JANUARY 19, 2017
FREE
SUSHI TREND ON A ROLL:
Healthy ingredients keep Japanese cuisine popular
A publication of
DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO
P14
DRAWING ATTENTION:
Lone Tree welcomes a new senior living community P6
TAKING TIME: Concierge medicine follows different approach in health care P5 Your newspaper is made possible by advertisers like Albert Vein Institute, who support our efforts to keep you connected to your community!
SHOWDOWN: Highlands Ranch and Douglas County face off P24 BUILDING SUPPORT: A bipartisan bill aims to get more condos and townhomes built in Colorado P8 THE BOTTOM LINE
‘Revenue for transportation is something we can control without asking taxpayers for more money.’ Patrick Neville, state representative | Page 9 INSIDE
VOICES: PAGE 10 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 22 | SPORTS: PAGE 24
LoneTreeVoice.net
VOLUME 16 | ISSUE 1
2 Lone Tree Voice
Urgent Care and ER. Together at Last. Always Open.
January 19, 2017J
Tiny dog worth big bucks stolen Eight-week-old purebred taken from Perfect Pets BY STEPHANIE MASON SMASON@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
A purebred, 8-week-old Papillon puppy worth $1,300 was stolen from Perfect Pets in Centennial on Jan. 3. According to an Arapahoe County Sherriff ’s Office news release, the suspects are a man and woman in their 20s, both white with dark hair. Video footage of the puppy being stolen can be seen on the Arapahoe County Sheriff ’s Office Facebook page: www. facebook.com/ArapahoeSO/videos/1380808035296113/ The female suspect picked the puppy up “by the back of the neck” out of a dog pen display and carried it to the back of the store, the news release
states. The male suspect then distracted the store employee while the woman put the dog under her sweatshirt. Both suspects left through a back exit without paying, according to the release. “By the way the lady grabbed the puppy, we are concerned about the puppy’s safety,” said Lexi Esquibel, manager of the store at 6840 S. University Boulevard. “She was less than two pounds. Those small-breed dogs are known to go hypoglycemic. If they don’t get care, water and soft food, they could get really sick and die.” Anyone with information about the crime, the whereabouts of the stolen dog or the identification of the suspects is asked to contact Crime Stoppers at 720-913-7867. You can remain anonymous and may be eligible for a cash reward. Additionally, Perfect Pets is offering a $300 reward. You can also call the sheriff ’s office’s tip line at 720-8748477 with information.
Q&A with state Rep. Kim Ransom Centura Health’s new combined Emergency and Urgent Care treats minor aches and major injuries 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Now Highlands Ranch has the best urgent and emergency care, right where you need it. Whenever you need it.
Kim Ransom began her second term as the state representative for House District 44 on Jan. 11. The Republican from Acres Green is a former teacher and editor. District 44 encompasses Parker, Lone Tree and Acres Green, among other areas of northeast Douglas County. Ransom What are the two most important issues the Legislature must tackle this session and why? Passing a balanced budget is both important and challenging. Although the total budget grows each year, so does mandated spending. This year we will need to find solutions for changes that are expected to happen on a federal level with the new administration and also prioritize transportation spending, especially for I-25.
Describe a bill you plan to sponsor that is particularly important to you. All the bills I put my name on are intended to uphold the Constitution and preserve Colorado citizens’ right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Stay tuned for specifics. After everything is said and done, what will constitute a successful session? With a split Legislature, all bills need to be approached in a bipartisan manner, and we need to find common ground with both parties to move any bill forward. Finding common ground does not mean we need to compromise our principles, however, so it’s important for everyone to remember that majorities matter, and that any bill passed needs to meet the magic threshold of 33-18-1 (a majority of votes in the House, Senate, and the governor’s signature.)
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COMING SOON TO HIGHLANDS RANCH! 9205 S. Broadway Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 303-649-3650 Centura Health does not discriminate against any person on the basis of race, color, national origin, disability, age, sex, religion, creed, ancestry, sexual orientation, and marital status in admission, treatment, or participation in its programs, services and activities, or in employment. For further information about this policy contact Centura Health’s Office of the General Counsel at 303-804-8166. Copyright © Centura Health, 2017
ACC hosting medical career fair The Arapahoe Community College Career and Transfer Center will host a health care career day on Jan. 31. The event is free and open to the public. Representatives from health care organizations will be on hand to answer questions and accept resumes for jobs such as laboratory and pharmacy technicians, medical assistants and nurses. The event will be held in the Summit Room, or room M1900, at the Littleton Campus, 5900 S. Santa Fe Drive, from 1 to 4 p.m. Learn to identify waterfowl South Suburban Parks and Recreation District will host a class on how to identify the various ducks and other waterfowl that populate South Platte Park on Jan. 21. Participants will first attend a lesson inside the classroom, then go outside to learn how to identify birds by behavior, sound, color and shape.
The class is open to ages 16 and up and costs $9 for district residents and $12 for nonresidents. It will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. The park is located at 3000 W. Carson Drive in Littleton. Seedling trees available The Douglas County Conservation District, in cooperation with the Colorado State Forest Service, is offering seedling trees for sale to local residents to be planted for conservation uses, such as windbreaks and shelterbelts, living snow fences, erosion control, wildlife habitat and reforestation. There is no minimum amount of property required to purchase these trees and shrubs. Species available include bare root shrubs, trees and small and large tubed deciduous and coniferous trees. Visit dcconservation.com, or call 303-218-2622 or email DCCDistrict@gmail.com. The last day for ordering will be March 29 to be picked up on April 13 in Castle Rock just in time for spring planting.
Lone Tree Voice 3
January 19, 2017
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January 19, 2017J
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School district extends interim superintendent’s contract Erin Kane took over for Elizabeth Fagen, who left the district in July 2016 BY MIKE DIFERDINANDO MDIFERDINANDO@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
The Douglas County Board of Education has extended the contract of Interim Superintendent Erin Kane through the 2017-18 school year, meaning the school district will continue to hold off on a search for a new permanent leader. At the beginning of this school year, Kane took over for Elizabeth Fagen, who announced in May she was leaving to lead a school district in Texas after six years in Douglas County. The board voted 5-2 in favor of the extension during its Jan.17 meeting. Board members David Ray and AnneMarie Lemieux opposed the extension. Wendy Vogel agreed to vote yes after a 20 percent bonus for Kane was removed from her contract. Board member James Geddes said that since the board of education election is in November, the board may change its complexion entirely come fall, and he said it would have been a mistake to try to recruit a new superintendent in that climate. Kane Four seats on the sevenmember board are up for election. “If the board becomes substantially changed, then that board should choose the next superintendent,” Geddes said. A tentative timeline would now have the school board beginning a search for a permanent superintendent after the November election, which would likely include hiring a search firm. Kane’s contract had been set to expire Sept. 1. Her salary is $240,000 per year — more than that of superintendents in two nearby suburban districts. Littleton’s superintendent earns $220,000 and Jefferson County’s $194,000, not including incentives. But it is less than the leader of the Cherry Creek district, who makes $247,000, according to figures from the Colorado Department of Education. In a guest column published on Colorado Community Media’s websites Jan.11, board member Steven Peck made the case for extending Kane. “Beginning the search for a new superintendent at this time isn’t fair, prudent or judicious,” he wrote. “Selection of a new leader a few months ahead of an election isn’t fair to the newly elected board who will assume responsibility following the November 2017 election. The new board should be given an opportunity to shape the trajectory of the district. That may result in a permanent contract for Ms. Kane or it may not, but the voters should have their voices heard.”
‘You want to know what creates chaos and instability? It’s keeping an interim indefinitely.’ Anne-Marie Lemieux, board member
Ray said he felt “blindsided” by the call for the extension, did not feel there was adequate communication among board members on the issue and felt it should have been addressed earlier in the school year. “It just didn’t evolve the way I thought it should,” Ray said. Lemiux said more input from community and school leaders was needed before making the decision and that she didn’t agree with prolonging the interim agreement with Kane. “You want to know what creates chaos and instability? It’s keeping an interim indefinitely,” Lemieux said. Kane was approved as the interim leader by a 4-3 vote of the school board at a special meeting Aug. 2. She had been chosen as the lone finalist as one of two candidates, the other being James Calhoun, who retired as principal of Castle View High School in Castle Rock at the end of the 2015-16 school year. Calhoun was supported by Ray, Vogel and Lemieux. Fagen officially left in July to take the superintendent position in Humble, Texas, a district of 39,000 students outside Houston. The Douglas County district has more than 67,000 students. Kane, a Colorado native with an engineering degree in applied mathematics and computer science from the University of Colorado, helped found charter school American Academy. Executive director of the school from 2013 until taking the interim DCSD post, she pointed to her leadership of the school’s community in her bid to win the job. Kane said she never envisioned remaining in the interim position for more than a year, but “if I’m helping in some way to bring some stability, I would like to continue to do that.” When asked if she has plans to apply for the permanent position, she said she “honestly didn’t know.” “I can’t predict what the district will look like in a year,” Kane said. The board seats held by Meghann Silverthorn, Judith Reynolds, Geddes and Peck will be up for election in November.
Lone Tree Voice 5
January 19, 2017
Option puts primary focus on the patient Some doctors are transitioning to concierge health care BY STEPHANIE MASON SMASON@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Dr. Michael Mignoli recalls spending eight to 15 minutes with patients during exams when he ran his small, primary care practice for 22 years. He admits to having only enough time to treat the biggest issue before moving on to the next patient. Now, he says it is not uncommon for him to spend 1 1/2 hours with a patient during an annual exam at his Lone Tree practice, Vanguard Primary Care. His availability to thoroughly evaluate an individual is the result of his practice’s transition into concierge medicine in October. “When you only have eight to 10 minutes, you figure out the Band-Aid for the biggest thing that is bleeding,” Mignoli said. “In this model you are able to address everything, not only all the problems and all the complaints of a patient, but also take it a step further and do a deeper dive into prevention.” Concierge medicine is a retainer model of medical practice in which patients pay an annual fee to have access to a primary-care practice. “Medicine in the past 40 years has really evolved to the negative,” said Terry Bauer, CEO of Specialdocs Consultants, an Illinois-based company that helps doctors transition into a concierge practice. “Physicians have become almost manufacturers. Concierge medicine gets back to the way medicine and primary care is intended — focusing on the patient and their whole personal wellness.”
Dr. Mignoli’s private practice has recently changed his practice from small primary care to concierge primary care to focus more on his patients and less on charts and insurance. He says that though he makes less money, he is happier than ever before. STEPHANIE MASON Of the nation’s 275,000 primary care doctors, between 8,000 and 10,000 doctors practice some kind of retainer membership, said Bauer, who has been researching concierge medicine since 1999. From what he has studied, retainer medical practices grow approximately 15 percent a year. Bauer sees the model providing not only preventative care — saving a patient from future health problems — but also quality post-situation care, giving a patient with the care needed to make a full recovery after an event like surgery. “If a doctor has more time and is more satisfied in his or her work, patients will receive better care,” Bauer said. “It is good for the doctor, it is good for the patient and it is good for the United States in terms of cost reduction.” As insurances reimburse less for medical services, Mignoli said it is becoming less
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viable to operate an independent primary care practice. Shifting his practice to a concierge model, he said, was the best business move. “Health care is costing more and more,” Mignoli said. “There has been pressure from government and insurance companies and patients to cut costs, and this is how that is being done. One of the consequences of that is that it is impossible to continue a small primary-care practice.” In the Highlands Ranch and Lone Tree areas, Mignoli knows of six other concierge medical practices. He believes more small health-care providers will make the switch in years to come. “The number of practices that I know of has increased remarkably over the last 10 years,” he said. “It really is one of the few options for a small primary-care practice to remain as that kind of practice.”
At Mignoli’s practice, an annual fee of $2,100 covers office visits, lab tests, selective vaccinations and a comprehensive wellness exam. He does not accept insurance. Time and access are the most important parts of a concierge practice, Mignoli said. To ensure that he can provide an excess of those components, Mignoli sees far fewer patients than the average practitioner. The average concierge medical practice will see an average of 300 to 600 patients, 20 percent of what average practitioners shuffle through their office, Mignoli said. Patients have Mignoli’s personal cell phone and can contact him after hours and on weekends. He will travel to a hospital or visit a home if a patient cannot make it to his office. “The reason that I did this was that I believe patients
deserve to have a deeper level of relationship with their physician,” Mignoli said. “I make less money now than I did before, but I am happier and my patients are happier.” Marie Degennaro, a patient of Mignoli’s for more than 10 years, decided to stay with Mignoli when he made the transition. “He is so caring and so knowledgeable,” Degennaro said. “He always answers my calls — I can always get in to see him. He spends a lot of time with us and answers all my questions, no matter what they are.” Mignoli’s office, located at 9218 Kimmer Drive, Suite 106, sees patients from Castle Rock, Lone Tree, Parker, Highlands Ranch, Centennial and Denver. “I feel more like a doctor than I ever have before,” Mignoli said. “I feel like I am doing more patient care as opposed to chart care.”
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6 Lone Tree Voice
January 19, 2017J
New luxury senior facility opens in Lone Tree Ribbon-cutting celebrates Morning Star Senior Living’s 20th community BY STEPHANIE MASON SMASON@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
More than 200 attendees surrounded the statue of a tree — its leaves designed by community members and new residents with the help of an artist — and listened to Ken Jaeger, CEO and founder of MorningStar Senior Living, introduce his newest community, MorningStar Senior Living at RidgeGate. “I am amazed how God honored this from day one,” Jaeger said, standing in the lobby of the new building at the Jan. 11 ribbon-cutting ceremony. “I really believe there is a sense of calling in all our lives to put out arms around the seniors who choose to call this wonderful community their home.” The four-year development and construction of the $56 million senior living center wrapped up early this month. Residents started moving in Jan. 4. Morning Star Senior Living at RidgeGate, 10100 Commons St., is a five-story facility offering independent living, assisted living and memory care. The 265,000-squarefoot community includes a restaurant, cafes, art studio, theater, lounge, courtyard, fitness center and a pool. Month-to-month rent starts at $3,075. “I expected it to be nice, but I am speechless and dumbfounded by how beautiful this facility is,” Lone Tree Mayor Jackie Millet said. “I
A ribbon cutting, representing the opening of the new MorningStar Senior Living at RidgeGate, took place on Jan. 11. Over 200 attendees witnessed the event. In the lobby at the new MorningStar Senior Living at RidgeGate, a single tree statue in the lobby represents the facility being part of the Lone Tree community. PHOTOS BY STEPHANIE MASON
really could not have contemplated what a pleasant experience it is to walk through these doors and into this environment… On behalf of the city of Lone Tree, we would like to welcome you.” Jaeger, whose father recently moved into the facility, wants to create a quality living experience for seniors. “We want to be a home and a company where goodness and kindness is the norm, rather than the exception, when it comes to team members loving on our seniors,” Jaeger said.
