Parker Chronicle 0819

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August 19, 2016 VO LUM E 1 4 | IS S U E 42 | FREE

LET THERE BE BEARDS There’s more to facial-hair fashion than meets the eye. PAGE 12

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Pardon our dust: Library nears completion Parker branch prepares for September opening

By Tom Skelley tskelley@coloradocommunitymedia.com Libraries are historically quiet places, conjuring images of bespectacled old librarians shushing the giggles of children. But construction crews at Douglas County Library’s new Parker branch are making lots of noise, and branch manager Amy Long said giggling children will be welcome once the dust clears.

“We’ve just put things down hoping that the community will use it, and I’m excited to see what they’ll experiment with,” Long said. Construction is scheduled to be finished by Aug. 22, with a grand opening set for Sept. 24. The new branch, at 20105 E. Mainstreet, replaces the old one at 10851 S. Crossroads Drive, which will remain open until Aug. 31. On an Aug. 5 tour of the new facility, the first thing Long pointed out was a children’s area, complete with a crawling

area for toddlers, reading nooks, a room for children’s programs and an “Everbright,” a fixture for creating illuminated designs, like a wall-sized Lite-Brite. Melissa Ancieaux, staff writer for Douglas County Libraries, said children won’t be the only people excited for what the building has to offer. “The sky’s the limit, creatively, for what they can do there,” Ancieux said. Take the new digital creativity lab for adults and children alike, Library continues on Page 17

Melissa Ancieaux, staff writer for Douglas County Libraries, stands in the midst of currently empty bookshelves at the county’s new Parker branch on Aug. 5. The construction project was delayed by heavy rains this spring, but will open on Sep. 24. Photo by Tom Skelley

Outlook for future looks bright, wet Updated master plan says shift to renewable water is working By Tom Skelley tskelley@coloradocommunitymedia.com Steve Tarr moved to Parker 15 years ago, and it didn’t take him long to learn that perhaps no other topic stokes as much controversy and concern in Colorado as water. “I’m from Michigan originally, so we have a lot more water than Colorado does,” Tarr said. “Yeah, water’s a very important issue.”

Volunteers freshen up the exterior of the Parker Senior Activity Center on Aug. 6. Trevor Mortensen organized the paint job to fulfill one of his requirements for becoming an Eagle Scout. Photos by Tom Skelley

Water continues on Page 5

Paint can improve more than walls Boy Scout organizes needed painting project at senior center By Tom Skelley tskelley@coloradocommunitymedia.com

Syriana Mbakob, left, and her sister Lyra show off their work on a shed and their faces as they paint the Parker Senior Activity Center on Aug. 6. The girls and their father, Jean-Daniel, were among 81 volunteers who gave the center a new coat of paint.

The swishing of brushes, squeaking of rollers and laughter of paint-splattered children echoed around the exterior of the Parker Senior Activity Center on Aug. 6, as 81 volunteers gathered to spruce up walls and trim with a fresh coat of paint. The project manager, 17-year-old Trevor Mortensen of Parker, paced feverishly around the grounds, checking progress with volunteers, directing newcomers to their places and dealing with unforeseen Paint continues on Page 17

Parker resident Steve Tarr takes some laps at the Parker Recreation Center on Aug. 12. Tarr says he xeriscapes and waters his yard sparingly to conserve water and reduce his utility bills. Photo byTom Skelley

Experiencing facial redness this summer despite using sunscreen daily?

WE CAN HELP! 303-945-2080 Dr. Kimberly Neyman

See page 7 for Dr. Kim Neyman’s column on Rosacea.


2 Parker Chronicle FACES AMONG US

HELLO

... My Name Is

August 19, 2016

NEWS IN A HURRY A glimpse of the people in our community

RON FERREIRA Turning wood into works of art Bouncing around and landing in Parker I moved here four years ago from Tennessee, to be near my granddaughter. I’m originally from Rhode Island, where I met my wife of 43 years, Linda, in high school. We moved from Rhode Island to Tennessee to Florida, then back to Tennessee and then to Parker. My family were all stone masons, so I went into construction management and worked in that field for most of my life. It takes a special class of people, just like firefighters or policemen or anything, to do that work. You have to have the talent and the desire to do those types of jobs. It’s hard work, but it’s a lot of fun. Starting strong, staying busy About 10, 12 or 13 years ago, I started doing woodturning fulltime. I joined a woodturners club in Florida and within a month they made me the president. I had only joined the club to learn how to sharpen my tools properly, but once I joined the club it opened up a whole new world for me. There were doctors, lawyers, engineers, just an incredible amount of diversity, and they all liked to share their little tricks of the trade. I was also very fortunate that I met a professional woodturner in the group who took me under his wing and shared his expertise with me, and it just snowballed from there. Nature is a big part of my work. I’ll take a leaf and trace it onto sandpaper, then use it to make an impression on a piece. Then I pyrograph the outline and dye it, and then the leaf becomes alive again in the pieces that I make. I have some pieces

Smoke rises as Ron Ferreira adds detail to a piece in his workshop at his Parker home on Aug. 11. Ferreria says he tries to complete one piece per day to “keep the juices flowing.” Photo by Tom Skelley like that at the Wildlife Experience space at the University of Colorado south campus and some at Studio J in downtown Denver. Favorite projects My daughter works as a teacher at Greenwood Elementary and an apple tree blew down there this spring. The tree was right outside my daughter’s classroom and I turned the wood from the tree into four bowls as gifts for teachers at the school. I get up early, around 3:30, and I usually walk for three miles, then come home, eat breakfast and start my day. I try to complete a project every day, to keep the juices flowing, and that’s part of what I learned from my mentor. It’s a long day, but it’s a passion, so it’s never a tiring day. Do you have a suggestion for My name is…? Contact Tom Skelley at tskelley@ coloradocommunitymedia.com.

County receives funds for veterans Douglas County recently received a $10,000 state grant to provide emergency assistance for veterans struggling with housing, transportation, employment, health care and other expenses. “Our goal with these grant dollars is to help our veterans bridge the gap during an emergency, creating a temporary safety net for the most basic and essential needs,” said Douglas County Veteran Services Officer David Maxwell. The group, staffed entirely by military veterans, serves more than 21,000 veterans and their families in Douglas County. It provides access to special programs and services and helps veterans with applying for benefits, employment assistance, medical care, housing applications and other services, such as transportation. The office also assists surviving spouses, dependents’ parents and dependents with claims for pension, disability, burial reimbursements and more. To apply for the veterans assistance funds, please contact the Office of Veteran Affairs at 303-663-6200 or email the office at Veterans_Services@douglas. co.us Those desiring more information can call 303-663-6200, email Veterans_Services@douglas.co.us or come to the office, located in the basement at 301 Wilcox St. in Castle Rock. The office is open Monday-Thursday, but is only staffed part-time, so interested parties should contact the office for exact hours before visiting. Parker PD announces app The Parker Police Department recently debuted a mobile app to increase accessibility and communication between the department and residents. MyPD is an app that allows users to submit crime tips, ask questions, give feedback and read the latest police news on their smartphone. Users will also find many other public safety tools on the app, such as crime maps, sex offender information and information on missing children. The Parker Police Department will

