assured the board the one-year lease does not have the option to renew and the district can market the property for sale following the 2017-18 school year. “I believe that we already have too many charter schools located in a fairly small geographic area,” said board president Ron Mitchell, echoing a statement from fellow board member Brad Rupert. “I just frankly don’t think we need another charter school there. It’s hard for me to feel happy about this.”
14 Lakewood Sentinel
LOCAL
Noodle dish
March 30, 2017M
LIFE
a real
pho-nomenon Vietnamese comfort food gains steam in metro area BY TOM SKELLEY TSKELLEY@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
O
f all the traditions Vietnamese immigrants brought to the United States, pho is probably the one most people recognize, even if they can’t pronounce it. The beef-and-noodle dish, pronounced “fuh,” originated in Vietnam in the 1880s. The name is believed to come from the French “pot au feu,” which translates to “pot of fire,” a beef stew the French brought to Vietnam when they colonized the country. Over the course of generations, the dish became Vietnam’s national food. “We look at pho like Americans look at bacon and eggs,” says Sunny Wong, whose family owns Pho Real in Littleton. “It’s a staple, it’s a street food. You can just get out
of your car anywhere (in Vietnam) and get a bowl of pho. We eat it for breakfast and dinner.” Pho became popular in the United States over the last few decades, but the trend has become a favorite with consommé consumers, and new restaurants continue to open across the metro area. Aficionados frown upon referring to pho as a soup, but comparisons arise nonetheless. Wong points out a key difference is pho, as opposed to ramen or wonton soup, is always made with rice noodles, not egg or flour. A variety of spices like star anise and ginger are added during cooking, and the bowl is traditionally topped with thin slices of rare beef that brown in the bowl. But every batch of pho begins and ends with the broth. Chanh Nguyen, who owns and operates Hashtag Pho in Centennial with his daughters Ally and Sue, steeps beef bones for two days to infuse all of the flavor he can into the broth, just as Wong’s aunt and uncle do at Pho Real. One disadvantage of pho’s popularity, they say, is that some restaurants have begun to cut corners and use canned broth. Grocery stores have even begun to carry “instant pho,” a concept Sue and Ally laugh at.
Chanh Nguyen ladles out a bit of the beefy broth he’s steeping in the kitchen at Hashtag Pho in Centennial. Nguyen came to the United States in 1987 and opened his family’s first pho restaurant near County Line and Quebec over 15 years ago. TOM SKELLEY But the Nguyens’ discerning customers, like Dan Popylisen, of Parker, know the difference. “I’ve been in the restaurant business for more than 20 years, and some of the younger places around Denver take their broth off the back of a truck,” he says. “This place is the real deal.” Traditional pho is all about the beef, but many restaurants offer “pho chay,” a vegetarian variation created for Vietnam’s Buddhist population. Pho Real bases their vegetarian broth on soy sauce and adds tofu, while Hashtag Pho’s pho chay is carrot and cabbage-based. At Golden Pho, in Golden the menu boasts that the pho chay there takes 10 hours to cook, and includes onions, ginger, cabbage, snow peas, squash, corn, scallions and even some cinnamon.
‘A sense of pride’ Authenticity and fresh ingredients are important to pho restaurateurs, Wong says, because family honor is on the line with every bowl. “Every good pho restaurant probably has a family behind it,” he says. “When people came to America from Vietnam, there’s a sense of pride in opening a pho restaurant.” Born in the U.S., Wong says eating pho almost every day was a way for him to connect to his heritage. For American customers like Chad Baker, of Aurora, the connection may not be as personal, but the personality of the cooks comes through in the taste. “Every kitchen has its own flavor, every restaurant does its own thing,” Baker, who’s been a pho fan for four or five years, says. SEE PHO, P15
PHO-NETICS A quick Google search reveals the many punfilled names of area pho restaurants. Sonny Wong, manager of Pho Real in Littleton, said he and his family had a brainstorming session to come up with the name.
1 2 3 Pho 11804 E. Oswego St., in the Meridian area
While many restaurant names are simply the word “pho” with a number attached, and a few are unfit to print, the following offers a sampling of some of the wittier restaurant pho names in the metro area.
