Lone Tree Voice 0907

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SEPTEMBER 7, 2017

A publication of

THE STATE OF THE BIBLE IN 2017: A look at the current numbers on the good book P16

FREE

DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO

mber 23 – January 28

WORRY ABOUT FOOD: Local Meals on Wheels could see budget cuts P6

THE REAL BRONCOS BUZZ:

Beehives hum at team’s Dove Valley training facility P5 Your newspaper is made possible by advertisers like this one, who support our efforts to keep you connected to your community!

PLAYING FOR KEEPS: Football rivalries still draw hometown crowds P23

THE BOTTOM LINE

‘Even if your effort benefits or helps in some small way just one person or family, it matters.’ Michael Norton, columnist | Page 10 INSIDE

10035 S. Peoria Street, Lone Tree, CO 80134

VOICES: PAGE 10 | LIFE: PAGE 16 | CALENDAR: PAGE 21 | SPORTS: PAGE 23

LoneTreeVoice.net

VOLUME 16 | ISSUE 34


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September 7, 2017S

Get a taste of law school STAFF REPORT

Learn about some of the hottest legal topics while getting a small taste of what law school is like at Mini Law School. Presented by Colorado Law, this fall’s curriculum will cover topics that have not previously been offered. The course is seven weeks and is taught by law school faculty. Live lectures are offered from 6-7:30 p.m. Tuesdays from Sept. 12 to Oct. 24 at CU South Denver in Lone Tree and at the Wolf Law Building on the University of Colorado-Boulder campus. Class materials and links to the lectures will be sent so participants can watch at their own pace. Topics covered are Food Law and Labeling (Sept. 12), Employment Law (Sept. 19), American Indian Law and Public Land Law (Sept. 26), Immigration Law and Executive Orders (Oct. 3), Climate Change (Oct. 10), Supreme Court and Litigation (Oct. 17) and Criminal Law (Oct. 24). Mini law school is open to anyone who would like to learn about law. No required readings, tests or homework assignments are given, and no academic credit is received for participation. Those who attend at least five of the seven sessions will receive a Mini Law School certificate. Registration required; go to http://www.colorado. edu/law/minilawschool.

Self-service DMV kiosks arrive in Douglas County Vehicle registration renewal is now a two-minute process, officials say BY JESSICA GIBBS JGIBBS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

The notorious wait times at Division of Motor Vehicles offices could be shortening up for some area residents. Last month, Douglas County announced it was becoming the next among several Colorado counties — including Arapahoe, Adams and Jefferson — to participate in a pilot program offering self-service kiosk machines at which residents can renew their vehicle registration. The first Colorado MV Express kiosk in Douglas County is now available exclusively to county residents in Castle Rock, and officials say they hope to expand throughout the county in coming months. “The citizens of Douglas County have shown us by their investment in personal technology that this is the right decision, at the right time, for all the right reasons,” Douglas County Clerk and Recorder Merlin Klotz said in a news release. “Touchscreens are used on a daily basis in many other transactions during the day at the grocery store, the bank, the airport and even for movie rentals.” As of now, vehicle registration renewal is the only function the kiosk performs, but county officials expect the new technology to free up DMV staff for more tedious title and registration transactions, such as new vehicle registration. Sheri Davis, deputy of motor vehicle for Douglas County, said the kiosks are an opportunity for the county to bring more convenience and efficiency to the DMV. In time, she envisions installing

Self-service kiosks at the DMV now allow users to renew vehicle registration in two minutes. JESSICA GIBBS more machines at high-traffic areas like King Soopers or Safeway. “We’re hoping we’ll be able to take that next step,” Davis said. “Where they’re open 24/7 and people can have access to them.” The county would also target areas that do not already have a DMV office, such as Parker, for which the nearest DMV locations are in Lone Tree or Castle Rock, Davis said. The county does not pay for or own the kiosk. The equipment is distributed by a private company and paid for through a $3 fee added to each user’s transaction, Davis said. The first Douglas County kiosk — a bright blue-and-yellow machine re-

sembling an ATM — is open from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Douglas County Wilcox Building, 301 Wilcox St. in downtown Castle Rock. To use the machine, residents can type in their license plate number on the touch screen and pay any taxes or fees with cash, check or credit card. The kiosk will immediately print a receipt, the new registration and license plate tabs. Each transaction takes approximately two minutes, Davis said, and more information about how to use it can be found on douglas.co.us/mv-kiosk. “It’s very quick,” she said. “I think that the more people become familiar with it the more it will be used.”

Life as Vietnam-era veterans. A news story with that information was included in this publication. Although inspired, partly, by the experience of pilots who flew in Vietnam, Flight for Life Colorado was founded by two

administrators at St. Anthony Hospital and two medical doctors. The administrators were Nick Ditirro and Jack Goetzinger. The doctors were Dr. Henry Cleveland and Dr. Boyd Bigelow.

CORRECTION At a public media event on July 15 at Centennial Airport, announcing Flight For Life Colorado as its 2017 Spreading Wings Award recipient, Wings Over the Rockies incorrectly identified the founders of Flight for

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Lone Tree Voice 3

September 7, 2017

My retirement will be well worth it .

Retire Well.

Only 16% of pre-retirees say they are financially prepared for a retirement lasting 20 years. Are you prepared to retire well? If you are within 5 years of retiring, get a free retirement account review to see if you are on your way to retiring well.

Call (888) 2-HANSON or visit HansonMcClain.com/Free-Review Statistic based on Age Wave/Merrill Lynch, “Finances in Retirement: New Challenges, New Solutions,� 2017; Base: Age 50+ pre-retirees; Hanson McClain Advisors is an Investment Advisor registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Securities offered through Hanson McClain Securities, a Registered Broker/Dealer, member FINRA/SIPC.


4 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S

‘Let’s go beyond our fears of what we can talk about’ Volunteer event puts focus on discussing mental health BY TOM SKELLEY TSKELLEY@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

While the individuals, families and friends of people affected by mental health issues have long been aware of the need for open discussion on the topic, only recently have those conversations begun. Centura Health, a former Colorado First Lady and a former Denver Bronco want to change that. “We want to create a safe space for people to be vulnerable and for people to feel support,” said former Denver Broncos offensive tackle

HOW YOU CAN HELP What: Love Matters Most Day of Community Service, featuring keynote speaker Ryan Harris, Super Bowl 50 Champion and former Denver Broncos offensive tackle and special guest Jeannie Ritter, former First Lady of Colorado. When: Sept. 13. Registration opens at 7:45 a.m., the program begins at 8:15 a.m. Where: Mile High Academy, 1733 Dad Clark Drive, Highlands Ranch To get involved: to register for the event, go to bit.ly/lovemattersmost2017 Ryan Harris. “Let’s go beyond our fears of what we can talk about and go beyond what it means to be a good neighbor.”

Harris will be the keynote speaker at the Love Matters Most Day of Community Service on Sept. 13 at Mile High Academy, presented by Centura Health. The first half of the day will feature a mental health resource fair as well as speeches by Harris and former Colorado First Lady Jeannie Ritter. The afternoon is scheduled for service projects with eight nonprofits in the south Denver region. Southeast Community Outreach, one of the groups involved, will fill backpacks with weekend meals for children facing food insecurity. Executive Director Dennis Gorton said he sees families every day dealing with depression caused by financial hardship. He said the backpacks are one way to help prevent the problem for the 33,000 children in the region who rely on

Ruler of the Railzz back

FAMILY-FRIENDLY WAYS TO CELEBRATE FALL IN RIDGEGATE.

STAFF REPORT

Guided Nature Hikes: Each year, RidgeGate teams up with the South Suburban Parks and Recreation District to provide free, guided nature hikes. These hikes are led by professional naturalists from SSPRD, and offer insight and education into the natural ecosystems within the open space at RidgeGate. Hikes are free to the public – register at ridgegate.com. Saturday, September 16, 8:30-10:30am — Family Fun Game & Trivia Hike Saturday, September 30, 9-10:30am — Autumn Glory Hike Saturday, October 21, 10-11:30am — “Build a Beaver” Family Fun Hike

Experience Historic Schweiger Ranch: Among RidgeGate’s cultural facilities is the 38-acre historic Schweiger Ranch, located just east of the RidgeGate Parkway and I-25 interchange. The Ranch has been impeccably restored and gives us an important glimpse into the settlers’ lives in the late 1800s. Schweiger Ranch is open to the public for self-guided visits on Saturdays and Sundays from 1-5pm. Register for or learn more about these events online at SchweigerRanch.org. Saturday, October 7, 10am-2pm — City of Lone Tree’s Annual Fall Festival Saturday, December 2, 2-5pm — Schweiger Ranch Austrian Christmas Photos by Sarah Neumann Photography

schools, and SECOR, for healthy meals. “The bottom line is that if these kids aren’t eating well, they’re not learning, and it leads to depression,” he said. “It mushrooms.” Both Gorton and Harris said they’ve had relatives or friends with mental health challenges, and they each said they hope to prevent others from going through what they did as a result. For Gorton, it was his mother, who had undiagnosed bipolar disorder. For Harris, it was Broncos teammate and friend Kenny McKinley, who died by suicide in 2010. “Anything I can do to prevent anything like that from happening to someone in the community, I’ll do it,” Harris said “If this changes or saves even one life, then it’s been successful.”

A M O R E N AT U R A L A P P R O A C H T O U R B A N I S M.

r i d g e g a te . c o m

Skateboarders, BMX and scooter riders of all skill levels are invited to compete in the annual Ruler of the Railzz competition on Sept. 16 from noon-1:30 p.m. The contest, open to all ages and abilities, will be held at Redstone Skate Park, 3280 Redstone Park Circle. Participants may compete in seven divisions: beginner ages 4-7, beginner ages 8 and up, intermediate skate park bowl,intermediate street,advanced skate park bowl, advanced streetand advanced mini skate park bowl. Judges will reward the top winners in each division. The cost is $10 per participant for each event entered. Events are open to the first 15 participants per division. For more information, call 303-7912710 or visit highlandsranch.org.


Lone Tree Voice 5

September 7, 2017

Learning about the Broncos and the bees

Hives of honeybees humming at team’s Dove Valley facility

‘BEE’ EDUCATED Resources: • The Colorado State Beekeepers Association coloradobeekeepers.org Beekeeping clubs: • DenverBee-Denver denverbees@gmail.com DenverBee.org • High Land Beekeeping Club-Highlands Ranch/Littleton HLBKC1@gmail.com highlandbeekeepingclub.org • Southeast Beekeeping Club-The Pinery suehuseby@gmail.com southeastbeekeepingclub.org

BY TOM SKELLEY TSKELLEY@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

T

here’s been a lot of talk about the upcoming Denver Broncos season, and the names Paxton Lynch, Trevor Siemian and John Elway have all been in the news. But the real buzz at the Broncos’ Dove Valley training facility in unincorporated Arapahoe County is the work of Joe Komperda. On a bright August morning, hours before the team will take the field for a pre-season game at Sports Authority Field, Komperda gracefully manipulates trays covered with honey, wax and thousands of crawling bees, seemingly oblivious to a cloud of the disgruntled insects zipping about his body. “My first year I got stung seven times, and the next year I got stung seven times in the first week, so I stopped counting,” he said with a smile. “It just happens sometimes.” The 60-year-old Parker resident took up beekeeping four years ago, and in 2015 was introduced to Brooks Dodson, Dove Valley’s director of turf and grounds, by a contact in the Cottonwood District after rescuing and moving several swarms near Dove Valley. “He said the chef might be able to use the honey at the training table, and I thought `This guy has a chef ?’ ” Komperda said. “Then I noticed he’s wearing blue pants with orange piping down the sides — and it hit me.” Last year Komperda installed the first two hives, painted blue and orange by his wife and beekeeping partner Debbie. This year he’s keeping four hives, with 50,000 to 100,000 bees, behind the fieldhouse. For the team, it’s a ready source of sweetener at the training table. For Komperda, it’s an opportunity to get the word out about his beekeeping and swarm rescue services, and a chance to make an impact on the declining bee population. “We lose about 1 million hives a year, which is a real concern,” he said. “If two out of every three bites of food come from bees, and they go away, what are we going to do?”