also be able to send push notifications to app users if there is an urgent or important message from the department. The app is free and can be downloaded from iTunes or Google Play. After download, users need to select the Parker Police Department as their local police department. Schools offer safety tips as students return More than 68,000 students are returning to school in Douglas County this month. The Douglas County School District encourages students to walk, bike or bus to school whenever possible to reduce road congestion with vehicles and lessen the chances for accidents in and around school zones. “While we ask that students of all ages pay attention for cars while traveling to and from school, we also ask that parents dropping children off at school and traveling through school zones use extreme caution,” said County Commissioner David Weaver. “Drive slowly and keep an eye out for children.” In an effort to promote safety in school zones, Douglas County traffic engineers, the sheriff’s office and the school district have identified and marked preferred routes to schools. Students who walk, bike or skate to school are asked to follow these steps: Choose a route with less traffic and fewer intersections and avoid crossing busy or high-speed streets and limit the number of streets crossed. Look for traffic at every driveway and intersection and be aware of drivers in parked cars who may be getting ready to move. Obey all traffic signs and signals and wait to cross the street until no traffic is coming. Obey crossing guards if present, and walk across the street instead of running, biking or skating. Safety tips for drivers include not double parking, not passing a vehicle stopped for pedestrians and not dropping children off across the street from the school. More tips can be found at the county’s page on school zones: www.douglas. co.us/road-work/pedestrian-streetcrossing-information/.

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4 Parker Chronicle

August 19, 2016

Body camera policy gets high marks

Parker police, ACLU join forces to create exemplary protocol

By Tom Skelley tskelley@coloradocommunitymedia.com Even before the 2014 shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and the killing of Eric Garner in Staten Island, New York, the Parker Police Department wanted to improve transparency by implementing the use of body-worn cameras. It took a few years to work out the details, but the department now has a body cam policy considered a national model, and civil liberties groups have applauded its work. Technical issues with the cameras and concerns about protecting officers and the public from invasions of privacy prevented the department from rolling the program out in 2014, but police Chief David King said it was worth the wait. “We understood the importance of transparency in building trust with our stakeholders and the impact this new technology would have well before” those incidents, King said in an email. “Although I would have liked to see implementation of our bodyworn cameras sooner, I am very pleased with the program that we have developed.” By 2015, technology had improved but questions remained regarding when officers could and couldn’t record their interactions with the public. “We really had to find the subject matter expert when it came to privacy issues,” Lt. Chris Peters said.

Peters sought an unlikely partnership with a group he described as a “historic enemy” of police departments, the American Civil Liberties Union. Peters attended a conference held by Chad Marlow, advocacy and policy counsel for the organization, and the two decided to collaborate. “He was very excited to help us,” Peters said. “He said that’s the reason he came to the conference, to help us get it right the first time rather than getting jammed up later.” They repeatedly revised the policy, but the result was something they could both agree on, Peters said. Even the skeptics were satisfied. “After meeting with the chief and talking with the (town’s) attorney and the officers on the road that had issues with it, they were all very happy that it addressed all of those questions,” Peters said. Peters’ partner from the ACLU agreed. In September 2015, when the policy debuted, Marlow cited it as an example for other police departments to follow, calling it “likely the best in the nation” in a news release. The Leadership Council on Civil and Human Rights issued a scorecard shortly thereafter, praising Parker’s transparency and privacy protections. The scorecard measures eight areas, among them public access to footage, availability of the policy to the public, officers’ ability to review footage and biometric use of footage, which includes facial recognition technology and access by other government entities to that footage.

‘It protects everybody’ Officer talks about wearing a body cam on the beat By Tom Skelley tskelley@coloradocommunitymedia.com Dawn Cashman joined the Parker Police Department in 2005, but she rotated out of patrol duty and was serving as a public information officer when the body camera program was implemented. She returned to active duty in January, and she said it didn’t take long to get used to using her camera. “The first week or two for me was just establishing a habit,” she said. “Once you kind of make it muscle memory, you’re just used to turning it on. But it was creating that muscle memory for me.” Once Cashman got into the habit, she said using the camera has paid off. Cashman was recently the subject of an internal affairs investigation after a suspect accused her of improper behavior. “It was pretty egregious; there were six or seven violations that they were alleging I had done,” Cashman said. “When I got a letter that said I was the subject of an internal affairs investigation, I was flabbergasted.” Her camera had recorded the entire interaction, however, and after watching the video, the person who made the allegations decided not to pursue charges. “I was like, ‘Let’s watch the video, everything’s there,’ ” Cashman said. “Thank God I had my camera on.” Everyone seems to be more aware of what they say and do when they know they’re being recorded, de-escalating situations that could otherwise get out of hand, Cashman said. She adds that the camera’s benefits apply to citizens as well as police.

“I think it keeps (suspects) in check,” she said. “I must say I have not come across this, but if an officer were to think about breaking the law or (committing) policy violations or something, maybe that helps keep them in check, too, because everything they’re saying and doing is on body cam. So it protects both parties — it protects everybody.”

Body cam continues on Page 15

COMM UNITY S

Parker Police Officer Dawn Cashman smiles at department headquarters on Aug. 9 as she shows how her body-worn camera is attached to her uniform. Photo by Tom Skelley

U

R

V

E

Y

Employee

TOWN HALL

(Open to DCSD employees only)

Thursday, August 18 6:00 p.m., Rock Canyon HS

Wednesday, August 24 6:30 p.m., Douglas County HS

Share your voice! Attend a Town Hall meeting.

General Community

The Douglas County School District is launching a community survey and needs your help.

Saturday, August 20

Join us at one of the following town hall meetings to help shape the survey, which will gather feedback from students, parents, staff and community members over the next few months. Your voice will help pave the way forward for the Douglas County School District.

Learn more at www.dcsdk12.org/community-survey

TOWN HALL

9:30 a.m., Rock Canyon HS

Tuesday, August 23 6:30 p.m., Chaparral HS

Thursday, August 25 6:30 p.m., Castle View HS


Parker Chronicle 5

August 19, 2016

A Douglas County home employs xeriscaping, reducing the need for watering and improving the region’s overall consumption of water. Per capita demand for water has declined ahead of goals set by the SMWSA. Courtesy photo

Water Continued from Page 1

Speaking from the edge of the pool at the Parker Recreation Center, Tarr said he, his wife and two children take conservation seriously. Tarr said their lawn is xeriscaped and they are careful about watering the grass they do have. “I have restrictions of my own,” Tarr said. “I only water certain parts of the day, I only water three or four times a week, there are a couple areas of our yard I don’t water at all.” Efforts like his appear to be paying off. The South Metro Water Supply Authority released its 2016 Master Plan update last week, and it shows a combination of conservation, improved efficiency and increased surface-water sources are putting the region ahead of schedule toward achieving a renewable and sustainable water supply. As of 2005, nonrenewable aquifers provided 57 percent of the area’s water. This dependence on a finite source, officials say, threatened property values, economic development and quality of life for residents — business owners and homebuyers don’t typically flock to areas without a reliable water supply. “Years ago, people were under the impression our aquifers were going to last forever, so Douglas County went around poking straws in the ground,” Douglas County Commissioner Jill Repella said. “Local community leaders became concerned that if current trends continued, it could affect future economic development,” said Eric Hecox, executive director for the South Metro Water Supply Authority, a collaboration of 13 water providers, most of which serve Douglas County. “People wouldn’t want to move to the area.” As the problem became evident in the 1990s, local governments decided to step in.