Fee Fi Pho Fum 1384 S. Broadway, Denver
Pho-natic 229 E. Colfax Ave., Denver
Pho Real 2399 W. Main St., Littleton
Lakewood Sentinel 15
7March 30, 2017
Vinyl Me, Please keeps the music spinning
H
ow do you find the music you love? There’s always been the radio, and streaming sites like Spotify have gotten better and better at creating LINER recommendations for NOTES listeners to discover new artists. But the people behind Denver-based Vinyl Me, Please, know none of that can replace the person who shares an album they really love with you. “Everybody has Clarke Reader these moments where you have this friend who is like, ‘No, you have to hear this thing’ and plays it for you,” said Tyler Barstow, who co-founded Vinyl Me, Please with Matt Fiedler in 2013. “Any music person, regardless of how much you use Spotify and that stuff, needs somebody in their life who says, ‘You need to sit down and listen to this one thing,’ and that’s what we do every month.” Vinyl Me, Please, is a record-of-themonth club where subscribers are sent one record each month — a record the 16-person staff has discussed, debated and decided it’s essential to any vinyl collection. Over the years, selections have included everything from Nina Simone’s “Nina Simone Sings the Blues” to The War on Drugs’ “Lost in the Dream” and Gorrilaz’s “Demon Days” to The Fugees’ “The Score.” These unique pressings also include
PHO FROM PAGE 14
“Every place has a different broth,” says Baker’s table mate, Nicole Nicholas of Highlands Ranch. Being able to customize her dish with basil, lime, jalapeno or sauces available is another plus. “I like that you can do your own thing with it,” she says. Littleton’s Janie Salazar says that that versatility makes pho the perfect option ,for a family. She and her husband bring their children to Pho Real so everybody
CLARKE’S ALBUM OF THE WEEK Selection: Drake’s “More Life,” released on Young Money, Cash Money and Republic records. Review: Drake was starting to take himself a little too seriously on last year’s “Views,” but he’s lightened up considerably on his latest release, which he is calling a playlist
(how that is different from an album or mixtape, I couldn’t possibly explain). Drake pulls even more international influences into his sound, and as is always the case, he and his producers make it sound absolutely incredible. I’ve always been a fan of Drake’s R&B leanings over rap, and he highlights
that side of himself this time around. Don’t miss it. Favorite song: “Passion Fruit” Most empowering lyric: “They want me gone, wait for the kicker/Bury me now and I only get bigger.” from “Gyalchester””
specially written liner notes, artworks and a custom cocktail-pairing recipe. “We have a relationship with our members where we say, ‘Here is this thing that was really moving to us and we actually spend a lot of time writing about it … and we’d love for you to give it a listen,’ “ Barstow explained. “Our goal is to illuminate and shed some light on where this album comes from, because there are so many albums that aren’t just another pop record or another rap record or another indie rock record.” In addition to the album of the month, subscribers to Vinyl Me, Please, receive access to limited-edition album pressings and special versions through the company’s online store. The website, www.vinylmeplease.com, also features some of the best long-form music writing on the internet, podcasts where Barstow discusses the latest in music with artists and other music experts, and weekly playlists. Vinyl Me, Please, also hosts monthly listening parties called The Spins at
local bars and brewpubs, where music lovers can come together over drinks and great tunes. Not bad for a club that started in a house in Louisville with just 12 members. The roots of the company go back to Chicago, where Barstow and Fiedler lived and worked together. Fiedler got a record player for Christmas, but it was hard to find good vinyl around town. They started looking for record clubs, but couldn’t find any good ones — and so Vinyl Me, Please was born. Fiedler and his wife came to Colorado, and Barstow soon followed, and they started working in earnest on building the best record club available. “It started with how do we get this to work, and then it was how do we make this tolerable and then how do we make this a little better than tolerable, and now we have the resources to go make this thing really great to use and be a part of,” Barstow said. “Over time it’s a relationship you develop with people. And we don’t refer to any of our people
gets what they want out of the meal. “There’s so many things you can throw in it,” Salazar says. “Everyone in the family customizes it, and the kids feel like they’re making their own soup.”
