JUNE 15, 2017
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A few handy tips can help keep summer activities safe P16 FACES OF THE HOMELESS: Struggle for housing takes many forms P8
HELP FOR MILLS:
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HALL OF FAME: GMHS coach among 2017 inductess to the Jeffco Hall of Fame P27
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VOLUME 93 | ISSUE 44
2 Lakewood Sentinel
June 15, 2017J
MY NAME IS
NATALIE SCHREFFLER
Patient Navigator at Metro Community Provider Network in Wheat Ridge
About me I am from Wyoming, went to undergrad at Northern Arizona University where I studied French and International Affairs. I then worked with refugees in Seattle before going to Penn State for grad school, where I also studied international affairs. I have been in Denver for a year. I hope to continue working with refugees and immigrants in Denver and am very fortunate to have a job that allows me to serve them every day. Building a career Because I have a passion for refugees and immigrants, I had been trying to get a job at one of the resettlement agencies in Denver since moving here. However, it became clear that finding employment in that specific of a field is not easy, and the new administration made me uneasy about seeking a career in a field that might not exist in five years. I decided to look for jobs in the health care field since I knew I could
LAKEWOOD NEWS IN A HURRY still combine my passion for immigrants and refugees with a field that still serves that population, and an industry that will not be in danger of going away any time soon. Working with immigrant families The most striking thing I’ve learned about refugees and immigrants is that regardless of a person’s status or documentation, he or she still has the same health care needs as documented citizens, and we are very fortunate to have grant funding for certain procedures that undocumented patients would not have access to otherwise. A person’s country of origin is irrelevant to his or her anxiety around medical problems, his or her need for health care, and the need for him or her to understand the health care system. I wish more people knew that these families are not trying to hurt American society by being here, and when we provide them with appropriate health care, they add exponential value to our society. My favorite part of my job My favorite part of my job is being able to tell uninsured patients that we can cover certain screenings (like mammograms) for them through grant dollars. I can see the anxiety drop from their face as they realize that they have one less financial burden to worry about. I have learned that there are ways to serve uninsured patients and that despite the current administration’s
of te schedule For a comple to go , ts er nc all Summer Co enter.com heC SummerAtT
Natalie Schreffler is a Patient Navigator at Metro Community Provider Network location in Jeffco Family Health Services Center in Wheat Ridge who is passionate about helping immigrants and refuge get the needed health care services. COURTESY PHOTO
efforts to dismantle the current health insurance marketplace, the health care community can still choose to fight for health care for uninsured or underinsured patients and make sure people are not forgotten. If you have suggestions for My Name Is ..., contact Clarke Reader at creader@coloradocommunitymedia. com.
Carmody Park opens June 19 The new playground and improvements at Carmody Park, 2200 S. Kipling St., are scheduled to open on June 19, when the fences will be removed and the new outdoor restroom facility will be open for use. Lakewood’s first universal playground is designed so that residents of all ages and abilities can play together. The Carmody Park Outdoor Fitness Zone, in partnership with Centura Health, provides an opportunity for visitors age 14 and older to get a free, full body workout while in close proximity and view of the playground. The year-round, heated restroom facility includes family restrooms with adult-sized changing tables to provide visitors of all abilities and their caregivers convenient bathroom access. Currently, the new turf is establishing its root system, and the public is asked to stay behind ropes and obey the signs to keep off of the new grass. A park dedication and community celebration will occur later in the summer. For more information, visit Lakewood.org/Projects. Community members can also contact Allison Scheck at 303-987-7872 or allsch@lakewood. org with questions. Pettersen bills signed into law Rep. Brittany Pettersen (D-Lakewood) had two education bills signed SEE BRIEFS, P3
Lakewood Sentinel 3
7June 15, 2017
BRIEFS FROM PAGE 2
into law by Gov. John Hickenlooper — one to replace ninth grade assessments with the PSAT and one to add a focus on early childhood education into school performance plans. The first, HB17-1181directs the State Board of Education to move away from the state English language arts and math assessments administered by the multi-state Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) currently given to Colorado ninth-graders. The bill instead directs the department to adopt a
new ninth-grade assessment that is in line with a suite of high school assessments currently offered in later grades. The second bill, SB17-103, promotes an emphasis on improving early childhood education in the Colorado school system by adding early childhood learning strategies to the technical assistance provided to improvement and turnaround schools and adding a needs assessment for early childhood learning in school performance plans. A bill giving women access to 12 months of contraception at one spearheaded by Pettersen was also signed into law. HB17-1186, also sponsored by Rep. Lois Landgraf (R-Fountain) allows
women to take home a full year supply of contraception at one time following an initial three-month trial of any new prescription. Through the eyes of the child 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 Paul at Lakewood.org/YouthView. Some of their ideas will be shown on the page and posted to Facebook. Children should tell the mayor: What challenges do they face in Lakewood? What do they like the most? What don’t they like?
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Beware the Less Obvious Costs of Ownership When You Buy a Home When you buy a home, your lender will I have observed substantial variation among consider several obvious costs of your pur- insurers. Use an independent insurance chase when approving your loan, but there broker to get competitive quotes from differare other possible costs which ent carriers, or, if you call “capthe lender doesn’t include, but REAL ESTATE tive” insurance agents, call three TODAY which you should keep in mind. or more different companies. Now let’s look at other, less The costs your lender considobvious costs of ownership. ers are your projected mortgage payments (consisting of princiWhat about energy costs? pal, interest, property taxes and These can vary substantially from insurance, referred to as “PITA”) one house to another. Find out plus HOA fees, if any. what the current owner is paying Let look at those costs first. for gas and electricity each Regarding property taxes, month, and factor in whether the don’t make the all-too-common number of members in your mistake of assuming that uninhousehold will vary from the By JIM SMITH, corporated areas have lower seller’s when projecting what your ® Realtor property taxes than incorporated energy costs will be. cities. The City of Golden, for example, has When you’re under contract, you’ll be hirthe lowest mill levy I’ve found anywhere in ing a home inspector to evaluate that home. Jefferson County, and the newer subdivi- Make sure it’s an inspector who is qualified sions, such as Candelas, have mill levies to assess the home’s energy efficiency as that can be twice that of Golden. part of his inspection (at no extra cost). We Regarding insurance costs, shop around! can recommend one to our clients. Your inspector can also assess how much Does Your House Need Painting? deferred maintenance there is on the house “Painters” is just one of 52 categories you buy. Get his advice on how much you of vendors on our smartphone app, which might need to budget in coming years for you can download free from the App Store maintenance and repairs, which can vary or Google Play. None have paid to be on greatly from one home to another. Water consumption is another serious that app. All have been vetted by us or our clients or they wouldn’t be listed. Rita and cost to consider, especially if the home has a I just repainted our house, using Honest lot of Kentucky bluegrass, which requires lots of water. Find out what your annual water bill Painting, LLC, and we is likely to be. couldn’t be happier. Here’s a hidden expense you may not Find them on our app, have thought of — health expenses due to and tell them we recbad indoor air quality. You recognize the ommend them heartily! smell of new carpeting, right? It’s not as in-
nocuous as “new car smell”! What you’re probably smelling are VOC’s — volatile organic compounds. Some paints also contain VOC’s, and they’re less expensive than paints with low VOC’s. Ask your inspector to assess how many VOC’s might be in the air that could literally make you sick. Mold is another sickness-causing consideration. Your inspector will tell you whether a separate mold inspection is called for. He or we can recommend mold inspectors. Older homes have clay sewer lines that are prone to root intrusion and collapse, which is the homeowner’s responsibility. A $100 sewer scope could identify a 4-figure repair that you might be able to get the seller to absorb, saving you that expense later.
Looking for ‘Green’ Homes
Do you have a home that’s a model of sustainable design and execution? The Metro Denver Green Homes Tour steering committee is seeking homes across Jefferson County to feature in this year’s tour, which is scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 7th, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. If your home belongs on this tour, let me know (my contact info is below), and I’ll share it with my fellow steering committee members and arrange a site visit. Thanks!
Arvada 2-Story Just Listed by Kristi Brunel This home, in the peaceful Lamar Heights neighbor$399,000 hood east of the Arvada Center for the Arts & Huth manities, is located at 6885 W 68 Avenue. It has four bedrooms and two bathrooms upstairs, plus a half bath on the main floor and rough plumbing for a full bath in the unfinished basement. It has radiant floor heating with a tankless water heater. Due to the recent hail storm, the home is scheduled for a new roof, new exterior paint, new screens and replacement of broken windows. See more details and view the narrated video tour at www.ArvadaHome.xyz, or call Kristi Brunel at 303 525-2520 for a private showing.
Belmar Townhome Listed by Andrew Lesko
Enjoy the urban lifestyle while living in the quiet, garden community of Belmar Commons. Belmar Park, the Belmar Library and Lakewood Heritage Center are just steps away. Located at 686 S. Yarrow Street, listings in this community are rare and sell quickly. Major upgrades and updating enhance the spacious, light and $445,000 open floor plan. This townhome features 2 master suites, 2½ baths plus a detached studio off the private This is a charming ranch home with a circular drive and patio. The finished basement area makes for a perfect game room. See video tour and open $500,000 lovely landscaped yards. The address is 12745 W. house schedule at www.BelmarTownhome.info. Call Andrew, 720-550-2064, for a showing. 15th Place. The exterior is brick and wood with a brand new hail resistant roof, newer windows and a Jim Smith large patio and deck. There are 5 bedrooms (2 of Broker/Owner which are non-conforming) and 3½ bathrooms. The Golden Real Estate, Inc. large foyer is bright and spacious. There’s a moss rock CALL OR TEXT: 303-525-1851 fireplace surround, with a wood-burning insert, plus a MAIN: 303-302-3636 nice sized living room and dining area. The basement has two non-conforming bedrooms with EMAIL: Jim@GoldenRealEstate.com a three-quarter bathroom. It also has a very large flex room with a half bath. The 2-car tan17695 South Golden Road, Golden 80401 dem garage is in the walk-out basement, accessed from Youngfield St. View a narrated video Honored as Metro Denver’s #3 Brokerage of its size (6 to tour, including drone footage, at www.ApplewoodHome.info. Or call David 303-908-4835. All Agents Are EcoBrokers 10 agents) for the number of closed transactions in 2016
Applewood Ranch Listed by David Dlugasch
4 Lakewood Sentinel
June 15, 2017J
Job fair helps those displaced by Colorado Mills closing BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Like many high school students, Lakewood graduate Robert Reese was looking forward to saving some money with a summer job before starting college in the fall. But his plans changed on May 8, when a hailstorm pummeled the West Jefferson County area, causing millions of dollars of damage to vehicles, homes and businesses. One of the hardest-hit places was Colorado Mills, the 1.1 million-square-foot shopping mall in Lakewood that sustained so much damage from hail and flooding that it remains closed until about November while repairs are completed. And since Reese worked at the American Eagle in the mall, that means he is out of a job. “I have heard from managers at our store, who said they’ll keep us informed on our jobs as November gets closer,” he said. “But especially since I’m going into college, I’d like to make some money and get some work experience.” To help Reese and the
WHERE TO LOOK FOR WORK Colorado Mills job seekers can contact the American Job Center at 303-271-4700, option No. 1, or email americanjobcenter@jeffco. us for valuable information about job search services and job training assistance. Also, visit http:// jeffco.us/american-job-center/.
Mary Ann Mathieu, recruiter with Sodexo Dining Services, speaks to Colorado Mills employees looking for work while they wait for the mall to reopen during a job fair on June 7. CLARKE READER other 3,000 mall employees who are without a job for the foreseeable future, the Jefferson County’s American Job organized a job fair for mall workers on June 7 at the Denver Marriot West. “Putting together job fairs is something we do on a regular basis, and so in the event of a disaster like the one at the Mills, we use our experience to help those in need find new jobs,” explained Tim Galloway, business service supervisor with the job center. “We had a lot of businesses reach out to us to participate, and worked with several organizations to get this together.”
Visitors to the event, which was co-hosted by the rapidresponse team of the state Labor Department, were able to peruse booths run by 24 area employers such as Home Depot, Lyft, Subway, Kohl’s, Natural Grocers and the City of Golden. There were also resources like Jefferson County Human Services and The Action Center if workers needed them. “Our headquarters are just a little down the road from Colorado Mills, so we know how damaging the storm was,” said Laura Mitchell, technology recruiter with FirstBank. “We shifted
For information on filing for unemployment, visit colorado.gov/cdle/ unemployment. some of our employees in branches near the Mills, so if mall workers want to stay in the area, we have openings nearby.” The Target at the mall reopened just a few days after the storm and was eagerly advertising its available positions, as well as openings at other locations. “We have a great mixture of full- and part-time positions for those looking for a job,” said Sara Wahlers, human resources business partner with Target. “This event is a great opportunity to grow connections with these job seekers.” Variety was the key to the fair, and in addition to retailrelated jobs, seekers could also meet with administra-
tive, seasonal and service jobs. “We do dining and quality life services for places like hospitals,” said Mary Ann Mathieu, recruiter with Sodexo Dining Services. “We’re here because we want to help people in the community remain independent and have a high quality of life.” The City of Lakewood also had a large number of seasonal jobs, ranging from bus driver to camp counselors, for people looking for just a summer job. One of the fair’s top goals was to be both convenient and useful especially with all the online resources available. “I’ve been mostly looking online, so I think it’s really good that they’ve got so many businesses here,” said Zach Sammon, who worked at the Vans location in Colorado Mills. “For me, I’d like to stay with a job in this area.” Mills employees of all ages and work experience turned out for the event. Galloway said the Job Center will continue looking for other ways to help them. “There are a lot of great connections here,” Reese said. “And I got an interview, too.”
Lakewood Sentinel 5
7June 15, 2017
Jeffco community recognized for devotion to diversity Terry Elliot earns Legacy Award STAFF REPORT
Twelve individuals and groups were awarded a Wayne Carle Award for Outstanding Contributions to Diversity and Inclusion in Jefferson County Public Schools and recognized at the Board of Education meeting Thursday, June 1. The award’s namesake, Dr. Wayne Carle is a former Superintendent of Jeffco Schools. The awardees Two administrator awards were given to Oberon Middle School Principal Tara Peña and Free Horizon Montessori Principal Kresta Vuolo. According to the award description, Peña believes that diversity builds a stronger community, and has worked to encourage minorities to pursue careers in education “She volunteers her time to help recruit minority teachers and shares ideas on how to encourage professional development and the advancement of minority staff members,” states her awards description. Vuolo was described as being a champion in fighting for the rights of Free Horizon’s LGBTQ community and has made the school a “safe place for all.” The school has made efforts to have gender inclusive bathrooms and safe space stickers on doors to let students know that staff are supportive across the spectrum of sexual orientation. Lindsay Secrest, teacher at Pomona
The 2017 Wayne Carle Award recipients were recognized at the June 1 Board of Education meeting. The Wayne Carle Awards are sponsored by the Jeffco Public Schools Student Engagement Office. COURTESY PHOTO High School and Ann Kelly, K-6 ESL teacher at Shelton Elementary were awarded in the Licensed staff category. Secrest is the brains behind Pomona’s annual Diversitypalooza celebration hosted every spring. It is a celebration of culture, talent, language, song, dance, art, cuisine, and individuality. Students eat food from different cultures; hear positive messages about individuality, goals, and dreams; watch talented performers on stage, and have the opportunity to have fun in a social environment that promotes unity. Kelly is known for holding Diversity Teas monthly for international and/ or non-English speaking families to get to know one another, share how they can support their child’s education, and learn about the many resources available to them. In addition, with the closing of Pleasant View and half of the families coming to Shelton, she held a special tea for the Pleasant View families this year to make them feel
welcome and share the many opportunities available to them at Shelton. Erika Williams, ESL tutor at Deane Elementary was also awarded for her welcoming spirit of all families; along with Dylan Scholinski, community resource liaison at Jefferson County Open School. Scholinski is the founder of Sent(a) Mental Studios, the HAVEN Youth Project, and the Sent(a)Mental Project: A Memorial to Suicide and also teaches classes that address a reclaiming of creative voice, self empowerment, identifying /working through personal obstacles, while searching for our most authentic selves. Scholinski is an “out” transgender employee and teacher and provides support to staff and students within and beyond school.