IF YOU SPY A SWARM Swarms occur when a hive grows too large and half of the bees within split off to start another hive. If you spot a swarm of bees, it is critical to the health of the local bee population — and your own — to leave it alone and not attempt to douse it with water or insecticides. Anyone who finds a swarm is urged not to attempt to spray the swarm with water or insecticides, as either could be harmful to local bee population. Instead, call the Swarm Hotline, where a dispatcher can put the caller in contact with a professional beekeeper who can remove the swarm quickly and free of charge. Swarm hotline: 1-844-SPY-BEES or 1-844-779-2337

Joe Komperda checks the staus of his hive behind the Broncos’ training facility fieldhouse as guard bees try to find a way through his protective garb. Komperda estimates between 50,000 and 100,000 bees occupy the four hives at Dove Valley. PHOTOS BY TOM SKELLEY About 60 percent of food products grown in the United States rely on pollination, Komperda said, and bee populations have been dropping worldwide from a combination of factors, including pesticide use, climate change and varroa mites, a parasite blamed for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of colonies around the world. Anyone can take small steps to make a big difference for their pollinating neighbors, Komperda noted, such as using more bee-friendly plants and fewer pesticides in

their gardens. “There’s all sorts of things you can do to help,” he said. “You don’t need to be a beekeeper.” Though anyone who does decide to put on a netted hood and gloves will get to experience what Komperda calls “the zen of beekeeping.” “When you come out here and open that hive, you start looking at that and just marvel at Mother Nature,” he said. “This is just something that is so amazing and you can’t see it anywhere else but in a beehive.”

Parker resident Joe Komperda holds a scraper he uses to remove and clean honeycomb trays.

Beekeeper Joe Komperda stands beside the beehives he keeps behind the fieldhouse at the Denver Broncos Dove Valley training facility. Komperda’s wife Debbie decorated the hives to fit in with the surroundings at the compound.


6 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S

September is National Preparedness Month Fire, floods and severe winter weather. Are you ready should a local emergency occur? For detailed information please visit www.readycolorado.com or call 1-800-BE-READY.

Help keep your neighborhood safe Creating a neighborhood watch program can reduce crime in your community. For more information visit www.dcsheriff.net and search: Neighborhood Watch.

What’s happening with my County government? Our committment to open and transparent government includes online posting of information about all public meetings at which the business of government is conducted. To view agendas for various public meetings, visit www.douglas.co.us and search: Meetings and Agendas.

Are you recieving Property Value and Tax Notifications Are you receiving your property value and tax notifications? Please help ensure that we have your current mailing address. Visit douglas.co.us/treasurer or douglas.co.us/asessor and complete an online change of address form

Youth Congress seeks youth delegates Douglas County youth, 9-12th graders, have an opportunity to become involved as youth delegates at the Douglas County 2017 Youth Congress on Monday, September 25 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. at the State Capitol in Denver. To complete your online registration or to learn more about the 2017 Youth Congress visit douglas. co.us and search: Youth Congress.

Online Engagement Tool of the Week

For more information or to register for CodeRed please visit www.DouglasCountyCodeRed.com

Visit www.douglas.co.us

Lometa Gaskin, 99, holds onto her lunch after receiving her daily Meals on Wheels delivery on Aug. 11. Gaskin lives alone in Denver and says talking with the delivery drivers is as important to her as the food. PHOTOS BY TOM SKELLEY

Service could have less food to go around Meals on Wheels faces federal funding cuts, uncertain future BY TOM SKELLEY TSKELLEY@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Denver resident Lometa Gaskin, 99, stands behind her screen door, waiting for Meals on Wheels volunteer Wayne Chitwood. He asks how she’s doing as he comes up the sidewalk. “If I was doing any better you’d think it was a frame-up,” Gaskin replies. The paint in her living room is peeling in patches, but the house is clean. Gaskin says she’d rather die than move into assisted living, and she relies on Meals on Wheels for a daily serving of nutrition — and conversation. “I enjoy meeting the people more than I enjoy the food,” she says. Asked about how funding cuts to the program, included in President Trump’s proposed 2018 budget, would affect her, she changes the subject. “Let’s not go there,” she says. The $4.1 trillion budget made headlines in March, proposing funding cuts to a number of social programs. One such reduction is a 16.2 percent cut to the Department of Health and Human Services, which reduces revenues the Denver Regional Council of Governments could distribute to Volunteers of America and its Meals on Wheels program. Congress has until the end of September to pass a federal budget, and as the deadline approaches, Dale Elliott grows anxious. SEE MEALS, P29

Wayne Chitwood, who’s been delivering food with Meals on Wheels for about eight years, brings Lometa Gaskin her daily serving of lunch and conversation on Aug. 11. Chitwood says most clients don’t have any social interaction beyond the daily deliveries. “They’re always very appreciative,” he says. “That’s why I’m doing it.” TOM SKELLEY

BY THE NUMBERS Average number of seniors served Meals on Wheels in area counties by the Denver Volunteers of America Nutrition Program each year from 2015-17: Adams: 411

Gilpin: 23

Arapahoe: 585

Jefferson: 667

Clear Creek: 49

Total: 3,900

Denver: 2,112 Douglas: 53

Source: Volunteers of America


Lone Tree Voice 7

September 7, 2017

Lockheed Martin begins construction on ‘factory of the future’ $350 million production facility underway at campus in Waterton Canyon BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Construction of a $350 million satellite production facility described as “a factory of the future” is underway at Lockheed Martin’s Waterton Canyon campus in south Jefferson County. Named Gateway Center, the 266,000-square-foot facility will produce up to seven micro and macro satellites in one building, saving time, resources and cost, said Jay Bolden, Lockheed Martin Mission Solutions communications leader. National security, scientific

Castle Rock/Franktown

First United  Methodist Church 1200 South Street Castle Rock, CO 80104 303.688.3047 www.fumccr.org

 Services: Sunday 8:30am - Traditional  10:00am - Non-traditional



10:00am - Children’s Sunday School  Little Blessings Day Care www.littleblessingspdo.com



Castle Rock/Franktown

and commercial satellites of all sizes will be assembled and tested in the facility, which will consolidate equipment and allow for a faster turnover to customers. “Moving things back and forth takes time and resources away,” Bolden said. “This is the dream building — we have everything we want in one location.” Lockheed’s Waterton Canyon campus, which sits on the southwest edge of Roxborough in Douglas County, has more than 4,000 employees and design, manufacturing and test facilities. Spacecraft currently in production at the campus include the Air Force’s GPS III satellites, NASA’s InSight Mars lander, NOAA’s GOES-R Series weather satellites and commercial communications satellites, a media release from Lockheed Martin says. SEE LOCKHEED, P9

Littleton South Denver Humanistic Judaism Find us on meetup and facebook!

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

720-284-2231

madrikhadavis@gmail.com

A home for secular, cultural Jews

A rendering of the $350 million satellite production facility under construction at Lockheed Martin’s Waterton Canyon campus in Jefferson County. COURTESY OF LOCKHEED MARTIN

Centennial

Parker

St. Thomas More 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, ServingCO the80112 southeast 303.770.1150

area

Denver

www.stthomasmore.org

Greenwood Village

Trinity

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

 303-841-4660 www.tlcas.org  WORLD MISSION CHURCH (KOREAN CHURCH) 



Congregation Beth Shalom Serving the Southeast Denver area

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

EVERYONE IS WELCOME!

Parker evangelical Presbyterian church

10035 Peoria Street

Sunday Worship

Meeting every Sunday at 9:30

All are welcome!

Connect – Grow – Serve

8:45 am & 10:30 am 9030 MILLER ROAD PARKER, CO 80138 3038412125 www.pepc.org

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

www.cbsdenver.org

303-794-6643

LIVING WATER CHRISTIAN CHURCH

 ENGLISH TRANSLATION

JOIN US FOR WORSHIP AT CU SOUTH DENVER

www.tapestryumc.org

DUE TO THE FIRE, MEETING TO BE HELD AT

7049 E PARK DR., FRANKTOWN, CO 80016 TIME: 12:30 PM PHONE: 303-688-1004

tapestry umc

Tapestry United Methodist Church on Facebook

Lutheran Church & School

 

Parker

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

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


8 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S

It’s Here!

Detox center proposal gets renewed attention Old idea to build withdrawal management facility in south metro gets new look BY DAVID GILBERT DGILBERT@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

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Local law enforcement and emergency medical service providers are exploring the idea of building a new social detox facility — also called a withdrawal management center — somewhere in Arapahoe or Douglas counties, which they say would make their lives easier and help those admitted to the facilities by shortening the distance to access services. Social detox facilities provide a safe place for people overly inebriated on drugs and alcohol to sober up. Stays in the facilities are usually less than 48 hours, and professionals such as addiction counselors and social workers are on hand to help connect them with resources. The metro area has four such facilities in Adams County, Jefferson County, Denver and Aurora. But only the Aurora location is used by Arapahoe and Douglas county sheriff ’s deputies and area police departments. The 30-bed facility, East Side Detox and Recovery Services, is located at 1290 S. Potomac St. in Aurora, sandwiched between a storage facility and medical offices, a stone’s throw from Interstate 225. That means a Douglas County deputy driving a drunk driver to East Metro Detox during Friday rush hour may be out of his patrol area for hours, said Capt. Kevin Duffy of the Douglas County Sheriff ’s Office. “That takes our deputies out of service while they could be helping others,” Duffy said. He said the law requires officers to prioritize taking overly inebriated people to detox centers, or to emergency rooms if detox is unavailable, and as a last resort to county jail if detox and hospitals are full. “We’re seeing a lot of our emergency room beds being taken up with psych holds or detox holds,” he said. “That’s not what the ER is built for. And county jails are supposed to hold bad guys. These people haven’t necessarily broken any law other than that they’re intoxicated to the point that they pose a danger to themselves. We don’t like detox holds in the jail, and there’s a lot of liability with holding someone who’s that intoxicated.” New eyes on an old idea The idea to add a new detox facility that’s more accessible to people farther from Aurora has been around for years, but started picking up steam after Aurora Mental Health Center took over East Metro Detox from its previous operator, Arapahoe House, said Heather Dolan, director of business development at Aurora Mental Health.

MORE INFORMATION Community meetings regarding a possible new social detox facility have not yet been scheduled. For more information, visit Aurora Mental Health Services at aumhc.org, or contact marketing and communications director Cindy Bohl at 303-417-2373 or cindybohl@ aumhc.org The idea is still in preliminary stages, Dolan said, with stakeholders only beginning to gather data and examine possible locations for a new facility. The process would involve extensive input from the public and county commissioners, she said. “Everyone is well aware of the need to make sure it’s in a safe and appropriate place for the community and the people receiving services,” Dolan said. “We’re here to provide a service to the community, where they want it. We’re not trying to impose it.” Arapahoe House, a nonprofit that operates a variety of addiction counseling services across the metro area, announced late last year that it would pull out of operating detox facilities. Aurora Mental Health picked up the contract to operate East Metro beginning in May, and with the contract came the long-discussed idea of building a south metro detox facility. Addiction services providers in the metro area are overseen by Signal Behavioral Health Network, a managed service organization or MSO, a nonprofit that answers to the state Office of Behavioral Health, part of the Department of Human Services. Signal put out a request for proposal earlier this year to build a new detox center, and Aurora Mental Health submitted the only letter of intent, Dolan said. Running smoothly Running the existing facility has been going well so far, said Brian Gannon, deputy director of Aurora Mental Health. “Our operations have been running extremely smoothly,” Gannon said. “We’ve had great communication with our partners like hospitals and law enforcement.” Funding comes from a hodgepodge of sources, Dolan said, composed of Medicaid revenue, third-party insurance, city and county support and self-payment from clients, with Signal providing gap funding. The same funding sources would likely be employed to build the new facility. “Social detox” facilities — and their proximity to clients — are important for addicts seeking recovery, Dolan said. “A social detox center is one step in a continuum of care, and oftentimes the best entry point,” Dolan said. “It’s better than being on the streets, or in jail, or in the ER. Having a facility near you allows for greater use of that facility.” SEE DETOX, P31


Lone Tree Voice 9

7September 7, 2017

No charges for ex-coach after drug-search incident Robinson left in student’s car during K-9 probe, sheriff’s report says BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

An investigation into Highlands Ranch High School’s head football coach — who resigned abruptly a day after the Douglas County Sheriff ’s Office reported suspicious activity during a drug search at the school’s student

LOCKHEED FROM PAGE 7

Gateway Center will be the largest facility at the campus, expected to bring 1,500 construction jobs over the next three years. Completion is slated for 2020. The aerospace and defense company has added more than 750 jobs to its Colorado workforce since 2014, and currently has about 350 job openings in the Denver area, according to the media release. Gateway Center will accommodate the recent

parking lot — has found no criminal activity. The case has been closed, said Sgt. Lori Bronner, a spokeswoman for the sheriff ’s office. The incident began at 9:32 a.m. on Aug. 24 when Deputy Ryan Wood, the school resource officer, informed the coach of three years, Mark Robinson, that K-9 units would be at the school at 10 a.m. to complete a sniff operation in the parking lot, according to the sheriff ’s office report. Robinson told two school security officers that he was leaving to put gas in a student’s car and returned without the car, the report

growth and future projects, the release says. The expansion’s economic impact to the area is welcome, economic development leaders said. Lockheed Martin has nearly 6,300 employees in Jefferson County and contracts with hundreds of local suppliers, said Leigh Seeger, interim president of Jefferson County Economic Development Corp. She added that with high average salaries, employees tend to have more disposable income to spend. “The economic impact of Lockheed Martin to Jefferson County is significant,” Seeger said.

said. School security officers informed Wood that the student’s car was parked in front of Robinson’s house, located behind the high school. A K-9 unit was sent to the car and had a positive hit for drugs, the police report said. When asked about the car, the student said he left it at home that day, but couldn’t remember what street it was on. He then acknowledged that it was parked at “coach’s house,” according to the report. The student declined to allow deputies to search his car. Robinson, who was hired in March 2014, resigned Aug. 25. He sent a let-

ter to Highlands Ranch High School parents on Aug. 28, stating that in the past year he has “gone through a lot of things” and “noticed that I was slipping in my duties as the head coach.” “I believe that you need to be in it 100 percent just like you ask of your players,” Robinson wrote. “At this time I am unable to give that effort and after conversations with my wife and (Highlands Ranch High School principal) Dr. Page I made this decision.” The school’s athletic director, Preston Davis, declined to comment on Robinson’s resignation. Robinson, reached later, also declined to comment.