Reversing the trend It took a “fundamental shift in thinking,” Repella said, for water providers and local districts to get comfortable with the idea of partnering with the county government. But she said it was that partnership that turned a threatening situation into a promising one. “It’s been a great transformation,” Repella said. “A lot of good people in the water community have come together to make this happen.” Conservation by residents has driven down per-capita water demand by 30 percent since 2000, according to the report. And a focus on efficiency and supply by providers in the SMWSA has taken a few of the straws out of the ground. Future projections are that 78 percent of the region’s water will come from renewable sources by 2020, and that figure is projected to increase to 85 percent by 2065, despite demand increasing by 130 percent during that same time frame. A united approach Hecox credited the progress to an “all-of-the-above” strategy — everything from educating homeowners about conserving water to increasing supply by reallocating water from Chatfield Reservoir in south Jefferson County and building the Rueter-Hess Reservoir in Parker. Local governments have also played a role, Hecox said, citing Castle Rock’s turf buyback program that encourages homeowners to xeriscape. Hecox also pointed to Centennial Water and Sanitation District’s “water budget” system that increases rates for homeowners who go over a specified amount of water during a billing cycle. “The best incentive for people to really participate in water conservation is their pocketbook,” said John Kaufman, general manager of Centennial Water, which serves Highlands Ranch. The credit for the community’s reduced demand goes to resi-

Graphic by South Metro Water Supply Authority

BY THE NUMBERS Water taken from non-renewable sources

2005: 57 percent 2013: 47 percent 2020: 22 percent (projected)

2065: 15 percent (projected)

Water drawn from nonrenewable sources is expected to decrease by 4 billion gallons between 2005 to 2065. Two SMSWA members, Inverness Metropolitan District and Meridian Metropolitan District, are zero-discharge providers. That means 100 percent of wastewater in the districts is treated and reused for irrigation. dents as much as to the officials, Kaufman said. In addition to reducing the water used for landscaping, Kaufman said residents have increased efficiency by using fixtures and appliances like lowflow shower heads and watersaving washing machines. “Conservation and efficiency are, of course, two of the pillars of the plans to transition to renewable water,” said Mark Marlowe, Castle Rock’s utilities director. ‘The numbers are amazing’ Douglas County’s initial goal was to reduce consumption to 129 gallons per person per day by 2050, but the SMWSA report states that progress is ahead of schedule. The current average is down to 120 gallons a day. Parker’s water district manager, Ron Redd, also cited per capita numbers as proof of a shift toward sustainability. “The numbers are amazing,” Redd said, adding that citi-

Water used from renewable sources

2005: 30 percent 2013: 37 percent 2065: 57 percent

MEMBERS OF THE SOUTH METRO WATER SUPPLY AUTHORITY Castle Pines North Metropolitan District Town of Castle Rock

(projected)

Centennial Water and Sanitation District (Highlands Ranch)

Three SMWSA members, Inverness Metropolitan District, Castle Rock and Castle Pines North, offer rebates for homeowners that replace turf and high-water-use vegetation.

Parker Water and Sanitation District

Read the full report by following this link: http:// southmetrowater. org/wp-content/ uploads/MP-PublicationFinal.pdf. zens in the region have played a vital role in conservation just by being well-educated on the issue. “A lot of people in the communities in the area are just better educated, and that’s showing in the way they’ve been taking care of that resource.” Redd, who held Marlowe’s position in Castle Rock before transitioning to Parker in 2012, also pointed to the increase in surface sources provided by securing water rights and building Rueter-Hess as critical steps to provide enough water to match the growth in Parker and surrounding areas. ‘Tremendous progress’ The people of Douglas County may not read the 20-page report, but Marlowe said understanding the details of the plan isn’t as important as knowing that there is one. “The most important thing for the community to understand is

Cottonwood Water and Sanitation District East Cherry Creek Valley Water and Sanitation District Arapahoe County Water and Wastewater Authority Dominion Water and Sanitation District Inverness Water and Sanitation District Meridian Metropolitan Districts Pinery Water and Wastewater District Rangeview Metropolitan District Stonegate Village Metropolitan District that there is a comprehensive plan in place, a group of dedicated professionals that are working on this issue every day,” Marlowe said. Hecox stressed that the report shows the job isn’t finished, but the south metro region is making strides toward ensuring a reliable water supply for the future. “There is clear evidence that we’ve made tremendous progress,” Hecox said. “There’s more work to be done, but we’re definitely on the right path.” Back at the pool, Tarr said he’s cautiously optimistic about the region’s water prospects. After learning of the SMSWA’s plan, and the encouraging results in the report, he said he feels “pretty good.” And he dove in.


Real Estate

6 Parker Chronicle

August 19, 2016

Real Estate

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Parker Chronicle 7

August 19, 2016

Gold Rush Elementary kicks off year in style Classes for some Douglas County schools started Aug. 8

By Mike DiFerdinando mdiferdinando@colorado communitymedia.com Lauren “LoLo” Shafer had sung for friends and classmates, but never in front of the entire school. “I’m kind of nervous but, overall, really excited,” she said before the performance. “I have sung for my friends at like birthday parties and stuff.” The fifth-grader welcomed her friends, teachers and classmates back to school Aug. 8 at Parker’s Gold Rush Elementary with a rendition of the national anthem. Most Douglas County School District students returned Aug. 8. Those schools that follow the modified calendar went back Aug. 1. About 67,000 students attend district schools. At Gold Rush, Shafer was excited. “I’m probably most excited that I have one of my best friends in my class this year,” she said. “Last year, all my friends were in different classes, so I’m really excited that I have some close friends this year.” Her mom Leah, a professional singer who regularly performs at Denver Broncos games, also performed at the school Aug. 8, singing “America the Beautiful.” “Perfect timing, right?” Leah said. “With all of the politics that are going on, we really just wanted to honor America and let our kids know how important it is.” Boy Scouts from Troop 280 in Parker raised the U.S. and Colorado flags in a ceremony. Gold Rush Principal Jenny Brown said having the students and families involved in the year’s opening celebration was a great way to kick off school. “I think today is pretty incredible. I

ABOVE: Lauren “Lolo” Shafer sings the national anthem Aug. 8 at Gold Rush Elementary in Parker. LEFT: Gold Rush students line up by grade to start the new school year Aug. 8. Photos by Mike DiFerdinando

think today highlights the partnership we have with our families,” Brown said. “Kids are really taking charge of our opening ceremony, so I love seeing that.” Brown welcomed back students and families as well as the new faces in the crowd. She said the key to creating a positive environment and school year is making sure the kids know they are supported. “They know that this school is a really loving environment, where they have not only their teachers but the whole school community to support them,” Brown said. “We are all in it together.”

Do You Have Rosacea? Dr. Kimberly Neyman • Colorado Skin & Vein Vascular (Erythematotelangectatic) Rosacea: • Vascular rosacea is characterized by chronic redness and frequent flushing of the skin (especially with alcohol, spicy foods, or exercise). Occasionally, visible blood vessels may be seen on the cheeks or nose. • The most effective treatment for facial redness is the pulse dye laser. Various topical and oral rosacea treatments may help mitigate some of the redness, especially if bumps are also present.