The PTAs at Mitchell Elementary and South Lakewood and Kendrick Lakes Elementary Schools were also recognized for cultural and diversity events organized at their respective schools. In addition Tanya Two Two, parent leader at South Lakewood Elementary was given an individual award for the weekly time she puts into the Title VI Indian Education after-school program. She was described as an aunt, “ because she does far more than just show up. She accepts students for who they are and what they bring to the program at that exact moment. She shares her presence with our Indigenous youth.” Lastly, The Wayne Carle Legacy Award was given to Terry Elliott, acting superintendent of Jeffco Public Schools. “Elliott was described as being “a supporter of diversity and inclusion and a catalyst for equity in Jeffco schools over the course of his career as a teacher, principal, Chief School Effectiveness Officer, and Acting Superintendent.” Award presenters said Elliott’s public leadership in the area of diversity and inclusion was highlighted as the district restructured Alameda 7-12, Jefferson 7-12, Stein Elementary, Emory Elementary, and Sobesky Academy when he ensuring that meetings honored languages spoken in the community even to the point of having separate meetings for Spanish speaking families and community members.
Jeffco welcomes Superintendent Jason Glass BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Parents, teachers, local government, and members of the community gathered June 8 at Lakewood High School to greet Jefferson County Schools’ new superintendent Dr. Jason Glass. “I was so grateful to be in a room with such a positive feeling,” said parent and Golden resident Kelly Johnson, who said she attended the event because after listening to Glass speak at the Board of Education meeting when he was voted in, she wanted to hear more from him. “Jeffco is a challenging place, and we have to come together again in the best interests of students,” Johnson said. “I think (Glass) is capable of knitting us tother to work for the best of the kids.” For Glass, the welcome reception was a way to connect with the community before officially taking over the position on July 1. “Right off the bat I wanted to make a connection with the community,” Glass said, while taking a break from talking one-on-one with community members. “Getting to come here and meet so
many people from Jeffco that are excited about the schools and welcoming to us has just been tremendous.” Jeffco Board of Education member Amanda Stevens said having a meet and greet for Jeffco’s new leader is extremely important in her eyes. “These are community members, parents like myself and people who are elected officials in our cities — who make decisions that impact our families and kids,” Stevens said. “So, I’m really excited for (Glass) to have a chance to meet as many people as possible, even before his day-one on July 1. Mostly because I want him to get excited about the community he’s working with and I want the community to get excited about him.” Glass said that the community members he has met are excited about where the schools are headed and wish Jeffco to be successful. “That’s a great starting point for us,” Glass said. “I want to keep building relationships, connections and collaborations so that when it comes time for us to work on really hard things, we have those established relationships to build on.”
June 24 & 25 July 1-2 & 8-9 Colorado Railroad Museum Golden, Colorado
Visit ticketweb.com/dowt or call 866-468-7630
6 Lakewood Sentinel
June 15, 2017J
Police increase presence near Lakewood mosque after threats Islamic center vows to continue being a welcoming place for community BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Leaders and members of Lakewood’s Rocky Mountain Islamic Center are taking a series of threatening and offensive phone calls received early on June 5 and 6 very seriously, especially in light of an increase in anti-Muslim bigotry and attacks nationwide. The center received multiple calls from an unnamed man who used “col-
orful language” and said the mosque and its members would “pay for Manchester and London,” said Ayman Hama, Iman of the center. “He started making threatening remarks, and that was the tipping point,” he said. “We filed a report with the Lakewood Police, and have hired security for our facility.” In response to the calls and threats, Lakewood Police will spend more time patrolling the mosque’s area, which is located at 8054 W. Jewell Ave., said Steve Davis, public information officer with Lakewood’s police department. “Our officers have leads they’re following up on, and we’re working with other jurisdictions where this individual may also have called,” Davis said. “This is the kind of thing we do for any and all properties, no matter the faith,
when they receive threats or may be in danger.” Data from the FBI showed a 67 percent increase in hate crimes against Muslims in the United States in 2015, the latest year statistics are available. A total of 257 incidents were called in to police — more may have gone unreported. Islamic leaders, officials in law enforcement and anti-discrimination groups all point out that retaliatory attacks against mosques and Muslim individuals tend to spike after terrorist attacks like the recent ones in Manchester and London and last year’s shooting in Orlando, Florida. They say there has been a steady increase in these incidents since 2014. But this kind of behavior in Lakewood is rare, Davis said. “I can’t re-
member the last time anything like this occurred in Lakewood.” The most concerning thing for Hama was the fact the person called multiple times and even sent texts. “He seemed very determined,” Hama said. “We know it takes only one person to do a lot of damage.” The Islamic Center has long made a priority of hosting community outreach events to neighbors and people who want to learn more about a faith that Hama said is often misrepresented. Despite the threats, he said the center will continue this outreach. “Overall, the support we get from neighbors and our community, whether online, over the phone or in person, is so overwhelmingly positive,” he said. “We know this individual doesn’t represent the greater community at all.”
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June 15, 2017J
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David Russell, 32, has been homeless for years, after a tour of the Middle East with the Red Cross. He recently took up residence in the West Colfax area after spending time in Thornton. CLARKE READER
Amy Carrillo sits in a room in the Jefferson County Department of Human Services. Carrillo, 34, is a single mother who, in recent years, has struggled to find safe and stable housing after losing her job as a nurse due to a back injury. CHRISTY STREADMAN
Tom and his children recently moved into Decatur Place, a transitional housing apartment building for those experiencing homelessness. SHANNA FORTIER
Many faces, many facets to homelessness Editor’s Note: This is the third story in an occasional series by Colorado Community Media about why homelessness is growing in Jeffco, how homelessness is affecting communities, the faces of the homeless in our communities, and what churches, social workers, law enforcement and community leaders are doing to help find solutions.
I
n speaking with church groups, social workers and homelessness experts, a common refrain is that no one solution exists
to homelessness, because there is no one cause. Each person facing homelessness often deals with multiple problems. Broken into broad categories, it is easy to see the dramatically different challenges these individuals may face. There are the chronic
David Russell: Facing depression and drugs
homeless, the newly homeless, the veterans, runaways, victims of human trafficking, the disabled, struggling immigrants and those fleeing abuse. Even those in the same category can have quite different obstacles to finding more secure housing and a better life. In this issue, three people dealing with homelessness share their stories. One is chronically homeless and dealing with drug use and mental health issues. The other two are parents, struggling to find safe and steady housing for their
Amy Carrillo: On the fringes
BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
BY CHRISTY STEADMAN CSTEADMAN@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Even when sitting down, there’s a kind of kinetic energy that animates David Russell. He occasionally rocks back and forth in his chair. His hands and fingers flutter when he gets particularly intense talking about his past or day-to-day experiences. “I’m from the Lakewood, Wheat Ridge area,” he said, as he sits in the Mean Streets Ministry Café in Lakewood. “I know I’m going to die an addict.” Russell, 32, is one of the many chronically homeless people in Denver and its surrounding cities. He’s spent years on the streets, most recently in the West Colfax area, occasionally in one of the motels, often in the alleys, after staying, for several months, in what he calls a “bush in Thornton.” “I’m one of those people everyone has come across,” he said. “My normal day is just trying to make money and looking for company.” Russell describes his younger self as a “geek who played guitar” and who came from a family of veter-
For the past couple of months, Amy Carrillo and her two teenage children have been living in a single room in a boardinghouse in Westminster, where they share a kitchen and bathroom with other residents. Carrillo was out of work for years, but in May, because of a referral from a former colleague in the nursing field, she landed a full-time job with a locally owned cleaning company. “My boss is flexible and understanding. Even with all that I have going on, she took a chance on me,” Carrillo said. “It’s hard work, but at the end of the day, I feel accomplished.” But Carrillo, 34, still struggles to pay the $800 monthly rent for the room. And she also is her children’s sole provider for food and other teenage expenses. Carrillo wakes up before 6 a.m. each day so that she and the kids can be on their way to school and
SEE DAVID, P9
SEE AMY, P9
children, while trying to get back on their feet financially — one displaced by the economy and the other by injury. There are countless other stories to tell. On a winter night last year, volunteers counted 5,467 homeless people across Denver and the surrounding six counties, including Jefferson County. In the coming weeks, we will be reporting on some of those other stories, as well as looking at some of the more pervasive causes of homelessness in our community.
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Tom: Struggling father BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
The only light in the dark apartment filters in through the windows. The living room, where two elementary-age children sit on a crib mattress on the floor, has little other furniture. But it’s a home. After almost a year of living in hotel rooms and doubling up with family, Tom, a 28-year-old single father of four children, was accepted into transitional a housing at Decatur Place Apartments in Denver’s Sun m R Valley neighborhood. The older two children, ages 10 and 8, attend elementary school in Jefferson County and the younger d two, ages 3 and 1, go to the childcare at Decatur Place. t w The majority of families at Decatur Place are homeless and in dire need of basic living needs such “ w as food, clothing, infant care, furniture and other I household staples. Tom, who asked that his real name not be used to t p protect his family’s privacy, said living at Decatur t SEE TOM, P9
Lakewood Sentinel 9
7June 15, 2017
TOM
A crib mattress serves as the sitting area for the kids at Tom’s transitional housing apartment.
FROM PAGE 8
Place is allowing him to move forward with his life. The single dad found himself experiencing homeless when the company he was working for did not get its contract renewed with Comcast. “Everyone lost their jobs,” Tom said, shaking his head. Although he did qualify for unemployment, he said it wasn’t enough to live off while supporting his children. “To go from making a decent amount of money to a couple hundred a week, I wasn’t able to renew my apartment and wasn’t able to find another place because rent was so expensive,” Tom said. “I was feeling helpless.” Tom was 18 years old when his oldest son was born. The child’s mother was 16. The two married and had a daughter two years later. “I think it was a lot for her to be that young, married and have two kids,” Tom said. “One day she left and didn’t come back.”
SHANNA FORTIER
Tom shares partial custody with the mother of the two youngest children. Being a single father, he said, made the search for a new job with a schedule to fit his life more difficult. “I knew I could do something, but it would have to be at the expense of my children and I couldn’t make that sacrifice,” he said. “I couldn’t leave them in a motel room by themselves. It was really hard to find a job that was able to work with me.” Keeping his family off the streets Rebecca Dunn, community and family connections coordinator for Jefferson County Schools, said she sees this situation a lot when parents are
AMY FROM PAGE 8
work by 7 a.m. She drives everyone around in a 1988 Toyota, which was given to her by a friend’s acquaintance not too long ago. “It’s nothing fancy, but it gets me where I need to be,” she said. The Carrillo family may not be sleeping on the streets, but Carrillo and her children still count as homeless in the sense they have not had a stable home to call their own for years now. It was only about three years ago when Carrillo was renting a duplex in a cul-de-sac neighborhood in Lakewood. She had a good job — a 15-year career as a nurse. She did everything from home care to working in intensive care units in hospitals, and she had dreams to continue her education and work with infants and newborns.
DAVID FROM PAGE 8
ans. But instead of joining the military, he joined up with the Red Cross. “I thought I was going to be doing things like helping build tornado shelters and helping with disaster relief,” he said. “What happened instead is I was sent to Iraq to help there. I would’ve rather seen combat than being stuck taking care of people, like I was when I was there.” Like many of the people he
trying to get their families out of homelessness. “A single homeless person, when you’re just taking care of yourself — that comes with burdens and stressors,” Dunn said. “It’s not an easy situation. But when you’re a parent and constantly trying to provide stability and every door gets shut, you face having to move outside of the county.” Because Jefferson County does not have a lot of affordable housing, shelters or places for families in transition, Dunn said many homeless families in Jeffco are living in cars, RVs, hotels or doubledup situations with families or friends. In 2016, Jeffco schools identified 3,622 students as home-
Then, in 2015, a back injury ended her job and nursing career. “It’s been a pretty rough couple of years, but we’ve come a long way,” Carrillo said. “We all have our days. I’m just moving forward, one foot in front of the other.” Carrillo moved to Jefferson County from Arizona in 2000 when she was 17. She and her oldest son, who was 2 at the time and now lives on his own in Colorado Springs, stayed with her sister as Carrillo put herself through nursing school. Carrillo lost both her sister and her mother in the span of about a week in the spring of 2008. Her mother had health problems, but the cause of her sister’s death is unknown — she just didn’t wake up one day, Carrillo said. In October 2015, Carrillo and her common-law husband separated. After she came home from a hospital stay related to her back injury, he moved out-of-state, and Carrillo had one week to vacate the home. Still in a back
worked with, and veterans he encountered, he found escape from his experiences and depression in drugs. The people and injuries he saw during his three years with the Red Cross, as well as the extreme conditions of the desert, made a big impact on him. He received disability because of his time overseas, and has been to rehab facilities twice in the 10 years since returning home, but said he remains addicted. “I need the drugs to escape the memories,” he said, now that he’s back. “They also help to keep sharp on the street.”
less. About 75 percent of those students live in a doubled-up situation, Dunn said. “But that doesn’t mean they are living in the same home from month to month,” Dunn pointed out, explaining that many families are continually moving around to different houses. For Tom, who couldn’t find a job after being laid off, staying in hotels was a way to keep his family off the streets. He used his time while unemployed to enroll at Red Rocks Community College in the fire science program. Grants paid for his schooling. In November, after 10 months of unemployment, he found a job doing contract work similar to his old job, But “I’m worried the same thing could happen again,” Tom said. That is why he earned his Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) certification and says he is working toward fire and paramedic certification — to be able to have a more stable job. In November, Tom and his children also moved in with his sister. “At that time, my sister let
brace and using a walker, Carrillo said she had nowhere to go. So she contacted 2-1-1, a nationwide free and confidential information and referral service that helps connects people with local community resources and health and human services. Carrillo received a long list of numbers of all shelters in the area. She called around and found a safehouse/ shelter in Colorado Springs where she and her children could stay. She was there for two months. Carrillo ended up moving in temporarily with a childhood friend and her husband. She later returned to Arizona — where she was born and raised — to take care of a releative following his heart surgery. Six months later, she and her children moved to Colorado Springs and later to Jefferson County. Carrillo contacted a friend who graciously offered them a cramped room in a small home in Arvada for a short time, before she found the boarding-
The Colfax area can be dangerous at times, Russell explained, so some of the drugs he uses are stimulants, which help keep him awake, especially at night. He said he’s tried everything when it comes to drugs, and most recently has been smoking crack. He earns money by being a gofer for people, running errands and fetching things for a fee, and has also gotten involved with gangs to survive. “Making money is important, and it helps that I’m one of those guys who needs to follow orders,” he said. “I can’t keep my thoughts straight, but I
us live there so I could save the money, not be homeless and not have to spend money that I could be saving,” Tom said. Determined to make a better life In January, he and his children moved into a onebedroom apartment with a sixmonth lease. But with monthly rent at $860, Tom wasn’t making rent. To prevent being homeless again, Tom applied for housing at Decatur Place, and was placed on a waitlist. At the end of May, just when he was being evicted from the one-bedroom, a unit opened and he was able to move his family in. He pays $200 a month at Decatur Place for a three-bedroom apartment with a daycare facility on site. If Tom complies with the regulations at Decatur Place and meets with an economic and life counselor weekly, he has two years there to get himself and his family into a stable situation. Tom is determined to make a better life. “Even though we ended up in that situation,” he said. “I’m going to make sure I don’t stay in that situation.”
house. Within the three or four months that Carrillo stayed with her friend in Arvada, she enrolled her two younger children — Tiona, 12, and Joshua, 14 — in Arvada schools. She eventually found the Westminster boardinghouse so the two children could finish up the school year. Now that school is out, though, Carrillo is hoping to find a more permanent living situation. She is on a number of waitlists for housing assistance, and is looking into any and all housing options. Right now, Carrillo says she feels as though she’s on a good path. Carrillo is thankful to have a job that she enjoys and a safe place to stay, even though it’s temporary. She says her children have grown to become compassionate individuals. “I pray a lot (and) I’m big on energy,” Carrillo said. “Looking at the positive side of things really helps. It took me a long time, but I’ve learned to stay positive and go forward.”
need to be sharp and ready for anything.” Russell’s personality is full of oscillations, and he’ll discuss some of his favorite horror or war movies and then suddenly switch to ruminations on violence and paranoia. At times like this, his body language gets more erratic, and his voice gets louder. “I try to be civil enough to keep my mouth shut,” he said. “People see me on the street and don’t want anything to do with me, and I don’t blame them. It’s frightening for them — and heartbreaking for me.” Russell isn’t sure what could
best help him and others like him, but increased access to resources would be a start. “We need more facilities to stay and to help us,” he said. “We need community with each other.” What Russell’s future holds is unclear. He said he has considered suicide. He hopes to find a girlfriend who will help him go straight. But he doesn’t know when — or even whether — this will happen. “I’d like to meet someone and have a kid that I could be there for,” he said. “But I’d rather wear the mask of drugs than to be crazy.”