Innovative features inside Gateway Center include paperless operations, virtual reality design and 3D printing. Rick Ambrose, executive vice president of Lockheed Martin Space Systems, calls Gateway Center a “factory of the future.” “We’ll be able to build satellites that communicate with front-line troops, explore other planets and support unique missions,” Ambrose said in the media release. “We’re transforming every aspect of our operations to help our customers stay ahead of a rapidlychanging landscape.”

Real Estate Miscellaneous Real Estate

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303-566-4091 Cemetery Lots

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Castle Rock


10 Lone Tree Voice

LOCAL

September 7, 2017S

VOICES Many have lost their way since phones became things to look at

QUIET DESPERATION

Craig Marshall Smith

O

ut of necessity, my college syllabi expanded by the month, as new infractions were coming in all the time. My first syllabus, in 1973, asked for no smoking, and that was about it. By the end (2003), the list went on for about six pages. No automatic weapons. No shouting, “I am the Messiah.” And no cellphone calls. Cellphones weren’t on the market in 1973 — that’s why they weren’t on the list back then. Hard to believe now — isn’t it? — that there was a time before mobile devices? Unless you were Dick Tracy. Tracy used to talk to his wrist. Ironically, the first mobile phone call was

made in 1973. On April 3, 1973, Martin Cooper, a senior engineer at Motorola, “called a rival company and informed them he was speaking on a mobile phone (knowyourmobile.com),” albeit one about the size of a hiking boot. It’s untrue that he said, “What’s the frequency, Kenneth?,” or asked for a medium, handtossed with everything. While Cooper was on the phone, he reached for his coffee, misjudged the handle, and dropped and broke the cup. It was the first instance of what is now referred to as “distracted talking.” Distracted talking is illegal in Honolulu. Stamford, Connecticut, may be next.

I

LETTER TO THE EDITOR Does civil discourse still exist? I was amused by the word you used in your recent headline to describe the actions by “constituents” at a town hall with Cory Gardner — “chided.” No, it was more that the screamers stole his, and very many of his real contituents’ FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS TO FREE SPEECH! No wonder he seldom appears. If I had to face a SHRIEKING MOB — excuse my caps — I would appear much less frequently than he does. I congratulate his courage in standing up, and good for those who

A publication of

outwaited the spoiled brats who were shouting and disturbing a peaceful conversation. What has happened to civil discourse? Is there such a thing? Read the First Amendment, people, and let us start there. Or read and apply the column by Michael Norton in the same issue and take his wisdom, kindness and openness to someone else’s ideas to the next town hall meeting. Mary Ann McCoy Lone Tree SEE LETTERS, P11

Phone: 303-566-4100 Web: LoneTreeVoice.net To subscribe call 303-566-4100

SEE SMITH, P11

When disaster and devastation strike, do your part, even if it seems small

t is not a matter of devastation or disaster hitting us or someone we love at some point, it is just a matter of when. That is a reality and although this column always focuses on sharing a posiWINNING tive message, there are WORDS just sometimes when positive or flowery words are the last thing someone wants to hear. And that’s OK, because what someone who is facing devastation or disaster really needs is for us to be present in some way and to listen Michael Norton more than talk. Many of us respond quickly with a donation of money when a natural disaster or some sort of catastrophic event happens. Others in the community are “doers” and they jump into action to do manual labor, volunteer at a shelter, and offer their time without even thinking about it, it is just how they are wired. We all respond differently and that’s OK too. Some people are prayer warriors and spend hours praying for those facing the storms of life. Some of us are the people who rally others around a cause, they are the cheerleaders and champions who make sure the rest of us are doing are part and getting things done. And as we all know, and hopefully always appreciate, there are the men and women on the front lines as first

responders and all of the police officers, EMTs, firefighters, nurses, doctors, military personnel, rescue workers, the Red Cross, FEMA and other agencies who come from near and far to aid us as they battle floods, fires, terror attacks and any other threat to our communities. A big shout-out to each and every one of these heroes. It’s not always about being the hero, so I would like to encourage anyone who may feel like they never know what to do when it comes to offering help or volunteering in some way to remember that it’s not the size of the effort that counts, it’s any effort at all that counts. Don’t feel or become paralyzed by confusion around what to do or how you can help. You may not be in a position to help many, but every little effort, every single dollar donated, every call you make or every call you take is appreciated by someone. Even if your effort benefits or helps in some small way just one person or family, it matters. You may say, “Well what difference can my small donation make?” Or, “How can spending just a couple of hours volunteering at a shelter help?” Trust me, it matters to that one someone, it matters to that community, and it matters to the others who are shoulder-to-shoulder with you. So how about you? Can you offer an ear to listen, a few words of prayer and encouragement, can you spare a couple of hours or a few days or weeks to lend

Columnists & Guest Commentaries

JERRY HEALEY President

ERIN ADDENBROOKE Majors/Classified Manager

jhealey@coloradocommunitymedia.com

eaddenbrooke@coloradocommunitymedia.com

Columnist opinions are not necessarily those of the Voice.

mshively@coloradocommunitymedia.com

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

abrooks@coloradocommunitymedia.com

Email letters to letters@coloradocommunitymedia.com

efranks@coloradocommunitymedia.com

Deadline Fri. 5 p.m. for the following week’s paper.

ANN MACARI HEALEY Executive Editor ahealey@coloradocommunitymedia.com

9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210 Highlands Ranch, CO 80129

I like it. Give me more. I admit that I am old-fashioned, and prefer it when people pay attention, and watch where they are going. But those days aren’t numbered. Those days are over. I can’t get from produce to frozen foods without pushing my cart defensively, because someone is making a life-changing call or a life-changing text and wandering in the aisles. In Honolulu (of all places), smartphone use is illegal by pedestrians crossing streets. Inevitably, there was a backlash. “Why should the government dictate where I

CHRIS ROTAR Editor crotar@coloradocommunitymedia.com

TOM SKELLEY Community Editor tskelley@coloradocommunitymedia.com

MAUREEN SHIVELY Marketing Consultant AUDREY BROOKS Business Manager

ERIN FRANKS Production Manager

LINDSAY NICOLETTI Operations/ Circulation Manager

lnicoletti@coloradocommunitymedia.com

SEE NORTON, P11

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 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129. Send address change to: 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129


Lone Tree Voice 11

September 7, 2017

Hearing loss can change your mind … and not for the better LIVING & AGING WELL

Joanne LaPorta

H

earing connects us to the world, our family, friends, surroundings, sounds and music. Most hearing loss occurs so gradually and can go unrecognized — perhaps the volume on the TV is increased; words are misunderstood; questions are answered incorrectly; or hearing in a noisy room becomes a struggle. As the hearing loss increases, so does the difficulty communicating. When untreated, the loss of hearing can cause stress, isolation, depression, impaired memory, diminished health, falls, reduced job performance and alertness. In addition, recent studies have noted that untreated hearing loss is associated with the development of and increased severity of dementia. Findings by Frank Lin, M.D., at Johns Hopkins University, suggest that hearing loss may play a much more important role in brain health than we’ve previously thought. Lin is the author of several recent

studies pointing to a link between hearing and cognitive problems ranging from mild impairment all the way to dementia. A mild to severe hearing loss can increase the risk of dementia from two times to five times if untreated. This may be caused by the excess effort and stress required to “fill in the blanks” with what is not heard to help understand. Other factors may be that loss of hearing causes a lack of stimulation in certain structures of brain. Without stimulation, the structures can shrink. We also know that not being able to hear well will cause isolation as people avoid socializing in restaurants or where they struggle to hear. These are all risk factors for cognitive decline and dementia. Of course, the presence of a hearing loss does not mean dementia is inevitable; however, the research indicates there is an increased risk. The studies also raise the possibility that

NORTON FROM PAGE 10

together for the greater good, and not just in times of disaster and devastation, it really will be a better than good week.

a hand, back, and shoulder to help others in need? I would love to hear your helping story at gotonorton@ gmail.com, and when we can all come

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.

LETTERS FROM PAGE 10

Board should keep discussion open The Elevate slate says they’ll stop dissension on the school board. From 2013 to 2015, there was no dissension. The board went into executive session, then came out and voted unanimously. The board of those years limited public input to a minute per 5 persons for 15 minutes total. The board of those years did not openly discuss any issues but unani-

SMITH FROM PAGE 10

look?” one person said. When a distracted driver flattens a distracted talker, who is at fault? Further, who cares? According to data compiled by the Governors Highway Safety Association, pedestrian deaths in the United States have been on the rise, and the two highest years were 2015 and 2016. Statistics don’t show if the pedestrians were distracted, but Richard Retting, a former traffic safety commissioner for the New York Department of Transportation, said, “When you keep records for 40 years and see two consecutive years with the back-toback largest, that tells you something. I don’t think it’s a leap of faith when you look at the increase in cellphone usage.” Leaving the house is an adventure.

mously hired a wrecking ball superintendent, moved school funds to administration, paid $60 million for developing a teacher evaluative tool, and approved a series of pay rates for teachers lower than any other district. That’s what the Elevate slate says is stopping dissension. Kevin Leung, Krista Holzworth, Anthony Graziano and Chris Schor will keep government transparent, keep open discussion and keep allowing public input. This isn’t dissension; it’s democracy. William C. Thomas Parker Anything goes, and it’s all a part of living the good life, as it is now perceived, and non-stop calls and texts and selfindulgent selfies are as good as it gets, anytime, anywhere, no matter what. A friend of mine just moved to La Veta. She said, “It is the strangest thing. People say hello to people on the street, not to people on the phone.” I am retired, why not move to La Veta? Pack the dog and leave it all behind? For one thing, Jennifer would be unable to go with me. For another thing, I might run out of things to write about if I lived in a community where people appreciated the moment, and did one thing at a time. No, give me Mr. and Mrs. Magoo in metro Denver. Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@comcast.net

treating hearing loss can help keep the brain active, ease the stress of hearing in difficult listening situations and reduce social isolation. Initial research is suggesting that treating the hearing loss early can and does improve cognition. Many do not realize that it is their hearing loss that causes a need for repetition and increased volume on the television. They are not conscious of what they are missing. It is recommended to have a baseline hearing test if you or someone you know has difficulty hearing, others complain that you cannot hear, or you have trouble understanding in noisy environments. Once evaluated, your audiologist can recommend a personalized treatment plan based upon your hearing test, your lifestyle and your needs. The treatment of the hearing loss most often involves hearing aids. The good news is that 93 percent of SEE AGING, P25

In Loving Memory Place an Obituary for Your Loved One. Private 303-566-4100 Obituaries@ColoradoCommunityMedia.com

Funeral Homes Visit: www.memoriams.com


12 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S

NEWS IN A HURRY CDOT launches safety campaign The Colorado Department of Transportation is asking drivers to `Mind the Gap’ along the 18-mile stretch of I-25 between Colorado Springs and Denver. The section of the highway between Monument and C-470 and is known for an above average number of crashes. From 2011 to 2015, there were 5,537 crashes between C-470 and Colorado Springs. The top causes of crashes along the corridor are rear-end and sideswipe collisions. Growing congestion and a road not built to handle an average of up to 87,000 vehicles on a weekend day have contributed to crashes and closures. As part of the campaign, CDOT has launched a Mind the Gap webpage that provides drivers with facts about this stretch of highway and tips on traveling safely. They include: • Mind your space—Allow plenty of room between your vehicle and the one ahead of you. • Mind your blind spots—Make sure you are clear before switching lanes to prevent sideswipes. • Mind your speed—Drive the posted speed limit. • Mind the unexpected— Speeds, construction, weather and wildlife can change road conditions quickly. • Mind the latest information— Visit cotrip.org, or call 511 for the latest road conditions. More information is available at: codot.gov/projects/I25COSDEN.