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8 Parker Chronicle

August 19, 2016

Stricter marijuana ordinance ‘smart move’ by county New county law, among the strongest in state, aims to eliminate illegal grows

IN PARKER AND CASTLE ROCK

By Shanna Fortier sfortier@coloradocommunitymedia.com Thanks to the recently passed county law that sharply reduces the number of marijuana plants that can be grown in a home, a Highlands Ranch family is looking forward to a return to normalcy in their neighborhood. “It’ll be nice for my daughter to be able to go outside and start playing again,” said James, who asked that his last name not be used because he said he fears for his family’s safety. “We won’t have to worry about the smell anymore and the traffic at night.” James was referring to a nearby rental home on Bentwood Circle in the community’s Bentley Hills subdivision, which the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office reported to have 66 legal medical marijuana plants growing inside. State law allows a caregiver to grow up to 99 cannabis plants for medical use in a residence. But, in one of the state’s most restrictive marijuana-cultivation laws, the Douglas County Board of Commissioners unanimously reduced the highest amount that can be grown in unincorporated areas to 12 plants per household, regardless of whether they are being grown by caregiv-

In Castle Rock and Parker, marijuana cultivation for medical purposes is approached from a zoning standpoint. There is no specified plant limit, but the square footage of a grow area is defined. In Castle Rock town limits, the cultivation area cannot exceed 32 square feet.

The new Douglas County ordinance limits marijuana grow operations to 12 plants per residence. Courtesy photo ers, patients or for personal medicinal or recreational use. Residents around the county, like James, had complained about odor, late-night traffic and safety concerns. The sheriff’s office, which lobbied strongly for the reduction, worried about public safety issues and the larger grow operations being used for illegal purposes. “We have a public safety issue that we believe this ordinance will help us address,” said Chief Deputy Steve Johnson, noting such concerns as fires resulting from improper modifications to electrical systems, chemicals or butane gas stored without proper ventilation, as well as risks of robbery and home invasion. “We all still respect Amendment 64

and Amendment 20,” he said, referring to the two laws that, respectively, legalized recreational and medical use of marijuana. “But these loopholes and/or unintended consequences have put people across the state at risk of local activity.” The Bentwood Circle home, which sits about a half mile from an elementary school, is one of 40 residences the sheriff’s office has confirmed as legal medical grow operations as of Aug. 12. The total number in 2015 was 45. Besides limiting indoor grows, the new ordinance also prohibits outdoor grows, requires growers to live in the home, and requires tenants of a rental property to have written permission from the property owner before establishing the property as

In Parker town limits, grow space is limited to 150 square feet in single-family dwellings and 100 square feet in multi-family dwellings. a location where marijuana may be grown, cultivated or processed. “To my knowledge, this is the first ordinance in the state to ban outdoor grows altogether,” said Eric H. Bergman, policy director at Colorado Counties Inc., a nonprofit organization that helps counties work together on issues. “In that respect ... it is the most stringent to date.” The gray market Amendment 64, passed by Colorado voters in 2012, allows an individual to home-grow six marijuana plants at a time for recreational use. But Amendment 20, Ordinance continues on Page 9


Parker Chronicle 9

August 19, 2016

Ordinance Continued from Page 8

approved in 2000, allows a caregiver to grow up to 99 plants, depending on the number of patients and physician prescriptions. Senate Bill 14, which takes effect next year, caps the number of patients per caregiver to five and the number of plants to six per patient. It also requires all caregivers to register with the Colorado Bureau of Investigation. In Douglas County, the marijuana cultivation law passed Aug. 9 by Douglas County commissioners immediately took effect and means homes with more than 12 plants are out of compliance. It applies to unincorporated Douglas County, which includes the Highlands Ranch community. It excludes the towns and cities of Castle Rock, Parker and Lone Tree. However, Larkspur and Castle Pines, which also are incorporated, fall under the ordinance because Douglas County provides service and enforces laws and ordinances for these jurisdictions. The ordinance focuses on eliminating the illegal grow operations that have made their homes in Douglas County under the guise of medical marijuana growth. These operations are referred to as the “gray market” because caregivers grow some plants legally but also grow extra to be shipped out of state and sold illegally, law enforcement and county officials said. A July 22 report from Gov. John Hickenlooper’s office blames loopholes in

ORDINANCE DETAILS Grows must occur at a primary residence. Grow space is limited to 1,000 feet. Grows can only be housed in a single structure on a single lot. Grow area must be fully enclosed and locked, preventing access by children. The home must fully comply with all applicable building and fire codes. Use of nonresidential buildings is prohibited.

NEIGHBORING CITIES This is not Douglas County commissioners’ first attempt to reduce the impact of the state’s legal marijuana industry on the county. Shortly after Amendment 64 was passed — Douglas County voters rejected it 55 percent to 45 percent — Douglas County became the first county in the state to enact the amendment’s local control measures by banning commercial marijuana operations. That ban prohibited the operation of marijuana cultivation facilities, product manufacturing, testing facilities and retail marijuana stores. Amendment 20 and Amendment 64 for the emergence of the gray market. “There are, in short, few ways to prevent gray marketeers from setting up under the guise of a residential caregiver grow in order to unlawfully ship marijuana out of state,” the report states. Enforcing the law Moving forward, Johnson said the Sheriff’s Office isn’t expecting many challenges, but will have more enforcement power in shady situations. “When we approach these homes with large plant count, we will be able to take some enforcement action,” Johnson said. “We’ve been without any sort of power and had to walk away from these situations in the past.” Johnson and his team plan to work with the known medical-grow residences that are now out of compliance. They are assembling a team to go out into the comOutdoor growing is prohibited. No more than 12 plants per residence are permitted.

Douglas County is now one of 221 local jurisdictions that have banned both medical and recreational marijuana on the commercial level.

square feet. In Parker town limits, grow space is limited to 150 square feet in single-family dwellings and 100 square feet in multi-family dwellings.

The counties’ most populous municipalities of Castle Rock, Parker and Lone Tree have also banned commercial marijuana sales and cultivation.

The new Douglas County code limits grow space to 1,000 cubic feet.

In Castle Rock and Parker, marijuana cultivation for medical purposes is approached from a zoning standpoint. There is no specified plant limit, however, the square footage of a grow area is defined. In Castle Rock town limits, the cultivation area cannot exceed 32 munity and educate residents on what is and isn’t allowed in terms of marijuana cultivation in Douglas County. “It’s our expectation that they get in compliance as quickly as possible,” Johnson said. “The individual who may have 13 plants is drastically different from the home that will have to go from 99 to 12. There will be challenges for these people who have come to Douglas County and gotten a medical card to set up a homegrow with 99 plants.” Efforts to contact the tenant of the Bentwood Circle grow home were unsuccessful. No one answered the door at the home after a reporter knocked and rang the doorbell a number of times. Advertising fliers hung from the doorknob and behind a locked security door. The grass in the front lawn was dry and brown. Property owner Yvette Guichard, who was reached by phone, said she had no

Lone Tree does not have a marijuana-cultivation ordinance, but city officials have been monitoring what the county is doing. Now that the ordinance passed, Jeff Holwell, the city’s economic development director, said the Lone Tree City Council will discuss the situation and an ordinance will likely be drafted in the near future.

knowledge that marijuana was being grown at the residence and she did not give the tenant permission. “I think that’s important that the homeowner should know,” Guichard said. “Just because you’re renting doesn’t mean that you can do anything.” Guichard said the tenant did ask if he could make a few modifications to the home, including to air ducts. But she emphasized she didn’t know the reason for the modification. Violations of the new regulations will constitute a class 2 petty offense and be punishable by a fine of $1,000 for each violation for each day that the violation exists. “I’m excited,” said James, the Bentwood Circle neighbor. “It’s not just me. It’s every neighborhood in the county that goes through this. I think it’s a smart move that the county did.”