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June 15, 2017J
Eat, drink and dance the summer away at Belmar BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
When summertime rolls around, its pretty difficult to argue with patios, food and drinks, and live music. And for the past several years, one of the best places to get all three is the Belmar plaza on a Friday night.
“Each year we see more and more new locals in attendance, mostly in part due to the types of bands we bring to the plaza,” wrote Vicki Dunbar, marketing coordinator with Belmar, in an email interview. “Each band has its own style and dedicated followers, and we also continue to see our residents who we have grown to know the series
over the years.” This year’s series began on June 2, and runs all the way through Aug. 25, and brings a variety of performers, from blues and country to gypsy and cover bands, all for free. “We’re seeing a younger group coming into the area, and that’s inspired us to really bring a mix of musicians to Belmar,” explained
Nancy Lease, with Talent West booking agency, the company that brings the artists to Belmar. “It’s the perfect way for people to wind down from the week and a beautiful way to kick off the weekend.” Since the concert series has grown in both musical styles and attendance, we gathered everything you need to know.
Concert series returns for 13 weeks Details
Lineup
Food and drinks
WHEN: June 2 through Aug. 25 Concerts run from 6 to 8 p.m. WHERE: The Plaza at Belmar 439 S. Teller St. Free parking is available at the intersection of West Virginia Avenue and Saulsbury Street. Existing seating is available on a first-come, firstserved basis. For guaranteed seating, please bring your own chairs. COST: Free
“Our goal at Belmar has always been to be as diverse as possible, and this year we cover a large musical terrain with both small and large groups,” Lease explained. “It’s also very important to us that we have a localized feel by adding some area performers into the mix.” June 16: John Weeks Band June 23: Karl Ziedins June 30: Soul Sacrifice July 7: Rekha Ohal July 14: The Constant Tourists July 21: Tin Brothers July 28: Mango Brothers Aug. 4: The Country Music Project Aug. 11: Mandoling Ranch Trio Aug. 18: Dearling Duo Aug. 25: Bluzinators
With the beautiful summer weather, music fans can hear the performances while sitting in one of Belmar’s 18 restaurants with patios, like Baker Street Pub, Tstreet Roadhouse and Wasabi Sushi. “There’s a lot more energy and activity in Belmar when the concerts are going on,” said JW Lee, owner of Wasabi Sushi Bar. “People really enjoy the environment and it’s a lot of fun for everyone.”
COURTESY PHOTO
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7June 15, 2017
Steam train superstar makes annual Golden visit BY CHRISTY STEADMAN CSTEADMAN@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Thomas the Tank Engine is seen as just as much of a rock star among preschoolers as The Beatles among teens in the 1960s, said Donald Tallman, the executive director of the Colorado Railroad Museum. “Thomas is multigenerational,” Tallman said. “He connects families in a very special way.” Thomas the Tank Engine is making his annual return to the Colorado Railroad Museum in Golden on June 24 and 25, July 1 and 2 and July 8 and 9. A train ride ticket is required for all attendees age 2 and older. General admission is not available during Day Out With Thomas dates. Tickets cost $20 each during off-peak ride times, 8:30-9:15 a.m. and 1:45-4:45 p.m. Tickets for peak ride times, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., cost $25 each. A train ride lasts 20 minutes. Thomas partners with the railroad
IF YOU GO For more information about Day Out With Thomas, or to purchase tickets, visit www. coloradorailroadmuseum.org/thomas.
museum’s Locomotive No. 491 to pull the 1928 Denver & Rio Grande Western Steam Locomotive around the railyard. And now, Tallman added, Thomas even talks and greets riders as he pulls into the depot. A ticket includes access to museum exhibits and model trains, and special Day Out With Thomas activities, which include a petting zoo, temporary tattoos, the Imagination Station, sing-a-longs, bean bag toss, hula hoops, bubbles, ladder golf and a magic show. Attendees will also have an opportunity to meet the character Sir Topham Hatt. It is recommended to plan a two-hour visit to enjoy all the Thomas activities, Tallman said. A wide range of food vendors will be
available for lunch, snack or dessert purchases. Families may also bring a picnic lunch but there are no lockers or storage facilities onsite. Both alcohol and cooking are prohibited. The museum opens at 8 a.m. Activities will shut down at 5 p.m. and the grounds will close by 6 p.m. Riders should plan on arriving at least one hour before their train departs, as it is sometimes difficult to reschedule a
missed train ride. Families may stay afterward for as long as they would like to enjoy the activities. It’s one thing for children to see Thomas in a picture book or play with a small-scale model toy of him, Tallman said. “But to see him in person and ride behind a full-size Thomas is a really special experience for families,” he added.
RED ROCKS CONCERTS
THE #1 BEATLES SHOW IN THE WORLD Thomas the Tank Engine has a partnership with Locomotive No. 491 to pull the steam locomotive around the Colorado Railroad Museum’s railyard. COURTESY PHOTO
WEST NEWS IN A HURRY Clear Creek restrictions The Jefferson County Sheriff ’s Office and the Golden Police Department are limiting river activities on Clear Creek temporarily. The restrictions apply to Clear Creek within the City of Golden, including unincorporated Jefferson County. The restrictions are in effect as of June 12 and will remain in effect until water levels decrease. Violators may be issued a summons for a class 2 petty offense, which is punishable by a $100 fine. Prohibited activities include swimming and body-surfing, and use of all single-chambered, air-inflated devices such as belly boats and inner tubes. Kayaks, paddle boards including stand-up paddleboards, whitewater canoes and multi-chambered, professionally-guided rafts and river boards are exempt. However, users and occupants of these devices must be equipped with a Type I, Type III or Type V Coast Guard-approved paddling life jacket and helmet designed for water use. However, anybody who visits the river and its surroundings are urged
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1964 The Tribute
to use extreme caution. There are safety concerns with swift-moving water and floating debris.
August 24
Buffalo Bill Stories The Jeffco community has two more opportunities to see Jim Salestrom’s Buffalo Bill Stories. The events will take place at 7 p.m. June 20 and June 22 at the Golden Masonic Lodge, 400 10th St. in Golden. Each program will last about an hour. It is a family-friendly multimedia event to include original music and rare, archived photos and video of Buffalo Bill. A suggested donation to attend the event is $10. The proceeds will benefit the Boy Scouts. To learn more, visit www.jimsalestrom.com. Hydrogen at Scale The community is invited to attend a lecture to learn about the potential benefits of hydrogen at 7 p.m. June 22 at the Jefferson Unitarian Church 14350 W. 32nd Ave., in Golden. Featured presenter is Mark Ruth, a principal project lead and engineer SEE BRIEFS, P15
September 21 1-888-9-AXS-TIX
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12 Lakewood Sentinel
HITTING HOME
Michael Alcorn
LOCAL
June 15, 2017J
VOICES
I
Entire nation seems to have some irreconcilable differences
recently read an article by David French in which he postulated that our country is headed for something akin to a divorce. And some of the numbers he cites are astonishing. In 1992, only about 30 percent of the country lived in a “landslide” county, that is, a county in which the winner of that county in the presidential election won the county by 20 percentage points or more. In 2016, that number had jumped to almost 60 percent of the country. It’s not just that we believe what we believe with passion and conviction; it’s that our convictions are so strong that we’re increasingly willing to surround ourselves with only people who think the same way we do.
Consider a few, um, interesting neighborhoods in this great country of ours. The pacific northwest features Oregon, which was one of the first states to legalize marijuana for recreational use and to legalize doctor-assisted suicide. And, right next door to Oregon is Idaho, which had more counties give John McCain 80 percent of the vote in 2008 than there were counties that voted for Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton ... combined. Or take Barack Obama’s home turf itself, Illinois. The home of Abraham Lincoln is now home to the strictest gun laws in the country, as well as a Democrat machine the likes of which would make Huey Long or Frank Underwood jealous. And, right next door, is
Indiana, the home of the current Vice President and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which he signed into law. Talk about your “irreconcilable differences.” It’s like seeing the moving van pull up next door, and then watching Tim Matheson, John Belushi, and the rest of the boys of “Animal House” hop out to start unloading. And that’s just if you’re, say, Kentucky. Of course, nothing we’re all worked up over these days is as important as, oh, say, freeing the slaves, so, at least so far, nobody is likely to want to start shooting California to make their point. SEE ALCORN, P14
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Knowledge, power and the capacity to change ALCHEMY
Andrea Doray
I
’ve written about poetry before, because, as both a journalist and a poet, the lyrical, mystical, profound, angry, loving and authentic world of words compressed into lines and stanzas is powerful. In these tumultuous times – no matter where we fall on the polarized scale – poetry provides an empathetic look into the lives of others, to feel their joys, to experience their struggles, and perhaps most important, to look find in ourselves the capacity to change.
A publication of
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The just-released fifth edition of DoveTales: An International Journal of the Arts, published by the organization Writing for Peace, features both new and established poets (as well as talented artists, photographers, essayists, and fiction writers), writing on the theme of “Refugees and the Displaced.” Carmel Mawle, founder of Writing for Peace and editor-in-chief for the issue, says: “Their suffering is in the front of our collective SEE DORAY P13
Getting the lead out As the legislative session came to a close, only six of 34 Colorado State Senators voted against a measure to provide funds for public schools to test for lead in their drinking water. One of those who opposed HB 1307 was our very own Sen. Tom Neville. This despite the fact that two of the three school systems in his district, Gilpin and Boulder County School Districts, haven’t completed such testing. It seems that he is representing the lunatic fringe, opposing government in any fashion. This bill doesn’t mandate testing, but it does provide funds for testing. Many older schools do indeed have plumbing systems that contain lead. Is there perhaps new “science” that says lead is not harmful? Or is Neville simply unwilling to advocate for the health and safety of children in his district? How horribly shortsighted. Doesn’t he recognize the cost of serving children and adults who may suffer the permanent, debilitating effects of lead poisoning? Soon, the Governor will sign this bill, and hopefully Gilpin & Boulder County Schools will avail themselves of the opportunity to test their water for lead. Your children will be safer for it, but you won’t have Senator Neville to thank for this. Ken Jacobs, Golden
Pause on parkway Commissioner Rosier says that right-of- way for the Jefferson Parkway (JP) have been acquired and the CDOT study and approval process is proceeding. What he did not say is that CDOT and DRCOG will provide no state or federal money to help build the Parkway as they are doing for other parts of the highway system in the NW Quadrant.The need for the Parkway has never been established as the most costeffective way to improve mobility in the NW Quadrant, yet the Parkway Authority has collected and spent millions of taxpayer dollars on the project for over eight years. The plan is to get a private financier as for the NW Parkway, but none is interested in investing in the expensive project without state and federal support. The commissioners should stop collecting taxpayer money for the JP and direct funds to improving SH-93, SH-72 and Indiana that are being financially supported by CDOT and DRCOG. Dick Sugg, Golden
Columnists & Guest Commentaries
EpiPen price gouging I suffer from a severe bee allergy, so I carry a EpiPen at all times. Last year, I was in between SEE LETTERS, P13
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Lakewood Sentinel A legal newspaper of general circulation in Jefferson County, Colorado, the Lakewood Sentinel is published weekly on Thursday by West Suburban Community Media, 722 Washington Ave, Unit 210, Golden, CO 80401.
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Lakewood Sentinel 13
7June 15, 2017
LETTERS FROM PAGE 12
jobs, and the cost of my EpiPen rose from $300 to $600. I was worried that I wouldn’t be able to afford the drug that could potentially save my life. Worrying about whether they can afford a life-saving drug is something no patient should have to experience. The company that raised the price of the EpiPen was able to do so relatively easily. Thankfully there is now a generic version of the EpiPen, which is much cheaper, but imagine if there was no alternative. What would people who can’t afford this drug do? Making prescription drugs affordable is a bipartisan issue. As our leaders in Congress, I hope Senators Gardner and Bennet can work together to help lower the prices of life-saving drugs. Coloradoans needs their leadership. Basil Stetson, Lakewood
Thanks to legislators The passing of SB 17-267, Sustainability of Rural Colorado, marks a significant moment in Colorado history. This bill – in addition to other components designed to support rural Colorado through transportation and education funding – will move the Hospital Provider Fee into a separate enterprise, protecting Colorado’s hospitals from a half billion-dollar budget cut. The bill sponsors and legislators created a legacy for the future of health care in Colorado and for the value of working together to find common ground. This bill has been described as -the “compromise of the decade.” We applaud Colorado legislators who supported SB 17-267 and especially the
DORAY FROM PAGE 12
consciousness … their situation has descended to new levels of hostility and danger.” The Writing for Peace mission is to cultivate empathy – through education and creative writing – that allows minds to open to new cultural views, seeking to value others’ differences, as well as the hopes and dreams that nunite all of humanity As the new president of Writing for Peace, I also believe that a strong and empathetic future will be built by today’s young people, and to that end I support programs that develop a spirit of leadership and peaceful activism. As an example, in “Refugees and the Displaced,” the winners of the Young Writers Contest demonstrate reflection, knowledge, authenticity and power in their poetry. I found Lisa Zou’s first-place entry, “She Serves in Ben Hai” haunting in its tenderness … about family, aging, and the shadows of displacement created by the Vietnam war. A high school senior, Zou is passionate about shedding light on human rights issues and education for young girls. “Writing is a way to express, but more importantly a record of living,” says Zou. She writes: “… Each summer, my grandmother knits guilt / into my
bill’s sponsors. They serve as a national model for their ability to work across the aisle on behalf of all Coloradans. Reps. Jessie Danielson and Tracy Kraft-Tharp, along with Sen. Cheri Jahn is a specific example of how important it is to elect leaders who are committed to representing the best interest of Coloradans and keeping their community interests at the heart of the debate. The supporting legislators are champions for all Coloradans. Not only has SB 17-267 restored the proposed $528 million in cuts to hospitals through the HPF enterprise, it has made great strides in education and transportation, with a large portion of these funds allocated to rural Colorado – $30 million for rural and small schools and $1.8 billion for transportation projects over four years. Of those transportation dollars, 25 percent is required to be spent in counties with populations of 50,000 or less and 10 percent goes to transit. SB 17-267 addresses health care, education, transportation and business – the cornerstones of Colorado’s economy. Thank you to all Colorado legislators for your ongoing efforts to work across the aisle to ensure a healthy, sustainable and prosperous future for all Coloradans. Grant Wicklund, President and CEO at Lutheran Medical Center Outrage over supe hire Congratulations Jeffco voters and bigmedia machine teachers union. You just got rolled. Your puppet school board just handed out the largest Jeffco Schools superintendent contract in history, while teachers struggle for modest raises. As an average, taxpaying citizen I am outraged. A comprehensive 3-year superintendent package of $1 million, while the district cries of monetary hardship,
waitress dress and hot privilege lacquers my tongue. / I swallow each gated community, each ‘made in Vietnam’ sticker, / one bleached spoonful after the other.” Second-place winner Lydia Chew, also a high school senior, looks forward to studying political science and aspires to work in government and politics. A strong proponent of political activism, she is also passionate about social justice and civic education, and appreciates healthy doses of introspection through literature In the poem, Chew’s speaker issues an apology to a young woman harassed in school because she is Muslim. Chew writes: “I don’t know if you remember me, / but this is my apology. / … I remember that I never saw you, / I only saw your hijab / … This letter began as an apology from me to you, / but this is bigger than the two of us … This is the message that peace will overcome hatred. / This is my hope.” Such words remind me that we all have the capacity for change, for thoughtful consideration of our beliefs, our prejudices, our world views. In young poets such as Lisa Zou and Lydia Chew – and, indeed, in writers of all stripes – we find knowledge, authenticity, power and the capacity to change. Andrea Doray is a writer who also believes that peace can overcome. Contact her at a.doray@andreadoray.com.
screams of incompetentcy. To me it just looks like another undeserved hiring, with public funds, to a political crony with similar views. I don’t blame Mr. Glass for taking the deal. Who wouldn’t? But don’t ever ask me for increased school tax money ever again. This disingenuous cries of “for the kids” is a joke. Richard Phillips, Arvada Ecstatic for Glass I am ecstatic about Dr. Jason Glass as Jeffco Schools’ new superintendent! I’ve followed his work and know that he will be able to inspire, and importantly, unite our district. A few things I appreciate about him: He’s an articulate communicator; held a high-level, statewide position in Iowa; received significant recognition; is a proven leader; has two masters degrees and a PhD; was the superintendent in Eagle County; knows the budgetary crisis CO schools face; and he is a vocal and bold advocate for students. I’m so appreciative of our Jeffco School Board of Education for seeking and pri-
oritizing stakeholder input on the qualities we value most in our next superintendent. It is clear from these attributes that stakeholder input is reflected in the selection of Dr. Glass. It has been refreshing to see a board work transparently through this process as well. Dr. Glass was selected unanimously by all five board members. The Board shared data points regularly throughout the process — 825 inquiries with potential candidates, 69 applications, 11 potential candidates from 9 states, 6 interviewees (5 current or former superintendents, 1 assistant superintendent, and 1 from Colorado). Dr. Glass clearly rose to the top and we should all look forward to getting to know him better and partnering with him to do what’s best for students in Jeffco. And I thank our board, Brad Rupert, Susan Harmon, Ali Lasell, Amanda Stevens, and Ron Mitchell for their service to our community. I look forward to voting to reelect Brad, Susan, and Ron this coming November! Tina Gurdikian, Littleton
OBITUARIES ROONEY
Eileen Louise (Bartlett) Rooney 4/14/1929 - 3/22/2017
Eileen Louise (Bartlett) Rooney, age 87, passed away peacefully Wednesday, March 22, 2017 in Englewood, CO. She was born April 14, 1929 in Denver to John “Jack” and Louise (Lovelace) Bartlett and predeceased by her brother Bob Bartlett. She was a 1947 graduate of Denver South High School. She married Albert Rooney on June 3, 1949. She worked many years in administration at the Colorado School of Mines Research Institute in Golden, CO and spent the majority of her life in the home she cherished on Rooney Ranch. Eileen loved her family, cooking, gardening, spending time in the mountains and in Hawaii. She will definitely be remembered
for her sense of humor. Left to honor Eileen are her five children, Gary (Patricia) Rooney, Chris (Garlan) Venters-Mellberg, Cindy (Will) McCrocklin, Cheri Rooney and Bill (Cheryl) Rooney, ten grandchildren, Jennifer Andrews, Jared Venters, Jason Venters, Lisa Rooney, Sara (Robert) Shibata, Mary Anne (Daniel) McGehee, Katie Lou McCrocklin, Will McCrocklin Jr., Christian Rooney and Nicole Rooney, eight great-grandchildren, Kelsey, Caden, Angela, Rogelio, Evan, Landon, Hailey and Chelsey. The family will gather to remember Eileen at Rooney Ranch on Friday, June 16th and at Rainbow Lake in Buena Vista on Saturday, June 17th.