The leaves of the statue were designed by community members and new residents with the help of an artist.
CEO and founder of MorningStar Senior Living Ken Jaeger spoke at the ribbon cutting on Jan. 11. Jaeger’s father will be living in the community.
New commissioner joins Douglas County board Thomas sworn in for first term, Partridge for second BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITY
Lora Thomas put her hand on her grandmother’s Bible before a crowded room at the Philip S. Miller Building in Castle Rock. Thomas’ granddaughter, 4-year-old Amidei Thomas, held the Bible. Thomas, the new county commissioner for Douglas County’s District 3, which encompasses Highlands Ranch, was sworn into office on Jan. 10. She fills the seat of term-limited Jill Repella. “I’d like to thank the people who made this possible,” Thomas said, acknowledging her family, friends and dozens of people that filled the room.
Thomas, a Highlands Ranch resident and the former county coroner, said she sent out 175 invitations to the individuals who helped with her campaign. “I’m really excited that this day is finally here,” Thomas said. “Douglas County is a great county and I want to maintain it for future generations.” On the three-member board of commissioners, Thomas will join District 1’s Dave Weaver and District 2’s Roger Partridge, who was sworn in for his second term Jan. 10. Thomas and Partridge won election in November. Partridge was named the 2017 board chair and Weaver is the board vice chair. Weaver, the former Douglas County sheriff, said Thomas brings a great perspective having served for 26 years with the Colorado State Patrol. “I’m sure she has great opinions to bring to the board on furthering Douglas County,” Weaver said.
Douglas County Commissioner Lora Thomas, right, is sworn in by Castle Rock Municipal Judge Lou Gresh. Thomas’ son, Creighton Thomas, granddaughter, Amidei, and daughter-in-law, Clarissa, joined her at the ceremony on Jan. 10 at the Philip S. Miller Building in Castle Rock. ALEX DEWIND
Lone Tree Voice 7
January 19, 2017
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January 19, 2017J
Construction defects bill introduced Bipartisan measure addresses insurers’ legal costs BY KYLE HARDING KHARDING@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Reforming Colorado’s construction defects laws in order to incentivize the building of condominiums and townhomes has emerged as a priority for both Republicans and Democrats early in the legislative session. State Senate President Kevin Grantham, R-Cañon City, and House Speaker Crisanta Duran, D-Denver, are prime sponsors of a bill tackling the issue, with co-sponsorship from House Assistant Minority Leader Cole Wist, R-Centennial, and Sen. Angela Williams, D-Denver.
“This is the first step in a multi-tier process to help Coloradans attain a home of their own, and I am pleased to be a part of this critical legislation,” Wist said in a statement. Senate Bill 17-045 was introduced Jan. 11, the first day of the session, and has been assigned to the senate Business, Wist Labor and Technology Committee. It targets insurance rates. In construction defects actions in court in which more than one insurer has a duty to defend a party, the bill would require the court to apportion the cost of defense among all of them. Supporters of the bill say it would simplify and reduce litigation costs. “By targeting insurance rates, we’re addressing the problem without reducing consumers’ rights to protect
the property that they spend their life’s savings to buy,” Duran said. Grantham said that while 100,000 people moved to the state last year, only 25,000 new homes were built. Reforming the law on construction defects has been a longtime priority of Republicans in the Legislature. They say the status quo prevents condos and townhomes from being built, leading to Coloradans facing the choice of either apartments or singlefamily homes, with no middle-price ground. Reform is also supported by several business groups, including the South Metro Denver Chamber of Commerce. Some cities and towns — including Lakewood, Littleton and Parker — have passed ordinances addressing the issue in recent years, as legislation died at the Capitol. State Rep. Susan Beckman, R-Littleton, has identified reforming construction defects laws as a priority of
hers this session. “There is a need to greatly modify the destructive construction defects law that was passed in 2008,” the Littleton Republican told Colorado Community Media in early January. “We must ensure a market-driven economy and availability of attainable home ownership options that are not hindered by regulation and manipulation. Rep. Kevin Van Winkle, R- Highlands Ranch, also says the issue is a priority. “Flawed laws from the recent past have made it impossible for homebuilders to meet market needs, especially for first-time homebuyers and downsizing seniors,” he told Colorado Community Media ahead of the session’s kickoff. “Instead of attainable housing, many Colorado families are trapped in apartments, unable to realize their housing dream.”
It is your duty (dooty)!
Picking up after your dog goes further than making your neighbors happy. When you are out walking your dog, it is your duty to collect their waste. Often, the trails and parks we enjoy with our dogs are adjacent to creeks and reservoirs. Dog waste that is not collected gets carried away during rainstorms to nearby waterways and can be a significant source of pollution. Unlike one might think, dog waste is not a fertilizer. Rather, it carries harmful bacteria like E. coli, which poses serious health risks if allowed to come in contact with water. Local stormwater agencies are teaming together to bring you this message. We take this so seriously that we posted this ad rather than send you more garbage in the mail. One thing is clear: our creeks, rivers and lakes depend on you.
T H IS ST ORMWATER MESSAGE B R OUGHT TO YOU B Y
Visit onethingisclear.org to: • Report accidental and illegal dumping to your local agency • Search local volunteer events • Find more helpful tips Dog waste is not a fertilizer. Thank you for promptly picking up after your dog to keep our waterways clean. Colorado Community Media agrees: Please recycle this newspaper responsibly and partner with our communities for a better tomorrow. Ad campaign creative donated by the Town of Castle Rock Utilities Department, Stormwater Division.
Lone Tree Voice 9
January 19, 2017
Legislators target transportation funding No sign of unity in opening round as Colorado faces billions in needs BY KRISTEN WYATT ASSOCIATED PRESS
There’s no debate — Colorado needs a big plan to pay for billions in needed highway upgrades. But that’s where agreement ended Jan. 11 as the state’s divided Legislature began work for the year. Republicans in the House and Senate gave differing takes on whether Colorado should ask voters to pass a new tax to pay for more than $8 billion in transportation projects. And Democrats are talking up different ways to pay for roads. New Republican Senate President Kevin Grantham, of Cañon City, took the unusual step of not rejecting a tax hike. Instead, he simply asked Democrats to take a careful look at cutting other spending first. Colorado requires voters to approve tax hikes, so Grantham called it essential to sell the tax as the only possible
option for improving roads. “If we are going to ask (taxpayers) for more out of their own pockets to fund these bond payments, then we must also demonstrate the commitment to reprioritize the dollars they’ve already entrusted to us,” Grantham said. That was a softer scolding than Democrats received in the House, where Republican minority leader Patrick Neville, of Castle Rock, insisted that Colorado has enough money and needs no tax Duran increase for roads. “Revenue for transportation is something we can control without asking taxpayers for more money,” Neville said, without explaining what he’d like to cut, though schools and health care are among the biggest spenders in Colorado’s existing pocketbook. Democratic House Speaker Crisanta Duran, of Denver, suggested both parties could seek voter approval for a new tax. Duran said in an opening-day news release that she was involved in “promising discussions” with members of
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SEE LEGISLATURE, P12
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10 Lone Tree Voice
LOCAL
January 19, 2017J
VOICES
Look for your inner calm during stressful times both large and small WINNING WORDS
Michael Norton
S
ometimes the tiniest of incidents can throw us into a tirade or tantrum. We get so blinded by the perceived crisis of the moment and situation we lose our minds, our tempers can quickly flare, and we fly off the handle and do or say things we will probably regret later. Have you ever been there? Me too. Now I don’t know about you personally, but sometimes it is the smallest of changes or accidents that occur where we see people just lose it. Yet those very same people when faced with an enormous crisis or challenge seem amazingly calm during the battle or height of the storm. You may know this type of person, you may live with them or work with them. This master of
remaining calm in the face of a critical situation or massive adversity may be you. So how can we develop an attitude and a technique that will help us to slow down or stop in the face of any trouble or problem, large or small, and gain control of our thoughts, words and actions before they take control of us? When I have spoken with some people who have mastered the art of finding calm in the fiercest of battles or crisis, and when I have witnessed such amazing grace and thoughtfulness in challenging times, there was a common denominator, a total lack of panic or worry. Instead, I heard stories of courage and an attitude of thinking about the bigger picture. I would see people looking and listening more than talking and screaming. The people
who amaze me the most are those who are in the middle of one of life’s biggest storms or tragedies and surrounded by others who are screaming, yelling, cursing and scrambling around without direction, and yet these amazing people can observe, understand the full impact, take control in a very calm and confident manner. As a matter of fact, instead of screaming or cursing, they even speak a little more softly. There is no doubt we all get faced with little accidents and incidents that can quickly get under our skin or annoy us to the point of anger and frustration. And locally and globally there are things happening every day that could be SEE NORTON, P11
Filling lucky, and that’s the tooth
I 2017 brings wealth of challenges
M
any U.S. citizens and investors are sighing in relief that 2016 is over but are trepid about what 2017 may bring. Last year was good for FINANCIAL parts of STRATEGIES certain the stock market, but those gains did not improve most investors’ balance sheet due to extreme uncertainty and a substantial variance in sectors. The new year carries over Patricia Kummer significant ambiguity around a new administration, new monetary policy, and a debt crisis in Europe.
A publication of
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Energy was one of the best performers in 2016 after hitting bottom in February and rebounding 25 percent. Financials soared on hopes of less regulation and higher interest rates. The health care sector fell into negative territory. Europe did not participate in our euphoria and China devalued their currency to keep up with our rising interest rates. This was definitely not an average year. Wall Street analysts overall missed the market reaction to a Trump victory, thinking there would be an emotional reaction to the down side. In reality, the improved earnings induced much of the rally and better corporate earnings will likely SEE KUMMER, P11
have been told that we don’t meet people by accident. When a good one comes along, I try to be ready. You never know who is going to be around the next corner. A cartoonist named Hirschfeld always used to hide his daughter’s name in his brilliant and complex line drawings. Nina. There is someone named Nina living in the area who is nearly hidden. That’s because she wears a mask most of the time. At least at work. The day we met, she asked me through her mask if I knew a particular artist. I mumbled something, because my mouth was numb, and full of gauze and an apparatus that was keeping it dry. Nina is a dental assistant. My dentists — there are three of them in the same offices — have about 18 assistants. There’s one to greet you by name when you walk in. There’s one to walk you to The Chair. One to numb you into subordination. One to wipe your drool away. The others, all beautiful young women, are doing the same things for other patients. As a composition, they are a gathering of Novocain Angels. My childhood dentists never used Novocain. I inherited teeth that needed constant attention. Put the two together, and trips to the dentist — always a man with thick fingers — were tortuous. No longer. How often do you see your dentist? Once a year? Twice a year? I go four, five, six or more times a year,
so I have gotten to know something about them, and they have gotten to know something about me. Perhaps that’s why they don’t schedule children when I have an appointment. Overhearing me might be bad for business. There’s one asCraig Marshall sistant whose Native Smith American name is “Fast Moving Footprints.” Another one whose name is “Just Keep Swimming.” Nina wears braces, and looks 15. But she is 32 and the single mother of four boys: 13-year-old twins, a 10-year-old, and an 8-year-old. She’s a former Marine. Every square inch of Nina — I’m told — is tattooed. Her meticulous handwriting is just like an architect’s. She knows things about artists, authors, films, and music that I know about, and she’s half my age. We recommend music to each other. There is no better way to find out about someone than through music. If she yearned to possess an autographed box set of Lionel Ritchie, I would nod, tip my Panama, and run for the door. Everything Nina recommends is just like she is: unusual, challenging, and fascinating. (I heard a rumor that she rocks a ruby
QUIET DESPERATION
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Lone Tree Voice A legal newspaper of general circulation in Lone Tree, Colorado, the Voice is published weekly on Thursday by Colorado Community Media, 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129. Send address change to: 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
Lone Tree Voice 11
7January 19, 2017
NORTON FROM PAGE 10
considered a massive challenge or enormous storm of life. And in either case, it is not what happens to us or around us, it is how we respond to what is happening to us or around us. When we “lose it,” regardless of the situation, our reputation becomes damaged. And not just the way others see us, it’s that regret I spoke of earlier and how we see ourselves, how we look at our own diminishing reputation or character. You know the saying and maybe even the book, “Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff … And It’s All Small Stuff.” Well it’s true. The next time the dog ac-
cidentally knocks over a cup of coffee, or your child mistakenly deletes a document on your laptop, or someone bumps into you in the grocery store, just remember to stop, slow down and realize it really is just small stuff and your reputation and your character are better than that, you are better than that. Fight the impulse and urge to react, and instead respond with calm and grace. And as far as those big, huge, enormous battles and storms of life go, the same rules apply. Remember to apply the attitude that panic is your worst enemy, nothing is ever as bad as it seems, and all will be well. Yes, even with the new presidentelect, and regardless of who we all voted for, the enormity of the situation calls for us to
KUMMER FROM PAGE 10
continue through 2017. Many investors wanted to be on the sidelines after a negative October and the pending election and have not found a good entry point since. Meanwhile fixed incomeinvestors are seeing dwindling values in their bond portfolios as yields rise and share prices fall. This interest rate phenomenon spread to other sectors also, such as real estate investment trusts and anything valued in currencies other than the U.S. dollar. So 2016 was a very mixed bag depending on when and where you were invested. While the best performance was in domestic large company manufacturing, industrial and financial stocks, most other sectors were average at best. The valuations became very rich as stock prices were pushed higher in anticipation of better earnings going forward. In the new year, we are faced with many challenges. These include rich stock valuations, diminishing bond prices, growing debt issues in greater Europe, and currency and trade issues with Asia and Mexico. There remains hope that the economy will grow, unemployment will remain low and interest rate hikes will be gradual enough not to disturb progress. If taxes are cut and health care expenses are reeled in, then the consumer can benefit through savings. Wages will likely rise along with some inflation. Research analysts are predicting an average year in equity returns, with
SMITH FROM PAGE 10
red Strat late at night.) I asked her about Christmas. “The boys and I celebrated Christmas being grateful for what we have. We bought presents for the Christmas wishes of four kids that we took off of the angel tree at work. “My boys will hopefully take these simple acts of kindness I teach them and become great men.”