DOUGLAS COUNTY COLORADO

Compressed flammable gas products and flammable liquids are prohibited.

Labor Day

The grow cannot be visible from the exterior of the structure.

Douglas County offices will be closed on September 5 in observance of Labor Day.

Smell and odor cannot be detectable by adjoining lot, parcel or tract. Rental properties must have written, notarized permission from the property before establishing property for marijuana use.

Many County services are available 24/7 at www.douglas.co.us

Back-to-School Safety Reminder for Motorists Drivers please follow traffic laws - such as school zone speed limits. Pedestrians - please observe street-crossing safety procedures at all times. For additional streetcrossing tips and associated traffic information please visit www.douglas.co.us and search for School Zones.

Slash / Mulch Site in Castle Rock Open The Douglas County Slash Mulch site is open on Saturdays-only through October 31, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. A County-operated loader will be available to load mulch into personal vehicles. For directions and a list of acceptable items please visit www. douglas.co.us and search for Slash.

What’s happening with my County government? Our commitment to open and transparent government includes our online posting of information about all public meetings at which the business of government is conducted. To view agendas for business meetings, land use meetings and public hearings, planning commission, the Board of County Commissioner’s weekly schedule and more, please visit www.douglas.co.us and search for meetings and agendas.

Basic Building Permits available online This online application allows contractors and homeowners, in unincorporated Douglas County, to obtain basic building permits for roofing, mechanical, construction meter and window/door replacement for residential property. For more information please visit www.douglas.co.us and search for Building Permits. www.douglas.co.us For more information or to register for CodeRED please visit www.DouglasCountyCodeRed.com


10 Parker Chronicle

August 19, 2016

VOICES

LOCAL

Love, forgiveness work like new Wow, is it just me or are there more people asking to be forgiven and offering up apologies than ever before? We are seeing it in the news, from the politicians, to athletes, we see it and hear it amongst friends and families, I mean I have even found myself asking for forgiveness more and more and certainly offering forgiveness more and more. What is it that is causing such a surge of activity that calls for an apology? What is driving our behaviors, poor choices, and our use of an unsavory and certainly an unhealthy vocabulary? Is it stress? Is it frustration? Could it be our environment or the people we are hanging around with? Maybe it’s a combination of all of it at some time or another. For many of us, asking for forgiveness comes very easily, as we know when we are in the wrong. Our foundational belief system around seeking reconciliation moves us to take action and make amends for our mistakes. And yet for others, asking for forgiveness is one of the toughest things that they will ever do. They are so resistant to apologies and can’t seem to get the words “I’m sorry” to come from their lips. And even though they know that they are wrong, they would rather have a situation or relationship deteriorate before bringing themselves to a point where they could ever admit fault. Some people believe that “Love” means that you never have to say you are sorry.

Or they just use that saying as something to hide behind and as an avoidance mechanism. We are all humans and all have the potential to make mistakes, falter, and make bad choices. Our mistakes have happened in the past and we will certainly make more Michael Norton going forward. And WINNING even when we are in a relationship based on WORDS true love, I can promise you that offering a sincere and well-deserved apology will strengthen that relationship and bring deeper love than making the decision to remain silent. When appropriate, asking for forgiveness and offering apologies are absolutely the right thing to do. And just as important is to find the strength and love in our own hearts to offer forgiveness. Each and every one of us has already been forgiven. And yet, many of us who have received forgiveness still hold back and deny that same forgiveness to others. Some of us hold on to anger and grudges, believing that we are hurting the person who is trying to apologize. When in reality, the only person that continues to remain hurt is the person who is withhold-

ing the forgiveness. You may try and come up with many different scenarios where forgiveness could just not be possible. The sin or mistake was just too terrible to be forgiven. And I will share with you that in each and every scenario you can think of, the support and rationale for forgiveness will always outweigh the perception to deny or withhold forgiveness. OK, so maybe you can get close to agreeing with me, and you may say something like, “I can forgive them, but I will not forget.” If you can get to that point of forgiveness, you may as well go all the way to forgetting too. Holding on to a bad memory or situation, or harboring any sort of anger will only lead to reliving the event or situation over and over again. So learn from the mistake, set good boundaries so you can’t be hurt again, but learn to love, forgive, and forget. How about you? Are you living with a spirit of love and forgiveness? Is there someone who would love to hear an apology from you? Is there someone that would love to be forgiven by you? Either way, I would love to hear all about it at gotonorton@gmail.com. And when love and forgiveness are a part of our guiding values, it really will be a better than good week. Michael Norton is a resident of Castle Rock, the former president of the Zig Ziglar Corporation, a strategic consultant and a business and personal coach.

Kummer continues on Page 11

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Take practical steps toward senior years This article is for everyone, regardless of age. While none of us likes to think about getting older, it could be your siblings, parents or your grandparents who need your help in making good decisions. Staying at home and staying Patricia Kummer independent are two FINANCIAL different things. PerSTRATEGIES haps the best way to be truly independent is to be free of the house and yard work. Therefore, choosing where you will live should be determined by what is important to you. It is never too early to plan on how to go about providing for yourself or your loved ones. In almost 30 years of advising clients of all ages, I have learned a few things. The terms “aging” or “elderly” do not mean “helpless.” It does not mean they can’t think for themselves and it does not mean they are sick. In some cases those other things also occur but not always. Being retired does not mean you are old and being over a certain age does not mean you are no longer productive or able to work, volunteer and take care of yourselves. Having gray hair or wearing reading glasses does not mean you are elderly. I see people in their 40s who have both these days. The ironic thing is that a typical 40-year-old could live another 60 years. That means they could be considering “aging” for the majority of their lives. OK, so point taken, we start aging before we can walk. Now, how to plan for the inevitable starts with understanding the facts. Let’s take a look at housing. This seems to be the biggest challenge, especially for people who have not moved in a very long time. It is difficult to imagine living anywhere else. The sticker shock that goes along with “downsizing” or moving to a retirement community often deters many seniors from even looking further. A

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Columnists & Guest Commentaries

Zzzzz ... it’s worth repeating Zzzzzz. Is there anything better than sleep? Just before sleep and just after sleep are my two favorite times of the day. The name for the lovely period right before we nod off is not very dreamy. Hypnagogia. It’s the transition from being awake to being asleep. Coming out of sleep has a graceless name too. Hypnopompia. I dated a girl in high school named Gladys Hynopompia. As Craig Marshall Smith you can imagine, she was teased QUIET DESPERATION a lot. I heard that she married a man named Brown, and her disposition improved immeasurably. Before I rhapsodize about sleep, I want to express my condolences to anyone who can’t sleep, and to anyone who falls asleep when they wish they didn’t. Insomnia is no good for you. Narcolepsy is no good for you either. Remember the Dormouse in “Alice”? Sleep comes upon me easily, and I look forward to it.