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14 Lakewood Sentinel
June 15, 2017J
Walmart to provide full-service shopping destination at new supercenter Arvada Neighborhood Market and Wheat Ridge Walmart to close BY CHRISTY STEADMAN CSTEADMAN@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
When Lauren Kent was about 13 years old, she would take the No. 32 bus from her house in Wheat Ridge to the nearby Walmart. She would go to the store with some cash and a list of items her mother needed. “This is where I learned to do the household shopping and budgeting,” Kent, 35, said. On July 7, two Jefferson County Walmart locations will close — the Wheat Ridge store, 3600 Youngfield St. in the Applewood Village Shopping Center, and the Arvada Walmart Neighborhood Market, 14605 W. 64th Ave. The closures are a result of consolidation efforts as the multibillion dollar corporation prepares for the Aug. 9 opening of its new Walmart Supercenter at West 58th Avenue and Independence Street in Arvada. The Wheat Ridge store is about five miles from where the new supercenter will be located and the Arvada Neighborhood Market is about four miles away. Clark Walker, the deputy director of the Arvada Urban Renewal Authority, expects the new Walmart Supercenter will have a positive impact on retail and commercial activity in the entire corridor of where it will be opening, he said. One example is that it helped spur the development of new retail and commercial space at the Shops at Ralston Creek, which is across the street from where the supercenter will
Golden Business & Financial Services, Inc. Financial & tax counseling business & personal
A shopper leaves the Wheat Ridge Walmart with purchases on June 6. The Wheat Ridge Walmart, 3600 Youngfield St., and the Arvada Walmart Neighborhood Market, 14605 W. 64th Ave., will close on July 7 as part of consolidation efforts to open a new Walmart Supercenter located at West 58th Avenue and Independence Street in Arvada. CHRISTY STREADMAN be located, he said. “This area of the community is well loved,” he said, “and a significant level of reinvestment is overdue.” Losing a large source of income is both a disappointment and a concern for any city, said Wheat Ridge Mayor Joyce Jay. But while there’s the concern for the city’s treasury, Jay said, the closure may also affect the shopping experience in Wheat Ridge. Walmart can provide consumers with a shopping destination that carries a large selection of different products and items to fill the needs of most shoppers, Jay said. Losing this attraction could hurt the accessibility shoppers have to a convenient store such as Walmart, she said. According to the City of Wheat Ridge’s financial reports, the 2016 sales tax revenues for the Applewood Center are $4,486,948. This amount includes Walmart, and the other anchor tenants of King Soopers, PetSmart, Wells Fargo, Applejack Liquors, Chili’s, Famous Footwear and Starbucks, among other retailers. It’s important that people don’t panic over the loss of sales tax revenue from Walmart closing, said Wheat Ridge treasurer Jerry DiTullio.
“Change brings opportunity,” he said. The Regency Group — the property’s owners — will be proactively looking for new tenants, and DiTullio believes it won’t take long for a business to move in. Employees of the Wheat Ridge and Arvada Neighborhood Market locations were notified of the closures on June 5. The Wheat Ridge location employs 125 people, and the Neighborhood Market has 60, Walmart spokesperson Anne Hatfield said. All will have the option to transfer to the new Arvada Walmart Supercenter, which will be hiring up to 280 people. Walmart is in the midst of its third year of multimillion dollar remodels at a number of its stores statewide, Hatfield said. Part of upgrading its service is consolidating older, smaller stores to open Walmart Supercenters that can provide a full-service shopping destination to meet the needs of all consumers, she said. “Today, convenience is as important as saving money,” Hatfield said. “What we’re doing is consolidating these two stores. This will allow us to better serve the customers of today.” The new supercenter will be 140,000 square feet. It will feature a drive-thru
pharmacy and an expanded grocery area with wider aisles and improved signage for easier navigation through the store, Hatfield said. The Arvada Neighborhood Market’s pharmacy customers will be able to transfer their prescriptions to the new Arvada Walmart Supercenter, Hatfield said. In the interim, Walmart plans to keep only the pharmacy open at the neighborhood market to ensure an easy transfer to the supercenter location. But for some shoppers, the location of the Wheat Ridge Walmart is why they shop there. Lisa Brown said she will most likely have to take her business elsewhere. “I live in Golden, but this is my neighborhood Walmart,” she said. “I’m a native to this area. I’ve been shopping here since it’s been open.” The Wheat Ridge store is the closest Walmart to Brown’s residence in the south Golden area, she said. And because there is also a King Soopers in the Applewood Village Shopping Center, the area provides a one-stop shopping destination to take care of all of her errands. “I’m really sad it’s closing,” Brown said. “I think there will be a lot of people upset.” Jerry and Rose Smith have lived in Wheat Ridge for more than 30 years, and they remember when the Wheat Ridge store opened in 1988. Although the location of the new supercenter will be convenient enough for them to be able to do their shopping there, the Smiths are mainly concerned it will be too congested for them to quickly stop in. “I’d like to see it (Walmart) stay small,” Jerry Smith said, adding that the area in Arvada is already quite busy, and a big supercenter will only attract more traffic and more people to a single shopping destination. Kent said she plans to continue to shop at the Wheat Ridge Walmart until it closes. Then she’ll likely go to the Lakeside Walmart, near 44th Avenue and Harlan Street. “I’m very surprised this one is closing,” she said of the Wheat Ridge Walmart.
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In The Gateway Station Building
ALCORN FROM PAGE 12
Sorry — any time I can insult California, I take it. So, I say, if that’s the case, then let’s start treating politics like a giant divorce proceeding. Stop it with the whole one-side-writes-a-whole-bill, then starts to bribe enough of its members to sign on, then tries to hammer it through both chambers thing. Sit down in a room with each sides’ divorce lawyer, and divvy up the assets. Imagine health care reform like this: Republicans: We want tort reform — a limit on medical liability. Democrats: Okay, well we’re gonna need the pre-existing conditions. R: Fine. Then we want insurance to cross state lines.
D: Okay. Then kids need to be able to stay on their parents’ plans until they’re 26. R: Fine, but we’re going to need visitations and we get the dog. D: Whatever. I always hated that dog. Obviously, the two parties, the two Americas, are now so far apart that there is very little reason to hope for compromise. So, if we’re going to blithely abandon any pretense of being a melting pot, I say let’s just embrace the idea of making a big old salad and forcing everybody to choke it down, all together. In fact, you don’t really even have to do it strictly by party — you could do it by region. For instance, regarding immigration, New England could have relaxed requirements for Ph.D candidates, while the Industrial Midwest could have protections for manufacturing, the Deep South and
the Plains could have open seasonal labor movement, the Mountain states could get strict enforcement with deportations, the Southwest could get some form of economic refugee status to help out, and, I guess, the Pacific Coast could, get, I don’t know … more legal marijuana. I know that’s a pretty bad take on a lot of regional stereotypes, and I apologize for that, but it makes a point: as painful as it is to admit, it’s hard to imagine an American household any more. So, let’s decide: stay together for the kids’ sake? Or start to hire lawyers? Because lawyers always make things better. Michael Alcorn is a teacher and writer who lives in Arvada with his wife and three children. His novels are available at MichaelJAlcorn.com
Lakewood Sentinel 15
7June 15, 2017
Funeral home leaving longtime downtown Golden location Olinger Woods Chapel to close its doors June 30 BY CHRISTY STEADMAN CSTEADMAN@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
For more than 100 years, families from all over Jefferson County have been serviced by Olinger Woods Chapel in historic downtown Golden for their mortuary needs. But on June 30, the funeral home located at 1100 Washington Ave. will close its doors, and merge services with Olinger Crown Hill Mortuary & Cemetery, 7777 W. 29th Ave., in Wheat Ridge. “It’s disappointing because of the heritage it has in Golden,” said Matt Whaley, Dignity Memorial’s market director for Denver-metro. “But it’s a business decision we had to make.” And, he added, the patriarch of Coors is buried at Crown Hill, so there is already a tie to Golden. Dignity Memorial is a provider of funeral, cremation and cemetery services. Olinger’s 10 funeral homes, seven cemeteries and one personal care center are included in Dignity Memorial’s nationwide network. Other metro area locations are located in Thornton, Centennial, and two in Denver. Funeral homes provide a service to a community in a time of need, said Melinda Acevedo, funeral director at Olinger Woods Chapel. “It’s valuable work to provide comfort, and being able to serve a community when it’s most vulnerable,” she said. One deciding factor for the merge is the lack of parking in downtown Golden. A funeral can last anywhere between one and four hours, said the Olinger Woods Chapel’s office manager Judy Jacobs, so it’s not ideal for the families that the funeral home serves.
BRIEFS FROM PAGE 11
with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s (NREL) Strategic Energy Analysis Center. The event is cosponsored by the Colorado Renewable Energy Society, the Jefferson Unitarian Church’s Green Task Force and New Energy Colorado/Golden Earth Days. Reservations are not required, but encouraged. The event is free, but donations are appreciated. To learn more about the topic, visit the Colorado Renewable Energy Society’s website at www.cres-energy. org. To provide an RSVP for the event, or for more information, contact the church at 303-279-5282 or office@jeffersonunitarian.org. Family “Backpack & Camping Adventure” Families are invited to participate on an overnight camping trip June 2425 at White Ranch Park, 25303 Belcher Hill Road north of Golden.
The parking issue is in addition to the fact that the building itself is antiquated and in need of repair, Whaley said. Dignity Memorial will sell the building and is currently working with a local broker, but there is no news on the sale of building yet, Whaley said. “We’re sad to leave the community,” said Damon Henry, Olinger Woods Chapel’s general manager. “But whatever is next for this building will add to the vibrancy of the city.” It’s a part of Golden’s heritage, said Jacobs, a Golden resident who has worked at the Olinger Woods Chapel for 10 years. “Our families are lovely people,” she said. “Often, they’ve come here though generations. We’ll miss their stories.” The Woods Chapel is a small building with about six rooms, including lobby areas, a reception area that can accommodate about 45 people and a chapel that can host about 100 people. Crown Hill’s chapel can host more than 200 people and its reception area can accommodate about 100 people. In addition, Crown Hill has a pavilion area that can host about 100 people, Jacobs said. Crown Hill is staffed seven days a week, in comparison to the Woods Chapel’s five, and also offers other modern amenities, Jacobs said. She mentioned state-of-the-art technology, updated furnishings and the building is going through a remodel. Families with prearranged services are being contacted through letters, and they will have the option to go to any Dignity Memorial facility. The staff at Woods Chapel will be relocated to surrounding Dignity Memorial locations, so families can still work with the staffer they’ve already established trust with, Jacobs said. She added that Olinger’s staff would continue to be active in the Golden community, such as participating in the annual Buffalo Bill Days parade.
The Camp Jr. Ranger: Backpack & Camping Adventure program is presented by the Jefferson County Open Space Nature and History Programs. All ages are welcome, but activities are designed for children ages 6-10 and their parents. Parents must accompany children. Families should arrive in time to hike the one-mile from the parking lot to Sawmill Campground on their own on June 24, eat lunch and set up camp. Campsites are first come, first served. Activities start promptly at noon, and continue through the evening, with stargazing beginning at 9:30 p.m. Activities will be led by park rangers and Jefferson County Open Space naturalists. Attendees are responsible for bringing their own meals and snacks. Firewood will be available at the campground as long as there is no fire ban. The program is free, but registration is required. To register or learn more, visit http://jeffco.us/open-space/ nature/nature-programs. Or call the Lookout Mountain Nature Center at 720-497-7600.
From left, Judy Jacobs, office manager; Melinda Acevedo, funeral director; and Damon Henry, Olinger Woods Chapel’s general manager, stand in the Olinger Woods Chapel, which is located at 1100 Washington Ave. in historic downtown Golden. On June 30, the funeral home will merge its services with Olinger Crown Hill Mortuary & Cemetery, 7777 W. 29th Ave., in Wheat Ridge. CHRISTY STEADMAN
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ST. JOAN OF ARC C AT H O L I C C H U R C H
Proclaiming Christ from the Mountains to the Plains www.StJoanArvada.org 12735 W 58th Ave · 80002 · 303-420-1232 Daily Masses: 8:30am, Mon-Sat Confessions: 8am Tue-Fri; 7:30am & 4:00pm Sat Saturday Vigil Mass: 5:00pm Sunday Masses: 7:30, 9:00, 11:30am, 5:30pm
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5592 Independence St. 80002 Tel. 303-422-3463 www.Arvada-pres.com Email: office@arvada-pres.com
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On the round-about at South Golden Rd. and West 16th Ave. Sunday Praise & Worship................... 9:00 am Fellowship Time ................................. 10:00 am Church School ................................... 10:30 am
Pastor: Rev. Dr. Miriam M. Dixon
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6750 Carr St. Arvada, CO 80004 303.421.5135 • www.arvadaumc.org Nursery Available
To advertise your place of worship Call 303-566-4100
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16 Lakewood Sentinel
Staying
LOCAL
June 15, 2017J
LIFE
safe in the summer’s shining sun
Stick to the shade, and use plenty of sunscreen to decrease risk of sunburn TIPS TO AVOID SUNBURN THIS SUMMER
CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
C
olorado is one of those places that really shows its best self in the summertime. Outdoor enthusiasts, from the casual to the fanatic, can check off practically every box here in the state — camping, climbing, hiking, biking, fishing, running, tubing and rafting are just a handful of activities to try during the summer. And when activities like checking out baseball games, going to an outdoor concert and sampling street fairs and farmers markets get factored in, it all adds up to a lot time in the sun. “Because we’re so high here in Colorado, it can only take 10 minutes to get sunburned if you’re not careful,” said Dr. Richard Asarch, founder of Asarch Dermatology and Aesthetics, which has branches in Castle Rock, Englewood, Lakewood and Westminster. “Because it’s so cool in Colorado, the sun often doesn’t feel that bad. But, we’re getting more ultra violet (UV) light intensity because of our elevation.” According to information provided by the Colorado Melanoma Foundation, Colorado’s skin cancer diagnosis is 30 percent higher than the nation average. The state’s residents are also in the highest risk group for death from skin cancer in the nation, and this rate continues to rise year after year. “I don’t want people to be afraid to be outside, but while you are out there, you should do what you can to avoid sunburn,” said Dr. Neil Box, associate professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and president of the Melanoma Foundation. “Every year when summer comes around, we try to remind people of the negative health consequences that come with spending time unprotected in the sun.” The damage to the skin comes from the sun’s UV rays, of which there are two kinds that are particularly intense — UVA and UVB. The intensity of UVA rays is more consistent throughout the day, whereas the intensity of UVB fluctuates but is strongest around noon and has a greater effect on DNA, according to the Melanoma Foundation’s information. In addition to skin cancer, particularly melanoma, over exposure to the sun also leads to premature aging of the skin. “People should try to avoid the
SKIN CANCER WARNING SIGNS Examine skin head to toe once a month: Take note of any new moles or growths, and any existing growths that begin to grow or change significantly in any other way. Lesions that change, itch, bleed, or don’t heal are also alarm signals. Look for the ABCDEs of Melanoma: A = Asymmetry. One half is unlike the other half. B = Border. An irregular,
scalloped or poorly defined border. C = Color. Is varied from one area to another; has shades of tan, brown or black, or is sometimes white, red, or blue. D = Diameter. Melanomas are usually greater than 6 milimeters (the size of a pencil eraser) when diagnosed, but they can be smaller. E = Evolving. A mole or skin lesion that looks different from the rest or is changing in size, shape or color.