remain calm, live, act and work with grace and control. There is no place for overreacting or overreaching when it comes to finding a solution. It is our job to respond in the best way possible to become and to be a part of the solution. Remember that eight years ago we elected our first African-American president. There were many who supported him and many who were upset with his winning the election. But in the end, and throughout his presidency, whether we voted for him or not, we were still one country and we supported each other. Even though many threatened it, no one actually ever moved to Canada or any other country for that matter. This year we almost voted into office the first woman to
lower bond prices and struggles with a very strong dollar and pressures on banks in Europe. However, sentiment is high and the momentum of positive returns has carried over despite a few down days in early January. Wise investors will watch for opportunities in sector rotation and be careful not to assume last year’s winners will repeat. For example, health care went from the worst performer last year to one of the best so far this year. Energy also switched places along with banks. Watch the elections in Italy, France, Holland and Germany. Europe is either voting for or against austerity and the survival of the EU (European Union). How the European Central Bank can support countries swimming in debt remains to be seen. Consumers will need patience as we wait to see how changes unfold. It will be virtually impossible to tackle all the campaign promises in the first quarter. We don’t see recession in the near term, but any surprise worldwide could easily pull back a record high stock market. The vigilant, patient investor can reap good rewards despite several underperforming and perhaps overpriced sectors. Fixed income holders will be challenged to stay positive and keep up with inflation. Creating a solid long-term plan with tactical exposure through dynamic allocation will be crucial as we navigate 2017. Patricia Kummer has been an independent Certified Financial Planner for 30 years and is president of Kummer Financial Strategies Inc., a Registered Investment Advisor in Highlands Ranch. Kummer Financial is a six-year 5280 Top Advisor.
The coincidences and alignments it took to meet Jennifer would fill a notebook. Or were they coincidences? The same goes for the unexpected discovery of Nina, who can explain Raymond Chandler’s “The Big Sleep” better than Chandler could, who is a varsity mother, and who can place provisional crowns and assist with extractions while you are comfortably numb. Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@ comcast.net.
be the president of the United States. And had she won, some people would have been angry and frustrated, not because she was a woman, just because they were voting for someone else. But had she won, we would have all come together once again. And now, regardless of who you voted for, we have elected the first businessman into office. Some are scared, some are overreacting and overreaching, but this is where calm, grace, understanding, stopping, slowing down, and an attitude of panic being our worst enemy must prevail. We are one country, and must come together and help Mr. Trump succeed. And as one Hollywood actor who opposed Trump recently stated, “If the president of the United States
Please visit www.kummerfinancial.com for more information. Any material discussed
fails, we all fail. If he succeeds we all succeed.” We really must come together and help him succeed. So how about you? Do you get caught up in the moment and “lose it” sometimes too quickly? Are you someone who responds to bigger battles and storms with thoughtfulness, calm, and grace? I would love to hear your thoughts at gotonorton@gmail.com, and when we can learn to respond instead of react to small accidents and incidents as well as in the huge storms of life, it really will be a better than good week. Michael Norton is a resident of Castle Rock, the former president of the Zig Ziglar Corporation, a strategic consultant and a business and personal coach.
is meant for informational purposes only and not a substitute for individual advice.
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12 Lone Tree Voice
January 19, 2017J
Women’s march set for Denver BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITY
Thousands will gather at Civic Center Park in downtown Denver and march in solidarity Jan. 21. “We need to focus on how to collaborate and be collective in going forward,” said Jessica Rogers, one of the three women who organized the Women’s March on Denver. “This is not a protest — it is a statement of our vigilance to not lose our current rights.” The walk — one of many across the nation — is in response to President-elect Trump’s views on several issues, including women’s rights, reproductive health and immigration. It is an effort to advocate for marginalized members of society, connect with others alike, promote change in a peaceful way and honor those who have fought for human rights, marchoncolorado.org says. As of early this week, 28,000 people said they were attending, according to the Women’s March on Denver Facebook page. One of those people is Heather Angell — a Highlands Ranch resident, insurance underwriter, wife and mother of two. “Right now, our country is in such flux and I know personally after the election, I became so afraid,” Angell, 36, said. “We as a community need to stand together and let the admin-
‘We are fighting for something rather than against something.’ Lauren Humiston-Moore, Highlands Ranch resident istration know that we will not be pushed aside, taken advantage of or made to feel inferior.” Angell said she is bringing her oldest son, who is 6. “I want him to be a part of this,” she said, “to see that it is every person’s responsibility to fight for the equality of everyone.” Another Highlands Ranch woman who will be at a different march is Lauren Humiston-Moore. She plans to attend the Women’s Walk on Washington — which is expected to have a turnout of more than 200,000 people — with a friend from Maryland. Humiston-Moore, 41, said she wants to stand up for minority groups. Her husband is an immigration attorney who represents clients from Ethiopia, Mexico, Italy, Nigeria, Somalia, Honduras and other countries. “I’ve met them, I’ve been hosted
in their homes and I want to stand by them,” Humiston-Moore said. “I want them welcome in our country. I want them to know they are safe around me.” The upbeat mother and wife said she feels electric when she thinks about the march. She also sees the march as a means to send a peaceful message to politicians, to the nation. “I see it as positive,” she said. “We are fighting for something rather than against something.” Rogers has a background in bookbinding and book history. She and her co-organizers, Cheetah McClellan, a teacher, and Karen Hinkel, a real estate agent, hope to see women, men and children — regardless of political affiliation — attend this weekend’s walk. “As far as a mountain region goes, we are really going to be the pillar of making sure we preserve and protect our rights,” Rogers said.
LEGISLATURE FROM PAGE 9
both parties in both chambers to devise a comprehensive statewide plan to upgrade the transportation system. “Anyone who’s been on I-25 at rush hour, anywhere from Fort Collins to Pueblo, knows the need is real,” she said, Senate Democratic leader Lucia Guzman, of Denver, meanwhile, repeated appeals to free up money by exempting a hospital tax from state revenues. Grantham has called that idea a nonstarter. Other issues explored on opening day: Health care Grantham said he was proposing a bill to repeal Colorado’s health insurance exchange, a move that would have residents instead shop on the federal insurance marketplace. Democrats, including Gov. John Hickenlooper, will likely see the move as an attack on President Barack Obama’s signature domestic-policy achievement. Education Duran called on Republicans to consider big changes to how the state funds public education. Just four years after voters soundly rejected an income tax hike to increase school funding, Republicans are unlikely to view the appeal favorably. Meanwhile, Senate Republicans talked about studying the need for weapons training for school employees, a perennial non-starter with Democrats.
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Lone Tree Voice 13
7January 19, 2017
Higher-education campus finds location in Castle Rock Colorado State University, ACC and Douglas County School District partner STAFF REPORT
A new collaborative education venture among Colorado State University, Arapahoe Community College and the Douglas County School District has found a home. Arapahoe Community College has accepted an investment of $3 million from the Town of Castle Rock in infrastructure reimbursement to construct a collaboration campus, according to a Jan. 10 news release. ACC will build a $40 million campus on a 14-acre site in The Meadows community, the release states. The two-phase project will consist of two buildings of 54,000 square feet each, with an estimated opening of phase one in the fall of 2019. “This addition to Castle Rock will offer residents, from high school through career professionals and retirees, options for higher and continuing education, with involvement from businesses and our community,”
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Mayor Jennifer Green said. The campus will be on private property, currently vacant and designated for development, north of Castle Rock Adventist Hospital and east of Meadows Boulevard. The collaboration aims to create an educational environment that will provide local high school students with a chance for concurrent enrollment for college credit, as well as further higher education for adults. Initial educational offerings will be in the areas of business/entrepreneurship, health care, information technology/programming, general education and workforce training. ACC will provide the infrastructure by leasing space to partners CSU and the school district. “ACC is very excited to expand our presence in Castle Rock to serve the community through this very unique educational partnership,” Diana Doyle, president of ACC, said in the news release. “The collaboration campus will be a dynamic model for progressive educational delivery at all levels. We greatly appreciate the town’s commitment and look forward to playing an integral role in the community’s continued development.”
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14 Lone Tree Voice
A growing
January 19, 2017J
LOCAL
LIFE
taste sushi for
Why sushi is so popular, according to local chefs
events such as the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, Americans gradually gained more exposure to Japanese food, he said. SEE SUSHI, P15
BY JESSICA GIBBS JGIBBS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
D
SHUTTERSTOCK IMAGE
iane Bukatman, who founded For the Love of Food cooking school in Golden, learned to make sushi in 2004 while working at a Washington, D.C., restaurant. One co-worker was a Japanese sushi chef for the restaurant, she said. Fascinated by the art, she’d spend free-time watching him craft sushi rolls. Eventually, he taught her the trade, she said. And when it comes to a fascination with sushi, Bukatman isn’t alone. In recent decades, sushi locations have sprung up left and right, making a large imprint in the U.S. restaurant market. Likewise, sushi-making classes have become popular options for date nights, birthday parties and other events. If you’ve ever wondered how sushi became popular in the U.S. or where to learn sushi-making, local restaurateurs and cooking instructors have the answers for you. For Yasu Kizaki, one of four brothers who run well-known Denver restaurant Sushi Den and sister restaurants Izakaya Den and OTOTO Den, sushi’s rise in popularity coincides with historical events. As people began to move from Japan to the U.S. after World War II, and through
Becoming a Japanese sushi chef
TYPES OF SUSHI In it’s most basic form, sushi is a dish made with vinegared rice. But there are varying types of sushi rolls more commonly featured in restaurants, including:
Nigiri Nigiri sushi is a type of sushi where slices of, typically, raw fish are laid over pressed rice. Rice is shaped in an oblong form, swabbed with wasabi and covered with seafood, although it could be other meats as well. Slicing of the fish is carefully done with a sharp knife, to avoid tearing the meat and ruining the roll’s presentation.
Maki Maki sushi means “rolled sushi.” It is usually wrapped in seaweed, or sometimes soy paper. Variations of maki sushi include rolls with rice on the outside of the seaweed paper, while other kinds have rice on the inside of the paper.
Temaki Temaki is a form of the maki roll that is commonly referred to as the “hand roll.” The roll form is similar to an ice cream cone, with the ingredients inside.
Tempura Tempura refers to a deep fried sushi roll.
Source: www.AllAboutSushiGuide.com
Lone Tree Voice 15
January 19, 2017
There’s more to the world of modern musicals than ‘La La Land’
T
he way people are flipping out over Damien Chazelle’s latest film, “La La Land,” you’d think there hasn’t been a musical on screen since “Grease.” Don’t get me LINER wrong — I thoroughly enjoyed “La NOTES La Land,” and it is definitely one of the year’s best films. I certainly have no problem with all the awards it’s won already (it did a record-breaking clean sweep at the Golden Globes on Clarke Reader Jan. 8) and the ones it will no doubt win at the Oscars. My issue is that viewers and listeners have been missing out on some wonderfully innovative approaches to the genre by ignoring anything that doesn’t have immediate name recognition. I’m talking about the big screen productions of standards like “Chicago,” “Phantom of the Opera” and “Les Misérables,” or live televised versions like “The Sound of Music,” “Rocky Horror Picture Show” and “The Wiz.” Just a little jaunt off the beaten path will lead to some serious musical treasure. Take the career of John Carney, the Irish writer and director behind
SUSHI FROM PAGE 14
Sushi’s appeal Dianne Morin is the founder of a Lakewood-based nonprofit, Cooking Experience Club. For the past 17 years, she has run cooking summer camps for local children and given cooking classes for events, private parties and families. In the past four years, Morin said, “sushi-making has been pretty popular.” She credits the popularity of sushi to its healthy nature. “I think a lot of it is because it’s a lighter meal,” she said. Sushi is not as dense as a mashed
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2007’s indie breakout, “Once.” That story went on to be a Tony-winning Broadway musical, and Carney followed it with “Begin Again” in 2013 and this year’s “Sing Street,” which was nominated for Best Motion Picture — Musical or Comedy, alongside “La La Land.” “Sing Street” might be Carney’s most delightful film yet, and Ferdia Walsh-Peelo turns in a memorable debut performance as Conor, a young teenager in 1985 Dublin who starts a band to impress Raphina (Lucy Boynton), a model he meets outside of his school. Carney makes rock musicals instead of the traditional songbook approach, and all of his films feature protagonists drunk on the power of music and love. Just like any other musical you’d think of, the characters often randomly break out into song. But because all three films focus on musicians, it’s a bit more believable when they do so. And Carney works with skilled musicians like Glen Hansard and Adam Levine, so you’re getting tunes you’ll actually hear on the radio. I hope Carney someday gets the audience he deserves. In the television realm, about the only musical you’re going to find is The CW’s “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” which is just as well, because I have difficulty imagining any other topping it — with the possible exceppotatoes-and-meat type meal, she said, and sushi rolls look appealing to consumers. “Just the whole concept of, `I can look at this and it looks pretty healthy,’ ” she said. It’s also easy to personalize, she said, which is something that comes across in her classes. For those leery of raw fish, she will demonstrate how to substitute in vegetables or smoked salmon. And there are dessert options, Morin said. Sushi-makers can incorporate fresh fruit or coconut for a sweeter taste. Kizaki said sushi truly gained momentum in the 1990s. The California roll — which typically contains cucumber, crab meat and avocado — provided Westerners a steppingstone
CLARKE’S ALBUM OF THE WEEK Selection: The xx’s “I See You” released on Young Turks. Review: As swooningly romantic as ever, The xx takes the insular sounds that made their first two records quiet hits, and adds some cinematic grandeur. Producer Jamie xx has expanded the group’s sonic palette, and songs like “Dangerous” and “On Hold” breathe beautifully in the new spaces. But don’t worry, singers
Sometimes, bigger really is better. Favorite song: “Lips” Lyrics that double as The xx’s guiding philosophy: “I’ve been a romantic for so long/All I’ve ever heard are love songs.”
tion of “Galavant,” which ABC canceled last year. “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” is the brain child of Rachel Bloom and Aline Brosh McKenna, and stars Bloom as Rebecca Bunch, a New York lawyer who moves to West Covina, California, to be closer to her high school crush (don’t worry — there’s a lot more nuance than that). The show features a hilarious and truly empathetic cast and approach to story. But top-notch songwriting really sets it apart. The songs spoof everything from Broadway song-and-dance numbers to torch songs, boy band pop and Alanis Morissette grunge. Check out some of the song names from the first season: “Settle For Me,” “I’m in a Sexy French Depression” and “After Everything I’ve Done For You (That You Didn’t Ask For).”