• Do not respond to any unsolicited incoming e-mails, including clicking links contained within those messages. • Be skeptical of individuals representing themselves as members of charitable organizations or officials asking for donations via e-mail or social networking sites. • Beware of organizations with copycat names similar to but not exactly the same as those of reputable charities. • Be cautious of emails that claim to show pictures of the disaster areas in attached files because the files may contain viruses. Only open attachments from known senders. • Avoid cash donations if possible. Pay by credit card or write a check directly to the charity. Do not make checks payable to individuals. Legitimate charities do not normally solicit donations via money transfer services. Most legitimate charities’ websites end in .org rather than .com.

Douglas County Libraries accepting donations Douglas County Libraries is holding a communitywide Toiletries Drive through Sept. 10, supporting the charitable work of the Douglas/Elbert Task Force. Collection boxes are available at all DCL locations, except Louviers, for donations of much-needed toiletries, including: toothbrushes, toothpaste, shampoo, conditioner, soap, deodorant, feminine hygiene products, diapers (sizes 3, 4, 5, 6), baby wipes, laundry pods, toilet paper, paper towels, facial tissue and dish soap. Cash donations and gift Avoid fraudulent charities cards are also accepted. The National Center for Disaster Part of giving back includes an allFraud reminds the public to be aware staff volunteer effort on Sept. 15, when of and report any instances of alleged DCL employees will pitch in around fraudulent activity related to relief operations and funding for victims, such Douglas County to work on things like: Trail cleanup and planting in Roxas with Hurricane Harvey. Tips should be reported to the National borough with the Audubon Society of Center for Disaster Fraud at 866-720-5721. Greater Denver, crafting handmade cards for children facing challenges with The line is staffed 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Additionally, e-mails can be Cardz for Kidz in Parker, trail cleanup for the City of Parker, stitching handsent to disaster@leo.gov, and informamade hats and blankets for Sky Ridge tion can be faxed to 225-334-4707. Before making a donation of any kind, Hospital newborns in Lone Tree. consumers should adhere to certain For more information, call 303-791-7323 guidelines, including: or visit DCL.org/everyday-superhero.

Answers

THANKS for

PLAYING!

© 2016 King Features Synd., Inc.

Solution


Lone Tree Voice 13

September 7, 2017

One-stop shop for surgery debuts Sky Ridge hybrid OR brings state-of-the-art convenience to south metro region BY TOM SKELLEY TSKELLEY@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Sky Ridge Director of Surgical Services Will Bertram adjusts the lighting in the hybrid operating room at the facility. Upgrades to the operating room cost $4 million and include a robotic radiology imaging machine that moves independently through the room. PHOTOS BY TOM SKELLEY

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Cash Flow Fundamentals Vascular surgeon Barbara Melendez checks out the controls in the new hybrid operating room at Sky Ridge Medical Center. Melendez operates controls for the radiology robot in the hybrid OR at Sky Ridge Medical Center. The facility is the first of its kind in the south metro region, the nearest comparable facilities being in downtown Denver.

BUSINESS

Patients seeking a closer, safer option for complex surgeries or trauma treatment no longer have to travel to downtown Denver. As of Aug. 15, Sky Ridge Medical Center in Lone Tree now hosts a hybrid OR, combining the traditional features of an operating room with live-action radiology, allowing surgeons to respond immediately to a patient’s needs. “It’s like a mix of radiology and an operating room,” said Director of Surgical Services Will Bertram. “It allows us to care for a segment of the population we couldn’t before… Currently most of those patients have to go to an OR downtown.” The $4 million upgrade includes all of the equipment found in a traditional operating room as well as a mobile robotic radiology machine. Big screen displays and live-action imaging allow surgeons to immediately monitor patients’ internal organs and blood vessels, without waiting for X-rays. “You have all the support from the OR staff, with all the instruments of the OR staff as well as the traditional interventional radiology,” said Barbara Melendez, a vascular surgeon practicing at Sky Ridge. Bertram said the facility is especially useful when a standard procedure becomes more complicated, such as when a blood vessel bursts. He said it also will enhance staff ’s ability to serve trauma victims, an asset for a hospital located next to Interstate 25. “We do things in a minimally invasive way,” he said, “but if we have to convert to an open procedure” the patient doesn’t have to be moved. “You can just do it all in one setting,” Melendez added. “You don’t have to wake up the patient, you don’t have to move them anywhere, so from a safety standpoint that’s great.” Patients will notice a difference in their bill as well, she said. “From a financial standpoint it’s great,” she said. “The patient doesn’t have to be charged for two separate things at different times.”

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14 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S

Best-selling author comes to Lone Tree Arts Center Q and A with Canadian mystery writer Louise Penny BY TOM SKELLEY TSKELLEY@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Canadian author Louise Penny is an award-winning and New York Times bestselling author of the Chief Inspector Armand Gamache mystery series. A former journalist with the Canadian Broadcast Corp., Penny lives just north of the United States border in a small town outside of Montreal, a village not unlike Three Pines, the fictional setting for her books. The first novel in the series, “Still Life,” was published by Minotaur Books in 2006 when Penny was in her 40s, and won the British Crime Writers New Blood and Dagger Award for previously unpublished authors. Twelve other entries in the series followed, including 2017’s “Glass Houses.” Penny answered questions via email before her sold-out

Award-winning and best-selling author Louise Penny appears at the Lone Tree Arts Center on Sept. 5 to discuss her career and her new novel “Glass Houses.” PHOTO COURTESY OF JEAN-FRANÇOIS BÉRUBÉ Sept. 5 appearance at the Lone Tree Arts Center, commenting on her inspiration, the challenges of writing a good mystery and how to find wisdom. What attracted you to writing mysteries? I read widely, from almost every genre, but the first adult books I shared with my mother were murder

mysteries, and so I have had a life-long affection for them. I also think they are perfect vehicles for examining human nature. A great crime novel isn’t about the crime, but about the people. Where do you get ideas for your stories? From everywhere. From listening to conversation,

music, from reading newspapers, and classics and poetry. Actually, again, while the plots of my books need to make sense and be, I hope, compelling, what will really compel people forward in the Gamache books and series are the themes. A plot is not enough to propel a book or keep my interest. There needs to be meat and muscle on that bone, and that comes from the characters, from the themes that are explored, of betrayal, of trust, of friendship, of love in all its forms. Of the struggle to adapt, to accept, to change.

a very tightly interwoven series, is quite different in tone, in theme. There is a consequence to the crime, it reverberates in their lives in that book, and beyond, as events can reverberate on our lives, for years. Sometimes forever. So the books have a memory. Though one challenge is to write the 13th book in the series so that it is satisfying for those who know Armand Gamache, Jean-Guy, Ruth, and (for) those who are picking up the series for the first time, 13 books in.

Without giving away any secrets, what is the most difficult part of writing a compelling mystery? I think the main challenge, and one I am very aware of, is to not become predictable. Not writing, intentionally or not, the same book over and over. And not allowing the characters to grow tired or stale. If I’m bored with them, how could I ever expect readers to enjoy their company? Each book, while clearly

Did anyone in your life inspire you or help you become an author? My lovely husband Michael said if I wanted to quit work to write, he’d support me. Those words were the most incredible gift. Michael is also the inspiration for Armand Gamache. In the books, Gamache talks about four statements that lead to wisdom, and I got those statements from Michael. They are: I don’t know, I was wrong, I’m sorry and I need help.

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Lone Tree Voice 15

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16 Lone Tree Voice

LOCAL

September 7, 2017S

LIFE The state of

the Bible

in 2017

Report finds older Americans, women most likely to be regular readers BY JESSICA GIBBS | JGIBBS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

J

ill Herr starts each day by reading the Bible. It’s a habit she’s kept for several years with her husband before they go to work, and one she says keeps her grounded. “Just to read about God’s love for people and the direction for individuals’ lives,” she said, “ and direction for my own life, too.” The Castle Rock woman has been a regular churchgoer since she was 15 years old but said within the past two decades, reading the Bible has grown her faith even more. The devotions, she said, are a critical part of her daily life.

At 61, Herr is more likely to remain devoted to regularly reading the Bible than those from other generations — specifically millennials and members of Generation X. And as a woman, she’s more likely to regularly read the Bible than her male peers. That’s according to the 2017 State of the Bible report commissioned by the American Bible Society and conducted by California-based Barna Group. Researchers issued phone interviews with approximately 1,000 adult Americans and took online surveys from another 1,028 adults between Jan. 20 and Feb. 2. They found that about half of respondents are “Bible users,” meaning they read or listen to the Bible on their own at least three or four times a year. That figure has remained constant since the annual survey began in 2011. But they also found that nearly one-third of adults said they never read, listen to or pray with the Bible — a 5 percent increase from 2016. Among the sample group, results showed women,

older Americans and people living in the South are most likely to be Bible users. The data wasn’t surprising, said Reg Cox of the Lakewood Faith Coalition, an organization that creates partnerships between the faith-based community and local governments, schools, neighborhoods, nonprofits and businesses. “The survey just seems to line up with some of the things that myself and Christian leaders across the metro (area) have experienced,” he said. “I think that there’s some shifts or decreases in biblical knowledge.” A lower rate of Bible readership among young people is a trend seen across the metro area. “That’s what we’ve experienced in our church. Millennials are not just going to automatically give any kind of credence to faith. They’re open to sort of all ideas,” Cox said. In response, churches focus on providing service projects or missions for members to be involved in, Cox said, stating social justice issues are one thing that repeat-

WHAT IS THE BIBLE? The Bible is the collection of sacred scriptures in the Christian religion, comprising the Old and New Testaments. The scripture is important to those following Christianity, as most believe it to be the actual or inspired word of God, free of any error, through which God spells out his plan and purpose for the world. Those within the Christian religion are encouraged to regularly read and study the Bible. Sources: Merriam-Webster Dictionary, merriam-webster.com; and the American Bible Society, americanbible.org.

Anne Jefferies says reading the Bible is an important part of her family life, and something she encourages her children to do daily. COURTESY PHOTO edly draw people in, rather than simply reading them a new Bible story each Sunday morning. SEE BIBLE, P19

2017 STATE OF THE BIBLE


Lone Tree Voice 17

September 7, 2017

F

HOOTenanny brings back celebration of owls

rom Sept. 19 to 23, various events focused on owls are scheduled at the Audubon Nature Center, 11280 Waterton Road near Littleton — it’s the seventh annual SONYA’S HOOTenanny! Astronomy, benefits SAMPLER of barn owls (one will visit), birding insights, story time at Roxborough Library, a nocturnal hike and a main event on Sept. 23 with crafts, face painting, Mac’N Noodles Food Sonya Ellingboe Truck, folk music by “Nearly There.” Find information and register at denveraudubon.org or call 303-973-9530. Depot Art Gallery “In Motion,” a new exhibit at the Depot Art Gallery, will open with a reception from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 8 at 2069 W. Powers Ave., Littleton. Awards will be announced. The show runs to Oct. 1. Refreshments. Go to depotartgallery.org. Improv Pam Roth O’Mara will teach “Improv for Fun and Awareness” starting Sept. 13 at Arapahoe Community Col-

release his new book in the gallery, from 5 to 8 p.m. 720-389-9085, outnumberedgallery.com. Englewood Camera Club The Englewood Camera Club will meet at 7 p.m. Sept. 12 at Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit, 6400 S. University Blvd., Centennial. The speaker will be Catherine Etherton, a widely traveled artist who loves street photography. She will talk about her favorite work: abstract views — and how she works within the camera, rather than through post-processing. Guests and new members are welcome.