midday sun, so I say do your activities before 9 a.m. or after 4 p.m.,” said Dr. Robert Dellavalle, professor of dermatology and public health at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “You don’t want to use sunscreen to stay out longer. You should use it to prevent getting burned while you’re out.” One good way to tell if it’s too sunny to be out without protection is to look at your shadow. If a person’s shadow is shorter than the person is tall, then its time to seek out shade, Dellavalle added. The best thing a person can do to avoid sunburn when outside is stick to the shady areas, but since that isn’t always the option, it’s important to remember coverage. Long-sleeved shirts and pants are good ideas, according to experts, and many companies now make breathable fabrics that will stay cool in the heat. Hats, specifically those with wide brims, are also highly recommended, especially for people who are bald. “A lot of bikers forget that their helmets have slits in them, and the top of their heads can get burned that way,” Asarch said. “The problem with baseball caps is sometimes your ears can stick out, so we recommend a wide brim that provides shade to your whole head and face.” When it comes to sunscreen, people should look for broad spectrum, which means it will protect the skin
Use the Ugly Duckling Sign: Most moles and spots on a body are the same or are similar-looking to each other. As such, a person using this method can compare moles with each other. If any mole stands out or looks different from that of surrounding moles, it is the “ugly duckling.” If a person finds a mole that is significantly different from its neighbors, get it checked out.
MALLETS FOR MELANOMA CHARITY POLO TOURNAMENT The Colorado Melanoma Foundation’s annual fundraiser is the Mallets for Melanoma Charity Polo Tournament, held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 6. For more information, or to participate, visit www.malletsformelanoma.com. from both UVA and UVB, and get at least SPF 30, explained David Erickson, president and founder of Rocky Mountain Sunscreen, which is headquartered in Arvada. “The thing I notice most is people don’t put sunscreen on properly,” he said. “You want to apply it indoors, at least 15 to 30 minutes before going outside. Sunscreen is designed to go on cool, dry skin, and if you put it on when you’re already sweating, it’s just going to be pushed out with the other moisture.” Another problem many people have is not using enough sunscreen. A good reference is about a shot glass’s worth (or an ounce) is the proper amount to use, Erickson said. As is always the case with cancer, early detection is key, so Dr. Stan Hill, with Golden’s Hill Center for Dermatology, advised at least an annual skin check. People should also make note of any spots or blemishes, and keep an eye on them.
WHEN OUTSIDE, STICK TO SHADY SPACES
WEAR LONGSLEEVED SHIRTS AND PANTS
WEAR SUNGLASSES AND WIDEBRIMMED HAT USE SUNSCREEN THAT IS AT LEAST SPF 30 AND BROAD SPECTRUM APPLY SUNSCREEN INDOORS, 15 TO 30 MINUTES BEFORE GOING OUTSIDE
“Set a good example for the kids, and take care of your skin,” he said. “If they see you being smart with the sun, they’ll pick up on it.”
Lakewood Sentinel 17
7June 15, 2017
Tasting the best of Denver’s west
H
undreds of diners sampled some of Jefferson County’s many culinary offerings at The West Chamber’s annual Taste of the West at the Jeffco Fairgrounds on June 9. Large restaurants like the Yard House, Black Eyed Peas and Olive Garden served samples alongside local favorites like Brodo Italian and 240 Union, and visitors tasted everything from roast beef and mashed potatoes to fish tacos and tiramisu. The event has grown beyond simply food, and a variety of breweries, wineries and distilleries like Joyride Brewing and State 38 Distilling were also on hand providing tastes. “I come every year because I love seeing all the people, tasting the food and finding new restaurants,” said Lakewood resident Deanna Hanna. “It’s divine being here — everyone is happy, and they all bring their best.”
“Cabaret” at Miners Alley packs a punch
I
Buck’s BBQ and Grill’s Kristen Samz hands out pulled pork nachos as her husband Dean “Buck” Samz prepares more food during The West Chamber’s annual Taste of the West at the Jeffco Fairgrounds on June 8. PHOTOS BY CLARKE READER
Jeffco County Commissioner Don Rosier was one of the judges at The West Chamber’s annual Taste of the West. Here he poses with Heather White with the Yard House, before trying their culinary offerings.
Elizabeth Robbole, left, with Applejack Wine and Spirits, and Deanna Hanna, right, at the Taste of the West on June 8.
’ve seen several productions of “Cabaret” the musical classic, playing weekends through June 25 at Miners Alley Playhouse in Golden; however, I’ve never before felt the impact of the Nazi rise to power in the beginning of World War II. Perhaps it was because I saw AROUND it during Memorial Day weekend. TOWN Whatever the reason, I was nearly Harriet Ford brought to tears by the bigotry and hatred that was constantly directed at Jews. The story centers around Clifford Bradshaw (Luke Sorge) an American writer who comes to Germany to get inspiration. Bradshaw meets Sally Bowes (Adriane Wilson) a nightclub singer at the Kit Kat Club, who ends up living with him. He lives in a rooming house owned by Fraulein Schneider (Kristen Samu) who has a “close” friendship with Herr Schultz (Tim Fishbaugh) who owns a nearby market. The shows at the Kit Kat nightclub are run by The Emcee (Jim Walker), an interesting androgynous person of unknown age. Walker plays the role with conviction. Sally Bowles is his star performer. When it is learned that Herr Schultz is a Jew things become very difficult for Fraulein Schneider who fears she will lose her rooming house if she continues her engagement with Schultz. She breaks the engagement along with Schultz’s heart. Miners Alley is so creative in staging their productions. This is a full-blown musical complete with singing and dancing. The choreography is exquisite. There is a live band on stage which lends greatly to the nightclub scene. Some of the audience members are actually seated at cocktail tables on the edges of the stage. Director Len Matheo does a masterful job of guiding his highly talented actors as they bring this sad and disturbing story to life. Musical Director Mitch Samu deftly leads his musicians in the iconic tunes that make “Cabaret” a classic. Rounding out the cast is Rory Pierce who plays Herr Ludwig and Max. In addition, Kit Kat Girls Steph Holmbo, Kenzie Kilroy, Kayla Mally and Abbey Kochevar, as well as Kit Kat Boys Parker Fowler and Gabe Morales add an energetic and delightful tone to the production. “Cabaret” provides a wonderful evening of live theater. The entire production is very well done with highly talented direction, technical details, musicians, dancers, and singers. This is definitely must-see theater. Miners Alley Playhouse is located on the second floor of the former Foss Drugstore, at 1224 Washington Avenue in Golden. The play runs Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. For information and tickets, call 303-935-3044 or visit www.minersalley.com. Columnist Harriet Hunter Ford may be reached at hhunterford@gmail.com.
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18 Lakewood Sentinel
June 15, 2017J
HometownIMPRESSIONS M O M E N TS I N T I M E F R O M YO U R C O M M U N I T Y
Firehouse project restarts with a party BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
It’s been a while since the West Metro Fire Foundation made any progress with its firehouse museum project at the Lakewood Heritage Center, but on June 9 the project started gaining steam again. “This has been a project we want to get more people interested in,” said West Metro firefighter Pat Mulligan. “We want to take people back 50 years and show all this history that our departments have taken in.” The foundation threw an informal at the Lakewood Heritage Center on June 9, featuring live music from
9’s A Pair, a rock group made of up firefighters, play at the Lakewood Heritage Center for a firehouse museum museum fundraiser and party on June 9. CLARKE READER 9’s A Pair, a band made up of firefighters who play everything from Steve Miller to Jet, auction items, historic items from the department, and more than a few firetrucks from different
departments and decades. “We need help from the community to move forward with preserving our history,” explained Cassie Serpan, vice president of the West Metro Fire Foun-
dation. “It’s important that we keep the history of firefighting in our community alive, especially because we have so many departments mixed with ours, like Bancroft Fire, Mountair Fire Department, Edgewater Fire Department and Wheat Ridge Fire.” The project the event was in support of is the creation of a firehouse museum at the Heritage Center, based on a design from 1946. The firehouse would display an original 1939 fire engine and other equipment memorabilia. “The reason this project is so important is for the community, not our departments,” Mulligan said. “We want to use this as a place
of education, and have a mobile component that we can take to schools to teach kids about the departments and importance of fire safety.” As the 90-degree weather finally started to cool off with the sinking of the sun, visitors had a chance to eat, drink, dance, and support a cause they believe in. “We love the history of firetrucks, and how it takes you back to a different time,” said Mike Humpert, who was in attendance with his wife Kathy. Both are avid firetruck enthusiasts, and own a historic truck themselves. “These kinds of events let us share the love,” Kathy added.
EVENT NEWS IN A HURRY Cultural Center hosts ‘The Wedding Singer’ The Performance Now Theatre Company brings “The Wedding Singer” to the Lakewood Cultural Center in June.
Directed by Seth Caikowski and choreographed by Kelly Van Oosbree, the show runs at the center, 470 S. Allison Parkway, from June 9 through
25. Performances are 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 2 p.m. Saturday and Sundays. Tickets are $20 to $35 and are available by phone at 303-987-7845 or at www. performancenow.org.
Markets and Mile Hi Church for this seasonal event. Visit the Alameda Gateway website, www.LakewoodCOusa.com, and Facebook page for information on special events.
Lakewood Farmers’ Market returns The Metro Denver Farmers’ Market, together with the Alameda Gateway Community Association, returns to the Mile Hi Church Campus at 9077 W. Alameda Avenue for the 2017 Lakewood Farmers’ Market, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturdays from June 17 through Oct. 28. More than 50 vendors from across metro Denver, the front-range and other parts of Colorado will bring fresh produce, baked goods and other products to the market each week. The Alameda Gateway Community Association and Alameda Corridor Business Improvement District partnered with the Metro Denver Farmers’
LAC hosts annual Garden Tour The Lakewood Arts Council is hosting its annual garden tour, 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, June 24. The tour will take visitors to eight beautiful gardens in the area, including thoughtful xeriscaping designs, a large community garden, homestead gardens, and two model railroad gardens. Tickets include lunch at the LAC gallery, 6731 W. Colfax Ave., from 11 a.m. to 2p.m. Tickets are $20 for adults, $10 for children, ages 7 through 12, and younger than 6 are free. Tickets are available the day of for $25. Tickets are available at the gallery and at www.lakewoodarts.org.
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Lakewood Sentinel 19
7June 15, 2017
‘Old-fashioned fun’ draws largest pinball crowd yet Games and tournaments are blast from the past BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
For three days each year, blinking pinball machines, old-school arcade games and sounds of bells, beeps and whistles fill the first floor of Denver Marriott South in Lone Tree. Here is where players, collectors and families assemble to partake in the pastime of analog gaming. “I think it’s a unique art form that is coming back,” said Dan Nikolich, who with his wife, Holly, founded Rocky Mountain Pinball Showdown and Gameroom Expo. “It’s something that you get to touch and feel versus everything in the digital world.” Nikolich, 38, used to fix vintage gaming systems as a teenager and purchased his first pinball machine after college. Holly has a background in marketing and public relations. Together the Highlands Ranch couple started a tradition that would bring life to a hobby that nearly died in 1999, when one of the largest manufacturers, WMS Industries, closed its pinball division. The three-day tradition started 14 years ago with some 80 games and a couple hundred people. Held from June 8-11, this year’s event featured nearly 300 games and drew thousands of guests from across the west. For many who came, pinball is more than leveraging a tiny ball through a glass box. It’s a skill, a challenge, an art to be mastered. It holds special memories from childhood for some. It’s a collector’s item for others. Brandon Wheeler was 9 or 10 years old when he played his first pinball machine. Its theme was Jurassic Park, his favorite movie at the time. When he was 25, he purchased his first pinball machine — also Jurassic Park-themed. Since then, he has owned 30 machines and repaired 50 to 100. “It starts with one and they multiply,” said Wheeler, 33, of Centennial,
Dozens of people fill the hotel conference room on June 9 for the 17th annual Pinball Showdown and Gameroom Expo. The weekend-long event has hundreds of vintage pinball machines and arcade games. PHOTOS BY ALEX DEWIND also a tournament director of the expo. “A lot of people see movies and then want to play the game.” Pinball, which Wheeler describes as a sport, is making a comeback for a number of reasons: the gaming community is more inclusive, older generations are passing the hobby to their kids and grandkids, and more companies are producing games, he said. “It’s a way for companies to license popular or nostalgic property,” said Wheeler. At the expo, themes of machines ranged from Popeye the Sailor, a newspaper comic launched in 1919, to today’s hit HBO series Game of Thrones. When her husband purchased an Addams Family pinball machine a year and a half ago, Snow Galvin was hooked. She’s captivated by the design of the machine — its animated graphics and hidden messages on the exterior and thousands of wires on the interior. The Denver resident now plays on a league and competes in tournaments. “You can totally nerd out on this
Free
stuff,” said Galvin, 33, who sat on a women’s panel at the expo. Sitting a few seats down from her was Helena Higgins, women’s world champion of pinball. Higgins, originally from Sweden but now living in Thornton, said she played competitive volleyball for years and
always had a knack for ball sports. Pinball was big in Sweden in the 1990s, so she started playing and competing. In 2011, at a competition, she met a man from Thornton and last year the two married at 1up LoDo, a bar and arcade in downtown Denver. “It’s beautiful and it challenges you,” Higgins said of pinball. “It’s fun to learn the rules and be able to master the game.” Not everyone at the expo had a history with pinball. Some people accompanied a child or spouse to simply enjoy a day of games. After receiving a wristband in a hall of the hotel, attendees had access to a giant conference room and several smaller rooms lined with every type of game — from a wooden arcade game to a life-size Pac-Man displayed on a giant screen. Vendors nestled in the corners selling tech gadgets like fidget spinners and portable lights. Deborah Hindman, of Littleton, was there for her husband, an avid participant of the hobby. The 43-year-old hopped from game to game. Wizard of Oz is her favorite. Cinnamon Harold, of Denver, perched behind her 4-year-old son as he maneuvered a Spider Man machine. Her reason for attending was simple: “It’s just old-fashioned fun.”
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June 15, 2017J
‘I just knew I needed help,’ new mom says Statewide campaign for pregnancy-related depression and anxiety provides ways to help
TO GET HELP
Postpartum Support International Postpartum Support International works to increase awareness about the emotional changes that women experience during pregnancy and postpartum. Visit postpartum.net/colorado for information about pregnancy-related depression and anxiety. The website also lists coordinators who provide support and resources in the Denver metro area.
BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Call 800-944-4773 any time for immediate, free and confidential support in English or Spanish.
T
he week following Amanda Hawthorne’s first pregnancy was good. But the day her mother, who had been helping, returned to work, Hawthorne’s emotional state quickly declined. She slept because she was so exhausted. She paced back and forth because of anxiety. She felt depressed and manic all at once, she remembers, and had little interest in her daughter. So she hired a babysitter and confided in her family. And then she went to see a psychiatrist. “I had to hand my child over because I couldn’t take care of either one of us,” said Hawthorne, 34, a Wheat Ridge resident who has a history of bipolar disorder, depression and anxiety. “I didn’t know what do — I just knew I needed help.” A support system comprised of family and friends helped most, she said. Creating such support systems is the goal of a campaign run by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, in partnership with Postpartum Support International, an organization that increases awareness about the emotional changes that women experience during pregnancy and postpartum.