over. “We hear it all,” Sue says. “I love that pho is becoming the next chicken noodle soup.” Monica Baruth likes to bring her 24-year-old daughter, Lindsay, with her when she visits Pho Real, especially when one of them is under the weather. “It’s like you’re eating your medicine,” Monica says, pointing with her chopsticks at the vibrant vegetables floating atop her bowl of broth. “It’s hydrating as well,” Lindsay says. “I love the freshness of it, it’s hearty and it makes your soul feel good.” That warm, full feeling is what keeps customers coming back, Wong says,
A remedy for what ails you Salazar adds that knowing pho is made with fresh, healthy ingredients makes her feel good about what she’s feeding her family, a selling point not lost on other pho lovers who rely on the dish as a remedy for whatever ails them. Customers tell the Nguyens they rely on a hot bowl of pho to get them over the flu, a cold or the occasional hang-
ASSISTED LIVING UP $ TO
SAVE
as customers, because they’re members of a thing we’re building with them.” The approach is working: By the end of 2016, Vinyl Me, Please had more than 20,000 subscribers in 40 countries, and has been featured on “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” and in Forbes Magazine. The company left its Boulder headquarters, and now is in downtown Denver, where it has room for even more growth. “Very slowly, almost without us noticing at times, it became a very big deal,” Barstow said. “Our mantra is we want to bring people closer to music and artists that matter and find more ways to connect with these artists and albums in a deeper level.” At a time where people primarily get their music from digital means, it’s important to celebrate those who still find the meaning in the tactile. “I think there’s something really meaningful about going, ‘I love this album and I have it, and I have it on my shelf and I have all the art. And I open it up and there’s the liner notes and I see all these photographs,’” Barstow said. “There’s something meaningful in the ritual and setting time aside to show how much you value this art.” Clarke Reader’s column on how music connects to our lives appears every other week. A community editor with Colorado Community Media, he hopes someone will vinyl him, please. Check out his music blog at calmacil20. blogspot.com. And share why you love vinyl at creader@coloradocommunitymedia.com.
healthy or sick, rain or shine or snow. “It’s a comfort food. You get filled up but it’s easy to digest,” he says. “It’s also really comforting to have a hot bowl of soup on a cold morning.” “I check the weather report every night,” he adds with a smile. As they begin to prepare an entrée for Popylisen, before he can order it, Sue and Ally insist they’d be making pho the same way they always have even if they didn’t have a restaurant. It’s comfort food for them too, after all. “We’re eating this every day,” Sue says. Ally agrees. “We’re making it as much for us as we are for them.”
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16 Lakewood Sentinel
March 30, 2017M
KENNEDY
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discovered how little we actually know about how our health care dollars are being spent. This is especially true with hospital care, which makes up 37 percent of our health care spending in Colorado. We’re looking at several pieces of legislation this year to address concerns with pharmaceutical costs, insurance company practices, and the new free-standing emergency departments springing up all over the metro area. But my highest priority this session is getting to the bottom of the cost increases for hospital care. My bill, House Bill 1236, will require hospitals to annually submit their cost reports and audited financial statements to the Department of Health Care Policy and Financing (HCPF, often pronounced “hick-puff ”). HCPF will then produce an annual report breaking down spending on inpatient and outpatient care, personnel and administrative costs, capital construction and equipment expenditures, and uncompensated care (including charity care and bad debt) so that policymakers and citizens have the information they need to understand the cost drivers in our hospital system.
mom fell again
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It’s also not just about premiums. State spending on Medicaid has been growing, too. Part of this growth comes from increased enrollment and utilization, but much of it comes from the same inflationary pressures impacting our premiums. Lieutenant Governor Donna Lynne testified in support of my bill in committee, saying, “This bill is important. It provides the basic financial information in the interest of providing appropriate oversight for such a large portion of taxpayer dollars. Hospitals represent 32 percent of all state Medicaid expenditures – the single largest portion of the program with the single largest budget in the state. These are public dollars and the public should know where and how they are used.” The bill passed the Health, Insurance, and Environment Committee with bipartisan support and will be debated this week on the House floor. After that, it will go to the Senate where it also has bipartisan sponsorship. Increasing transparency is only a first step, but I’m hopeful we can identify some of the major cost drivers, partner with hospitals on future legislation, and pass the savings along to the people of Colorado.