“HOOTenanny Owl and Music Festival” runs five days, Sept. 19-23 at the Audubon Nature Center. Perhaps a relative of this owl family, photographed by Dick Vogel, will be present! DICK VOGEL lege from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. on Wednesday evenings. Invent characters and create scenes. Littleton Campus. Register: ARCR 1167F01-68153 ($169). Outnumbered Gallery Kenneth Ober will be painting in the Outnumbered Gallery at 5654 S. Prince St., Unit A, with a reception Sept. 7 from 6 to 8 p.m. On Sept. 14, photographer Andy Marquez will

BIBLE

Biennial event Biennial of the Americas runs Sept. 12-16 at various locations, including “Mi Tierra” at Denver Art Museum. Lectures, exhibit at Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, performances, symposia and more.

Pulitzer winner “August Osage County” by Tracy Letts plays through Oct. 15 at Vintage Theatre, 1468 Dayton St., Aurora. Directed by Bernie Cardell. Plays on Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays and Monday, Sept. 18. Go to vintagetheatre.com, 303-856-7830. Englewood fall concerts “Mozart, Kodaly and Brahms” will be the 2 p.m. Sept. 30 Englewood Arts Presents concert at Hampden Hall in the Englewood Civic Center, featuring cellist Matthew Zalkind and pianist Stephanie Cheng. Tickets: $20, $15, under 18 free. 303-806-8196. Go to englewoodarts.org. Interior design Arapahoe Community College will host the Interior Design Student Exhibition from Sept. 18 to Oct. 5 in the Colorado Gallery of the Arts in the Annex at the Littleton Campus, 5900 S. Santa Fe Drive. Closing reception Oct 5 from 5 to 7 p.m.

2017 FEATURED FALL EVENTS

NEVER GROW UP

FROM PAGE 18

Anne Jefferies, who does public affairs work for her Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in Lakewood, also said there is a degree of lower readership among her church’s young membership, but many youths are still actively engaged with the Bible. The church offers morning seminary classes before high school-aged youths leave for school, she said, and attendance remains strong. “So we are reading the Bible and talking about the Bible on a daily basis with those youth, in addition to weekly activities,” she said. “We can’t force any of them to do it, so it is an option, but the majority of our youth participate.” Jefferies and her family study the King James Version of the Bible along with the Book of Mormon as part of their LDS faith. They strive for daily devotionals, lasting 30 minutes to an hour, she said. “My reading daily supports me in becoming a better person in my home as well as in my community,” she said. Jefferies predicted the generation gap in Bible readership is a result of millennials’ busy lives, she said, traveling for work and raising children. Her theory was backed up by the State of the Bible report, which found more than 50 percent of the respondents

Powwow The Denver Art Museum will celebrate the 28th Annual Friendship Powwow on Sept. 9 on the plaza between 12th and 13th avenues, just west of Broadway. Included: American Indian dancers, drum groups, working artists, hands-on activities and more. Admission is free. (Art museum general admission is also free on the first Saturdays.) Go to denverartmuseum.org.

Jazz at PACE The Colorado Repertory Jazz Orchestra will swing with the Stan Kenton Orchestra’s library at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 15 at the PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker. Tickets: 303-805-6800, PACEtickets@ parkeronline.org.

just find a bigger playground

WHISKEY AND WINGS September 9 Winter Park Resort

Reg Cox, far left, says he and other Denver metro Christian leaders encourage Bible readership but strive to find other ways to keep people engaged in the church, such as mission trips or projects. COURTESY PHOTO who saw a decrease in their Bible readership last year named busy lives as the top reason. But Jefferies also believes many millennial LDS members are raising their children to read the Bible daily, true to the church’s continual encouragement to do so, she said. “They know that children follow what their parents do,” she said. Herr suspected that those, regardless of age, who don’t read the Bible “don’t understand all of the life that it contains.” Still, she isn’t worried about the future of the holy book. “I believe there’s a revival to God and his word coming,” she said, “and that it will just be something that will sweep across all the generations.”

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18 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S

Advanced dance students have new training option Both on-site and online help is available through charter operation BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Advanced dance students — bright, talented and disciplined pre-professionals — must try to fit hours of scheduled dance classes and rehearsals into a week, while also trying to maintain good grades in a standard middle and high school academic schedule. A new national charter school option, announced Aug. 21, has entered the south metro area scene for the 2017/2018 school year, offering a different path to graduation which may fit well for some teens. Two south area dance studios, Denver Ballet Theatre and Centerstage Starz Dance Studio, who share space at 8150 S. University Blvd. in Centennial, have combined forces with the

Pre-professional ballet students at Denver Ballet Theatre Studio, as well as students at Centerstage Starz Dance Studio, might be candidates for the new Arts Immersion online school that is newly available through the two dance school’s shared studio space in Centennial. COURTESY PHOTO Arts Immersion School, a division of Immersion Schools: a free, accredited, blended online program with five specific art tracks in site-based dance, theatre, circus, film and visual art.

Admission is through an audition (to determine skill level), an essay and interview. The extensive online curriculum can be accessed anywhere in the state and combined with on-site dance classes, according to David Taylor, artistic director of Denver Ballet Theatre and Zikr Dance Ensemble. He had hoped to have the arrangement in place well before school started in the area, but there were delays regarding details, he said. Denver Ballet Theatre teaches in the Russian style Vaganova Method, Taylor says, with Russian-trained faculty. A focus on building strength before attempting more difficult techniques is described as an important element in this classical training. Taylor has been involved with Denver’s dance scene for many years and headed the former David Taylor Dance Company, once located on Main Street in Littleton, at Loretto Heights College and in Englewood. His special choreography for “Nutcracker” and “Rain Forest” are remembered. He also directs Zikr

Dance Ensemble, which is focused on sacred dance from various traditions. Denver Ballet Theatre stages performances in addition to the traditional “Nutcracker” during the year, as well as a Summer Intensive training program. Centerstage Starz Dance Studio offers ongoing classes in jazz, lyrical, ballet, pointe, tap, hip-hop, break dance, turns and progressions, stretch and strengthening, theatre skills and poms instruction. A Competitive Touring Company of more than 50 dancers, ages 5 and up, often wins state and national awards. “We have performed in regional and national competitions, philanthropic and community outreach programs, fundraisers, banquets and assisted living communities,” said director Taami Bash. For information on the Arts Immersion School or each studio’s programs and curriculum, contact David Taylor, 303-884-1910, denverballettheatreacademy.com, or Taami Bash, 303-713-0355, centerstagestarz. com.

‘In The Heights’ won multiple Tonys on Broadway Gentrifying neighborhood in Brooklyn is scene for look at life BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Joyous music with a Latin beat fills the space as a six-piece band, directed by Donna Kolpan Debreceni, introduces a well-worn neighborhood — Washington Heights in Brooklyn — as “In The Heights” opens at Littleton’s

Town Hall Arts Center. Lights come up on Usnavi (Jose David Reynoza, a student at University of Northern Colorado) at center stage. The owner of a small bodega featuring café con leche and lottery tickets saunters forward, rapping about life in the fast-gentrifying neighborhood that has been home to him and many other characters in this Tony Awardwinning musical (Best Musical, Best Score, Best Choreography and Orchestration). “In the Heights” opened off-Broadway and in 2010 moved uptown with Lin Manuel Miranda in the Usnavi

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de La Vega role — in the show which he conceived, also creating the music and lyrics. Quiara Alegria Hudes, who later won a Pulitzer for “Water by the Spoonful,” wrote the book. (Miranda has since created and performed in the hugely popular “Hamilton.”) We soon meet the rest of this accomplished cast of 18 who take the audience through a bittersweet few days in early July, via several parallel storylines. Usnavi’s Abuela Claudia (Margi Lamb) has watched over younger neighborhood people, helping with school work and loving advice. She holds a lottery ticket. Nina Rosario (Rose Van Dyne) is the good student who won a scholarship to Stanford—and thought she was out of the neighborhood … She drops out due to money problems and connects with Benny (Randy Chalmers), a nonLatino who works for her father’s cab

company. Vanessa (Sarah Harmon) is shy Usnavi’s love interest and anxious to move away. Everyone dances to the engaging beat, carefully choreographed by director Nick Sugar, who occasionally stopped the rehearsal we visited to tweak one or another detail. Piraguero (the ice cream guy) wanders through the neighborhood singing about his different flavors, while Nina’s parents worry about their sagging business and beauty shop owner Daniela (Chelly Canales) is moving away tomorrow, due to a big raise in rent. We visited a rehearsal on Aug. 24 and feel certain that with two weeks to go, the whole production will be polished and engaging from start to finish — certainly an outstanding beginning for Town Hall Arts Center’s 2017-2018 season.

‘TREET SIGHTS’ ART SHOW TO COMPLEMENT PLAY In Town Hall Arts Center’s Stanton Gallery, an art exhibit by Lisa DiAmor Sanchez and Elayne Moseley is called “Street Sights” and is planned to tie in with the musical about a city neighborhood that is playing upstairs: “In the Heights.” Di Amor Sanchez expresses herself by incorporating text in layers of paint. “I am inspired by the diverse layers of the past hidden beneath layers of pain in our cities — and the possibility of change and vibrancy that change brings,” she writes. “A background in psychology helps to provide me with an understanding of how powerful

the written word can be and why I use it so frequently in my art.” Each painting tells a story, she adds. Moseley, Texas-born, but a longtime Colorado resident, teaches at Art Students League of Denver. She exhibits works from her “Architecture Lingua” series. “Art is a reflection of how an artist sees and feels then translates into a visual medium.” In the new series, she wants the viewer “to consider how they see and interact with it. Frequently there is a mystery or spiritual aspect that develops with a painting. Because of this element, I have titled these paintings


Lone Tree Voice 19

September 7, 2017

Suspect arrested in cold-case slaying of deputy district attorney Robert Williams, 70, still lived in complex where murder occurred BY ELLIS ARNOLD EARNOLD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Investigators have arrested a 70-year-old man as a suspect in the murder of an 18th Judicial District deputy district attorney that occurred 18 years ago, the Arapahoe County Sheriff ’s Office announced Aug. 30. Rebecca Bartee was found dead at the age of 41 in her apartment in the 6500 block of South Dayton Street in Centennial on June 9, 1999. A Denver-area news reporter in February of this year contacted law enforcement after a tipster provided the reporter information, the sheriff ’s office said, and as a result, new evidence led to Robert Williams

being identified as a suspect. Investigators arrested Williams Aug. 29. He was living in the same apartment building where Bartee was killed. Williams lived there at the time of the murder, said Julie Brooks, spokeswoman for the sheriff ’s office, Williams and to her knowledge he had not moved since then. According to previous news reports, authorities said the murder was staged to look like a suicide, with a bottle of antidepressant pills set on Bartee the bathroom sink next to the bathtub where Bartee was submerged. A glass of wine sat in her living room, but an autopsy revealed she had no wine in her body, and authorities did not find any

wine bottles in her home, according to the news reports. After Williams’ arrest, authorities booked him into the Arapahoe County Detention Facility on a charge of first-degree murder. He was being held without bond. A few residents of the apartment complex where Williams lives who talked to the Colorado Community Media said they did not know Williams and had not heard of the arrest. An employee at the complex was not allowed to discuss it. A man who appeared to live near Williams said he knows him, but did not wish to comment. Bartee was a district attorney in Hays, Kansas, before moving to Colorado. She pursued parents who did not pay their court-ordered child support for Arapahoe County. A few days after her death, her co-workers went to her home looking for a case file and instead found Bartee dead in her bathtub.

The ensuing investigation and coroner’s information estimated that Bartee died after arriving home from work Friday, June 4, 1999, and that homicide was the likely cause of death. The sheriff ’s office urges anyone with information about the case or other cold cases to contact authorities at 303-795-4711 or at coldcase@ arapahoegov.com. Information about this and other cold cases can be found at arapahoegov.com/918/Cold-Case-Investigations.

WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU If you would like to share your opinion, visit our website at www.coloradocommunitymedia.com or write a letter to the editor. Include your name, full address and the best telephone number to contact you. Send letters to letters@coloradocommunitymedia.com.

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20 Lone Tree Voice

Media

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September 7, 2017S

Marketplace

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Direct: 303-566-4091 Main: 303-566-4100 Email: kearhart@coloradocommunitymedia.com

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September 9th at The Larimer County Fairgrounds Specialty Auto Auction with Goodguys r 6 Classic and/or Cars, Street Rods, 17 Muscle Cars & Memorabilia! All auctioned off Saturday, Sept 9th, 1:00pm! Thomas H. McKee building at

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Fall Fashion Show Luncheon 2 Featuring fashions by Chico’s. 11:30 am, September 29th at Pinehurst Country Club.This is a PEO, Chapter EO fundraiser providing scholarships for women. Tickets $40. For information call 303-421-1336.