Tri-County Health Department MamaTalk is a free support group for pregnant and post-delivery moms offered in English and Spanish to Adams County residents by Tri-County Health Department. The program is facilitated by Community Reach Center, a mental health service provider in north metro Denver.
For more information on MamaTalk, call Emma Goforth at 303-255-6261.
TIPS FOR MOMS SHUTTERSTOCK IMAGE
The educational campaign, launched last October, brings awareness to symptoms of pregnancy-related depression and anxiety —which occur in one in seven new mothers during or after giving birth — and provides resources for help. Though pregnancy-related depression and anxiety cannot be fixed overnight, the department of public health says it can be treated through self-care, support groups, therapy or counseling and medication when necessary. SEE PREGNANCY, P21
• Get support from family and friends so you can keep active, eat healthy and get enough rest and time for yourself. • Talk to a professional. • Learn as much as you can about pregnancy-related depression and anxiety. • Ask for help when you need it. • Join a support group in your area or online. • Don’t give up — it may take more than one try to get the right help you need. Source: Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment
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Help Wanted General Manager needed by petroleum retailer to oversee daily operations of Truck Stop/C-Store in Golden! Ideal candidates will have 3 + years of successful management experience and will enjoy working with the public. Competitively salaried position includes opportunity for increasing the compensation package through quarterly bonus plans! Great benefits, too! Send resume to dpladson@petroleumwholesale.com or fax 281-681-7692 today! Ben Roofing, Inc. Thornton area. Hiring Roofing Supervisor over 1 year Experience required. Duties - Maintaining a secure, safe and health work environment. Directing the work crew.. Checking supplies and assisting with record keeping. Access and manage safety. Coordinate workers to ensure on-time delivery of tasks. Duration: Will be 10 months. Send Resume to Gamma_carol@yahoo.com
RN or LPN nurse(s) to fill 2 night shifts per week (FT with benefits also available). Adult child needs caring 24/7, one on one patient care, in private home. PT CNA needed for day shift. North Parker. Must be reliable and dependable. Please call 303-646-3020 and leave a message. Thank you for considering this ad.
Lakewood Sentinel 21
7June 15, 2017
PREGNANCY FROM PAGE 20
• Pregnancy-related depression and anxiety occurs during pregnancy or after giving birth, including after a pregnancy loss.
‘No one reason’ exists Postpartum depression and • Women are most frequently affected but it anxiety are not the same as “baby can also affect fathers, partners and close blues,” which are mild feelings of family members. sadness, worry and fatigue that - may accompany new mothers in the • Parents of every culture, age, income level week or two after pregnancy and and race can experience pregnancy-related typically resolve on their own. depression and anxiety. Symptoms of pregnancy-related t depression and anxiety can appear There is no one reason for anytime during pregnancy or in the pregnancy-related depression and year following birth and may inanxiety, according to the departclude feelings of anger or irritabilment of public health. Symptoms ity, lack of interest in the baby, loss are caused by a combination of of appetite and trouble sleeping, psychological, social and biological feelings of guilt or hopelessness, stressors. People with a personal or loss of interest or joy and possible family history of mood or anxiety . thoughts of harming the baby or disorders and sensitivity to horoneself. monal changes are more likely to be Some mothers find it difficult to at risk. address these feelings and instead That was the case for Hawthorne, hide them, said Mandy Bakulski, who said she was informed by her maternal wellness and early childmidwife that because of her history hood supervisor of the department of mental illness, she had a higher of public health. In today’s fasterchance of having postpartum depaced society, there is an expectapression. tion that women should return to Bakulski recommends medical leading the lives they did pre-pregproviders use the Edinburgh Postnancy, said Bakulski, adding that natal Depression Scale, a 10-item it’s hard to ask for help. questionnaire quickly administered “There is a cultural expectation in a clinical setting that helps docthat having a baby should be one tors screen for risk of postpartum of the happiest times of a woman’s depression. life,” she said. “The reality is there “It’s a way for providers to hear is an entirely new human being in and learn from women who might their life that takes time and carbe more at risk,” said Bakulski. ing.”
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• Nearly 1 in 10 Colorado women reported symptoms of pregnancy-related depression and anxiety. Research indicates this underestimates the true prevalence in Colorado because the survey is based off of women’s self-report as opposed to a clinical diagnosis, and women may fear disclosing their symptoms.
• Encourage her to get help from a professional.
Source: Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment
Source: Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment
“There can be social or psychological issues that were either present or brought on by the pregnancy.”
how you feel, even if you think it is small,” she said. “Just find somebody you can talk to, anybody that you feel comfortable enough to call.” For mothers who don’t have a strong support network, Postpartum Support International has volunteer coordinators across the Denver metro area to assist in finding help and resources, such as local support groups. The free, confidential phone line is available in English or Spanish for moms or dads, 24 hours, seven days a week. Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment partnered with the organization to provide moms and their families and support systems more access to resources on pregnancy-related depression and anxiety, according to Bakulski. “It is hard — every day can be a struggle as a new mom,” she said. “Being patient and understanding from a support side is so critical.”
New moms ‘are not alone’ It’s critical for women to know they are not alone, moms and experts in the maternal field say. It’s also important for partners, families and friends of new moms to be aware of signs and symptoms of pregnancy-related depression and anxiety. A Highlands Ranch mother, who would like her name withheld for privacy reasons, lost her first child, who was stillborn, and experienced postpartum anxiety with her second child. Her feelings included constant worry and unease over improbable things, like losing her husband of 15 years. She found solace in having a community to rely on, which included her husband, friends, obstetrician and a women’s support group at her church. “Don’t be afraid to tell someone
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22 Lakewood Sentinel
June 15, 2017J
CLUBS Ongoing Activities Mondays Golden Chapter, Order of DeMolay meets at 7 p.m. every first and third Wednesday in the town of Golden. Walt Disney, Mel Blanc & Walter Cronkite are counted amongst its Alumni. DeMolay is an organization for young men between the ages of 12 and 21 that offers character building, leadership training, and life skill development. We offer many activities, academic opportunities and scholarships. Please contact the chapter for more information. Email demolaygolden@gmail.com or www. coloradodemolay.org and visit Golden’s page under the Chapter tab by clicking on the Golden photo. Golden Nar-Anon family group meets 7:30-9 p.m. Mondays at Calvary Episcopal Church, 1320 Arapahoe St. We ask that people enter on the east side of the church and follow the signs to the upstairs meeting room. Call the Nar-Anon Family Groups World Service Organization at 800-477-6291 or go to NarAnon.org. Jefferson County Republican Men’s Club meets 7-9 a.m. Mondays at Davies’ Chuck Wagon Diner, 10151 W. 26th Ave., Lakewood. Meeting fee is $5 (cash preferred). Order from diner menu (pay on you own). Call Fred Holden at 303-421-7619 for information. Republicans, especially students, youth and women, welcome to join. Job’s Daughters, Golden Chapter Bored? Lonely? Make life-long friends. Join a group of young ladies from ages 10-20 learn leadership and organizational skills in meetings with support from friends. Meetings are the second and fourth Monday of the month in Golden. Meet periodically to do fun activities. Rewards of membership include life skills, community work and significant scholarships for college. Interested, call Job’s Daughters at 303-204-1572 to join us for an activity. Open mic Living Water Unity Spiritual Community presents open mic night – celebrate your teen self 4:30-6:30 p.m. Mondays at 7401 W. 59th Ave., Arvada. This program gives teens the opportunity to express their performing art including voice and
instrument, acting, poetry, stand-up comedy, mime, etc. Open to all students in sixth to 12th grades. Email bellbottoms809@gmail. com. Square Dancing Want some fun exercise? Learn to square dance. Start at 7 p.m. any Monday at the Wheat Ridge Grange, 3850 High Court. Call 303-973-9529. Wheat Ridge Rotary Club meets noon to 1:30 p.m. Mondays for lunch at the Wheat Ridge Recreation Center, 4005 Kipling St. Come as our guest and learn about our service projects for the community. Tuesdays Applewood Kiwanis Club meets 7-8 a.m. Tuesdays at the Applewood Golf Course, 14001 W. 32nd Ave., Golden. You are invited to attend a meeting. Our goals are to serve children worldwide and in our community. We ring the bell for Salvation Army, deliver Christmas baskets to needy families and, assist the Jeffco Action Center with school supplies for children from low-income families. These are just three of our many projects. For more information, contact Fred McGehan at 303-947-1565. Arvada Fine Arts Guild: 2-4 p.m. the third Tuesday of each month at Indian Tree Golf Club, 7555 Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada, in the restaurant/clubhouse. Meetings are free and open to the public. Go to http://arvadafineartsguild.com/ Arvada Sunrise Rotary Club meets 7-8 a.m. Tuesdays at The Arvada Centre For The Arts and Humanities, 6901 Wadsworth Blvd. for a breakfast meeting. Come join us as our guest and learn about our community service projects and what Rotary does in the world to help people. Denver Apple Pi, an Apple/Mac computer user group, meets 7-9 p.m. the third Tuesday each month at the Applewood Community Church (downstairs), 12930 W. 32nd Ave., Golden. Program varies each month. We welcome those interested in learning more about their Apple or Mac computer. Visitors are welcome to see if you like our more mature group. More information may be found at denverapplepi.com.
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Golden Rotary meets 7:15-8:30 a.m. Tuesdays at Rolling Hills Country Club, 15707 W. 26 Ave., Golden. This active organization reaches neighbors in need. We build, support, and organize. We save lives locally and globally. For additional information visit www.rotayclubofgolden.org or contact Pat Madison at 303-279-1021. Lakewood Chapter of Retired and Active Federal Employees meets at 1 p.m. the second Tuesday of most months at the Episcopal Church, 10th and Garrison. Call Greg Kann at 303-718-7307 with questions. Lake Arbor Optimist Club Bringing Out the Best in Kids meets at 7 a.m. Tuesdays at Indian Tree Golf Course, 7555 Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada. Breakfast served. Contact Terri Kearney, president, 303-506-6692; or Debbie Espinoza, treasurer, 720-937-2550. New members welcome. Northside Coin Club is a group of collectors that meets monthly to promote the hobby of numismatics among its members and the public. The club meets at 7 p.m. the second Tuesday of the month at 12205 Perry St., at the Friendship Hall in the Cimarron Village in Broomfield. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Find more information about our club at www. northsidecoinclub.org/ or look for us on Facebook. Master Networks of Belmar Entrepreneurs and professionals interested in growing their business and personal connections, this is the group for you. We use a national platform that includes an educational component along with traditional networking aspects. Group is oriented toward entrepreneurs and professionals. The group meets 10-11 a.m. Tuesdays at DeMarras Bourbon Bar & Eatery, 11100 W. Alameda Ave. For information, visit a meeting or call Suzie at 303-9799077 or email Littleton@Mathnasium.com. Ports of Call Singles Club, 55 Plus Social hours take place 4-6 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at 3 Margaritas in Lakewood (contact Carol at 303-389-7707), and the fourth Tuesday of each month at Chads in Lakewood (contact Darlene at 303233-4099). Denver meetings are the fourth Thursday of each month at Baker St. Pub, 8101 E. Belleview, in the Tech Center (contact Harold at 303-693-3434). For info and a monthly newsletter, call JoAnn, membership chairperson, at 303-751-5195, or Mary, president, at 303-985-8937. Rocky Mountain Team Survivor, a health, education and fitness program for women of all abilities who have experienced cancer or are currently in treatment, offers weekly free, fun, supportive activities. Tuesdays, 10 a.m., Boulder Creek Walk (meet at Boulder Public Library main entrance). Tuesday, 11-11:30 a.m., Yoga, Boulder Senior Center, 909 Arapahoe Avenue. Thursdays, 6-7 p.m., Fitness Training, Boulder Center for Sports Medicine, 311 Mapleton Avenue (entrance on Maxwell Avenue.). Learn more at rockymtnteamsurvivor.org. Wheat Ridge Art League meets at 7 p.m. the last Tuesday of the month at the Active Adult Center, 6363 W. 35th Ave, Wheat Ridge. Social time starts at 6:45 p.m. Enjoy an art demo by an award-winning artist each month at 7:30 pm. All art mediums and abilities welcome. Contact Pat McAleese at 303-941-4928 or mcpainter03@comcast. net for information. No meeting August or December.
Wednesdays Adult Roller Skating is offered from 10:30 a.m. to noon every Wednesday at Roller City at 64th and Sheridan, Arvada. Cost is $5 plus $2 to rent skates. Contact Toni at 303-8688273. American Legion Auxiliary presents Burger Nite, 5-7:30 p.m. every Wednesday at Post 178, 1655 Simms St., Lakewood. Members, their guests and active military invited for varied food and reasonable prices. Visit www.alpost178.org. Arvada Business Connection is a friendly group of Arvada Business owners who meet once each month on Wednesdays at various restaurants in the Arvada area. All are welcome – friends, kids and spouses, too. We collect a $5 donation, given to one of the attendees to donate as they wish. They share how they donated the money at the next meeting. For meeting and contact information, check the Arvada Business Connection Facebook page @ArvadaBusinessConnection or call 303-995-9919. Arvada Jefferson Kiwanis meets 7-8 a.m. Wednesdays at the Arvada Center, 6901 Wadsworth Blvd., for a breakfast meeting. We invite you to join us for great fellowship, interesting programs, and the satisfaction of serving your community. This Kiwanis organization supports the Arvada Community Food Bank, the school backpack program, Santa House, Ralston House, and many other local organizations. For information or to visit a meeting, call Brad at 303-431-4697. Arvada Rotary meets from 6:30-8 p.m. Wednesdays at Indian Tree Golf Club, 7555 Wadsworth Blvd. The club engages in a variety of community service projects, with emphasis on assistance to and support of Arvada’s youth. Visitors are always welcome. For additional information visit www.arvadarotary.org or call Dave Paul at 303-431-9657. Buffalo Toastmasters meets from 11:30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. the first and third Wednesday of each month at the Denver West Office Park, 14142 Denver West Parkway, Building 51, Suite 195, Golden. Go to www.buffalotoastmasters.org or www.meetup.com/ Buffalo-Toastmasters-Golden/ for more information. Buffalo Toastmasters, where public speaking and leadership excellence is encouraged in a safe environment. Dawn Yawn Toastmasters meets 6:458:30 a.m. Wednesdays at Denny’s Restaurant, 565 Union Blvd., Lakewood (on the southwest corner of 6th Avenue and Union Boulevard). You need Toastmasters training because communication is not optional, it is required. Do you communicate with confidence, are you worried about your next big presentation or job interview. Attend the first three meetings for free. Call 303-988-2025 for directions. For information about the club, contact dawnyawn.toastmastersclubs. org or John Googins, VP of membership, at 303-547-0084, john.googins@gmail.com. Foothills Music Teachers Association meets 9:30 a.m. to noon the third Wednesday of each month. FMTA is a local group of independent music teachers, affiliated with Colorado State Music Teachers Association and Music Teachers National Association. Call Kathy at 303-988-9565.