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Lakewood Sentinel 17
THINGS to DO
THEATER
‘Stella and Lou’: 7:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday, March 30-31 at Dairy Center for the Arts, 2590 Walnut St., Boulder, in the Carson Theater. Presented by Vintage Theatre. Call 303-444-7328 or go to www.thedairy.org for tickets and information. ‘The Nance’: 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 6 p.m. Sundays through Sunday, April 2 at The Edge Theater, 1560 Teller St., Lakewood. In the 1930s it was easy to play gay and dangerous to be gay. Call 303-232-0363 or go to www.theedgetheater.com for tickets. Free parking. Adult themes. ‘Hello, Dolly!’: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays through April 9 at the Lakewood Cultural Center, 470 S. Allison Parkway. Presented by the Lakewood Cultural Center and Performance Now Theatre Company. Call 303-987-7845, stop by the box office or go to www.Lakewood.org/LCCPresents for tickets. ‘Stage Kiss’: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturday through April 15 at The Bug Theatre, 3654 Navajo St., Denver. A pay-what-youcan industry night planned for Thursday, April 6. Second show in Equinox Theatre Company’s ninth season. Tickets and information at www.EquinoxTheatreDenver. com. ‘A Skull in Connemara’: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 1 p.m. Sundays through April 30 at Miners Alley Playhouse, 1224 Washington Ave., Golden. Additional shows at 6 p.m. Sunday, April 2, 9, 16 and 23. A raucous and unsettling comedy about death and dirt. Call 303-935-3044 or go to minersalley.com.
MUSIC
Che Malambo: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 11 at the Lakewood Cultural Center, 470 S. Allison Parkway. A dynamic blend of precision footwork, rhythmic stomping, drumming and song, presented by the all-male Argentinian dance company. Tickets available at the box office, by calling 303-987-7845 or online at www.Lakewood.org/LCCPresents.
by a licensed Realtor. Register at http://www.re-workshops.com or call 303-489-9217.
this week’s TOP FIVE ‘Super Duck’: 7 p.m. Friday, March 31, and 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Saturday, April 1, at Colorado ACTS, 111455 W. Interstate 70 Frontage Road North, Wheat Ridge. ‘Super Duck’ is the beloved tale of ‘The Ugly Duckling’ with a super-powered, action-packed twist. Call 303-456-6772 or go to www.coloradoacts.org. World War I Day: Thursday, April 6, at Red Rocks Community College, Lakewood campus. A free community event to commemorate World War I. Activities are free and include Vaudeville shows, a speakeasy, museum exhibits, historical guest speakers, re-enactments of trench warfare, presentations from academic departments, a display of 1920s vehicles, dance lessons, and staff and students in period costumes. Go to www.rrcc. edu/WWI.
Make Something: Ukrainian Eggs: 3:30-4:30 p.m. April 8 at the Arvada Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. Learn the Eastern European art of Pysanka, or Ukrainian Easter egg decoration, using a wax resist (batik) and dye method. Suitable for teens and adults. Registration is required. Call 303-2355275 or go to www.jeffcolibrary.org. Ringers & Singers: 5:45 p.m. Saturday, April 8 at New Apostolic Church, 5290 Vance St., Arvada. This musical worship concert features the Timberline Bell Ringers, the church’s various choirs and its organist. Admission is free; non-perishable food donation to the church’s food pantry appreciated. Evergreen Players presents ‘Enchanted April’: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays through April 15 at Center Stage, 27608 Fireweed Drive, Evergreen. Under the wisteria vines and sunny skies, four women discover their true selves, rediscover romance and forge lasting friendships. Call 303-674-4934 or go to www. evergreenplayers.org.
ART
Kite Making Classes: 4-5 p.m. Friday, March 31; 9 a.m., 10 a.m., 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday, April 1 at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. Assemble, decorate and take home your own sled kite. Then fly your kite at the Arvada Kite Festival from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday, April 2 at the Stenger Soccer Complex. Go to arvada.org/public-classes. Tastebuds Cookbook Group: 1-3 p.m. April 9 (comfort food) at the Arvada Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. Do you love browsing through cookbooks, trying new recipes or learning about kitchen time-savers? This group is for you. Group alternates meeting at the Standley Lake and Arvada libraries. Group members may bring prepared dishes from either of the cookbooks chosen or a favorite of their own. Members who choose to bring food (never required) should bring enough for 4-6 people to sample, bring the recipe to share and make sure the food reflects the topic. The May 28 theme is Let’s Party; theme for June 18 is Italian. Call 303-235-5275 or go to www.jeffcolibrary.org. ‘Damage’ Art Exhibit: open through February 2018 at Red Rocks Community College,
after a suicide. Participants will have the opportunity to discuss how suicide has impacted their own lives. Contact Polly Wegner at 303-424-4454 or pwegner@peacelutheran.net. Lakewood, in the mezzanine near the library. Denver artist Sharon Brown’s exhibit features psychologically charged paintings created mostly from photographs. Go to www.rrcc.edu.