5 10 24 $ 240.00 1 Want To Purchase minerals and other oil/gas $ 240.00 interests. Send details to:

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Sept 8 & 9 Castle Rock Annual Orphan Grain Train garage sale at Epiphany Lutheran Church 550 Wolfensberger. Proceeds support shipping clothing to orphanages worldwide. Quality selection of gently used furniture, kitchen, craft supplies, linens, household ,jewelry, costumes ,purses, prom dresses, shoes, leather coats and some things we can’t identify but you probably want one. 9 AM to 4PM Some items are priced we accept your reasonable offer for the rest. Don’t miss this….lots of good stuff

70+ Boyds Bears and Hares and others most have outfits/accessories various sizes $100 for the lot call Linda 303 - 518-3567

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Split & Delivered $275 a cord Stacking available extra $25 Call 303-647-2475 or 720-323-2173

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September 7, 2017

THINGS to DO

THEATER

Back to School Night: 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 7 at Comedy Works South, 5345 Landmark Place, Greenwood Village. Presented by Colorado Youth for a Change. Headliner is Monty Franklin. Live auction and paddle raiser. For tickets, go to https://youthforachange.ejoinme. org/MyEvents/BTSN2017. In the Heights: Friday, Sept. 8 to Sunday, Oct. 8 at Town Hall Arts Center, 2450 W. Main St., Littleton. First musical production of the 2017-18 season. Reserved tickets on sale at the box office or online at www.townhallartscenter.org/ in-the-heights. ‘Nutcracker’ Auditions: Saturday, Sept. 9, at Denver Ballet Theatre, 8150 S. University Blvd., Suite 120, Centennial. Open auditions are from 2:30-2:45 (ages 4-5); 3-3:45 p.m. (ages 6-8); 4-5 p.m. (ages 9-12); and 5:15-6:30 p.m. (ages 13 and older). Headshot required. Call 303799-6609 or go to www.denverballettheatre.com for details. Peter Samelson Magic Show: 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Sept. 15-16 at Theatre of Dreams, 735 Park St., Castle Rock. Illusionist, entertainer and philosopher. Reservations required; call 303660-6799 or go to http://Tickets. AmazingShows.com. ‘August: Osage County’: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; and 2:30 p.m. Sundays from to Oct. 15 at Vintage Theatre, 1468 Dayton St., Aurora. Additional show at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 18. After the Weston family patriarch disappears family tensions heat up and boil over in the ruthless August heat. Go to www. vintagetheatre.com or call 303-8567830.

ART

Evening with Art Encounters: 5-8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 8 at Seven Stones Botanical Gardens Cemetery, 9635 N. Rampart Range Road, Littleton. Stroll the Seven Stones gardens and celebrate five newly placed public art sculptures, along with artwork from 20-plus local artists. All art is for sale. Call 303-619-9697 to RSVP. Go to www.discoversevenstones. com

MUSIC

DEMTA Performance: 10:30 a.m. to noon Saturday, Sept. 9 at Castle Rock Adventist Hospital, 2305 Meadows Blvd., Castle Rock. Public welcome. DEMTA members are independent and school music teachers who work in Parker, Castle Rock, Elizabeth, Centennial, Highlands Ranch, Littleton and Aurora. They have provided music education public service performances and teacher development since 1994. Call Ann at 303-841-2976.

Lone Tree Voice 21

to RSVP.

this week’s TOP FIVE Colorado Artfest: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 9 and Sunday, Sept. 10 at the Outlets at Castle Rock, 5050 Factory Shops Blvd. More than 170 artists will have their work on display. Live main stage entertainment. Go to https://castlerock. org/castle-rock-artfest/

the first federal military post in the Denver area. Presentation will cover highlights of Fort Logan’s history including its role in the Spanish American War, its development as a recruiting and training center in World War I and World War II, and finally its closure in 1946. Contact ColumbineGenealogy@gmail.com.

West African Kora Performance: 6:30-7:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 11 at the Englewood Public Library, Perrin Room, 1000 Englewood Parkway, Englewood. The Kora is a 21-string harp that is native to the Mandinka people. In-between songs, Sean Gaskell will talk about how the instrument is built, who typically plays it, what its cultural significance is, and what it was like to live in the Gambia. For adults and teens. Registration recommended. Call the Englewood Public Library at 303-762-2560 or email epl@englewoodco.gov. History of Denver’s Fort Logan Army Base: 1-3 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 12, at Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit, 6400 S. University Blvd., Centennial. Columbine Genealogical and Historical Society program presented by Jack Ballard, local author and historian. Established in 1887, Fort Logan was

Concert, Car Show: 3-7 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 9 at Centennial Center Park, 13050 E. Peakview Ave., Centennial. Music by The Nacho Men, a local band playing swing and hits from the 50s, 60s, 70s and beyond. Variety of booths, food trucks and a senior resource fair. Cars will be on display starting at 3 p.m. Live music begins at 5:30 p.m. Go to http://www.centennialco.gov/ Things-To-Do/community-events. aspx#CalendarContent Rhythm and Percussion: 10:3011:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 11 at the Englewood Public Library, 1000 Englewood Parkway, in the Storytime Room. Ms. Monique will lead us through some fun clapping rhythms before we make our own drums to try out our rhythms on. Supplies provided; bring a round container (metal, cardboard or heavy plastic) that is no larger than 4 inches in diameter. Call 303-762-2560. Arapahoe Philharmonic Concert: 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 16 at Aspen Academy, 5859 S. University Blvd., Greenwood Village. “Destiny Fulfilled” features Johannes Brahm’s Symphony No. 1 and Richard Strauss’s Four Last Songs, featuring local soprano Lauren Sawyer. Go to www.arapahoe-phil.org/ events/buy-tickets/.

Denver Mountain Parks Foundation: 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 14 at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. Bart Berger created the foundation to improve and maximize the potential of the park system’s 14,000 acres. The pars are owned and maintained by Denver and span Jefferson, Douglas, Clear Creek and Grand counties. Refreshments served at 6:45 p.m. Go to www.castlerockhistoricalsociety.org. Contact the Castle Rock Museum at 303-814-3164 or museum@castlerockhistoricalsociety.org. Flag Retirement: 10 a.m. Sept. 16 at South Metro Fire Training Center, Plaza Drive and Twenty Mile Road, Parker. Ceremony hosted by Parker American Legion Post 1864 and Parker Cub Scout Pack 363. Public welcome. Flags for retirement may be dropped off at the reception desk at Parker Town Hall, 20120 E. Mainstreet. Contact coappleby1@ msn.com.

Joyful Celebration Community Picnic and Concert: 9:30 a.m. (worship) and 11 a.m. (free concert, picnic, games) Sunday, Sept. 17 at Joy Lutheran Church, 7051 Parker Hills Court, Parker. Live music by the Metropolitan Jazz Orchestra. Service will be translated by a sign language interpreter. Go to joylc.org.

EVENTS

Feel Good, Look Good for Life: 6 p.m. Friday, Sept. 8 at the Castle Pines Library, 360 Village Square Lane. Discover life-changing strategies for living your best life and thriving from author Angela Gaffney. For adults. Registration is required at 303-791-7323 or DCL. org. Highlands Ranch Senior Club Monthly Luncheon: 11:45 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 13 at the Southridge Recreation Center, 4800 McArthur Ranch Road, Highlands Ranch. Octoberfest theme with Polka music; entertainment by Steve Rock’s Tanzkapelle Band. Brats, hot dogs, sides and dessert included. Reservations required by Friday, Sept. 8. To RSVP or for information on cost or

membership, call Sue at 309-3609677. Newcomers welcome. Go to http://www.hrseniorclub.org/. ChiliFest: 4-8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 9 at the Douglas County Fairgrounds. Sample and judge all the chili entries or enter your own secret recipe to win cash prizes. Tickets available at http://www.castlerockchilifest. com or at the door. Fundraising event for Boy Scout Troop 780. Lego Maniacs: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 9 and Saturday, Sept. 23 at the Englewood Public Library, 1000 Englewood Parkway. School-aged children welcome to come in and created. Parents welcome too. Call 303-762-2560. Lifetree Café: 5-6 p.m. Monday, Sept. 11 (A Safe Place); Monday, Sept. 18 (Is Church Obsolete?); Monday, Sept. 25 (Forgiving the Unforgivable) at DAZBOG, 202 Wilcox St., Castle Rock. Call 303-8140142. Go to LifetreeCafe.com. Turbulent Waters: Conflict in the South China Sea: 2-4 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 12 at Iora Primary Care, 8246 W. Bowles Ave., Littleton. This Active Minds program features the South China Sea, which is located between China, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines. At stake is one of the busiest trade routes in the world as well as oil and fishing rights. Recently China has been pressing its claim to long disputed parts of the South China Sea, raising concerns as to what may happen as tensions rise. Call 303-552-2282

Putin’s Russia: 3-4 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 13 at RiverPointe, 5225 S. Prince St., Littleton. Vladimir Putin’s leadership of Russia suggests a return to an authoritarianism that, for some, feels similar to the days of Soviet control and the Czars of old. Join Active Minds in examining the story of Russia under the influence of Vladimir Putin. Call 303-797-0600 to RSVP. Women’s Sensory Experience: 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 14 at Civic Green Park, Highlands Ranch. Invite nature back into your day; meditate, practice yoga, journal and more. Bring a yoga mat, sunscreen, water and lunch. Space is limited; go to http://highlandsranch.org/ adult-enrichment-and-wellness/ to register. For information, call 303-725-1434. Slime: 4-5 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 14 at the Englewood Public Library, 1000 Englewood Parkway, in the Storytime Room. Examine slime from the perspective of slugs and snails, then create a variety of slime including Kool-Aid slime, glitter slime, fluffy slime and oobleck. Call 303-762-2560. Paws to Read: 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Sept. 16 at the Englewood Public Library, 1000 Englewood Parkway, in the Storytime Room. Early readers share their stories with four-legged listeners. Registration recommended; space cannot be guaranteed to those who do not register. Call 303-762-2560. Animals provided through Denver Pet Partners. Hilltop Schoolhouse Open House: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 16 at 5748 Flintwood Road, Parker. The 1898 Hilltop Schoolhouse is the only remaining public structure from the railroad town, Hilltop. Event is free; Hilltop notecards, postcards and pencils given when donation made to schoolhouse. Five ponderosa pine tree seedlings will be planted.

Parker Oktoberfest: 6-10 p.m. Friday, Sept. 15; 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 16; and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 17 at O’Brien Park, 10795 Victorian Drive. Learn about the German tale culture with visuals and information. Enjoy a dachshund race and dachshund costume contest; a mustache competition; silent auction and raffle. Admission is free. Go to www. parkeroktoberfest.com 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.


22 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S

In case of emergency, break glass Law grants immunity for freeing animals, humans from hot vehicles, with certain conditions BY TOM SKELLEY TSKELLEY@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

A new law granting immunity to citizens who break a vehicle’s window to rescue at-risk animals and humans went into effect on Aug. 9. “It’s already exceeded my expectations,” said state Rep. Lori Saine, RFirestone, who introduced House Bill 1179. Saine said she was prompted by calls and emails from constituents to write the bill, and it immediately received bipartisan support. She added that media coverage has already reduced reports of animals in hot cars to law enforcement around the state, likely because the attention stopped some pet owners from leaving animals in their vehicles in the first place. But the Parker Police Department is warning citizens to consider some important criteria included in the law before coming to the rescue. A recent case occurred in which a Parker resident broke a car window to free an animal, but failed to follow the law’s protocols. The individual was only spared a count of criminal mischief because the car’s owner chose not to press charges. Such cases were a concern as the bill was debated, Saine said, but guidelines within the bill were added to prevent just those kinds of incidents. “We wanted to create a balance for property owners as well as good Samaritans,” she said. One such provision is that citizens call 9-1-1 before taking a rock, or the law, into their own hands. Though it isn’t written into the law, another idea Saine suggests is for would-be rescuers to record the circumstances of the situation with video. Parker Police Department Public Information Officer Josh Hans said via email that calls about animals in

DINOSAUR DISCOVERY

hot cars are fairly common, but staff

Read before you break To qualify for immunity under House Bill 1179, the following conditions must apply members have yet to advise anyone to break a window. “The most important step is to call 9-1-1,” Hans said. “Our communication technicians will be able to get an officer headed to the scene ASAP and will know what you should do to ensure everyone is safe.”