Lakewood Sentinel 23
7June 15, 2017
Motorcycles, music and more for a cause Freedom Fest is back at Littleton venue, with a focus on thanking vets
IF YOU GO When: Saturday, June 17. Where: Platte River Bar & Grill, 5995 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton How much: $30 in advance through freedomfestcolorado.com, or $35 at the door
BY DAVID GILBERT DGILBERT@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Motorcycles, metal bands and good times are on tap for the third annual Freedom Fest, a day-long event in Littleton to thank and help America’s military veterans. Eight bands will rock the Platte River Bar & Grill, 5995 S. Santa Fe Drive, on June 17, including returning headliner Warrant. The day opens with a motorcycle show, followed by a ride to Evergreen and back. Proceeds from the event support the American Soldier Network, a California-based nonprofit that works to help veterans tackle psychological and emotional issues. Organizers are hoping for upward of 4,000 attendees, up from around 3,000 last year. Tickets are $30 in advance or $35 at the door. Free parking will be provided across Santa Fe Drive at Arapahoe Community College, and free shuttle buses will carry attendees across the busy roadway. For Freedom Fest organizer Dean Gary, of Castle Rock, the event is a way to give back to people who have already given so much. “I’ve got men and women who would take a bullet for me, who don’t know me, and I don’t think I’ve got a friend who would do that,” Gary said. “The normal thank-yous to a vet are one thing, but I want people to come out, look a vet in the eye, and hug them, man. Say thank you in a way you never have. Listen to some music, have a beer, but have a day where that gratitude resonates in your heart.” Though Gary never served in the military, he says he feels indebted to veterans, and he funds Freedom Fest largely out of pocket. “I’m just a local Realtor, dude,” Gary said. “I don’t have a ton of money, but what I do have goes back
Parking: Across Santa Fe Drive at Arapahoe Community College, with free shuttles running all day Contact: Platte River Bar & Grill, 303-7989356 Event organizer Dean Gary, 303-356-5253 freedomfestcolorado.com Schedule:
The band Warrant rocks the house at Freedom Fest 2016. The event is back at Platte River Bar & Grill in Littleton on June 17. PHOTO COURTESY SIMONE ROBERTSON to this cause.” American Soldier Network founder Annie Nelson will be on hand to help roll out the newest incarnation of the group’s “I Choose To Live” oath, which encourages veterans to swear not to take their own lives — an effort to address what she describes as an epidemic of veteran suicides. Nearly 20 veterans took an earlier version of the oath at last year’s event. “When these veterans took the oath to serve their country, they took that oath for life,” Nelson said. “They don’t stop abiding by that oath when they hang up their uniform. If you talk to any veteran, that oath means something.” Nelson said her group’s partnership with Freedom Fest was a natural fit. “You can’t walk away from the event without knowing you’ve impacted lives,” Nelson said. “So many veterans come to the event and get that feeling of warmth and gratitude and acceptance and pride. It’s so strong there.” The connection between veterans
and motorcycles is an enduring one, Nelson said. “The motorcycle is a way veterans reconnect,” Nelson said. “It’s how they get their brotherhood back.” The event has grown substantially since its first year, when about 1,800 people came to the Douglas County Fairgrounds in Castle Rock. Gary moved the event to the Platte River Bar & Grill last year after he says he was struck by the venue’s beauty and tranquility. “It’s one of the last non-pretentious bars on this side of the city,” said Christian Coulter, Platte River’s marketing director. “It’s not even blue-collar. It’s no-collar.” The City of Littleton has worked closely with organizers to ensure the event is safe and secure, said city spokeswoman Kelli Narde. “We urge people to be careful, and utilize the free parking at the college and the shuttle buses,” Narde said. “Please don’t try to cross Santa Fe at any time of the day or night.” Six Littleton police officers and two supervisors will be on site, and Coulter said additional security will
8:30 a.m.: Motorcycle show; prizes awarded ($20 entry fee) 10-10:30 a.m.: Motorcycle ride departs for Evergreen, returning around noon BANDS 12-12:30 p.m.: Romero 12:15-1:20: Hericane Alice 1:45-2:25: Autograph 2:50-3:35: Lynch Mob 4:05-5: FireHouse 5:30-6:30: Lita Ford 7-8:10: Winger 8:35-9:55: Warrant
be provided by dozens of former Navy SEALs. “The event largely polices itself,” Coulter said. “Last year we had every motorcycle club on site — Diablos, Sons of Silence, Hells Angels — and everyone left their club colors on their bikes. It’s so militarydriven. Everyone remembers why they’re here.”
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24 Lakewood Sentinel
June 15, 2017J
Five things to know about Chatfield Storage Reallocation Project Project will allow reservoir to hold more water BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
To meet the Front Range’s growing water demand, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers determined Chatfield Reservoir can accommodate an additional 20,600 acre-feet of water storage, increasing reservoir water levels up to 12 feet. The $130 million project, called the Chatfield Storage Reallocation Project, approved in 2014, will allow water storage for eight municipal water providers and agricultural organizations across the Denver metro area and northeast Colorado. Construction is expected to begin late this year and will take up to
History In 1975, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built Chatfield Reservoir at the confluence of the South Platte River and Plum Creek to control flooding following the disastrous 1965 flood. The main purpose of the reservoir, which currently has the ability to store more than 350,000 acre-feet of water, is flood control, but it also provides space for multiuse water and maintains fisheries and wildlife habitat. In response to a growing demand for water — the Statewide Water Supply Initiative, commissioned by the state Legislature, estimates by 2030 Front Range water demand will exceed supply by 22 percent — the corps determined Chatfield Reservoir could accommodate additional storage space. “We are taking advantage of an existing federal structure,” said Colleen Horihan, the corps’ project manager.
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two years to complete. “The ability to store in that much space gives Highlands Ranch new surface water supplies,” said Rick McCloud, water resources manager of Centennial Water and Sanitation District in Highlands Ranch, one of eight participants. “We can use that water instead of non-tributary (non-renewable) groundwater.” Chatfield Reservoir Mitigation Co., formed in 2015 to implement the project, hosted a May 30 open house at ThunderRidge High School in Highlands Ranch for the public to learn about upcoming changes at Chatfield Reservoir and the surrounding state park, which is a major recreational draw for Front Range residents. The following are five things to know about the reallocation project.
Who will benefit The project is a partnership among eight water providers and environmental organizations: Colorado Water Conservation Board, Centennial Water and Sanitation District, Central Colorado Water Conservancy District, Castle Pines North Metro District, Colorado Parks and Wildlife, Castle Rock, Center of Colorado Water Conservancy District and Castle Pines Metro District. Participants will fund upward of $130 million over the next two years for construction of the project. Each provider will receive a varying amount of the additional 20,600 acre-feet of storage space for surface water in Chatfield Reservoir once the reallocation is complete. The project allows participants to have access to renewable water supplies at an existing water storage reservoir, according to Chatfield Reservoir Mitigation Co. It also provides renewable water supplies for paying customers in several communities, such as Highlands Ranch, Castle Pines and Castle Rock.
Dozens of people gather at ThunderRidge High School on May 30 to learn about the future of Chatfield Reservoir and the surrounding state park. ALEX DEWIND
Recreational impact In order to prepare for the reallocation project, many recreational facilities will be modified in phases starting this fall. Most modifications include moving and elevating public areas for increased flood protection and updating existing structures, including picnic structures and bathrooms. A list of detailed designs is available at chatfieldreallocation. org/recreation. Chatfield Reservoir Mitigation Co. encourages park users to follow the project on Facebook and Twitter and to ask questions and receive updates on closures and construction schedules. “Social media channels are critical platforms,” said Ben Waymire, social media consultant of the project. “These are channels for residents to engage.”
Environment On-site and off-site environmental mitigation will be done at Chatfield State Park to address impacts of storing more water in the reservoir, according to Chatfield Reservoir Mitigation Co. Mitigation will include an adaptive treemanagement plan for the reservoir to remove dead trees and debris along the shoreline and to identify a long-term treemonitoring program. A $424,000 budget is set aside for pre-construction weed control. Off-site mitigation is being explored for bird and Preble’s meadow jumping mouse habitats. Depleted water channels and wetlands will be restored using vegetation and structures. “We are creating more wetland habitat than we are impacting with the project,” said Barbara Biggs, project manager.
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Timeline The reallocation project will begin in fall of this year and is expected to be complete by 2020, after which the reservoir will be able to store up to 20,600 acre feet of additional water. Construction will be done in 12 phases, starting with the north boat ramp of the reservoir, to minimize impact on Chatfield State Park — the most visited state park in Colorado with more than 1.6 million visitors per year, according to the mitigation company. The final phase will be wetland and bird habitat mitigation of Mary Gulch, an eastern tributary of the South Platte River. “Our goal is to save as much as possible,” said Scott Roush, park manager.
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7June 15, 2017
THINGS to DO THEATER
Performance Now Presents `The Wedding Singer’: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays through June 25 at 470 S. Allison Parkway, Lakewood. Call 303-987-7845 or go to www.performancenow.org. Mud Blue Sky: 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday, and 6 p.m. Sunday, through July 2 at The Edge Theater, 1560 Teller St., Lakewood. When three seasoned flight attendants are reunited at a motel near O’Hare Airport, the grungy accommodations and looming morning flight make them question their lives in the friendly skies. Call 303-232-0363 or online at www.theedgetheater. com.
MUSIC
Summer Series: `Mud Blue Sky’: 8 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays through July 2 at The Edge Theater, 1560 Teller St., Lakewood. Tickets and passes for the Edge Theater Summer Series available by calling 303-232-0363 or online at www.theedgetheater. com. Other shows in the series are “Bad Jews” from July 14 to Aug. 6; and “Dinner” from Aug. 25 to Sept. 17.
EVENTS
Beekeeping Up Close: 8-10 a.m. Saturday, June 17 and June 24 at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. Three-part series designed to build on the basic information presented in introduction to backyard beekeeping. Each week covers a different topic relating to beekeeping and includes a visit to the observation area of Pioneer Farmsteaders’ bee yard for an up close look at the bees. Sign up in advance at Arvada.org/publicclasses. Lego Play and Build: 2-3 p.m. Saturday, June 17 at the Arvada Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. Builders of all ages are welcome to stick to the theme or build their own creation. What story will you tell? We provide the Lego bricks and Lego Duplo for younger kiddos. For all ages. Call 303-235-JCPL (5275) or go to www. jeffcolibrary.org Service Day in the Park: 9-11 a.m. Saturday, June 17 at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. Gather with friends and fellow park users to spruce up Majestic View Community Park.
the view. Register at Arvada.org/ public-classes.
this week’s TOP FIVE Stuart Little: 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Friday, June 16 at Colorado ACTS theater, 11455 W. I-70 Frontage Road North, Wheat Ridge. Join the Little family and Stuart on his many adventures with scheming Snowball the Cat and his beloved bird friend Margalo. Classic E.B. White tale is sure to bring a smile. Tickets on a donation basis. Go to http:// www.coloradoacts.org/. Sounds Exciting! Summer Concerts: 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 21 (Hazel Miller Band); June 28 (Megan Burtt); July 5 (Town Mountain); July 12 (Pandas and People); July 19 (Dotsero); July 26 (The Burroughs) at the Bonfils-Stanton Foundation Amphitheater, 801 S. Yarrow St., Lakewood. Tickets available at the Lakewood Cultural Center box office, 470 S. Allison Parkway; the Lakewood Heritage Center visitor center, 801 S. Yarrow St.; by calling 303-987-7845; or online at Lakewood.org/SummerConcerts. Gates open at 6 p.m. Can Hydrogen Save Our Energy System?: 7 p.m. Thursday, June 22 at Jefferson Unitarian Church, 14350 W. 32nd Ave., Golden. Learn about and Bring a picnic lunch to enjoy with others after we are done. A light snack will be served. Sign up at Arvada.org/public-classes. Republican Men’s Club: 7-9 a.m. Mondays at Davies’ Chuck Wagon Diner, 10151 W. 26th Ave., Wheat Ridge. Meetings open to everyone; women and students especially invited. Upcoming meetings include Monday, June 19, Jeff Shrader, providing updates on Jefferson County Law Enforcement following the 2017 General Assembly conclusion. Contact Fred Holden, president, at 303421-7619. Opioid Use in Community: 10:30 a.m. to noon Saturday, June 17 at the Standley Lake Library, 8485 Kipling St., Arvada. Town meeting with Rep. Tracy Kraft-Tharp, Rep. Lang Sias, and Sen. Rachel Zenzinger. Contact RepTracy29@gmail. com. Mad Science Camp: Space and Flight Academy: noon to 4 p.m. Monday to Friday, June 19-23 at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. For ages 6-11 years. Learn about the four forces of flight, build your own kit and rocket. Sign up at Arvada.org/
discuss the Department of Energy’s Hydrogen at Scale Idea. Networking reception with food and drinks follows presentation. Contact Martin Voelker, jcres@cres-energy.org. Go to www.cres-energy. org. RSVP at https://www.meetup.com/J-CRES/ events/237038731/ to help plan for food. Day Out with Thomas: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, June 24-25, July 1-2 and July 8-9 at the Colorado Railroad Museum, 17155 W. 44th Ave., Golden. Departures begin at 8:30 a.m. and run every 45 minutes until 4:45. Tickets on sale at www. ticketweb.com/dowt or by calling 866-468-7630. Call the museum at 303-279-4591 or go to www. coloradorailroadmuseum.org. Miners Alley Playhouse Presents `Cabaret’: 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday through June 25 at Miners Alley Playhouse, 1224 Washington Ave., Golden. Tony Awardwinning musical about following your heart while the world loses its way. Additional shows at 6 p.m. Sunday, May 28, June 4, June 11 and June 18. Call 303-935-3044 or go to minersalley.com.
public-classes. Putin’s Russia: 1-3 p.m. Tuesday, June 20 at Arvada Estates, 7175 Kipling St., Arvada. Join Active Minds as we examine the story of Russia under the influence of Vladimir Putin, including Russia’s involvement in the situation in Ukraine. Call 303-412-5480 to RSVP. Build a Better World with Salida Circus: 12:30-1:30 p.m. Monday, June 20 at Arvada Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. Interactive circus theater show featuring juggling, acrobatics and clowning. For all ages. Call 303-235-JCPL (5275) or go to www.jeffcolibrary. org Imperfect Parents: noon and 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 20 at Lifetree Café, 5675 Field St., Arvada. The program, “Imperfect Parents: Making Peace and Moving On,” features a screening of And What Remains, an award-winning short film. Participants will have the opportunity to discuss how the forces that shaped their parent’s lives have impacted their own. Contact Polly Wegner at 303-424-4454 or pwegner@ peacelutheran.net. Snakes and Stakes: MVNC Campfire Series: 6:30-8 p.m. Wednesday, June 21, at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. For all ages. Learn about snakes from a naturalist friend from Lookout Mountain Nature Center. Hear how snakes play an important role in the ecosystem
Lakewood Sentinel 25
and get over the myth that they are monsters. There will be live snakes to touch and admire, as well as marshmallows to roast. Sign up at Arvada.org/publicclasses. Make Something: Firestarters: 2:30-3:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 21 at Arvada Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. Learn how to make camp firestarters using common household materials. Registration required and starts one week in advance. Class limited to 25 and is suitable for all ages. Call 303-235-JCPL (5275) or go to www.jeffcolibrary.org. Bridge Building Challenge: 2-3 p.m. Friday, June 23 at the Arvada Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. Build a bridge, find out how much weight they can hold and expand your knowledge about what makes structures strong. For ages 8-11. Call 303-235JCPL (5275) or go to www.jeffcolibrary.org Hands Dirty, Feet Wet Nature Playdate: 10:30 a.m. to noon Friday, June 23 at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. Children can climb on logs, jump stump to stump, build forts, dig in the dirt and connect with their world. Stay as long as you like; pack a picnic and enjoy
Dowsers Conference: 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, June 24, at Clements Community Church, 1580 Yarrow St., Lakewood. Learn about dowsing and witching for water. Demonstrations and practical exercises offered. Walk the magical labyrinth, browse vendor booths, hunt for crystals and gold coins, and more. Presented by Mile High Dowsers. Go to milehighdowsers.org or contcct dowsersmilehigh@gmail.com. Movie Time: 1:30-3:30 p.m. Saturday, June 24 at the Arvada Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. It’s Saturday matinee time. We show family-friendly flicks and serve popcorn. Movie is “Sing” and is suitable for all ages. Call 303235-JCPL (5275) or go to www. jeffcolibrary.org Build a Better World with Lego: 3:30-4:30 p.m. Saturday, June 24 at the Arvada Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. Enthusiasts of all ages can create a Lego structure that represents this year’s summer reading theme “Build a Better World.” Build at home with your own bricks or create using the library’s Lego collection. Entries must be submitted by Friday, June 23. Visit the library for entry details. Call 303-235-JCPL (5275) or go to www.jeffcolibrary.org Fox Hollow Tournaments: The Men’s Club is hosting the Mayor’s Cup on Saturday, June 24 and its Red, White and Blue member guest event including women July 2. This year Lakewood’s award winning 27-hole facility at 13414 W. Morrison Road added more tee options for all player levels. Join the golfing fun through October; go to fhmgc.com.
HEALTH
Reverse Type 2 Diabetes: 11:30 a.m. Saturday, June 17, at Natural Grocers/Vitamin Cottage, 7745 N. Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada. Class Naturally Arvada:10:30-11:30 a.m. Sunday, June 25 at the Arvada Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. Free demonstrations and displays from master chefs and gardeners using fresh produce found at the Sunday Arvada Farmer’s Market. Call 303-235-JCPL (5275) or go to www.jeffcolibrary. org. 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.