EVENTS
Fox Hollow Golf Season: The Men’s Club plans its spring tee off party at 5 p.m. March 31 at Den Restaurant, 13410 W. Morrison Road, Lakewood. A new member orientation is at 8 a.m. April 1 at the Den. Fox Hollow based CGA members are welcome to play in the club’s first 2017 tournament scheduled April 15. Go to fhmgc. org. Arvada After Dark: April Fool’s Prank War: 6-8 p.m. Saturday, April 1 at the Arvada Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. Get your prankster on and bring your best tricks to help your team win the Prank War. For ages 11-18. Call 303-235-JCPL (5275) or visit www.jeffcolibrary.org to register. Coping After a Suicide: noon and 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 4 at Lifetree Café, 5675 Field St., Arvada. “Living After a Suicide: Finding Hope After Loved Ones Take Their Own Lives” explores the aftermath that friends and family experience
Mile High Dowsers: 7-9:30 p.m. Thursday, April 6, at the Clements Community Center, 1580 Yarrow St., Lakewood. Learn about dowsing with the Mile High Dowsers. This month, Jennifer Newton leads beginning dowsing, and Bo Hanson leads practical dowsing. Hank Innerfeld shares Perspectives for 2017. Go to www. milehighdowsers.org.
Exploring Black Anger: 9:30 a.m. Saturday, April 15 at Westland Meridian, 10695 W. 17th Ave., Lakewood. The non-fiction book club of the League of Women Voters of Jefferson County will read and discuss “Between the World and Me,” by Ta-Nehisi Coates. Please have book read before meeting. The group also will meet at 1 p.m. Wednesday, April 19 at a site in Littleton. Call Lynne at 303-9855128 for information and location. Wine, Cheese Fundraiser: 6-9 p.m. Saturday, April 22 at The Club at Rolling Hills, 15707 W. 26th Ave., Golden. Guest speaker is Jonah Werner. Business casual attire. Adults only. Learn how Young Life impacts the lives of kids in central Jefferson County. All proceeds benefit Young Life in Golden, Wheat Ridge, Lakewood and the surrounding areas. RSVP by March 31 at www.centraljeffco. younglife.org. Food Pantry: open from 9-11 a.m. Wednesdays at New Apostolic Church, 5290 Vance St., Arvada, rear entrance (across the street from Beau Jo’s restaurant). Contact Gertrude at 303-902-6794. Fun with Animals: 10-10:45 a.m. Wednesdays in March at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. For ages 3-6 years. Learn about coyotes, beavers, bugs and fish. Use books, stories, crafts and games. Sign up at arvada.org/public-classes.
Round Table Issues Breakfast: 7 a.m. Friday, April 7, at American Legion Wilmore-Richter Post 161, 6230 W. 60th Ave., Arvada. Learn about local projects and events. Open to the public. Contact 303-424-0324 for cost and other information. Easter Breakfast, Egg Hunt: 9 a.m. April 8 at the Apex Community Recreation Center, 13150 W. 72nd Ave., Arvada. All-you-can-eat pancakes, followed by visits with the Easter Bunny, games and rides on the Easter Bunny Express. Easter Egg Hunt begins at 11 a.m. at the Stenger Soccer Complex. Registration required; go to apexprd.org. Call 303-424-2739. 20 Steps to Selling Your Own Home: 6:30-7:45 p.m. Monday, April 10 at America’s Wellness Clinic, 441 Wadsworth Blvd., Unit 101, Lakewood. Free workshop led
Editor’s note: Calendar submissions must be received by noon Thursday for publication the following week. Send listings to calendar@coloradocommunitymedia.com. No attachments, please. Listings are free and run on a space-available basis.
18 Lakewood Sentinel
March 30, 2017M
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Misc. Notices
The Westminster Police Department investigated the accident; however, they were unable to identify/locate any independent witnesses to the accident.