Paleontologist Joe Sertich, curator of dinosaurs for the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, uses a triceratops model to show where bones found at a nearby dig site in Thornton come from to Brantner Elementary school students Sept. 5. Construction crews uncovered bones Aug. 25. Sertich hosted a closed-circuit television interview for hundreds of metro Denver schools in the morning, but Brantner -- which is close to the dinorsaur dig site — was the only school he visited in person. SCOTT TAYLOR

Don’t miss Cherokee castle tour STAFF REPORT

Join the Highlands Historical Society on a 90-minute private tour of Cherokee Ranch Castle, a scenic property in Sedalia that dates back to the late 1890s. Former owner Tweet Kimball’s caterer, Meg Anderson, and butler, John Lake, will lead the tour, along with one of the castle’s docents, Linda Preshaw. A bringyour-own brown bag lunch at the castle’s picnic pavilion will

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follow the tour. The tour is from 9:30-11 a.m. on Sept. 21 at the castle, 6113 Daniels Park Road. Lunch will be from 11 a.m. to noon. Cost is $11 for Highlands Ranch Historical Society members and $13 for nonmembers. Registration and payment deadline is Sept. 19. For more information, call tour coordinator Nancy Linsenbigler at 720-932-6990 or visit highlandsranchhistoricalsociety.org/ Tours-Information.

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September 7, 2017

Lone Tree Voice 23

LOCAL

SPORTS

CHSAA commissioner aims to bring new perspective to job

R

ThunderRidge’s Zeke Johnson (30) makes a cut to avoid a Mountain Vista defender in last year’s rivalry game. ThunderRidge won 35-13. FILE PHOTO BY PAUL DISALVO

What a difference a rivalry makes Intensity ramps up when certain teams play each other BY JIM BENTON JBENTON@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Rivalry football games are contests that get circled on the calendar, get players and students pumped up and get coaches to put a little extra into game planning. Pueblo Central versus Pueblo Centennial is the oldest rivalry football

game in Colorado. It was first played in 1892 and now is known as the Bell Game, with the winner gaining possession of an old train bell that was donated as a trophy in 1950. There are several intense Colorado rivalries involving area teams and most are tied to geographic proximity or games within the same school district. Changing conference alignments and schools switching classes have purged some rivalries and forced teams to move games against rivals to early SEE RIVALRIES, P24

Rock Canyon’s Bryce Henningsen and Zach Wilson (23) pull Arapahoe’s Jack Hollingsworth to the ground. The Jaguars started off the season with a 38-7 victory over the Warriors at Echo Park Stadium on Sept. 2. PAUL DISALVO

THE TALLY Here are the series football won-lost records in some of the area’s top rivalry games: Douglas County 3, Castle View 3 Cherry Creek 3, Regis Jesuit 2 Valor Christian 4, Cherry Creek 2 Valor Christian 5, Pomona 3 Legacy 6, Horizon 3 Legacy 7, Broomfield 3 Pomona 6, Ralston Valley 4 Legend 2, Ponderosa 2 Ponderosa 3, Chaparral 3 Arapahoe 10, Heritage 2 Mullen 2, Valor Christian 1 Mullen 11, Cherry Creek 3 ThunderRidge 9, Mountain Vista 2 Northglenn 63, Thornton 24, two ties Green Mountain 54, Golden 49, one tie

honda Blanford-Green is a former track star who has been displaying her speed in her new job as Colorado High School Activities Association commissioner. Blanford-Green was hired in March and his been proactive OVERTIME in addressing issues and initiating new concepts that could foil unanticipated issues. Sometimes the old-school ways have to be tweaked, and Blanford-Green banks on her experience. Jim Benton “What I bring to the table is a different perspective and I’ve seen it differently,” she said. Blanford-Green, a 1981 Aurora Central graduate, set several Colorado track and field records that stood for years. She won 18 conference championships as a collegiate standout at Nebraska, where she was an 11-time track All-American and competed in several international events. She worked 16 years for the CHSAA as an assistant/associate commissioner, was the executive director of the Nebraska School Activities Association for three seasons and was an assistant executive director the Louisiana High School Athletic Association from 2015 until returning to Colorado. The CHSAA held a media day Aug. 30 with a round-table discussion, and a much-needed format for interviews after state championship games was revealed. “Our vision and mission was building relationships with our media,” said Blanford-Green. “We wanted a round-table discussion in an informal matter and not at a state championship, where sometimes those conversations don’t go very well. In a non-competitive atmosphere we can really start to build those relationships, having an open dialogue with our media partners.” The CSHAA Sports Medicine Advisory Committee, a group consisting of doctors, school personnel and athletic trainers, met earlier in the day, and the launching of a Head, Heart and Heat Program was announced, which focuses on three major areas of concern for student safety. Blanford-Green revealed that all art departments in CHSAA member schools have been advised that one student will create the logo for the Head, Heart and Heat Program. The student who designs the winning logo will be paid for the copyright for that logo. SEE BENTON, P24


24 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S

RIVALRIES FROM PAGE 23

in the season — including Week 1, which is the case with several games this season. “The good news is we are still playing these rivalry games,” said Derek Chaney, Douglas County School District athlethic director. “We sort of flip-flopped the schedule and what used to be the non-league games are our league games. The games lose a little bit because league titles are not on the line. “The flip side is we are playing these rival games in the good weather. The student bodies, I don’t think they care if it is a league or non-league game.” Crowds in Colorado are not as large as some other states, such as Florida and Texas, but the attention surrounding rivalry games is considerable. Bleachers fill fast at 3,500-seat Shea Stadium in Highlands Ranch for the ThunderRidge-Mountain Vista game. The parking lot fills up hours before the game with tailgating, and then many people line up outside the stadium behind the north end zone to watch the game. “We sell out that game every year,” ThunderRidge Athletic Director Sean Patterson said. “It’s a hyped-up game, the kids are hyped up for it. It’s a great atmosphere.” The Castle View-Douglas County crosstown rivalry is another can’tmiss contest as the Castle Rock teams compete in the Battle of the Rock affair. This year, the game was in the opening week on Sept. 1. “There is no better atmosphere than a rivalry game,” Douglas County coach Gene Hill said. “There is nothing better than seeing the stands full.

BENTON FROM PAGE 23

“This isn’t reactionary,” said Blanford-Green. “This is proactivity that we understand where we need to be going, and this is kind of like when you see the CHSAA logo, it might be a more modern look, you know this is from CHSAA and it has to do with

Valor Christian’s Chase Lopez (29) gets underneath Mullen’s Wind Henderson (80). The Eagles got their second victory of the season over Mullen 34-7 on Sept. 1 at Valor Stadium. PAUL DISALVO Players are more focused. The hard part is making sure the players still play within themselves. It absolutely stinks that this game is played in Week 1. How much fun would it be to see these two teams play Week 10 for a league title or a playoff spot?” Castle View senior Heath Helms said everyone on the team circles the date of the Douglas County game. “The biggest part of the rivalry is everyone used to play together, then when high school starts they spilt and go to different schools,” he said. “There is a lot of trash talking. It’s still friendly. Everyone is still friends after the game but when we are on the field, it’s a fight.” Legend and Ponderosa are two Parker schools that play in nonleague and the lower parking lot fills at EchoPark Automotive Stadium early with tailgaters. Ponderosa is a

4A school but still plays the Titans. The third Parker public high school, Chaparral, isn’t on the Mustangs’ schedule. “The Legend game is a great experience for both teams’ players and the Parker community,” Ponderosa coach Jaron Cohen said. “The atmosphere on game day is fantastic and the players know each other through playing youth ball.” In some games, there is hardware on the line. Heritage, a Littleton school, and Arapahoe, located a few miles away in west Centennial, play each season for the Brookridge Trophy. It is a milk can that is a tribute to the Brookridge dairy farm that used to occupy the area where Littleton Public Schools Stadium now stands. Legacy has two big rival games each year, one against Broomfield and

safety and right now there is nothing that does that for us.”

committed to play at Coastal Carolina, had a slugging percentage of 3.000 with three home runs and a double in five at-bats and started the season with a 1.000 batting average. She drove in seven runs, scored nine times and reached base safely in 11 plate appearances. She was 3-for-3 with a homer and double, had three runs batted in and scored three runs in a 12-4 win over Wheat Ridge. She walked four times in

Fast start Chaparral senior Adrienne Visintine started the softball season with a bang and was named the MaxPreps/ NFCA (National Fastpitch Coaches Association) National High School Player of the Week for games played Aug. 21-27. Visintine, an outfielder who has

the other against Adams 12 district school Horizon. “Horizon is a district school and you always want to be the best in the district,” Legacy Athletic Director Brendon Feddema said. “The Broomfield game every year draws a lot of people, but as soon as the game is over the players are good friends. It is the Best of Broomfield game.” Northglenn and Thornton are longtime rivals that played for the 89th time on Sept. 1 in what is called the I-25 Bowl. n “This game is one that both sides c play up for and it’s usually a great t game,” Northglenn Athletic Director Matt Oelhert said. “Each of our com- t munities has multiple generations H who have gone to either Northglenn r or Thornton.” a There have been several metro-area l rivalries that have developed because e of the strength of the teams. While these schools aren’t in the same city or the same league, year after year, it seems, they are squaring off in the playoffs, often with a state championship on the line. Valor Christian, seven-time Colorado state champions, has developed rivalries with Cherry Creek and Pomona mainly because of competitive games and the fact the teams are typically battling it out for Class 5A state titles. Valor holds a 4-2 edge in the series, but the Bruins ended the Eagles’ 28game in-state winning streak in 2014, and later that season Creek won the state championship with a 25-24 win over Valor Christian. Pomona has lost the past two title games to Valor but the Panthers have three wins over the Eagles during the regular season. “In the past four years, we’ve played Pomona eight times and Creek four times,” said Valor coach Rod Sherman. “They have been good games.”

a 9-5 loss to Ralston Valley but scored three of the Wolverines’ five runs. In a 20-0 victory over Overland, Visintine belted two homers, had four RBI, scored twice and drew a walk. Jim Benton is a sports writer for Colorado Community Media. He has been covering sports in the Denver area since 1968. He can be reached at jbenton@ coloradocommunitymedia.com or at 303-566-4083.

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Lone Tree Voice 25

September 7, 2017

Sterling Ranch residents will get annual state park passes BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM

Sterling Ranch recently announced that its residents will receive a complimentary annual pass to Colorado’s 44 state parks. “We believe it’s the right thing to do,” Sterling Ranch developer Harold Smethills said in a media release. “We want to be good stewards and do it to help conserve the land, wildlife and habitat that will ensure a healthy sustainable natural

AGING

resource, not just for the active lifestyle of our current residents but for our children, grandchildren and generations still to come.” After a 20-year buildout, the master-planned community in northwest Douglas County — near Chatfield and Roxborough state parks — is projected to have about 13,000 homes with more than 30,000 people. Most homes will start in the $500,000s and $600,000s, according to Sterling Ranch’s website.

Joanne LaPorta is the owner and audiologist at Accent on Hearing, 1189 S. Perry Street, Suite 120, Castle Rock, 303-663-2235. Please join the Senior Council of Douglas County at 10:15 a.m. Nov. 2 at the Parker Library, 20105 E. Mainstreet in Parker, to learn more about this subject. There will also be an opportunity to speak out about senior needs in Douglas County during the Community Conversation portion of the meeting. Questions? Please email dcseniorlife@douglas. co.us.

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28 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S

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Lone Tree Voice 29

September 7, 2017

MEALS

Dale Elliott, division director for Aging and Nutrition Services for the Volunteers of America, has a laugh while a kettle at the Denver VOA kitchen gets a wash. Elliott says the organization reaches out to private individuals and corporations for Meals on Wheels revenue, but most people don’t appreciate the need for the program until they need it for themselves or a family member.