When I was in college, I could sleep for 12 hours, wake, brush my teeth, and go back to it. Now I sleep for a few hours at a time, accomplish as much as I can, nap, and repeat. I am following Edison’s example. It’s called “polyphasic sleeping.” I don’t know who came up with names for sleeping and sleeping disorders, but there is no poetry in them, is there? When I am about to fall asleep, I purposely reminisce, and I schedule my recollections. On Mondays, I reminisce about my father. On Tuesdays, I reminisce about Little League. On Wednesdays, it’s ex-girlfriends. I try to avoid bad times and disagreeable people, because I know that my nightmares will take care of that. I sleep like the innocent, which I am not. But I am visited. A “nightmare” is, I am sorry to say, “a female evil spirit thought to lie upon and suffocate sleepers.” Mine knocks on my door just about every other night. I don’t know where some of the things I dream about are stored. They get all turned around, but they seem quite real. I wish it were more like Netflix, and that I could order up a romantic comedy. Waking is slow, and it usually takes coffee. Smith continues on Page 11

The Chronicle features a limited number of regular columnists, found on these pages and elsewhere in the paper, depending on the typical subject the columnist covers. Their opinions are not necessarily those of the Chronicle. Want your own chance to bring an issue to our readers’ attention, to highlight something great in our community, or just to make people laugh? Why not write a letter of 300 words or fewer. Include your full name, address and the best number to reach you by telephone. Email letters to letters@coloradocommunitymedia.com Deadline Fri. 5 p.m. for the following week’s paper.

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Parker Chronicle 11

August 19, 2016

Now is the time to roll out the rain barrels

Jessie Danielson

GUEST COLUMN

It’s been a long and surprisingly difficult fight, but on Aug. 10 my new law legalizing rain barrels in Colorado officially took effect. The new law makes Colorado the last of the 50 states to allow citizens to collect and store the rainwater that falls on their roofs. It’s estimated that using two rain barrels could save your home as much as 1,200 gallons of water per year. Now, residents across the state are able to use rain barrels to collect the water from their roofs to water their plants and gardens. Here are a few tips to help get you started: • Rain barrels of different shapes, sizes and materials may be purchased at many hardware and home improvement stores across the state, as well as online. • You may use up to two barrels for a combined total of 110 gallons. • The water collected may only be used on your

property, and may not be used for drinking water. • Your rain barrel must have a secure lid and screen to keep mosquitos from becoming a problem. Most rain barrels available for purchase include the necessary equipment. • To install your rain barrel, you really only need a gutter. But, depending on the gutters on your home, you may want to get a flexible gutter extension or additional materials that best suit your downspouts. • As winter approaches, make sure to empty the rain barrel to avoid any damage that freezing water might cause. I can tell you from my experience that purchasing, assembling and installing my rain barrel under a downspout was easy and didn’t take much time at all. From now on, I’ll be one of many Coloradans using rain barrels and taking part in this simple way to save a little bit of water. This is especially impor-

Kummer

Smith Continued from Page 10

Continued from Page 10

But, still in bed, with the dachshund at my side, everything is rosy, as if I have shaken the Etch-a-Sketch, and I get to start all over. That’s because I haven’t turned on the computer. That’s because I haven’t read the newspaper. Ignorance is bliss for five or 10 minutes. I have plenty of comfort and joy, food, and few financial worries. My love life is just fine. Then, gradually, the realities of existence begin to enter, and another day takes a familiar shape. “The (Olympics) stadium was surrounded by hundreds of soldiers with assault rifles.” There have been times when I couldn’t get to sleep because of ailments, problems at school, my father and mother’s declines, a busted friendship, things like that. Not now. I don’t go to the trundle with a heavy heart, except for the world, and for the United States. It’s not pretty out there. It’s good in here, next to my studio, near a music or two, aside a dachshund, and, now and then, a vertical German (Jennifer). Sweet dreams.

majority of older adults have not changed residences in more than 20 years (58 percent), and 75 percent say they intend to live in their current home for the rest of their lives. If you are unlikely to move, the next step is getting the home ready to age in place. Many older adults have been proactive in making home improvements, including 34 percent who have made bathroom upgrades and 28 percent who have improved lighting. Other options may be to move in with other family members. While this concept is assumed in many other cultures, it has not been popular in this country for several generations. Housing costs continue to rise, which may force extended family dwellings in due time. This could work well for three or more generations living in the same household as child care, home upkeep and working adults all need to be considered. The num-

Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@comcast.net.

AREA CLUBS High Plains Chapter, Order of DeMolay, meets at 7 p.m. every second and fourth Monday in Parker. With Walt Disney, Mel Blanc and Walter Cronkite counted among its alumni, you won’t find another organization for young men between the ages of 12 and 21 years that offers character building, leadership training, and life skill development more than DeMolay. Contact the chapter for more information. Email:highplainsdemolay@gmail.com or Visit www.coloradodemolay.org. Hilltop Social Club is an active women’s club that was founded in 1921 by the women of Hilltop, once a railroad town eight miles southeast of Parker. We meet the second Thursday of each month at the 1898 Hilltop Schoolhouse at Flintwood and Democrat Roads. Our diverse group maintains the schoolhouse for community events, and preserves the history of Hilltop. For meeting and event information, call 303-6601616 or email lorelei@llinwood.com. Kiwanis Club of Parker meets at 7 a.m. Tuesdays at the International House of Pancakes, 11355 S. Parker Road. Call Jim Monahan at 303-841-1560. Lunch Out Loud Toastmasters Harness those butterflies and make them fly in formation. Conquer your fear of speaking with the help of proven techniques practiced in a supportive group. Be our guest at “Lunch out Loud” Toastmasters, which meets from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. every Friday at Parker United Methodist Church, 11805 S. Pine Drive, Parker, in the fellowship hall, and learn more about how Toastmasters International can help you become a better speaker and leader. Contact officers@lunchoutloud.com for more information. MOMS Club of Parker East is a nonprofit club designed to support stay-at-home moms. We offer a variety of activities for moms and kids including playgroups and Mom’s Night Out. Contact membership@momsclubofparkerne.org or visit www.Momsclubofparkerne.org for more information. Moms Club of Parker Northeast meets at 10 a.m. every first Wednesday of the month except

for October, November and December at Parker Adventist Hospital. Meetings in October to December will be on different Wednesdays. Call Lisa 303-284-8028 or e-mail lrstehle@comcast. net. MOMS Club of Parker Southeast meets at St. Matthews Church on Mainstreet in Parker the first Thursday of the month. E-mail momsclubofparkerse@yahoo.com for more information. MOMS Club of Parker Northeast is a nonprofit club that supports stay-at-home moms. Join us for fun activities and friendships. We are not affiliated with any religious or political group. Contact Sara at MOMSParkerNE@yahoo.com. Moms Club of Parker West focuses on supporting moms and has a variety of activities for moms and their children. We believe being a mother shouldn’t isolate you, so mothers may bring their children with them. For information, email momsclubofparkerwest@yahoo.com. Montessori Parent Association meets at 6 p.m. every second Tuesday at the Parker Montessori Educational Institute, 10750 Victorian Drive. Call 303-841-4325 or e-mail pmei@pmei. org. Mothers of Multiples Society of Parker meets at 10 a.m. every first Wednesday at Crossroads Community Church on Parker Road north of Mainstreet. All moms are welcome. Mothers of Preschoolers meets from 6:30-9 p.m. every second Tuesday at Southeast Christian Church in Parker. Call 303-841-9292. Mountain Pine Woman’s Club of Parker meets at 10 a.m. the first Thursday September to May at the Club at Pradera, 5225 Raintree Drive, Parker, for a program and lunch. New members welcome. We give college scholarships, Parker recreation scholarships, pay for GED tests and donate to charities. We have sections such as crafts, card making, international and books. Contact mpwcparker@outlook.com or 720-3363447. Clubs continues on Page 22

tant to me, as we welcome 10,000 new Colorado residents each month and need to work to conserve our most precious resource. Conservation Colorado worked with my coprime sponsors, Rep. Daneya Esgar and Sen. Mike Merrifield, and me on this bill, and has a lot more information at http://conservationco.org/2016/07/ all-about-rain-barrels/ Thanks to so many of you for your outpouring of support for the passage of this bill. Now that it is official, I hope you’ll take advantage of the new law and get a rain barrel for your home. Together we really can make a difference. Jessie Danielson represents State House District 24, which includes Golden, Wheat Ridge, Edgewater and other areas in Jefferson County. To contact Rep. Danielson or learn more, call her cell at 720-276- 3468 or visit www.JessieDanielson.com.