The show manages to create frighteningly accurate explorations of self-confidence and self-worth, romantic obsession and dynamic friendships, while writing songs like the second season’s standout, “It Was a Sh*t Show.” If “La La Land” really is creating a renewed interest in musicals, then there’s already plenty out there for fans to dig into. Get started.
into the new culinary world, he said, as it didn’t incorporate raw fish in the mix. By the 2000s, Kizaki said, sushi was going strong.
said, also noting they are some of her most popular options. Customers eat as they go and take home nearly $60 worth of sushi supplies. Kizaki and his brothers offer regular sushi-making classes through their restaurants. He said they began the tradition as a way to broaden their customers’ horizons. “Food is an introduction of Japanese culture,” he said. “When I do a class I talk about Japanese culture.” Talking culture was a way to make the classes entertaining for those who are simply there to have fun, he said. But in Kizaki’s perspective, if you want to learn serious sushi-making, go to Japan. “Then,” he said, “you learn the skill from a pro.”
Learning the craft Bukatman said becoming a master sushi chef takes years, but learning for fun is quick and easy. She advises people to work with very sharp knives and know when to use water. You need dry hands when working with seaweed paper but wet when working the rice. “The trickiest part is learning to make the rice properly,” she said. Adding too much water melts the grains into a glue-like mixture. Bukatman started her sushi-making classes around 12 years ago, she
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Romy Madley Croft and Oliver Sim’s vocal interplay remains as hushed and intimate as ever.
P RO G R A M
Clarke Reader’s column on how music connects to our lives appears every other week. A community editor with Colorado Community Media, he is also in a sexy French depression. Check out his music blog at calmacil20.blogspot.com. And share your favorite modern musicals at creader@coloradocommunitymedia.com.
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January 19, 2017J
Classical guitarists to perform at Littleton venue SONYA’S SAMPLER
“Generations: Master and Prodigy” a classical guitar concert by longtime audience favorite Alex Komodore, director of guitar studies at Metropolitan State UniSonya Ellingboe versity, and his 13-year-old prodigy, Gwenyth Aggeler, will attract audiences to Littleton United Methodist Church, 5894 S. Datura St., Littleton,
at 7:30 p.m. on Jan. 20. Part of LUMC’s free Fine Arts Series, the pair will play individually and together in works ranging from Baroque to contemporary. Information: littletonumc.org or 303-794-6379. New at Lone Tree “Muscle Shoals: I’ll Take You There,” the world premiere of a musical program developed by Randal Mylar, who spent weeks in the musical Alabama region, plays Feb. 2 to 12 at Lone Tree Arts Center, 10075. Think: Wilson Pickett, Etta James, Aretha Franklin, The Staple Singers,
Jefferson “Thomas Jefferson and the Most Contentious Election in American History” is Jack Van Ens’ title for his 7 p.m. Jan. 24 talk at Bemis Library, 6014 S. Datura St., Littleton. Ens will portray Jefferson and talk about the very partisan election of 1800, which nearly tore the new nation apart. He is author of the book, “How Jefferson Made the Best of Bad Messes.” 303-795-3961.
Paul Simon, Mac Davis and more. 720-509-1000, lonetreeartscenter.org. Free Community Dinner First Presbyterian Church in Littleton, at 1609 Littleton Blvd., begins a series at 6-7 p.m. on Jan. 31 of Free Community Dinners on the last Tuesday of each month. Tested successfully in 2016, the dinners seek to offer cookedfrom-scratch healthy food and companionship to Littleton people. Reservations are not necessary and all ages are welcome, according to chairperson Lynda Kizer.
Improv Pam Roth O’Mara is offering improv classes at Arapahoe Community College in Littleton. Wednesdays, Jan. 25 to March 1,
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6:30 to 8:30 p.m., $149; Thursdays, Jan. 26 to Feb. 16, 2:30 to 5 p.m., $99; and Thursdays, Feb. 23 to March 16, 2:30 to 5 p.m., $99 each. Registration: www.arapahoe. edu/community-education/ current-classes/dance-theatretravel-and-more.
LPS art Arapahoe Community College will host the Annual Littleton n Public Schools Exhibition in the o Colorado Gallery of Art through p Feb. 7, with a closing reception a on Feb. 7 from 5 to 7 p.m. The gal- m lery is in the Annex at the east O a side of the Littleton Campus, 5900 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton. H
Help Wanted
303-566-4091 Now Hiring Smiling Faces!! Exxon is hiring Cashiersfull and part-time, all shifts available at busy 24-hr location! Pre-employ drug screen/background required. Apply in person at 18561 Hwy 40, Golden today!
Colorado Community Media, the Publisher of your hometown newspaper and the largest local media company in the state is looking to fill a full and part-time sales positions. If you strive to be a larger part of your community by meeting with business owners big and small, helping them grow their business by marketing with digital media, community newspapers, and everything in between – then we would like to meet you.
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Pinnacle Structures, Inc., in Parker, CO is looking for a Full Time CONSTRUCTION FLEET MECHANIC to support fleet of equipment. Should have experience with all types of construction equipment, including Cat, Bobcat, Komatsu, JD loaders, excavators, and skid steers. If interested send resume to garrul@comcast.net or call 303-887-8668 to schedule an interview. Compensation based on experience.
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If you answered yes, please keep reading. Our titles are Marketing & Community Engagement Specialists but we do so much more. Send us your resume to eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com. We are locally family owned and operated, provide training, offer a competitive salary, commission and a full benefits package that includes paid time off, health, dental, vision and 401K.
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Independent contract drivers needed to deliver flowers for Valentines Day. Must use your own vehicle and provide MVR, insurance & license. Contact Mike at (720) 229-6800.
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Laborers: Aslan Construction is seeking full time construction laborers, and skilled craftsman. Call Emelio at 303-918-4580 to schedule an interview or email resume to emelioo@aslanconstruction.com
TECHNOLOGY Inovant, LLC, a Visa Inc. company, currently has openings in our Highlands Ranch, Colorado location for: - Systems Analysts (Job# 170149) to be responsible for supporting and ensuring the stability of critical applications by performing proactive maintenance activities, engaging in automation activities, root cause analyses and remediation. Provide application support by resolving incidents in a timely manner. Apply online at www.visa.com and reference job number above. EOE
Lone Tree Voice 17
January 19, 2017
‘Italian Sojourn’ is theme of two shows by chamber orchestra Arapahoe Philharmonic Sinfonietta coming to Littleton, Highlands Ranch BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
The Arapahoe Philharmonic Sinfonietta, a chamber orchestra comprised of members of the full orchestra, will perform two concerts that take the audience on an “Italian Sojurn” with music by Mozart and Mendelssohn. On Friday, Jan. 27, the group will play at Bethany Lutheran Church, 4500 E. Hampden Ave., Cherry Hills Village,
and on Jan. 28 the 7:30 p.m. concert will be at St. Luke’s United Methodist Church, 8817 S. Broadway, Highlands Ranch. Both concerts will be preceded by a 6:45 p.m. lecture by maestro Devin Patrick Hughes and both will feature Concertmaster Tracy LaGuardia and Principal Violist Heidi Snyder in the opening work, Mozart’s “Sinfonia Concertante in E-flat major, K. 364.” This is an Snyder early masterpiece which combines elements of symphony and concerto. The orchestra will also perform Felix
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Assistant Manager
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- ICKOVIC & CO. PC is currently seeking an experienced TAX SENIOR s Our boutique CPA firm, established in 1976, is located in the Inverness Business Park. e Our firm has an excellent base OF HIGH NET WORTH CLIENTS. We are seeking a g full-time or part-time TAX SENIOR to work with our existing staff of professionals. y Must have 4 plus current years in the areas of complex tax return preparation and - planning. , This position has the capacity to play a crucial role within our firm. We are only look. ing for a long-term player with a strong work ethic who wishes to grow and learn g within this highly sophisticated realm of tax. No audits, no travel, excellent salary based on experience and liberal benefit pack- age. Send RESUME, SALARY REQUIREMENT, and SALARY HISTORY to kim@ickovic.com for immediate consideration.
Mendelssohn’s “Italian Symphony No. 4. Op. 90,” which captures the spirit of his happy travels in Italy, incorporating folk dances, religious imagery, art and the vision of a sunny countryside. Tracy Laguardia has performed nationally and locally and is a vocalist as well at a violinist and violist. She has been concertmaster of the Littleton Symphony as well as the Arapahoe Philharmonic and operates an entertainment agency, A Touch of Class Music, which provides musicians for weddings and private events. She lives in Broomfield with her husband Pat and has two grown children, Brian and Deanna, as well as seven stepchildren. Heidi Snyder joined the Arapahoe
IF YOU GO THE ARAPAHOE PHILHARMONIC SINFONIETTA will perform at 7:30 p.m. on Jan. 27, Bethany Lutheran Church, 4500 E. Hampden Ave., Cherry Hills Village and 7:30 p.m. Jan. 28 at St. Luke’s United Methodist Church, 8817 S. Broadway, Highlands Ranch. Ticket information: 303-781-1892, Arapahoephil.org. Philharmonic in 2012 and also plays with Status Chamber Orchestra. She was a member of the Grand Junction Symphony for five years after graduating from CU-Boulder with a degree in viola performance. She is also the middle school string specialist for Littleton Public Schools.
Now Hiring: Equipment Operator Your future has never looked brighter, you could say, you’re in the driver’s seat. Douglas County is seeking Equipment Operators to join our team of dedicated professionals. We offer health, vision, dental and retirement packages. Come share the commitment to community and serving others in a professional and family-oriented work environment with one of the best local governments in the nation.
Apply online today at www.douglas.co.us.
LOCAL CLASS A & B DRIVERS (Castle Rock)
Come join our family. . .
You’ve driven the rest, now come drive the BEST!
Haulaway, a family owned company since 1963, is currently seeking great Commercial Roll-Off & Rear Loader Drivers to add to our team! Be part of a great company and home every night. Drivers with a minimum of 2 years experience, a clean MVR and be able to pass a drug and physical screening! Haulaway not only offers good pay, great benefits, a great work environment but here you are not just a driver, you’re FAMILY! Apply online at www.crrwasteservices.com, call Dino at 714-372-8273 or e-mail resume to dinod@crrmail.com
Help Wanted Local company is looking for drivers to transport railroad crews up to a 200 mile radius from Denver. Must live within 20 miles of Denver, be 21 years or older, valid driver's license and a pre-employment drug screen is required. A company vehicle is provided, paid training, and benefits. Compensation is $11.16 per hour. Apply online at www.hallcon.com
NCS Pearson, Inc. seeks Associate User Interface Designer in Centennial, CO to design and implement html prototypes, visual interfaces and user interactions of web-based applications by leveraging expertise in user-centric, visual human interfaces design principles. Make design recommendations and decisions on behalf of clients while collaborating or mentoring peers and junior team members. Design visually compelling and highly usable web applications for consumers while maintaining a look and feel consistent with organization brand direction. Consult with internal and external clients to interpret and translate business requirements into a visual product. Leverage rapid prototyping and frequent customer interaction to inform design decisions using current digital design technologies including: HTML, CSS and JavaScript. Assist in the direction and design of all customer-facing products. Collaborate with Web Developers on the development of dynamic user experience interactions. Develop learning content by possessing advanced skills related to multimedia development (Flash, Javascript frameworks), markup and scripting languages (HTML, XML, Style Sheets, JavaScript, ActionScript, etc.), and graphic design (Adobe and Macromedia applications). Enhance existing products by updating UI and aesthetic elements to current development and design guidelines. Min. req. Bachelor degree in design related field or technical field together with 2 years’ experience in interface design and product development. Proficiency in XHTML, Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), web standards, rapid prototyping. Experience with JavaScript, graphic software, gathering software/user requirements. Advanced skills in Photoshop, Illustrator and Fireworks. Send resume to: NCS Pearson, Inc., Attn: Darrel Stern, 2145 MetroCenter Blvd., Suite 400, Orlando, FL 32835.
NCS Pearson, Inc. seeks Platform SME in Centennial, CO to resolve production incidents and problems, while primarily focusing on priority level 1 & 2 within defined Service Level Agreements (SLAs) adhering to release/change management process. Ensure production stability, scalability, performance and security requirements are met. Analysis of production environmental health, trends, demand and provide management reports. Access staging and production environments to troubleshoot and investigate on incidents/problems. Deployment support for fixes in staging and production environments in deputy capacity. Use monitoring tools within production environment to guide triage and draw proper technical conclusions. Provide technical recommendations to ensure the scalability/capacity requirements of the business are met. Software engineering representation in service management forums when required. Develop configuration and code level changes to address production incidents/problems with a minimum guidance while adhering to engineering best practices as well as defined standards within software engineering organization. Min. req. Master’s degree in Computer Science, Information Technology or foreign equivalent together with 2 years’ experience in software engineering and design environment including significant experience or knowledge in IIS or Apache, Object Oriented Design and Development, Microsoft Visual Basic 6.0, Microsoft Visual Studio .NET, Java, HTML, JavaScript, CSS, Microsoft SQL Server 2005 or higher, XML, XSLT, SOAP & REST Web services, Windows Services, MSMQ, COM, COM+, Source code version management with Perforce & Git, High-availability applications. In the alternative, will accept Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science, Information Technology or foreign equivalent together with 6 years’ experience in the above. Send resumes to: John Maher, 3075 W Ray Road Suite 200, Chandler, AZ 85226.