26 Lakewood Sentinel
June 15, 2017J
Marketplace ANNOUNCEMENTS Instruction Reading tutor: licensed teacher, MA special education, MS literacy, reasonable rates, contact 303-915-7064 or email readdaly@yahoo.com
Misc. Notices Want To Purchase minerals and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: P.O. Box 13557 Denver, CO 80201
FARM & AGRICULTURE Farm Products & Produce Grain Finished Buffalo
quartered, halves and whole
719-775-8742
GARAGE & ESTATE SALES Garage Sales 5388, 5378, 5348 East Weaver Ave Centennial, CO 80121. Between Arapahoe & Orchard on Holly. Fri.,June 16 & Sat.,June 17 -- 8AM to 3PM Twin over Full Bunk Bed (complete), Vintage Acme Adjustable Dress Form Mannequin, Wheel Barrel, Ladder, (2) Bar Stools, Upholstered Side Chair, Baby Items, Radial Arm Saw, Massage Table, Vintage Cedar Chest, Dresser, Vintage Glassware, Disney VHS tapes,Books, many other items. Community Garage Sale in Arvada! Saturday, June 17th from 8-12 Multiple Sales in Sandra Terri neighborhood, Follow the Signs! Sales between 51st and 54th and Kipling and Independence. Sponsored by Joe and Kathryn with Colorado Home Realty Call with Questions! 720-327-9350 Multi Fam Garage Sale. A lot of great clean items, Antique dresser and more, Harley items, Tools, Outdoor, Luggage, Elliptical, Cornhole game, Cookware, Bakers rack, Handbags, Jewelry and more. Sat. June 16 & Sun. June 17th. 8-6 PM. 23272 Blackwolf Way, Parker 80138.
Garage Sales
PLACE YOUR AD TODAY!
303-566-4091
Bicycles
HUGE COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE (Up to 86 garages) at St. Andrews at plum Creek community, located in Castle Rock, CO. Sale will be held on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, 22, 23 and 24 June 2017 from 8:00 am to 2:00 pm each day. Follow your GPS to 3123 Newport Circle, Castle Rock, CO for the center of the community. The homes are located on Mount Royal Drive, Newport Circle and Compass Circle. From Exit 181 (Plum Creek Parkway) off of I-25 follow the signs to Mount Royal Drive. A full range of items will be on sale from appliances to baby clothes. Saturday 6/17 9am 11127 West 64th Place Arvada 80004 Household items, books, misc. 6' Sleeper Couch tan $200
Furniture
TRANSPORTATION
New Lazy Boy Power Lift Recliner Chair never used, new price $1500 asking price $1000 720-898-0216
Autos for Sale
Sofa, 2 Queen Anne Chairs, end table Great condition $100 Foyer Table exc. cond. wood hand painted $50 720-982-5049 cash only
Electric Bicycle Sale Buy 1 ebike & get 1 ebike FREE All 2016 New & Used electric Bikes on sale LIMETED SUPPLY HURRY FAST – BRAND NEW 2016 ELECTRIC BIKES 303-257-0164
Lawn and Garden
For sale 2010 Ford Fusion. 53,000 miles, runs great, clean with minor hail damage, black with spoiler, manual transmission 2.5 L, $8000. Contact 303-514-8371
John Deer EZ Trak Riding Lawnmower Model 31P707 Type 0132B1 $1500 Also Snow Blower for sale 303-457-4315
Building Materials
Vista Village Townhomes Community Garage Sale 8700 Block Allison Dr. Westminster-Across from Moore Middle School June 23 and 24 8am-3pm Electronics,Tools,Furniture Household,Collectibles,
All Brands 1995 Prices - Motivated Air Staples for Upholstery, Roofs, Framer, Trim, Cabinets, Pin Nails, Truss, Carpets, Printers All sizes Bostitch, DuoFast, Senco etc. Pins, Loads and Anchors Paul. Glenn 303-287-1601
Estate Sales
Push Lawnmower For Sale. Great Way to Exercise while Mowing! Good for the Environment and Only $35. Call 303257-0121
Firewood
Split & Delivered $275 a cord Stacking available extra $25 Call 303-647-2475 or 720-323-2173
MERCHANDISE
I
BUY DIABETIC Test Strips! OneTouch, Freestyle, AccuChek, more! Must not be expired or opened. Call Chris Today: 800-506-4964
Furniture Antiques & Collectibles I Buy Antiques and Collectibles Partial and Estates Sports Cards, Baseball Cards Etc. Jewelry, Watches, Art, Figurines, Paintings As a Disabled Veteran I Greatly appreciate your business 720-292-6185 ferona65@yahoo.com
Please Recycle this Publication when Finished
PETS
11 piece walnut Dining Room furniture by Hooker, NC Table, 2 leafs, china cabinet, buffet and 6 cane back chairs Very Good Condition $850 719-439-4673 Dining Room set solid wood w/2 leaves Opens to approx 10' with Four chairs $200 Hutch matches but not part of the set $200 303-437-1065 Dining Room Table with 4 newly upholstered chairs and buffet (303)798-9044
303-566-4091
RV’s and Campers
Your Vacation Home away from Home Take your pets along Damon Ultrasport Motorhome 38' diesel pusher Cummins transmission New Drapes, Very Clean 56K miles, barely broke in $30,000 for quick sale too See Call Vaughn (303)674-8909 or 720-351-9597
Wanted
Cash for all Vehicles! Cars, Trucks, Vans, SUV’s
Dogs 2 male Pomeranian's black, tan, brown & white 11 weeks old, all shots gentile personalities good with everyone 303-431-0172 AKC English Golden Retrievers Ready in 4 short weeks 5 females, 4 males 720-660-6712
ADVERTISE IN THE MARKETPLACE
For Local News Anytime of the Day Visit OurColoradoNews.com
Sell your merchandise on this page $25 for 2 weeks in 16 papers and online 303-566-4091
For sale Lite Craft camper: good condition, barely used some hail damage, $2000. Contact 303-514-8371
Health and Beauty
ARVADA 6013 Newcombe Street Saturday June 17th only 8:30am Various Items such as Furniture, clothes, nick nacks Lots of Vintage & Collectible Items
*2002* 35th Anniversary Chevrolet Camaro Z-28 Convertible For Sale. It Is In *Excellent Condition*! It Only Has 30,500 Miles! The Car Is Platinum And The Top Is Black. Beautiful Chrome Wheels! It Has Always Been Stored In Garage. This Is A Very, Very Beautiful Automobile! $17,500. 303-997-7979.
Any condition • Running or not Under $700
(303)741-0762
Cell: (303)918-2185 for texting
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DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK, BOAT, RV; Running or not, to www.developmentaldisabled.org Tax deductible! 303-659-1744. 19 years of service (go onto website to see 57 Chevy)
LOCAL
7June 15, 2017
SPORTS
Lakewood Sentinel 27
Jeffco Athletic HOF inducts outstanding Class of 2017 BY DENNIS PLEUSS JEFFCO PUBLIC SCHOOLS
ARVADA — The names conjure up thousands of memories of athletic accomplishments for those familiar to Jeffco Public Schools. Annie Kunz, Matt Rillos, Don McGatlin, Peter Horvath and Frank DeAngelis were permanently immortalized June 9 at the Arvada Center. The five former Jeffco athletes and coaches were inducted as the Class of 2017 to the Jeffco Athletic Hall of Fame. “I get to come in with so many of your heroes,” McGatlin said of his entry into the hall of fame. “I appreciate so much Jim Thyfault (Executive Director of Athletics) and Jefferson County for allowing me to be a part of this wonderful group of people. It’s emotional today.” McGatlin was one of the highlights in one of the strongest induction classes ever for the hall of fame. The longtime Green Mountain High School football and track coach guided the Rams to five state titles during his tenure from 1981 to 2005. Even after leaving Green Mountain, McGatlin hasn’t stopped coaching. He is currently an assistant football coach at Chatfield High School under his son and head coach Bret McGatlin, along with being a track coach at Calhan High School. “I can’t get away from it,” McGatlin said of coaching. “I’ll coach until I feel like I’m not doing a good job. Right now I could see coaching into
Annie Kunz (Wheat Ridge), Peter Horvath (Columbine), Don McGatlin (Green Mountain and Chatfield), Frank DeAngelis (Columbine) and Matt Rillos (Golden) were inducted into the Jeffco Athletics Hall of Fame on June 9. DENNIS PLEUSS/JEFFCO PUBLIC SCHOOLS my 70s.” Annie Kunz Kunz is also still chasing her athletic passions. The 24-year-old — arguably one of the best female athletes to come out of the Jeffco and maybe Colorado — is currently training at the Olympic Training Center in San Diego. She placed 8th
in the Heptathlon at the 2016 Olympic Trails and holds the school records at Texas A&M University in both the Pentathlon & Heptathlon. “2020 is the ultimate goal,” the Wheat Ridge High School graduate said about the Olympics three years from now in Tokyo. “Building up to that and hopefully peaking at the right time.”
The spring belonged to Kunz during her time at Wheat Ridge. She not only was a track star, but led the Farmers to three straight Class 4A girls soccer state championship games with Wheat Ridge winning two state titles. Despite going on to Texas A&M where she helped the Aggies women’s SEE HALL, P31
Jefferson High School graduate finishes second in figure-8 race Jefferson High School graduate finishes second in figure-8 race BY TOM MUNDS TMUNDS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
There was a smile in Sean Smith’s voice as he talked about taking second place June 10 figure-8 race at Colorado National Speedway in Dacono. “This is the best our car has run all season,” he said. “The car handled well and the race went well for us. It was probably our best overall effort so far this year.” He said the car is coming around. He and the crew do make some changes each race but most of the changes are little things that are done to get a little more speed and better handling out of the car. He said he really doesn’t pay a lot of attention to cars coming from the other side of the figure-8 as he goes into where the two portions of the track cross. He said he just focuses
Driver Sean Smith in the white car makes sure to avoid the driver in the 13 car as they take figure 8 warm up laps as they get ready for the June 10 race at Colorado National Speedway. Smith, who grew up in Lakewood, said his car was running great and he drove his way to a second-place finish, his best performance so far this season. TOM MUNDS on guiding his car so he doesn’t make contact with other cars but admitted that wasn’t always easy to do. Figure-8 racing gets its name from the shape of the track. The cars circle the curves at each end of the track then speed through the straight-away
section of the course that cross in the middle. Smith drive the No. 4 white Ford Thunderbird body car, powered by as 350 cubic inch V-8 engine that pushes the car up to 80 miles an hour on the straight portions of the course.
Sean is one half of the father-son team racing at Colorado National Speedway. He grew up in Lakewood now lives in Greeley and his dad Darrell Smith is a Lakewood businessman who lives in Littleton. Sean smiled and said racing is in his blood. “My dad Darrell Smith, who is next to me in the pits, has been racing for 50 years. We grew up at Lakeside and Englewood speedways so I guess it is natural that both my brother and I were race drivers. My brother doesn’t race anymore but I am still at it,” he said. “I started racing as a 6-year-old in quarter-midget cars which are gokarts with roll cages.” He said he has driven several different kinds of cars in his racing career and has raced on both paved and dirt tracks. “I finally decided to drive figure-8s last year and was the rookie of the year in that division here at CNS,” Smith said. “Adjusting from circle track racing to figure-8 racing wasn’t SEE RACE, P32
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Lakewood Sentinel 31
7June 15, 2017
FROM PAGE 27
soccer team advance to the NCAA National semifinals her senior year and being a two-time All-SEC first team selection, Kunz was a surprised when she got the call that she had been selected for induction. “Definitely not so soon,” Kunz said about being one of the youngest Jeffco Athletic HOF inductees ever. “I joked with my mom that I don’t feel like I’ve done anything yet to deserve to be in the hall of fame. I’m definitely just grateful, honored and humbled to be a part of such a wonderful group. Being apart of the Jeffco community means the world to me.” It was the 32nd year Jeffco has added to its athletic hall of fame that started in 1986. The names of nearly the 100 athletes, coaches and contributors who have been inducted are displayed on plaques at the atrium at Jeffco Stadium. Matt Rillos A four-sport (football, basketball, track and baseball) athlete at Golden High School from 1992-1996. Was Golden’s valedictorian his senior year, along with winning the Freddie Steinmark, Gold Helmet (The Denver Post) and Jeffco Male Athlete of the Year honors. “He (Rillos) had an unbelievable senior year,” said current Ralston Valley football coach Matt Loyd who coached Rillos at Golden. That incredible senior year included Rillos coming out for baseball. It was his first year playing high school baseball and Loyd joked about how Rillos showed up for the first practice with a borrowed glove and wood bat. However, he turned out to be the best player on the team that season and was an all-conference selection. Rillos went on to play football at the Air Force Academy. He was a running back on the Falcons’ 1998 team that were Western Athletic Conference champions with a 12-1 overall record while finishing No. 8 in the nation.
Currently, Rillos is the owner of Financial Counsel Associates in Golden. Peter Horvath Horvath was the boys and girls head varsity soccer coach at Columbine High School from 1983-2008. During his 25 years of coaching the Rebels’ soccer programs Columbine won 19 Jeffco League titles, grabbed eight state runner-up trophies and the boys team won three state championships (1986, 1993 and 2002). Horvath talked during his induction speech about his goal when he first began coaching — “To create an experience and environment for our players and athletes that wasn’t just based on soccer. It was about life experiences and developing our players into people, not just players. It was about character and values. I think I did a good job doing that.” Horvath was named coach of the year several times and was inducted into the Colorado High School Coaches Hall of Fame in 2016. Frank DeAngelis While being remember mostly as Columbine High School’s principal for 18 years, DeAngelis has a rich background in athletes. He was an assistant football coach at Columbine and the head baseball coach for the Rebels from 1981-1994. Three times he was selected at the Jeffco’s baseball Coach of the Year. During his acceptance speech, DeAngelis said being a coach for so many years before stepping into the role of principal helped him lead the school and community after the tragic shooting at Columbine High School in 1999. Fittingly, just before DeAngelis retired as principal at Columbine the Rebels’ girls soccer team won the first girls state team title in the school’s history claiming the 2014 Class 5A state championship. Dennis Pleuss is a communications specialist for Jeffco Public Schools with a focus on athletics and activities. For more Jeffco coverage, go online at CHSAANow.com/Jeffco.
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RACE FROM PAGE 27
too hard. It just took a little getting used to turning right as well as left because in circle track racing you always turn to the left.” He said racing is an expensive hobby. Racing doesn’t come cheap. A figure-8 car is all metal and must meet stringent specifications, particularly those to protect the driver. It would cost about $10,000 to buy a ready-to-race figure-8 car. The cost of racing includes the cost of racing fuel at about $10 a gallon and tires that cost several hundred dollars a set. Like most local drivers Smith races on the weekend and works at a full-time job during the week as a manager at United Facility Solutions that is based in Lakewood. Darrell Smith grew up racing too. “I saw a race at Lakeside Speedway about 50 years ago and thought I would like to try it,” he said. “I looked things over and decided to race figure-8. I raced at Englewood Speedway for 14 years and was the champion in 1971.” He said he eventually decided to leave figure-8 racing but still wanted to get
June 15, 2017J behind the wheel so he went to super stock. His red No. 2 is powered by a 350 horsepower engine and hits speeds of more than 80 miles an hour on the straight sections of the race course. He said when he was younger he would drive 50 or more races a year at tracks mostly in Colorado. Now it is down to about 20 track races a year. But he also drives in enduro events at I-76 Raceway in Fort Morgan. The I-76 enduro races are 100-lap events and the race is not stopped except for an emergency or if the track is completely blocked. If a car breaks down or is damaged and unable to move, the race can be halted long enough to get the driver to safety. But the disabled remains in place on the track so drivers must maneuver around it. So durability rather than speed is often the key to winning the race. “I just like being on the track and racing. I like racing stock cars and the endure races are a lot of fun,” Darrell Smith said. “It is a hobby. When I am not at the track you can find me at my business Badwrench Auto Wrecking. My son runs the shop but I show up there almost every day because just as I like racing I like being involved in the auto wrecking business.”
Darrell Smith guides his car back into the pits after completing warm up laps as he and his crew prepare to compete in the June 10 super stock division races at Colorado National Speedway. Smith, a Lakewood businessman, had been driving race cars for about 50 years and said it is still a lot of fun to be behind the wheel. PHOTOS BY TOM MUNDS
Sean Smith makes his way into his figure-8 car as he prepares to head out onto the track for testing laps as he prepares to take part in the June 8 race at Colorado National Speedway.
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Lakewood businessman Darrell Smith readies to take his super stock car out onto the Colorado National Speedway track for warm up laps as he prepares to compete in the June 10 super stock division race. Smith has been racing for 50 years, said he loves the sport and has no plans to stop racing anytime soon.
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