ber of resources to support in-home health care is not sufficient for the coming need. Therefore, cost will continue to rise and services may suffer as resources are stretched thin. The costs of providing services for those who don’t have the time, expertise or ability to care for their own home are also on the rise. Therefore we see more rentals and multi-family dwellings designed to lower purchase and maintenance costs. First, determine what the needs of the family members are and research all possible options. Next, define the available resources to use for a possible move. That senior community that appeared very expensive may make more sense when you realize what you could sell the big house for and what the maintenance would cost over time. Maybe the adult children are struggling under mortgage payments and could use some help and have room. Perhaps it is time to clean out the attic, sell any extra cars, lawn supplies and put everything on one floor. With the number of

knee and hip replacements, many people have the need to have all of their living space on one floor. There are many considerations you can discuss with your financial planner, elder law attorney, healthcare provider and family members. Understand how these decisions affect the estate, taxes and assets. Consider selling items the kids are not interested in such as antiques, artwork, jewelry and tools. It is hard to imagine being somewhere else if the past is weighing you down. Time marches on, so putting off decisions to another day may limit your options. Patricia Kummer has been an independent Certified Financial Planner for 29 years and is President of Kummer Financial Strategies Inc., a Registered Investment Advisor in Highlands Ranch. Kummer Financial is a six-year 5280 Top Advisor. Please visit www.kummerfinancial. com for more information or call the economic hotline at 303-683-5800. Any material discussed is meant for informational purposes only and not a substitute for individual advice.

OBITUARIES HANSON

VALDEZ

MAYBERRY

Jon (Martin) Hanson

Patrick “Patch” Valdez 9/8/1987 – 8/13/2016

11/1/1928 – 8/13/2016

50, of Praying Hands Ranch. Son of Carl and Shirley. A 50 year Jubilation Celebrating Jon’s Life will be held at 1 PM on August 20, 2016 at the Praying Hands Ranch Arena, 11892 E. Hilltop Road, Parker. See ponderosavalleyfunerals.com.

28, of Parker, passed away August 13, 2016. 2005 Graduate of Chaparral High School, 2010 Graduate of University of Colorado. Son of Paul and Monica Valdez. Brother of Zachary and Liza Valdez. See ponderosavalleyfunerals.com.

87, of Parker, passed away peacefully on August 13, 2016. Loving Mother of Nicholas Norman also of Parker. Nana of Sara Crosby and Elizabeth Norman. Private Memorial Services will be held. See ponderosavalleyfunerals.com.

Dec. 27, 1965 – Aug. 8, 2016

BRADSHAW

Mary Mayberry

We now publish:

Harold Bradshaw

Aug. 12, 1933 - Aug. 8, 2016 Harold Bradshaw, 82 of Parker, Colorado passed away on August 8th, 2016 in Parker. He was born August 12th, 1933 in Milner, Idaho to Bill and Christine Bradshaw. He was one of nine children. Two sisters survive him; Eleanor Hewlett and Alice Lind. Also surviving are his daughters, Karen Colleen Bradshaw (Bohland) of

Parker, CO and Kathleen Ann Bradshaw (Harvey) of Arvada, CO, granddaughter Brianna Bohland, and three grandsons, Preston Bohland, Aaron Harvey and Joe Harvey. Harold loved family get togethers, watching sports, socializing with friends, gardening, fishing and camping. He especially liked fishing in Alaska.

Arvada Press, Castle Pines News Press, Castle Rock News Press, Centennial Citizen, Douglas County News Press, Elbert County News, Englewood Herald, Golden Transcript, Highlands Ranch Herald, Lakewood Sentinel, Littleton Independent, Lone Tree Voice, NorthglennThornton Sentinel, Parker Chronicle, South Platte Independent, Westminster Window, and Wheat Ridge Transcript.

In Loving Memory

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


12 Parker Chronicle

LIFE

LOCAL

August 19, 2016

CULTURE FA I T H FA M I L Y FOOD HEALTH

I’ve changed my whole identity looking like this with the long beard.”

Parker Mayor Mike Waid said he has been growing facial hair since the fifth grade. Photos by Mike DiFerdinando

Nick Mischel, Barber at Freddy’s Barber Shop

Tyler Johnson of Lone Tree has had a beard since the age of 19. He has been growing his current beard for four years.

Nick Mischel was an elementary school teacher in New Mexico before changing careers and becoming a barber three years ago.

The local beardsman Men put style, masculinity on display with facial hair By Mike DiFerdinando mdiferdinando@colorado communitymedia.com

A

s an elementary school teacher in New Mexico, Nick Mischel had to keep a certain appearance. “In teaching, you have to be relatively conservative,” Mischel said. “I was able to have a goatee, but not a full-on beard.” Three years ago, he quit teaching and pursued his dream of being a barber — a traditional barber who performs straight-razor shaves and does it while looking the part. “I’ve changed my whole identity looking like this with the long beard,” said Mischel, who works at Freddy’s Barber Shop in Arvada. “If I could barber in the 1800s, I would be right there.”

FUN FACTS

• 55 percent of males worldwide have some kind of facial hair, according to the History Channel.

• The last president to wear a beard in office was Benjamin Harrison, who served from 1889-1893.

• A thick beard can help prevent skin cancer by providing 50 percent to 95 percent protection from harmful ultraviolet rays, according to a study by researchers at the University of Southern Queensland in Australia and published in the journal Radiation Protection Dosimetry.

• The beard of Norway’s Hans N. Langseth measured 17 feet 6 inches at the time of his death in 1927. Langseth holds the Guinness world record for longest beard, which was presented to the Smithsonian Institution in 1967.