18 Lone Tree Voice
January 19, 2017J
TAKING STOCK OF THE ECONOMY
Richard Wobbekind, executive director of the business research division and senior associate dean for academic programs at the University of Colorado Boulder, Leeds School of Business, offers insight on the 2017 economic outlook for Colorado. Wobbekind spoke during the Economic Forecast Breakfast put on by the South Metro Denver Chamber of Commerce on Jan. 13 that drew hundreds of area business and community leaders to the Hyatt Regency DTC in Denver. Wobbekind said he expects to see increased job growth in Colorado this year. He also said not enough single-family, detached homes are being built to keep up with the state’s growing population.
STEPHANIE MASON
CORRECTION An article on the Coors Western Art Exhibit in last week’s edition should have identified the artist who created the work “Community” as Dinah K. Worman.
LPS KINDERGARTEN AND PRESCHOOL REGISTRATION January 30 and January 31, 2017 Child-Centered Programming Traditional School Calendar Out-of-District Families Welcome!
Kindergarten Options: Half-Day Programs Tuition-based Extended Day Programs Free Full Day Programs
Preschool available at 7 locations
For more information: Call your neighborhood school or 303-347-3334
Visit www.littletonpublicschools.net
Lone Tree Voice 19
January 19, 2017
Phyllis Vandehaar offers daylong painting workshop in Littleton Watercolor, ink technique to be explored on Feb. 4
IF YOU GO
BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
“If art isn’t challenging, enlightening, enjoyable and requiring the thinking process, there is something wrong,” she said. Local artist Phyllis Vandehaar, who spent much of her career teaching art at Arapahoe High School, is still sharing her expertise some years after she retired. On Feb. 4, she will spend the day, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., leading a workshop called “Playful Watercolor and Ink” for members and guests of the Heritage Fine Arts Guild of Arapahoe County. It will be held at Littleton’s First Presbyterian Church, 1609 W. Littleton Blvd. (Doors open at 8:30 a.m.) Participants will draw with a device called the Speedball Elegant
PHYLLIS VANDEHAAR’S WORKSHOP will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Feb. 4 at Littleton First Presbyterian Church, 1609 W. Littleton Blvd. (Doors open at 8:30 a.m.) Workshops held by the Heritage Fine Arts Guild of Arapahoe County cost $35 member/$50 non-member. (Membership costs $35 a year.) See story for supply info. Sign-up forms are at heritage-guild.com. Pre-registration is necessary. The Heritage Fine Arts Guild of Arapahoe County, founded in 1974, welcomes new members at all levels of experience in fine arts media, as well as those interested in art appreciation. It holds monthly meetings, weekly “paint days,” and ongoing exhibits and workshops. See: heritage-guild.com. Writer calligraphy marker, a pen that flows into “a lovely array of fluid values when water or watercolor paints are applied.” Vandehaar will demonstrate and show examples, then participants will start with a small piece of paper and move on to a larger, more detailed work.
Registrants are asked to bring two black Elegant Writer pens (one broad 3.0 and a thinner 1.0 — about $5 each) as well as watercolors, watercolor paper and reference photos if wanted. Abstract and nonobjective works are also acceptable. For a complete supply list, go online to heritage-guild.com, go to the Phyllis Vandehaar listing and click on “See workshop details,” then on the resulting Phyllis Vandehaar listing, click on “Download class description and supply list.” Vandehaar has always made art an integral part of her being. She earned a BA and MFA in fine arts from the University of Colorado and taught high school art for many years. In retirement, she still teaches: a few private lessons at her home, workshops and classes, as well as creating her own artwork in watercolor, mixed media, pastels, charcoal and collage. “Although she is capable of realistic imagery, she prefers to abstract out subject matter through loosely-
“Bird on a Branch” is an example of the new pen and watercolor technique Phyllis Vandehaar will teach in her Heritage Fine Arts Guild workshop. COURTESY IMAGE
applied color and brushwork. Her greatest sense of achievement is inventing subject matter, using vibrant color, creating unusual relationships and simply making up things as she produces her art,” she wrote, adding, “I don’t know what I would have done with my life had I not been an artist!”
Serving the southeast Denver area
Castle Rock/Franktown
First United Methodist Church 1200 South Street Castle Rock, CO 80104 303.688.3047 www.fumccr.org
Services:
Sunday 8:00am, 9:30am, and 11:00am Children’s Sunday School 9:30am
Little Blessings Day Care
www.littleblessingspdo.com
Centennial
Greenwood Village
Sunday Worship 8:00 & 10:45 a.m. Sunday School Bible Study 9:30am Trinity Lutheran School & ELC (Ages 3-5, Grades K-8)
Catholic Parish & School
Seven Sunday Masses Two Daily Masses Confessions Six Days a Week STM Catholic School Preschool – Grade 8
8035 South Quebec Street Centennial, CO 80112 303.770.1150
www.stthomasmore.org
Congregation Beth Shalom Serving the Southeast Denver area
Call or check our website for information on services and social events! www.cbsdenver.org
303-794-6643
Lone Tree Chabad Jewish Center South Metro Denver Synagogue, Preschool, Hebrew School & Much More! www.DenverJewishCenter.com
tapestry umc JOIN US FOR WORSHIP AT CU SOUTH DENVER
10035 Peoria Street Meeting every Sunday at 9:30
All are welcome! Tapestry United Methodist Church on Facebook
www.tapestryumc.org
Parker evangelical Presbyterian church Connect – Grow – Serve
Sunday Worship
8:45 am & 10:30 am 9030 MILLER ROAD PARKER, CO 80138 3038412125 www.pepc.org
303-792-7222
303-841-4660 www.tlcas.org
Parker
St. Thomas More
Trinity Lutheran Church & School
Parker
To advertise your place of worship in this section, call Karen at 303-566-4091 or email kearhart@ColoradoCommunityMedia.com
Sunday Services - 10 a.m. Ruth Memorial Chapel 19650 E. Mainstreet Parker, CO 80138 www.CSLParker.org
Joy Lutheran Church Sharing God’s Love
SAturdAy 5:30pm
SundAy 8am & 10:30am
9:15am Education hour
Pastor Rod Hank
Joyful Mission Preschool 303-841-3770 7051 East Parker Hills Ct. • Parker, CO 303-841-3739 • ELCA • www.joylc.org
Pine Lane Elementary South 6475 E Ponderosa Dr. Parker, CO 80138 303-941-0668
20 Lone Tree Voice
January 19, 2017J
Valentine’s Day
MOVIE QUOTE Contest Priz es! How well do you know your Romantic Movies?
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Belle and the Beast sneak away from rehearsals at the PACE Center for a trip through downtown during the Christmas Carriage Parade on Dec. 10. “Beauty and the Beast” will run at PACE from Jan. 20 to Feb. 12, 2017. TOM SKELLEY
‘Beauty and the Beast’ brings magic to Parker PACE Center will host musical that has enchanted audiences
IF YOU GO
BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
“Disney’s Beauty and the Beast” plays Jan. 20 to Feb. 12 at the PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker. Performances are at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays. There are some single tickets remaining. Call 303-805-6800, parkerarts.org.
Once upon a time, in 1740, a French writer, Gabrielle Suzanne Barbot de Ville, published a story about a beautiful young woman and a man who had been transformed into a beast by an evil fairy … It was based on a folk tale that had been in circulation for about 400 years and has been retold in various versions since the 1700s — more recently by the American Walt Disney Company, which produced an animated film in 1991 and converted it to a hugely successful Broadway musical in 1994, complete with a singing teapot and cabinet ... When Gary Lewis, artistic director of Inspire Creative, the in-house producing company at Parker’s PACE Center, met with the PACE producing manager to choose the season’s musical productions, they were finally able to select “Disney’s Beauty and the Beast” after trying for three years to get the rights, Lewis said. And they were right on target for their local audience. Despite the addition of two more performances on Thursday evenings, tickets are “97-98 percent sold,” the director said. Rehearsals have been going for almost eight (holiday-interrupted) weeks for the production, which runs Jan. 20-Feb. 12. It is directed by Lewis and stars Shelby Brienzo of Parker as Belle and Matt Wessel of Highlands Ranch as Beast. Both have appeared at PACE before — Brienzo is in her fourth production and Wessel said he has been in over a dozen shows since
2010. All three also have day jobs, but, as Lewis said, theater is “the passion side of life.” Lewis is an RN by training and has recently “switched to the IT world.” He’s especially fond of the French fairy tale because of its concept of learning to care about people, he said. “It needs to be heard!” Wessell, who lives in Highlands Ranch with his wife, Bethany, and three children, is creative director for a telecom company. He also contributes to Inspire Creative by managing the company’s website and community outreach. The Beast is one of his dream roles — “it tops them all!” Brienzo, who has married recently, graduated from Legend High School and attended University of Northern Colorado for two years. She is a mortgage loan processor by day for DHI and is finishing up her degree, she says. She is also part of Wands and Wishes, a group that appears at little girls’ birthday parties. “She gets paid to be a princess,” Wessel joked. Both stars speak of auditioning for the upcoming “Hairspray,” at PACE, but Brienzo may have to back off, since she is building a house in Parker. (Auditions are open to the community.) The first rehearsal with a full orchestra was coming up soon after we talked with them on Jan. 10. They have been working with a recorded rehearsal score supplied with the script. After “tech week” comes opening night on Jan. 20.
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Lone Tree Voice 21
January 19, 2017
HOW TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE Send volunteer opportunities to hharden@ coloradocommunitymedia.com Gateway Battered Women’s Shelter Serves victims of family violence in Aurora and Arapahoe County Need: Volunteers help with crisis-line management, children’s services, legal advocacy, community education and other shelter services. Donations: Also accepts used cell phones (younger than 4 years) to give to victims. Mail to Gateway at P.O. Box 914, Aurora, CO 80040, or drop them off at Neighborly Thrift Store, 3360 S. Broadway, Englewood Requirements: Must attend a 26-hour training session; bilingual skills welcome Contact: Jeneen Klippel-Worden, 303-3431856 or jkworden@gatewayshelter.com Girl Scouts of Colorado Youth organization for girls Need: Troop leaders, office support, administrative help and more Age requirement: Men and women, 18 and older Contact: www.girlscoutsofcolorado.org, inquiry@gscolorado.org or 1-877-404-5708 Global Orphan Relief Develops and supports programs bringing light, comfort and security to orphans around the world Need: Super stars with website development, users of the abundant resources of social media. Those with great connection ability are needed to help with the development of the donor pool. Contact: Those interested serving this faith-based Colorado nonprofit can contact Deitra Dupray, 303-895-7536 or dadupray@comcast.net. GraceFull Community Cafe Provides a place in Littleton where people of all backgrounds can gather, eat well and be inspired to give back. Cafe is open for breakfast and lunch, from 6:30 a.m. to 2
EDUCATION FROM PAGE 13
The $3 million from the town will assist ACC — which has campuses in Littleton, Parker and Castle Rock — with building permits and fees, and land-site improvements. Kathay Rennels, associate vice president for engagement at CSU, told Colorado Community Media in November that it is the first collaboration of its kind in the state. She said Castle Rock, with a population of about 60,000, has been targeted for the campus because of its growing population and accessibility from other areas along I-25. “The collaboration campus will allow DCSD students to continue pursuing their passions – whether it is entrepreneurship, health care, information technology and more – as they move through our system and into postgraduate education,” school district Deputy Superintendent Steve Cook said in an email. “DCSD has always appreciated our strong partnership with Arapahoe Community College, which has afforded numerous concurrent enrollment courses to our students and families. Expanding on this partnership, and including Colorado State University, we together will provide even more opportunities for
p.m. Tuesday to Saturday. A partner of the GraceFull Foundation. Need: Opportunities for food preparation, guest service, cleaning and dishwashing. Location: 5610 Curtice St., Littleton Contact: Sign up for volunteer opportunities at http://gracefullcafe.com/volunteer/ Habitat ReStore Nonprofit home improvement stores and donation centers Need: Volunteers for Wheat Ridge, Denver or Littleton Habitat ReStores, helping with the cash register, dock and warehouse floor Contact: 303-996-5468, email Alice Goble at Alice@habitatmetrodenver.org Highlands Ranch Community Association Works with Therapeutic Recreation Program and Special Olympics Need: Volunteers to help teach classes, coach Special Olympics, provide athletes support during Special Olympics practices, assist with special events, and help participats succeed in the therapeutic recreation program. Contact: Summer Aden, 303-471-7043 or www.hrcaonline.org/tr Hospice at Home Need: Volunteers help patients and their families with respite care, videotaping, massage and other tasks. Home study training is available. Contact 303-698-6404 Hospice of Covenant Care Nonprofit, faith-based hospice Need: Volunteers to support patients and families Contact: 303-731-8039 Lone Tree Police Department Volunteers in Police Service (VIPS) Provides assistance within the Police Department in both Administrative and
our students in the future.” Frank Gray, CEO of Castle Rock’s Economic Development Council, said the campus is likely to help the town draw new businesses. “This is big for our sustainable future as a stand-alone community,” Gray said in the news release. “This educational infrastructure is another step in our strategic plan to create a great environment and workforce pipeline for the attraction and retention of primary employers. “We know that access to an educated workforce and ongoing training are critical to a long-term sustainable and vibrant community.” A student enrolled in the new program would have the opportunity to move directly through high school, to the community college level and eventually graduate with a degree from CSU without ever leaving Douglas County. “Attracting higher education has been a vital part of our business infrastructure plan in Castle Rock,” said Matt Call, chairman of the board for the Castle Rock EDC. “The collaboration campus is a huge win for our entire community. Quite honestly, I’m excited as a citizen with school-age kids and the opportunity to significantly bring down the cost of higher education for my kids and my neighbors.”