FROM PAGE 6

“We save lives every day,” says Elliott, division director of Aging and Nutrition Services for VOA. Drivers give some clients their only social contact of the day, as well as a nutritious meal. Three or four times a year, Elliott says, they find seniors who’ve fallen and need medical help. The budget cuts would take $307,300 from Meals on Wheels’ Denver branch, eliminating services to 620 seniors in the metro area, according to Elliott. Funds for “congregate meals,” offered to mobile seniors in 30 centers in the seven counties Elliott’s office covers, would lose $192,900 and serve 705 fewer seniors. Funding reductions would also take more than $30,000 from programs the VOA offers to provide safety-based home repairs and in-home exercise programs for seniors. But Republican businessman and former state legislator Victor Mitchell, a Castle Rock resident and candidate for governor who has been delivering meals on Fridays for about a year, believes other funding mechanisms exist for the organization to make ends meet. One solution could be “to change their model to the extent that they raise more money from private-sector dollars,” Mitchell says. “I think it’s a fantastic program and it does a lot of great things. I just believe there could be a great deal more done with

TOM SKELLEY

funding the program with the private sector.” Meals on Wheels receives 87 percent of its funding from government sources, 9 percent from private donations and 4 percent from client contributions, Elliott says. “It’s not like we don’t do that,” he says. “The reality is we just don’t receive sufficient response.” Herb Wager, 68, began visiting the Castle Rock Senior Activity Center after his wife died in May, and enjoys the fellowship as much as the food. He’s an unaffiliated voter and leans

Republican, but like Elliott, he disagrees that private corporations or citizens can fill the gaps federal cuts would create. “It won’t get done,” the Castle Rock resident says. “It would be nice in an ideal situation, but it’s not an ideal world.” On a sunny Tuesday in August, Wager talks over baked chicken with Buzz Bowers, also of Castle Rock. Bowers began bringing his wife to the center five years ago when her Parkinson’s disease confined her to a wheelchair. It was a way for his wife

to socialize as her condition worsened, and the friends they made there were a comfort for Bowers when she died last year. He says the fact that the government would consider cutting programs for seniors is evidence of “troubled times” in the United States, and he warns that decreasing funding won’t decrease the demand. “I think it’s something that needs to be increased, not decreased,” Bowers, 84, said. “Seniors are living longer, and there’s going to be a lot more of us.”


30 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S


Lone Tree Voice 31

September 7, 2017

DETOX FROM PAGE 8

Location, location, location The next steps will be gathering data, Arapahoe County Sheriff Dave Walcher said. “It takes a lot of work to know if we should even consider this,” Walcher said. “We have to really get all the numbers of how agencies are utilizing detox centers and emergency rooms. We need to know more about where people are coming from, where the location should be, what the cost would be. It’s not even close to decision time.” Where to put the facility is a prime concern, Duffy said. “A detox facility has to be in a place that’s zoned for it,” he said. “You’re not going to put it in a residential area. Land is very expensive. The perfect case scenario would be to find an existing building so we don’t have to build from the ground up.” Stakeholders are aware that some opposition is inevitable, Duffy said. “There will be naysayers and people who are nervous about this, and part

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of the job is to be transparent and important group to get behind this is honest, and to answer questions,” Public Notice the public. We’re trying to do this for PUBLIC INVITATION BID Duffy said. “Sooner or later, the most the TO public.” Separate sealed bids for DANIELS PARK ROAD IMPROVEMENTS (PHASE 2B AND PHASE 2C); DOUGLAS COUNTY PROJECT NUMBER CI 2013-021, 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, September 26, 2017 at 2:00 p.m. This project consists of reconstruction and paving of 0.75 miles of Daniels Park Road from the existing pavilion to the north, including relocation of the existing buffalo fence, grading and drainage improvements and asphalt paving.

Voluntary Contribution

Behind your weekly community newspaper is a dedicated team of skilled journalists, designers, administrative staff, printers and carriers who work hard to deliver quality content to your Public Notice doorstep. If you enjoy your hometown newspaper, we invite PUBLIC INVITATION TO BID you to make a voluntary contribution. We will continue to Separate sealed bids for DANIELS deliver your news free of charge, but your assistance helpsPARK us ROAD IMPROVEMENTS (PHASE 2B AND PHASE DOUGLAS COUNTY PROJECT maintain a high-quality product and 2C); superior service.

NUMBER CI 2013-021, 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, September 26, 2017 at 2:00 p.m. This project consists of reconstruction and paving of 0.75 miles of Daniels Park Road from the existing pavilion to the north, including relocation of the existing buffalo fence, grading and drainage improvements and asphalt paving.

The Contract Documents will be available after 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, September 5, 2017, through Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System Website To participate in our annual (www.rockymountainbidsystem.com) or they Voluntary may be obtained at the above address. ElecContribution Program, please complete this tronic versions of the Plans obtained by any other means than as described above notcontribution be form and mail withmay your to: complete or accurate, and it is the Bidder’s responsibility to obtain complete set of the Lone Treea Voice Project Plans and Specifications. Douglas 9137 Blvd.,forSte. 210 County will not be Ridgeline held responsible misinformation received from private Highlands Ranch,plan COrooms. 80129

P RO G R A M

Public Notice PUBLIC INVITATION TO BID

Separate sealed bids for DANIELS PARK ROAD IMPROVEMENTS (PHASE 2B AND PHASE 2C); DOUGLAS COUNTY PROJECT NUMBER CI 2013-021, 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, September 26, 2017 at 2:00 p.m. This project consists of reconstruction and paving of 0.75 miles of Daniels Park Road from the existing pavilion to the north, including relocation of the existing buffalo fence, grading and drainage improvements and asphalt paving.

The Contract Documents will be available after 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, September 5, 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. A PRE-BID CONFERENCE will be held at

The Contract Documents will be available after 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, September 5, 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.

City and County

A PRE-BID CONFERENCE will be held at 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, September 13, 2017, at the Department of Public Works Engineering, Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, Suite 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104. All questions are due to Dennis Lobberding, Project Engineer, by 12:00 p.m. on Wednesday, September 20, 2017. The Bid Opening will be conducted at 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, September 26, 2017, at the same address. The Project includes the following major items and approximate quantities: • Embankment Material (CIP) – 27,000 CY • Topsoil (Stockpile & Redistribute) – 6,000 CY • ABC (Class 6) – 5,000 CY • HMA Asphalt (PG 58-28) – 4,500 TONS • Bison Fencing – 4,500 LF 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. Any questions on the bidding process shall be directed to Dennis Lobberding, Project Engineer, at 303.660.7490.

Name Street Address

Public Notice REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

City, State, Zip

Proposals for TRAFFIC OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT SYSTEM FOR THE DOUGLAS COUNTY TRAFFIC DIVISION; DOUGLAS COUNTY PROJECT NUMBER TF Email We do not sell or share your personal information 2017-024 will be received by the Owner, County Government, We are requesting $25, but feelDouglas free to contribute any amount.Department of Public Works Engineering, Philip S. Miller BuildPlease make checks payable to the Lone ing,Tree 100Voice Third Street, Suite 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104, until Wednesday, October 18, 2017, at 2:00 p.m. This project consists of the acquisition and implementation of an integrated and workflow Contribution Carrierasset Tip management Amount Enclosedsystem for the Traffic Division.

Thank you for your support!

The Request for Proposals (RFP) Documents will be available after 10:00 a.m. on Monday, September 11,events 2017, through Rocky Mountain A PRE-BID CONFERENCE will this be held at receive breaking news, newsletters, exclusive offers  Please check box to and special via email. E-Purchasing System Website (www.rocky10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, September 13, mountainbidsystem.com). RFP Documents are 2017, at the Department of Public Works Enginnot available for purchase through Douglas eering, Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, County Government and can only be accessed Suite 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104. All quesfrom the above-mentioned website. Electronic tions are due to Dennis Lobberding, Project Enversions of the RFP Documents obtained by any gineer, by 12:00 p.m. on Wednesday, Septemother means than as described above may not ber 20, 2017. The Bid Opening will be conbe complete or accurate, and it is the Offeror’s ducted at 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, September responsibility to obtain a complete set of the 26, 2017, at the same address. Public Notice RFP Documents. The Project includes the following major items REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS A PRE-PROPOSAL CONFERENCE will be and approximate quantities: held at 2:00 p.m. on Wednesday, October 4, Proposals for TRAFFIC OPERATIONS 2017, at the Department of Public Works Engin• Embankment Material (CIP) – 27,000 CY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM FOR THE eering, Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, • Topsoil (Stockpile & Redistribute) – 6,000 DOUGLAS COUNTY TRAFFIC DIVISION; Suite 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104. All quesCY DOUGLAS COUNTY PROJECT NUMBER TF tions are due to Krista Deibert, Engineering • ABC (Class 6) – 5,000 CY 2017-024 will be received by the Owner, Contracts Specialist, by 12:00 p.m. on Friday, • HMA Asphalt (PG 58-28) – 4,500 TONS ToDepartment advertiseofyourSeptember public notices call 303-566-4100 Douglas County Government, 22, 2017. • Bison Fencing – 4,500 LF Public Works Engineering, Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, Suite 220, Castle Rock, Offerors must submit one (1) unbound paper Prior to submitting a Bid Proposal, Bidders shall CO 80104, until Wednesday, October 18, copy and one (1) electronic copy (in pdf format, have received prequalification status (active 2017, at 2:00 p.m. This project consists of the on a flash drive) of their Proposal no later than status) with the Colorado Department of acquisition and implementation of an integrated Wednesday, October 18, 2017 at 2:00 p.m. Transportation to bid on individual projects of asset management and workflow system for the Douglas County will not accept or consider Prothe size and kind of work as set forth herein. Traffic Division. posals which are time stamped at the place of receipt after the specified due date and time. Any questions on the bidding process shall be The Request for Proposals (RFP) Documents Douglas County will not accept or consider edirected to Dennis Lobberding, Project Enginwill be available after 10:00 a.m. on Monday, mailed or faxed Proposals. Proposals should be eer, at 303.660.7490. September 11, 2017, through Rocky Mountain hand-delivered or mailed to the location below: E-Purchasing System Website (www.rockyPlan holder information can be found on the mountainbidsystem.com). RFP Documents are Douglas County Government Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing System Webnot available for purchase through Douglas Department of Public Works Engineering site. County Government and can only be accessed 100 Third Street, Suite 220 from the above-mentioned website. Electronic Castle Rock, CO 80104 Legal Notice No.: 931521 versions of the RFP Documents obtained by any Attn: Krista Deibert, First Publication: August 31, 2017 other means than as described above may not Engineering Contracts Specialist Second Publication: September 7, 2017 be complete or accurate, and it is the Offeror’s Publisher: Douglas County News-Press responsibility to obtain a complete set of the Douglas County reserves the right to reject any Public Notice RFP Documents. and all Proposals, to waive formalities, informalities, or irregularities contained in a Proposal REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS A PRE-PROPOSAL CONFERENCE will be and furthermore, to award a Contract for items held at 2:00 p.m. on Wednesday, October 4, therein, either in whole or in part, if it is deemed Proposals for TRAFFIC OPERATIONS 2017, at the Department of Public Works Enginto be in the best interest of Douglas County to MANAGEMENT SYSTEM FOR THE eering, Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, do so. Additionally, Douglas County reserves DOUGLAS COUNTY TRAFFIC DIVISION; Suite 220, Castle Rock, CO 80104. All questhe right to negotiate optional items and/or serDOUGLAS COUNTY PROJECT NUMBER TF tions are due to Krista Deibert, Engineering vices with the successful Offeror. Any questions 2017-024 will be received by the Owner, Contracts Specialist, by 12:00 p.m. on Friday, on the RFP Documents shall be directed to Douglas County Government, Department of September 22, 2017. Krista Deibert, Engineering Contracts SpePublic Works Engineering, Philip S. Miller Buildcialist, at 303.660.7490. ing, 100 Third Street, Suite 220, Castle Rock, Offerors must submit one (1) unbound paper CO 80104, until Wednesday, October 18, copy and one (1) electronic copy (in pdf format, Legal Notice No.: 931565 2017, at 2:00 p.m. This project consists of the on a flash drive) of their Proposal no later than First Publication: September 7, 2017 acquisition and implementation of an integrated Wednesday, October 18, 2017 at 2:00 p.m. Last Publication: September 14, 2017 asset management and workflow system for the Douglas County will not accept or consider ProPublisher: Douglas County News-Press Traffic Division. posals which are time stamped at the place of receipt after the specified due date and time. The Request for Proposals (RFP) Documents Douglas County will not accept or consider ewill be available after 10:00 a.m. on Monday, mailed or faxed Proposals. Proposals should be September 11, 2017, through Rocky Mountain hand-delivered or mailed to the location below:

Notices

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32 Lone Tree Voice

September 7, 2017S

LIMITED ENGAGEMENT! September 23 – January 28

GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION! Saturday, October 7 9:30 a.m. – Noon Bring the whole family for fun, interactive activities! Buy tickets online at southdenver.cu.edu This event is included with museum admission.

10035 S. Peoria Street, Lone Tree, CO 80134


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