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LOCAL
7March 30, 2017
SPORTS
Freshman leads Green Mountain in victory over Dakota Ridge BY DENNIS PLEUSS JEFFCO PUBLIC SCHOOL
LAKEWOOD — What a different a year makes. Last season, Green Mountain’s girls soccer team finished with a 2-12 record and scored just 15 goals the whole season. Ten of those goals came in a single game. A year later, the Rams have already surpassed their win total from 2016. One of Green Mountain’s latest wins came against Class 5A Jeffco’s Dakota Ridge on March 20, at Lakewood Memorial Field. Green Mountain (3-1 record) took a 2-0 lead early in the second half and was able to withstand some good pressure from the Eagles (2-3) in the final 20 minutes to eventually take a 3-1 victory. “We didn’t play well, but we found a way to score a couple,” Green Mountain coach John Barone said. “It’s a big difference from last year when we couldn’t find a way to get a goal even when we played better than this.” Freshman Addisyn Hyrup has been a scoring machine for the Rams. Hyrup had six goals through Green Mountain’s first three games. The forward scored in the 6th and 49th minutes against Dakota Ridge to give the Rams a 2-0 lead. Hyrup’s first goal came off a shot that looked improbable when she fired it as a pair of Dakota Ridge defenders closed in. The hard and high shot hit the inside of the far post and ricocheted over the goal line. “Six goals in three game,” Barone said of the Rams’ scoring machine. “We are lucky to have her. She is a great player. She has a great shot and finds ways to get it off.” The freshman admits she didn’t expect to have this type of early impact for the Rams. “I hadn’t practiced with the team
Green Mountain senior Danielle Lord (19) attempts to settle a ball during the Rams’ 3-1 victory over Dakota Ridge on March 20 at Lakewood Memorial Field. The Rams entered spring break with a 3-1 record. DENNIS PLEUSS/JEFFCO PUBLIC SCHOOLS for a while because of club training,” said Hyrup, who gets the chance to play with her older sister Jadyn. “I’m surprised that I’m scoring a lot for the team.” Dakota Ridge trimmed the lead to 2-1 with a goal by senior Hannah Matson in the 63rd minute. Matson’s shot sailed over the head of Green Mountain goalie Emma Lonergan and into the back of the net to make it a 1-goal game. The Eagles had a couple of chances to even the game at 2-2. However, Dakota Ridge failed to get the equalizer. Green Mountain junior Sydney Weathers sealed the victory with a goal with 9 seconds remaining. “This is a huge step for our team,” Green Mountain senior captain Dani-
elle Lord said. “We had quite a young team last year. Now that we are a year old we’ve developed into better and stronger players. I hope we continue to be successful moving forward.” Barone gave a lot of credit to the Rams’ backline of Elli Berger, Anistin Pazink, Jadyn Hyrup and Lord for helping Green Mountain surrender just a single goal in the second half. “The whole second half was in our own end, but the defense played great,” Barone said. “Our back four are great. They are going to keep us in a lot of games.” Dennis Pleuss is a communications specialist for Jeffco Public Schools with a focus on athletics and activities. For more Jeffco coverage, go online at CHSAANow.com/Jeffco.
Benton, coaches honored at Hall of Fame dinner BY SCOTT STOCKER SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
Colorado Community Media’s own Jim Benton was honored with the Media Award by the Colorado High School Coaches Association March 25 at its Hall of Fame induction dinner in Aurora. Benton joined five coaches in receiving honors at the dinner. Benton is a Denver native who graduated from Lincoln High School and the University of Denver. He worked for 41 years as a sportswriter
for the Rocky Mountain News covering all levels of sports — club, high school, college and pro. Since 2012, he has been covering sports, with a focus on high schools, in the metro area for Colorado Community Media. Also inducted wereformer Chaparral High School volleyball coachT.R. Ellis, former Fowler basketball coach Greg Fruhwirth, former North Park coach and althletic director Randy Hodgson, former Overland football coachTony Manfredi and Colorado Academy track and cross country coach Alan Versaw.
Ellis was the lone female coach inducted by the CHSCA this year. She began her coaching career in Colorado at Olathe High School in 1982 and in 1990 moved over to the Douglas County School District for the remainder of her career. In 1997, Chaparral High opened and Ellis became the school’s first volleyball coach. In 2010 and 2011, the Wolverines were state champions and she led them to a 226-120 record. She was the All-Colorado Volleyball Coach of the Year and Class 5A Volleyball Coach of the Year in 2011.