Patrol functions. Need: Volunteers are needed to assist with many areas within the Police Department to include patrol functions, fingerprinting, and fleet maintenance. Requirements: Must attend the Lone Tree Police Department Citizen’s Police Academy, and submit to a background check. Additional training is provided based on area of interest. Patrol volunteers must commit to a minimum monthly hour requirement. Contact: Tim.Beals@cityoflonetree.com or 720-509-1159. Lutheran Family Services: Cultural Mentoring Program We welcome refugee families and help them adjust to their new home Need: People who can commit to working with refugees on skills for self-sufficiency
and helping them learn about their new home. Requirements: Must be 18 or older (although children of volunteers are welcome to participate). One-hour training and orientation required. Contact: David Cornish, 303-225-0199 or david.cornish@lfsrm.org; go to www.lfsrm. org. Meals on Wheels Delivers meals to residents in Englewood, southern Jefferson County and western Arapahoe County Need: Drivers to deliver meals; volunteers to help prepare, box and label meals Requirements: Must dedicate one to two hours a week Contact: Phil or Mary at 303-798-7642 (from 8 a.m. to noon Mondays through Fridays)
Developmental Pathways Holiday Outreach Sometimes Santa comes in disguise as he did for about 700 people with developmental disabilities or delays this year. For more than a decade, the local community centered board Developmental Pathways has held their much-anticipated Holiday Outreach program. Supported individuals and/or families in need are nominated to participate in this extraordinary program. The program nominees are asked to submit gift requests, and the generous supporters of Developmental Pathways fulfill those requests.
One parent had this to say about her encounter with Pathways’ undercover Santa: “Dear Donors, I wanted to express our overwhelming gratitude for all the donations to my family this Christmas. This has been such a tough year for me and my husband with my cancer diagnosis and treatments. We have tried to keep things as normal as possible for our kids. The gifts we received for Christmas were such a heartwarming blessing and brought so much joy to our kids. I look forward to paying all of your generosity forward once I recover and life gets back to normal. God bless you and your family.” Developmental Pathways would like to thank all the donors, volunteers, and employees that put on their elf hats for a few weeks so that hundreds of families could feel the warmth of the Christmas spirit. Thank you to… Developmental Pathways Staff CH2M Hill Chubb Insurance Franklin Elementary Great West Life Lewis Roca Rothgerber Christie LLP Morrisey Design Standard Insurance Technolink of the Rockies Via West El Dorado Elementary Espree Child Learning Center Coyote Creek Elementary Wildcat Mountain Elementary Bear Canyon Elementary Governors Ranch Elementary Cherry Creek Child Find Solace Health Care
Alliance of Therapy Specialists Motor Milestones Horizon Community Church Valor Poms The Plumery Foundation Pediatric Speech Therapy Associates MGA Home Healthcare Stryker TracomGroup PT Therapies Talking Together Haaksma Speech Pathology Peekaboo Therapy Spark Therapy Milestone Pediatric Therapy Services Colorado’s Assuring Better Child Health and Development (ABCD) project As well as 32 individuals and families!
325 Inverness Drive South, Englewood 303-360-6600 | www.DevelopmentalPathways.org
22 Lone Tree Voice
THINGS to DO
THEATER
Town Hall Arts Center Presents ‘Avenue Q’: 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays, through Saturday, through Feb. 4, at 2450 W Main St., Littleton. Additional shows are at 2 p.m. Jan. 28 and Feb. 4, and at 6:30 p.m. Jan. 22 and Jan. 29. Call 303-794-2787 ext. 5 or go to townhallartscenter.org/ avenue-q.
MUSIC
Arapahoe Philharmonic Sinfonietta Chamber Orchestra Concert: 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 27, at Bethany Lutheran Church, 4500 E. Hampden Ave., Cherry Hills Village; and at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 28, at St. Luke’s United Methodist Church, 8817 S. Broadway, Highlands Ranch. Maestro Devin Patrick Hughes will speak at 6:45 p.m.
ART
DIY Festival: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 21, at the Douglas County Libraries branch in Castle Pines, 360 Village Square Lane. Learn a variety of DIY how-tos. All ages. No registration required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www.DCL.org. DIY How-To Fest: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 21, at the Parker Library, 20105 E. Mainstreet, Parker. Drop in for how-to demonstrations and hands-on activities including arts and crafts and cooking. All ages. Call 303-7917323 or go to www.DCL.org. DIY @ DCL: Mini How-To Festival: 1-4 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 28, at the Roxborough Library, 8357 N. Rampart Range Road. Drop in and learn a variety of DIY techniques. Great for all ages. No registration required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www.DCL.org.
EVENTS
Blanket Drive for Homeless: drop off blankets from 1-4 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 22 at 8z Real Estate, 734 N. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. Blankets also may be dropped off Saturday, Jan. 21, from 9:30-11:30 a.m. at Sage Canyon Elementary School, 2420 Autumn Sage St., or Flagstone Elementary, 104 Lovington St.,; and from 12:30-2:30 p.m. at Rhyolite Park, 1701 Crystal Valley Parkway, or Plum Creek Golf Course, 331 Players Club Drive. Contact Jim Cote at 970-8199652 or jim.cote@8z.com. The Soviet Union: The Road After Collapse: 6-8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 23, at Charter Financial Resources Memory Lane, 9335 Commerce Center St., Unit B5, Highlands Ranch. Presented by Active Minds. Call 303-468-2820 to RSVP. Ice cream and refreshments served.
this week’s TOP FIVE Art of Downsizing and Decluttering: 10 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 21, at the Lone Tree Library, 10055 Library Way. Learn creative ways to view your treasures and start the process of downsizing, decluttering and destressing. Registration required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www.DCL.org. Adolesco International Youth Exchange Coffee: 10 a.m. to noon Sunday, Jan. 22, at Peet’s Coffee at the Streets at SouthGlenn, 6751 S. York St., Ste. 518, Centennial. Adolesco accepts applications from children and teens from ages 9-18. Applications are due March 29. RSVP at colorado@adolesco.org, or go to www.Facebook/ Adolesco.org/events for details on other gatherings. Chamber Recital Series, “Eine Kleine Windmusik’: 3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 22 at St. James Presbyterian Church, 3601 W. Belleview Ave., Littleton. Presented by the Air Force Academy Band. Go to www.usafacademyband.af.mil.
The National Parks: 1:30-2:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 24, at the Inn at Greenwood Village, 5565 S. Yosemite St., Greenwood Village. Join Active Minds for the story of the development of the national parks system and hear some of the more notable parks and their stories. Call 303-327-7340 to RSVP. Seating is limited. Business Database Speed Dating: Meet Your Information Match: 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 25, at the Lone Tree Library, 10055 Library Way. An interactive session for business owners to explore favorite and lesserknown online business resources available in the library and the community. Registration required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www. DCL.org. Conservation in Colorado Lecture Series: 6:30-8 p.m. Wednesdays at Breckenridge Brewery, 2920 Brewery Lane, Littleton. Presented by the Audubon Society of Greater Denver, topics include “Government Accountability Office, Energy Choices and Impact on Birds” on Jan. 25; and “Audubon Rockies, Western Rivers Action Network” on Feb. 1. Proceeds support programs of the Audubon Nature Center. Go to http://www.denveraudubon.org/ events/2017-01/ Brexit: What Does the Future Hold for the UK and the European Union?: 1-2 p.m. Thursday,
Author Jack Van Ens Portrays Thomas Jefferson: 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 24, at Bemis Public Library, 6014 S. Datura St., Littleton. Program recounts the mudslinging election of 1800. Find out why politics, then and now, is a rough sport, full of verbal body slams and character assassinations that Jefferson experienced firsthand. Van Ens is the author of “How Jefferson Made the Best of Bad Messes.” Call 303-795-3961. Future Huskie DC Poms/Dance Clinic: 4:306:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 27, at Douglas County High School, 2842 Front St., Castle Rock, in the South Commons. Open to dancers ages 4-12. Parent performance to follow. Contact Britany Ederveen at beederveen@dcsdk12.org for cost and registration information.
Jan. 26, at Castle Rock Senior Center, 2323 Woodlands Blvd., Castle Rock. Presented by Active Minds. Call 303-688-9498 to RSVP. Chinese New Year Kids’ Zone: 4-5 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 26, at the James H. LaRue Library, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Grades 2-6. Learn to ribbon dance, write characters, cut designs and make greeting cards. Take home a special treat. No registration required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www.DCL.org. Turkey: 10-11 a.m. Friday, Jan. 27, at the Malley Senior Center, 3380 S. Lincoln St., Englewood. Join Active Minds for a look at Turkey’s past and present-day challenges. Call 303-762-2660 to RSVP.
Birdwatching 101: 10 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 28 at the Louviers Library, 7885 Louviers Blvd. Learn to identify all manner of birds on the fly. Great for all ages. Registration required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www.DCL.org.
HEALTH
PACE Center Blood Drive: 9:3011:40 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. Friday, Jan. 20, at 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker. In the bloodmobile. Contact the Bonfils Appoint-
ment Center at 303-363-2300 or bonfils.org. How Your Body Really Works (or Doesn’t): 3-4 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 21 at Natural Grocers, 1265 Sgt. John Stiles Drive, Suite M, Highlands Ranch. Knowing how nutrients work with your body makes it easier to understand which supplements to take and why. Call 303-471-9400. St. Thomas More Parish Center Blood Drive: 7:30-11:30 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 21, at 7071 E. Otero Ave., Centennial. Inside St. Francis Hall. Contact the Bonfils Appointment Center at 303-363-2300 or bonfils.org. Our Father Lutheran Church Blood Drive: 8 a.m. to noon Sunday, Jan. 22, at 6335 S. Holly St., Centennial. Contact the Bonfils Appointment Center at 303-363-2300 or bonfils.org. Christ Lutheran Church Blood Drive: 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 22 at 8997 S. Broadway, Highlands Ranch. Inside the Fellowship Hall. Contact Dianne Yoss at 303-7910803 or bonfils.org. St. Mary of Littleton Catholic Church Blood Drive: 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 22, at 6853 S. Prince St., Littleton. Contact Bill Wagener at 303-7988506 or bonfils.org. Enhancing Immune Health: Your Key to Wellness: 7 p.m. Monday,
January 19, 2017J
Jan. 23, at the Parker Library, 20105 E. Mainstreet. Nutritionist Trisha Ackerman provides tips and solutions to building your immunity this winter. Contact Trisha@ Nutrition4supportandwellness. com. Columbine Library Blood Drive: 12:30-6 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 24, at 7706 W. Bowles Ave., Littleton. Inside the bloodmobile. Contact the Bonfils Appointment Center at 303-363-2300 or bonfils.org. Turmeric, the Spice of Life: 6-7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 26 at Natural Grocers, 1265 Sgt. John Stiles Drive, Suite M, Highlands Ranch. Spice up your life and your health by learning how to use turmeric in more than just curry. Call 303471-9400. Plaza Tower One Blood Drive: 10-11:40 a.m. and 1-3:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 26 at 6400 S. Fiddler’s Green Circle, Suite 1400, Greenwood Village. Contact the Bonfils Appointment Center at 303-363-2300 or bonfils.org.
Arapahoe County Administration Blood Drive: 8-9:40 a.m. and 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 26, at 5334 S. Prince St., Littleton. In the east hearing room. Contact the Bonfils Appointment Center at 303-363-2300 or bonfils.org. Philip S. Miller Library Blood Drive: 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 28, at 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. Inside Meeting Room West. Contact the Bonfils Appointment Center at 303-3632300 or bonfils.org. Crossroads Community Church Blood Drive: 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 29, at 9900 S. Twenty Mile Road, Parker. In the adult classroom. Contact the Bonfils Appointment Center at 303-363-2300 or bonfils.org.
EDUCATION
Joshua Early Childhood Center Open House: 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Jan. 28, at 5760 E. Otero Ave., Centennial. Preschool open enrollment for the 2017-18 school year opens Jan. 30. Joshua Early Childhood Center Combines its expanded traditional preschool, Joshua Academy, with its Joshua Early Intervention program for children with autism. Go to www. joshuaearlychildhoodcenter.org, email info@joshuaearlychildhoodcenter.org or call 720-3165234. Editor’s note: Calendar submissions must be received by noon Wednesday for publication the following week. Send listings to calendar@coloradocommunitymedia.com. No attachments, please. Listings are free and run on a space-available basis.
Lone Tree Voice 23
January 19, 2017
‘The Wiz’ is exciting adaptation of ‘Oz’ tale Ignite Theatre Company calling it quits after production at Aurora Fox
IF YOU GO
BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
“The Wiz” plays through Jan. 29 at the Aurora Fox Arts Center, 9900 E. Colfax Ave., Aurora. Directors are Keith Rabin Jr. and Amy Osatinski. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; 2:30 p.m. Sundays. Tickets: $28/$26/$20, ignitetheatre.com, 855-8114111.
When “The Wiz” first appeared on Broadway in 1975, it won seven Tony Awards, including Best Musical, and was an early example of Broadway’s musicals appearing with an all-black cast. It’s a big, far-fetched, colorful show that does indeed take us to see the Wizard at the end of that Yellow Brick Road, but the folks along the way give the story a different spin. Witches have distinct personalities and memorable costumes. They appear on a city-ish junkyard sort of set, cleverly constructed around a pair of thrones as the show is stages at the Aurora Fox Arts Center. Projection, designed by co-director Amy Osatinski, carries the audience into the scene by flying over cornfields and landing at Aunt Em’s farm, as word of an impending storm sends folks scrambling for shelter. The tornado is depicted by a nicely choreographed troupe of swirling dancers and Dorothy finds herself in a field, amidst munchkins celebrating the demise of the Wicked Witch of the East, whose silver sneakers stick out
send the audience out smiling … … Except for the sad announcement that this is the last production the community will see from Ignite Theatre Company. Producer Will Adams said in a press release that the decision was made as Ignite prepared its 31st musical production after a run of eight years. The show was cast, then delayed from the projected summer production dates due to venue scheduling problems, and Adams and co-founder/ artistic director Keith Rabin Jr. and the company board voted to call it quits. They will leave the parent Lucent Performing Arts structure in place in case someone else wants to pick up the banner. Adams made the point that it was not a financial issue, but the demand on time and energy for the principal founders/supporters and lack of a home stage that drove the decision. Changes at the Aurora Fox, where they have performed for the past eight years, contributed to the decision to cease operations.
Keith Jackson plays the elusive Wiz in the urban musical called “The Wiz” at the Aurora Fox, through Jan. 29. It is produced with an all-black cast by Ignite Theatre Company. COURTESY PHOTO
beneath the Kansas farmhouse that flattened her. With L. Frank Baum’s timeless tale reset in black culture, the music becomes funky soul, gospel and jazz/ blues — all backed by a great, brassy 10-piece live band conducted by Brandon Bill. Choreographer Carlos Jimenez has a fine score by musical prodigy Charlie Smalls (Juilliard at
11) to work with and dancers of varying sizes, shapes and skills. Oz fans will enjoy the musical’s take on the story’s characters: a hip Tin Man, a gospel-singing Wicked Witch of the West, citified crows and a wizard who phases into a bit of AfricanAmerican-style preaching. Another week of rehearsal might have added a bit more polish, but the production did
Marketplace ANNOUNCEMENTS Instruction
MERCHANDISE
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Arts & Crafts
Miscellaneous
Offering Piano Lessons as well as
Spanish Classes
Boxes of 750 ml. wine bottles with labels on, 15 cents per bottle (303)421-9368
and Tutoring
For Children and Adults Location is in Highlands Ranch First class is FREE (303)791-6441
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Firewood
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Men's cashmere coat, L-XL $59. Woolrich coat w/ removable hood, $30. Both like new. New TENS unit, $29 (state of the art). New Chicago 12" dble bevel sliding compound laser-guide miter saw, $149. New 12" blade $19. 303 688-9171
Tools
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TRANSPORTATION
Autos for Sale Place an ad to sell your car on this page $25 for 2 weeks in 16 papers and online 303-566-4091 Wanted
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Any condition • Running or not Under $700
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FARM & AGRICULTURE
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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)
24 Lone Tree Voice
LOCAL
January 19, 2017J
SPORTS
I
Highlands Ranch junior guard Tommi Olson goes in for a layup following a steal as Douglas County’s Sierra Stephen and the Falcons’ Jordan Matthews trail the play. Olson scored 22 points and Highlands Ranch forced 37 turnovers in a 90-37 Continental League victory over the Huskies on Jan. 13 at Highlands Ranch.
JIM BENTON
Falcons pick up the pace Highlands Ranch’s defense sparks 53-point victory over Douglas County BY JIM BENTON JBENTON@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
It took Highlands Ranch more than two minutes to score its first points in the Continental League opener
against visiting Douglas County on Jan. 13, but once the Falcons started scoring, there was little doubt about the outcome. Highlands Ranch, ranked third in the Class 5A CHSAANow.com poll with a young team with only one senior on the roster, rolled to a 90-37 victory over the Huskies after falling behind 4-0 in the first 2:04 of the game. The 53-point win improved Highland Ranch’s overall record to 12-2
KAISON HAMMONDS
What is your favorite pre-competition meal? Subway because you can’t go wrong with a footlong. Who is your favorite professional or collegiate athlete? Russell Westbrook because of his competitiveness. Why do you participate in sports? For the love of basketball and competing.
Key moments Highlands Ranch forced turnover after turnover and ran off a 24-2 run to start the second period to grab a SEE FALCONS, P25
STANDOUT PERFORMERS
KEEPING SCORE WITH... What is your favorite movie? “Friday Night Lights” because it’s about believing in yourself and playing as a team.
while the Huskies fell to 2-11 on the season. “We’re doing pretty good right now, but we’re a young team and need to develop,” Highlands Ranch guard Tommi Olson said.
What is your favorite type of music and who is your favorite artist/ group? Hip-hop. Favorite rapper is Young Thug. Do you play video games, and if so, which one(s)? Of course, enjoy playing “Battlefield” with teammates and NBA 2K. Do you have any pre-competition superstitions or rituals? Put my left sock on before my right. What are your plans for after high school graduation? Play college basketball and get a degree.
KEEPING SCORE WITH... is a Q&A with high school athletes in the south metro area. Email sports writer Jim Benton at jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com if you or some you know would llike to participate.
Angelo Martinez, basketball, senior, Englewood: Martinez scored 22 points to go along with three assists and three steals in the Pirates’ 78-57 win over Bruce Randolph on Jan. 13. In six games this season, Martinez is averaging 26 points a game. Ty Johnson, hockey, senior, Castle View: Johnson had six points in the Sabercats’ 11-4 win over Heritage on Jan. 12, with three goals and three assists. Walker Andrew, basketball, senior, Heritage: He scored 20 points and grabbed nine rebounds in the Eagles’ 79-48 win over Thornton on Jan. 10. Reagan Chiaverini, basketball, senior, Chaparral: She scored 17 points to help the Wolverines open Continental League play with a 40-21 win over Mountain Vista on Jan. 13. Tommi Olson, basketball, junior, Highlands Ranch: She scored 22 points and had several steals as the Falcons forced 37 turnovers in a 90-37 Continental League win over Douglas County on Jan. 13. STANDOUT PERFORMERS are five athletes named from south metro area high schools. Preference is given to those making their debut on the list. To nominate an athlete, contact Jim Benton at jbenton@ coloradocommunitymedia.com
Upon further review, it’s still an honor
t was awhile ago that Tom Robinson had to make quick, steadfast decisions while coaching the Regis Jesuit boys basketball team. Robinson was OVERTIME tasked with making more astute decisions as the replay official at the NCAA national championship football game between Clemson and Alabama on Jan. 9 “What a special honor it was,” said Jim Benton Robinson after he was selected as the Big 12 Conference replay official to work the game. “It was a responsibility for a game of that magnitude. During the game it wasn’t on my mind that I was holding the attention of the nation. It didn’t hit me until a little bit afterward.” Robinson, a coach and teacher at Regis for 30 years, has worked for the Colorado High School Activities Association for the past 16 years after retiring as a coach. He is currently a CHSAA associate commissioner. He’s been employed as a high school football official and an official in the Western Athletic and Mountain West conferences. As a replay official at the college level, if something looks questionable, Robinson, 71, has to stop the game to confirm or change the call by the onfield officials. “If you don’t have a lot of video, you have to piece it together,” Robinson said. “Most of the production crew at games knows what you need.” There were several controversial plays that will be debated in the title game, especially the one when Hunter Renfrow caught a 2-yard touchdown pass with one second remaining to give Clemson the national title. Many felt Renfrow was freed up by an illegal pick. “There can’t be moving picks,” Robinson said. “A player can’t be moving. It can be legal, but it can be illegal if a player is moving. That play was not reviewable.” Robinson, who is the director of officials for CHSAA, will retire from the organization on June 30 but plans to keep on being a replay official for college football games. Back to the basics Jared Yannacito was recently named the new head football coach at Golden High School and has a plan to rejuvenate the program. Yannacito takes over a program that has averaged two wins over the past seven seasons, going 14-56 since the Demons’ last winning campaign in SEE BENTON, P27
Lone Tree Voice 25
7January 19, 2017
FALCONS FROM PAGE 24
40-13 lead and turn the game into a runaway. The Falcons’ aggressive defense forced Douglas County into 37 turnovers. Key players/statistics Olson, a 5-foot-6 junior, led four Highlands Ranch players in double figures with 18 points. Sophomore Kasey Neubert had 18 points, while sophomores Courtney Humbarger and Autumn Watts each finished with 15 points. Senior Sylar Backstrom scored 18 points for the Huskies and senior Sierra Stephan contributed eight points They said it “We’re progressing every day and being good teammates to each other and starting to grasp the concepts we’re trying to teach them,” Ranch coach Caryn Jarocki said. “It is starting to come out in games. They really have been buying into the system and each other.” Defense and forcing turnovers like the team did against Douglas County is part of the Falcons’ system. “When we play like that, it is really inspiring to us,” Jarocki said. “It gets us going, we get easier stuff on offense, more open shots and that helps. This game did do us some good because we started running the floor more, passing the ball better to each other. We’ve played some really tough
‘They really have been buying into the system and each other.’ Caryn Jarocki, Highlands Ranch ocach games up until this point. We were ready for that and now we were ready for this too.” Douglas County coach Todd Dickson admires the Falcons’ style. “Eventually, we want to get where Highlands Ranch is,” Dickson said. “It isn’t going to happen overnight.” The lopsided victory could be beneficial for the Falcons in more than just the win column. “A game like this helps us grow mentally because we know now that we have to start off fast because any team can come out and match us,” Olson said. Going forward Highlands Ranch goes to Legend on Jan. 19 for a Continental League game while Douglas County hosts Regis Jesuit the same night.
ACC Career and Transfer Center Presents
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26 Lone Tree Voice
January 19, 2017J
Valor loses tough basketball clash Eagles mount challenge but lose boys hoops game to D’Evelyn
a f l 5 q
BY TOM MUNDS TMUNDS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
D’Evelyn invaded the Valor Christian gym on Jan. 11 to battle the Eagles for first place in the Jefferson County Class 4A boys basketball league. Valor overcame a slow start and at one point held a narrow lead, but D’Evelyn put on a late scoring run and won, 70-60. “The outcome of the game wasn’t what we wanted it to be,” Valor coach Troy Pachner said after the game. “They came out and outplayed us, particularly early in the game. They built a good size lead but our guys rallied, had a great third quarter and led for a while. But D’Evelyn hit key outside shots and got the win.” Key moments It was a game matching two talented teams. Valor, ranked No. 1 in the state, came into the game with a record of 8-3 overall and 2-0 in league while D’Evelyn’s record was 8-2 overall and 2-0 in league. After the tipoff, the Jaguars pushed the pace and built a 20-6 lead by the end of the first period. But Valor picked up the pace in the second quarter as they mounted a stingy defense that forced turnovers and pushed a fast-paced attack. The Eagles cut the Jaguars lead to 33-28 going into the third period; the Eagles tied the score 33-33 at less than two minutes into the period; and Valor took their SEE VALOR, P27
fi t
Jalen Sanders puts the ball into the hoop for Valor during the Jan. 11 game against D’Evelyn in the clash to determine first place in the league. Sanders led his team with 30 points and 10 rebounds, but D’Evelyn won 70-60. TOM MUNDS
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Lone Tree Voice 27
January 19, 2017
VALOR
the Jaguars hit back-to-back threepointers to pull ahead to stay and went on to win the game, 70-60.
FROM PAGE 26
first lead of the game at 37-35 late in the period. The entire game was a physical and tactical battle, particularly in the fourth quarter, and there were seven lead changes. The score was tied at 50-50 at the 5:27 point in the fourth quarter and again tied at 52-52. Then
BENTON FROM PAGE 24
2009 when Golden went 7-3. “I have watched film and they have good athletes,” Yannacito said. “We’re going to start out by being perfect at the things that take no talent. We’re going to go back to the fundamentals. And we are going to ask for relentless effort in every-
Key players/statistics Jalen Sanders led Valor in scoring with 30 points, plus he hauled down 10 rebounds, blocked five shots and made five steals. Keisan Crosby scored nine points for the Eagles while Josh Randle and Dylan MCaffrey pulled down four rebounds each
thing we do.” Yannacito, a 2005 graduate of Pomona, has been an assistant coach for seven seasons for the successful Panthers program. “Pomona was a great place,” Yannacito said. “I will bring the blueprint of success up to Golden.” McCaffrey, Dvorak honored Quarterback Dylan McCaffrey, who led Valor Christian to its second straight Class 5A state football
© 2016 King Features Synd., Inc.
TO SOLVE SUDOKU: Numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!
Answers
They said it Pachner said D’Evelyn played a very physical game and had the range for their outside shots. “It was hard to lose but we take the fact away from this game that other teams might use the same game plan against it and we will work to counter that style of play,” he said. “We lost this game but there is a lot of season left and we still control our own destiny. We will focus on each game left on the schedule and
particularly the fact we’ll see them again next month.” After the game, senior Sanders talked about what it was like on the court. “I thought D’Evelyn got off to a good start, we pushed back and fought hard in the second and the third quarter,” he said. “The fourth quarter sort of got away from us, and instead of rallying together we sort of put our heads down and didn’t respond as a team.”
championship, has been named the Boys High School Athlete of the Year by the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame. Quarterback Justin Dvorak from Colorado School of Mines in Golden will be honored as the Male College Athlete of the Year. Dvorak is the Harlon Hill Trophy winner as the nation’s best Division II football player. The awards banquet will be held April 27 at the Denver Marriott City Center.
Among the people who will be inducted into the hall of fame is former Littleton High School swimming coach Maurice “Stringy” Ervin. Jim Benton is a sports writer for Colorado Community Media. He has been covering sports in the Denver area since 1968. He can be reached at jbenton@ coloradocommunitymedia.com or at 303-566-4083.
28 Lone Tree Voice
January 19, 2017J
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7January 19, 2017
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by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.
The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust.
Public Notices Public Trustees PUBLIC NOTICE Lone Tree NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2016-0288 To Whom It May Concern: On 11/17/2016 2:41:00 PM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County.
Original Grantor: JOSEPH R. EVANCICH AND ARLINE M. EVANCICH Original Beneficiary: KEYBANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: KEYBANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 3/11/2003 Recording Date of DOT: 3/24/2003 Reception No. of DOT: 2003037882 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $60,000.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $58,763.55
Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay installments of principal and interest, together with other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust.
Legal Description of Real Property: ALL THAT PARCEL OF LAND IN CITY OF LONE TREE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO, AS MORE FULLY DESCRIBED IN DEED INST #2003014085, ID# 2231-091-04004, BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED AS LOT 35, BLOCK 2, LONE TREE FLG. NO.1, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, CO. Which has the address of: 8119 Lodgepole Trl , Lone Tree, CO 80124 NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, March 8, 2017, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.
If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38-103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process. First Publication: 1/12/2017 Last Publication: 2/9/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 11/17/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee
The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
DAVID C. WALKER Colorado Registration #: 36551 2000 SOUTH COLORADO BOULEVARD TOWER TWO, SUITE 700, DENVER, COLORADO 80222 Phone #: (303) 329-3363 Fax #: (303) 393-8438 Attorney File #: 3500-117
*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/
Legal Notice No.: 2016-0288 First Publication: 1/12/2017 Last Publication: 2/9/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press
Notices
self-weathering steel beam bridges with a concrete deck in accordance with the specifications and plan details.
Lone Tree Voice 31
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
Legal Description of Real Property: UNIT D, CONDOMINIUM BUILDING 19, MERIDIAN- VILLA CONDOMINIUMS, ACCORDING TO THE CONDOMINIUM MAP THEREOF, RECORDED ON MARCH 3, 2005 AT RECEPTION NO. 2005018653, IN THE RECORDS OF THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO, AND AS DEFINED AND DESCRIBED IN THE DECLARATION OF COVENANTS, CONDITIONS AND RESTRICTIONS OF MERIDIANVILLA CONDOMINIUMS, RECORDED ON JANUARY 16, 2004 AT RECEPTION NO. 2004007079 IN SAID RECORDS, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO.