For crew chiefs, it’s life in the fast lane
C
ole Pearn and Chris Gayle feel right at home in Golden, but neither is home very often. Both are crew chiefs for Denver’s NASCAR Furniture Row Racing teams. Pearn is in his secOVERTIME ond season as crew chief for the No. 78 team and driver Martin Truex Jr. Truex, who won March 12 in Las Vegas, is third in driver points and has a series-leading eight playoff bonus points following the March 26 Auto Club 400 in Jim Benton Fontana, California. Gayle is the crew chief for the No. 77 and rookie driver Erik Jones, for the second FRR team. Jones is 15th in the point standings. Pearn and his family moved from North Carolina to the Denver area before the start of the 2016 season. They are embracing the Colorado lifestyle, but it’s not always easy. “It’s hard being away,” said Pearn, a native of London, Ontario, who plays hockey in an area league and skis during the offseason. “I’ve got two young kids (Callum and Freya), so it’s hard on my wife (Carrie)… We just do the best we can with it, but it’s a challenge.” On most NASCAR weeks when races are on Sundays, the FRR teams return to Denver after the race Sunday evening and depart on Thursday for the next track Gayle, along with his wife Brandi and 2-year-old daughter Cora, moved to Golden from North Carolina on Nov. 30, 2016. “I moved out (here) and three days later it dumped 9 inches of snow and it was like 4 degrees for a high for two straight days,” Gayle. “I was like, ‘whew, this is more than I expected,’ but then three days later it was 50 degrees and all the snow was gone. It’s nice and sunny and I like that.” American football in Italy Football is the most popular sport in Italy, but in America that sport is called soccer. Castle View senior Riese Lutz is part of the American Football Worldwide USA Elite 19U team that will tour Italy April 15-22 and will play a game of American football on April 22 in Milan against the Italian National U19 team. The Italian team gets together a couple times a year to train and compete against other national European American football teams. The USA team will help refine the American form of football for Italy’s team. Lutz was all-conference player in the Mount Wilson league last season. The cornerback/free safety made 26 solo tackles, had five interceptions and blocked two field goals.
20 Lakewood Sentinel
March 30, 2017M
Inaugural Cans Around the Campus nets more than 5,000 pounds BY DENNIS PLEUSS JEFFCO PUBLIC SCHOOLS
GOLDEN — The first joint food drive — Cans Around the Campus — put on by Jeffco Public Schools was a great success. More than 5,000 pounds of can food was collected during the week-long event by nine Jeffco high schools: Arvada, Chatfield, Columbine, Dakota Ridge, Golden, Jefferson, Pomona, Ralston Valley and Wheat Ridge. All food was donated to the Arvada Community Food Bank and The Action Center in Jeffco. “What a fantastic first year. I honestly didn’t know what to expect,” said Jon McVey, organizer of the event. “I would have been happy with a just a couple of schools involved and maybe we collect 50 pounds of food.” Pomona raised the most food with a total of 1,852 pounds (1.22 pounds per student). Wheat Ridge finished second with 1,325 pounds (1.1 pounds per student) and Golden was third with 675 pounds. “We had an idea of everyone just bring what they can, but then some of my students reached out to some elementary and middle schools,” Pomona social studies teacher Lindsay Secrest said. “It became a really big thing. Considering we did that all in one week, what would be do in a month?” Teachers at Pomona actually raised $200 to donate that to the class that brought in the most food. The students from Secrest’s world history class brought in the most food. The class then donated the money between Pomona’s Lunch
Fund, Pomona’s Wish Week and the Foothills Animal Shelter. The Lunch Fund, started by Pomona’s former school resource officer Jim Glasmann that recently passed away, is available for any student at Pomona that is in need of a lunch. “It shows how empathetic the kids are,” Secrest said. “I think it hit home for a lot of kids. A lot of our population struggles with food scarcity issues.” Secrest is also the chair of Pomona’s Diversity Club that spearheaded the food drive. The Diversity Club was presented with a plaque by McVey on March 20 honoring Pomona for donating the most food during the inaugural Cans Around the Campus event. “It is always important to help others as much as you can,” Pomona senior and Diversity Club member Jocelyn Perez said. “Hopefully it will grow. Hopefully more people will get involved and it will just get better from here on out.” McVey hopes this is just a stepping off point Jeffco Public Schools’ Cans Around the Campus event moving forward. “I have a big vision for the future of this event and that is having every Jeffco school involved and collecting over 500,000 pounds of food,” McVey said. “We teach our students to dream big, so why not?” Dennis Pleuss is a communications specialist for Jeffco Public Schools with a focus on athletics and activities.
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