If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38-103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.
Public Trustees
Public Trustees
First Publication: 1/12/2017 Last Publication: 2/9/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press
Which has the address of: 9768 Mayfair Street #D, Englewood, CO 80112
Dated: 11/17/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee
NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, February 22, 2017, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.
DAVID C. WALKER Colorado Registration #: 36551 2000 SOUTH COLORADO BOULEVARD TOWER TWO, SUITE 700, DENVER, COLORADO 80222 Phone #: (303) 329-3363 Fax #: (303) 393-8438 Attorney File #: 3500-117 *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website : http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2016-0288 First Publication: 1/12/2017 Last Publication: 2/9/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press
If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38-103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.
PUBLIC NOTICE Englewood NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2016-0274 To Whom It May Concern: On 11/2/2016 8:03:00 AM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: STACEY BRUNSON Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR SUNTRUST MORTGAGE, INC. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE, SUCCESSOR-IN-INTEREST TO WACHOVIA BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE FOR GSAA HOME EQUITY TRUST 200514 Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 6/30/2005 Recording Date of DOT: 7/11/2005 Reception No. of DOT: 2005062762 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $164,800.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $165,684.39
First Publication: 12/29/2016 Last Publication: 1/26/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 11/3/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: DAVID A. SHORE Colorado Registration #: 19973 5347 S VALENTIA WAY SUITE 100, GREENWOOD VILLAGE, COLORADO 80111 Phone #: (303) 573-1080 Fax #: Attorney File #: 16-00537SH
Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof.
*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2016-0274 First Publication: 12/29/2016 Last Publication: 1/26/2017 Publisher: Douglas County News Press
*Loan Modification Agreement dated January 30, 2015* THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
Government Legals
The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust.
Public Notice
Public Notice
PUBLIC INVITATION TO BID
The IFB documents may be reviewed and/or printed from the Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System website at www.rockymountainbidsystem.com. IFB documents are not available for purchase from Douglas County Government and can only be accessed from the above-mentioned website. While the IFB documents are available electronically, Douglas County cannot accept electronic bid responses.
Separate sealed bids for 2017 ASPHALT OVERLAY PROJECT, DOUGLAS COUNTY PROJECT NUMBER CI 2017-003 will be received by the Owner, Douglas County GovernThree (3) copies of your IFB response shall be ment, Department of Public Works Engineering, To advertise yoursubmitted public notices callenvelope 303-566-4100 in a sealed plainly marked Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, Suite “IFB No. 002-17, Front Range Trail Pedestrian 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104, until Tuesday, Bridges”. Electronic and/or faxed bid reFebruary 7, 2017, at 2:00 p.m. This project sponses will not be accepted. Bids will be reconsists of placement of asphalt planing and ceived until 11:00 a.m., on Tuesday, February 7, overlay, patching, pavement marking, traffic 2017 by the Douglas County Finance Departcontrol, and sediment control at various locament, Purchasing Division, 100 Third Street, tions throughout Douglas County. Suite 130, Castle Rock, Colorado 80104. Bids will not be considered which are received after The Contract Documents will be available after the time stated, and any bids so received will be 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, January 17, 2017, returned unopened. through Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System Website (www.rockymountainbidsystem.com) or Douglas County Government reserves the right they may be obtained at the above address. to reject any and all bids, to waive formalities, inElectronic versions of the Plans obtained by any formalities, or irregularities contained in a said other means than as described above may not bid and furthermore, to award a contract for be complete or accurate, and it is the Bidder’s items herein, either in whole or in part, if it is responsibility to obtain a complete set of the deemed to be in the best interest of the County Project Plans and Specifications. Douglas to do so. Additionally, we reserve the right to County will not be held responsible for misinnegotiate optional items/services with the sucformation received from private plan rooms. cessful bidder. A PRE-BID CONFERENCE will be held at Please direct any questions concerning this IFB 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, January 25, 2017, to Carolyn Riggs, Purchasing Supervisor, 303at the Department of Public Works Engineering, 660-7434, criggs@douglas.co.us, 8:00 a.m. to Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, Suite 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104. All questions are holidays. due to Daniel Roberts, P.E., Project Engineer by 12:00 p.m. on Tuesday, January 31, 2017. Legal Notice No.: 930507 The Bid Opening will be conducted at 2:00 First Publication: January 19, 2017 p.m. on Tuesday, February 7, 2017, at the Last Publication: January 19, 2017 same address. Publisher: Douglas County News-Press The Project includes the following major items and approximate quantities: Public Notice • Removal of Asphalt Mat (Planing) PUBLIC INVITATION TO BID (1 1/2 Inch Thickness) – 211,526 SY • Aggregate Base Course (Class 6) – Separate sealed bids for 2017 SURFACE 1,963 TONS TREATMENT PROJECT, DOUGLAS COUNTY • Hot Mix Asphalt (Grading SX) (75) PROJECT NUMBER CI 2017-002 will be re(Haul and Asphalt) (Paving) (2 Inch) – ceived by the Owner, Douglas County Govern54,554 TONS ment, Department of Public Works Engineering, • Hot Mix Asphalt (Grading SX) (75) Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, Suite (Haul and Asphalt) (Paving) (5 Inch) – 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104, until Tuesday, 1,000 TONS February 14, 2017, at 2:00 p.m. This project consists of surface treatments in various locaPrior to submitting a Bid Proposal, Bidders shall tions throughout Douglas County. have received prequalification status (active status) with the Colorado Department of TransThe Contract Documents will be available after portation to bid on individual projects of the size 10:00 a.m. on Monday, January 23, 2017, and kind of work as set forth herein. through Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System Website (www.rockymountainbidsystem.com) or Any questions on the bidding process shall be they may be obtained at the above address. directed to Daniel Roberts, P.E., Project Electronic versions of the Plans obtained by any Engineer at 303.660.7490. other means than as described above may not be complete or accurate, and it is the Bidder’s Plan holder information, can be found on the responsibility to obtain a complete set of the Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System Project Plans and Specifications. Douglas Website. County will not be held responsible for misinformation received from private plan rooms. Legal Notice NO.: First Publication: January 12, 2017 A PRE-BID CONFERENCE will be held at Last Publication: January 19, 2017 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, February 1, 2017, Publisher: The Douglas County News Press at the Department of Public Works Engineering, Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, Suite 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104. All questions are Public Notice due to Daniel Roberts, P.E., Project Engineer by 12:00 p.m. on Tuesday, February 7, 2017. The INVITATION FOR BID (IFB) Bid Opening will be conducted at 2:00 p.m. #002-17 on Tuesday, February 14, 2017, at the same FRONT RANGE TRAIL address. PEDESTRIAN BRIDGES
Government Legals
Government Legals
The Department of Open Space and Natural Resources of Douglas County Government, hereinafter referred to as the County, respectfully requests bids from prequalified bridge suppliers for the design, fabrication, and delivery of three (3) steel pedestrian bridges for the Front Range Trail. The bridges will be prefabricated, bolted, self-weathering steel beam bridges with a concrete deck in accordance with the specifications and plan details.
The Project includes the following major items and approximate quantities:
The IFB documents may be reviewed and/or printed from the Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System website at www.rockymountainbidsystem.com. IFB documents are not available for purchase from Douglas County Government and can only be accessed from the above-mentioned website. While the IFB documents are available electronically, Douglas County cannot accept electronic bid responses.
• Removal of Pavement Marking (Striping) – 199,230 SF • Hot Mix Asphalt (Grading SX)(75)(Haul and Asphalt)(Partial Depth)(Small Crack Patching) – 1,110 TONS • Cover Coat Material (3/8 Inch) – 591,113 SY • Cover Coat Material (Slurry) – 688,332 SY • Pavement Marking Paint (Waterborne) – 1,861 Gal Prior to submitting a Bid Proposal, Bidders shall have received prequalification status (active status) with the Colorado Department of Transportation to bid on individual projects of the size and kind of work as set forth herein.
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Legal Description of Real Property: UNIT D, CONDOMINIUM BUILDING 19, MERIDIAN- VILLA CONDOMINIUMS, ACCORDING TO THE CONDOMINIUM MAP THEREOF, RECORDED ON MARCH 3, 2005 AT RECEPTION NO. 2005018653, IN THE RECORDS OF THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO, AND AS DEFINED AND DESCRIBED IN THE DECLARATION OF COVENANTS, CONDITIONS AND RESTRICTIONS OF MERIDIANVILLA CONDOMINIUMS, RECORDED ON JANUARY 16, 2004 AT RECEPTION NO. 2004007079 IN SAID RECORDS, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO.
PUBLIC INVITATION TO BID
Separate sealed bids for 2017 ASPHALT OVERLAY PROJECT, DOUGLAS COUNTY PROJECT NUMBER CI 2017-003 will be received by the Owner, Douglas County Government, Department of Public Works Engineering, Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, Suite 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104, until Tuesday, February 7, 2017, at 2:00 p.m. This project consists of placement of asphalt planing and overlay, patching, pavement marking, traffic control, and sediment control at various locations throughout Douglas County.
The Contract Documents will be available after 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, January 17, 2017, through Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System Website (www.rockymountainbidsystem.com) or they may be obtained at the above address. Electronic versions of the Plans obtained by any other means than as described above may not be complete or accurate, and it is the Bidder’s responsibility to obtain a complete set of the Project Plans and Specifications. Douglas County will not be held responsible for misinformation received from private plan rooms.
Which has the address of: 9768 Mayfair Street #D, Englewood, CO 80112 NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, February 22, 2017, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.
Plan holder information, can be found on the Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System Website. Legal Notice No.: 930510 First Publication: January 19, 2017 Last Publication: January 26, 2017 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press
Douglas County Government reserves the right to reject any and all bids, to waive formalities, informalities, or irregularities contained in a said bid and furthermore, to award a contract for items herein, either in whole or in part, if it is deemed to be in the best interest of the County to do so. Additionally, we reserve the right to negotiate optional items/services with the successful bidder.
A PRE-BID CONFERENCE will be held at government makes decisions that this one to publish public notices since the birth Every day, the Please direct any questions concerning this IFB 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, January 25, 2017, can affect your life. to Whether are decisionsSupervisor, on of the303nation. Local newspapers remain the most Carolyn they Riggs, Purchasing at the Department of Public Works Engineering, zoning, taxes, businesses or myriad other 8:00 trusted source of public notice information. This criggs@douglas.co.us, a.m. to Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, Suitenew660-7434, 5:00 through excluding 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104.issues, All questions are governments playp.m., a bigMonday role in your life.Friday, newspaper publishes the information you need holidays. due to Daniel Roberts, P.E., Project Engineer by Governments 12:00 p.m. on Tuesday, January 31, 2017. have relied on newspapers like to stay involved in your community. Legal Notice No.: 930507 The Bid Opening will be conducted at 2:00 First Publication: January 19, 2017 p.m. on Tuesday, February 7, 2017, at the Last Publication: January 19, 2017 same address. Aldous Huxley Publisher: Douglas County News-Press Notices are meant to be noticed. The Project includes the following major Read your public notices and get involved! items and approximate quantities:
Facts do not cease to exist b because they are re ignored. ignored. -
Three (3) copies of your IFB response shall be submitted in a sealed envelope plainly marked “IFB No. 002-17, Front Range Trail Pedestrian Bridges”. Electronic and/or faxed bid responses will not be accepted. Bids will be received until 11:00 a.m., on Tuesday, February 7, 2017 by the Douglas County Finance Department, Purchasing Division, 100 Third Street, Suite 130, Castle Rock, Colorado 80104. Bids will not be considered which are received after the time stated, and any bids so received will be returned unopened.
Any questions on the bidding process shall be directed to Daniel Roberts, P.E., Project Engineer at 303.660.7490.
• Removal of Asphalt Mat (Planing) (1 1/2 Inch Thickness) – 211,526 SY
Lone Tree * 1
32 Lone Tree Voice
January 19, 2017J
A running start: Castle Rock group looking to expand Year-old club provides network for mothers and other women BY JESSICA GIBBS JGIBBS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Castle Rock’s local chapter of Moms/ She Run This Town, a nationwide club that unites women and runners who are mothers, is looking to revamp in 2017. The club celebrated its one-year anniversary on Jan. 16. In that first year, founders Tracy Manning and Monica Kopp saw a network of nearly 300 women amass through their Facebook page. There, group members share tips for marathon training, talk about new or upcoming races, meet new running partners and encourage each other to complete monthly exercise challenges, like planks or squats. “People were super excited to hear about us out of the gate,” Manning said. They also saw women of all fitness levels come together for group runs, something they say provides a mix of accountability, support and encouragement. “I have to have somebody guilt me into a run,” group member Valerie Jones said with a laugh. To her, the group provides motivation and accountability. Manning and Kopp say they try to
facilitate all types of runners. While they usually run through parks, such as the downtown Festival Park, Kopp will sometimes lead women on trail runs, for those who prefer non-pavement trails. They also take time to stretch and talk before a run, so women can match up based on how far they’d like to run and at what speed. Martilyn Neilsen, who led a group of five women on Jan. 14 run, said she relies on the flow of information through the Facebook page — whether that means finding good doctors or the next big race, which can be difficult to search online. “I like that you can ask questions,” she said. She also appreciates the support. Neilsen, a marathon runner, is able to find running partners for her races through the group. “That’s nice, that you don’t have to run by yourself,” she said. In the New Year, Manning and Kopp hope resolutions will inspire more women to join and push current members to become more active. But the two women have some New Year’s resolutions of their own. “I want to get back to being consistent,” Manning said of group runs. Kopp hopes to organize a 5k race. And, they said, they hope to gather more members to join their welcoming community of runners. “There’s no intimidation,” Manning said. “That’s the whole reason of the group.”
Martilyn Neilsen and Valerie Jones lead a group of Moms/ She Runs This Town members on a recent Saturday morning run through Festival Park in Castle Rock.
JESSICA GIBBS
WANT TO JOIN? For more information, visit the group’s Facebook page, Castle Rock Co., Moms RUN This Town, at www.facebook.com/groups/castlerockrunsthistown.
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