Parker Mayor Mike Waid said he’s had facial hair since fifth grade and doesn’t like the way he looks without it. “If you think about it, societally, beards are one of the few masculine accessories that a man has to work with,” Waid said. “It’s fun.” Eric Lough, founder of Denver-

• People with pogonophobia have an abnormal and persistent fear of beards.

based The Famous Beard Oil Co., said while beards have become more common in recent years, especially in Colorado, they are far from a new trend. “Of course, there is an influx of beard-growing over the past few years, but to me, personally, beards are always around and they’re never

going to go away,” Lough said. “If you look throughout history, in every old picture you see, there is a man with a beard.” Attention grabber Mischel said his beard attracts business as well as attention. “Since I have this look, and I’m interested in having the same look as my clients, it kind of advertises for me,” he said. “Lots of times, I’ll be at the store and someone will ask me about my beard and I’ll tell them I’m a barber.” Tyler Johnson, of Lone Tree, said he’s grown facial hair for the majority of his adult life. He has been working on his current beard for four years. He routinely gets asked about his look. “You don’t normally go and randomly compliment people as they walk down the street, but people Beards continues on Page 13

Keeping the beard healthy Beard oils help hydrate and keep skin and facil hair healthy. Eric Lough of Denver-based The Famous Beard Oil Co. suggest daily use for men with full beards. Courtesy photo

By Mike DiFerdinando mdiferdinando@coloradocommunitymedia.com In addition to being mayor of Parker, Mike Waid is founder of Extraordinary Beards, a local company that makes facial hair-care products. He started the company after making his own beard oils at home for himself and friends. “What I found, and it was a little disheartening, is that most products were either based on brand or smell,” Waid said. “There was Viking-brand oil and pirate oil and zombie baseball player. I’m not kidding you.” Waid said his oils are made with allnatural ingredients and are focused on hair health. Beard oils add shine, reduce dryness and moisturize skin and hair, the beardsmen say. A small amount can be brushed into a beard as part of a daily routine.

Eric Lough, who started Denverbased The Famous Beard Oil Co. six years ago, said beard oils are right for anyone with any type of skin. But it’s important to wait until your beard is dry before applying. “You don’t use a lot. You don’t want your beard and face to feel oily,” Lough said. “You use about a dime to a quartersize amount depending on the size of your beard.” Beard oils and other similar products have become more readily available in recent years. Beardsman say they are essential to healthy grooming and help combat the great enemy of facial hair — itch. “We have a guy in the Netherlands who is a professional Santa Claus,” Waid said. “He has a long white beard and he’ll buy 20 bottles at a time because his beard is his profession and he has to keep it healthy.”


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August 19, 2016

The power of story comes through in songs What was the last song you heard that really told a story? Scrolling through the radio these days, the vast majority of songs are about feelings — usually love, or lack of — or songs addressing a particular person. None of this is bad, per se, but some of the most affecting songs bring the listener into a different world and tell a story. Clarke Reader Unfortunately, for those of us LINER who find ourselves NOTES in little turns of phrase or scenes from these oftenlong tracks, story songs appear to be falling by the wayside in a pop climate that prizes inclusivity over nuance and bland sentiments over real storytelling. There’s a transformative magic about the specificity of language and detail in what are now referred to as a story songs, more familiarly known as ballads, an art that traces its history to Medieval times. They foster connection between the musician and the listener, even if

Beards Continued from Page 12

randomly stop and compliment me on my beard as I’m walking,” Johnson said.” I’m used to it now, but when I’m with someone who isn’t used to the attention they’ll say to me, ‘Does this happen all the time?’ And I’m like, ‘pretty much.’ ” Brad Wann, of Highlands Ranch, has worn a beard for more than 20 years and advises if you go down the path of look-

you’ve never experienced what the song is about. Consider songs like The Shangri-Las’ “The Leader of the Pack,” Bob Dylan’s “Desolation Row,” Johnny Cash’s “A Boy Named Sue” or Eminem’s “Stan.” These kinds of songs have the power of empathy — allowing the listener to relate to an idea or emotion by avoiding generalities, and going deep. I started thinking about this while listening to Car Seat Headrest’s hilarious and heartbreaking “The Ballad of Costa Concordia” in the car on the way home from work. The 10-minute opus is from his 2016 album “Teens of Denial.” The Costa Concordia was an Italian cruise ship that sunk in 2012, claiming 32 lives. The Car Seat Headrest song doesn’t chronicle events leading to the crash — instead, it focuses on the many mistakes we make in our 20s as we try to figure out our lives. Singer Will Toledo details a litany of his mistakes — to emphasize how he is still learning. Check out the questions: How was I supposed to know how to ride a bike without hurting myself? How was I supposed to know how to make dinner for myself? How was I supposed to know how to hold a job? How was I supposed to remember to grab my backpack after I set it down to

play basketball? As the song goes on, Toledo starts identifying with the captain of the Costa Concordia, which is where the power of story kicks in. Toledo projects himself into the mind of someone who messed up royally, not because he was evil, but because he made a crucial error. How the hell was I supposed to steer this ship? It was an expensive mistake! he howls, before the song crashes into waves of

ing different, you should always expect the unexpected. “Just this year, I was in a crowded coliseum, when two women walking by just had to feel my beard,” Wann said. “One actually reached out and touched it without asking. I’ve had total strangers ask to take photos with me.” Lough, a self-described beardsman, said people treat him differently because of his facial hair. “I get called sir a lot,” Lough said. “There’s more respect.”

A lifestyle In Colorado, full beards are a common occurrence. “It fits with the lifestyle,” Waid said. “When I’m out in the elements in the winter time, it absolutely makes a difference and keeps your face warmer.” Waid notices an unspoken bond with many of the men with beards he comes across. “Sometimes,” he said, “it’s just a look.” Wann agreed that beards and the outdoor lifestyle go hand in hand. “The more I did mountain-themed

Extraordinary Beards, a Parker-based company, makes beard oils and other facial hair care products. Courtesy photo

BEARD GROWING AND GROOMING TIPS Don’t wash your beard every day: “You still want to be clean,” Mike Waid said. “You can let the water run over it in the shower, but don’t get in there and scrub it with a bar of soap or shampoo or anything like that. It dries the heck out of the skin under your beard and beard hair itself.” A nice beard takes time: “You don’t want to look dirty. You don’t want to look unkempt and you don’t want to look like you just fell into a beard,” Waid said. “We get our hair cut for a reason. We trim our nails for a reason. You take vitamins and keep healthy for a reason. That should absolutely apply to your beard.” Trim judiciously: “Trimming is a delicate subject because people will get frustrated and go at it,” barber Nick

Mischel said. “Really, what they need to do is just take bread crumbs off. If they ever come at you with a full-on clipper, that is probably not the person who should trim your beard.” For a long beard, let sideburns grow: “For people who really want to grow it long, it’s important not to trim too high up into the sideburns because as it grows, it falls down,” Mischel said. Know the shape of your face: “People should know the shape of their face when they are growing out a beard,” said Eric Lough of The Famous Beard Oil Co. “They should know how it should look. Some men look great with, say, a medium-sized beard. But if they grow it out, it just doesn’t look right on them.”

CLARKE’S ALBUM OF THE WEEK Selection: Blind Pilot’s “And Then Like Lions,” released on ATO Records.

The result is as warm and invigorating as a blanket on a cool autumn day.

Review: Wistful and lilting, Blind Pilot’s third album is the perfect folk rock soundtrack for the end of summer and beginning of autumn. The group adds some lovely horn lines to its shimmering cascade of guitars and banjos.

Favorite song: “Which Side I’m On”

To feel the full force of song, a listener has be engaged.

Most comforting lyrics: “Don’t you doubt / Everybody’s seen the winter / Don’t you take the dark way out.” — From “Don’t Doubt”

guitar and reverb. By focusing on details specific to his experiences, Toledo invites the listener to remember his or her own mistakes and frustrations, before providing the vital moment of catharsis. To feel the full force of song, a listener has be engaged. That’s what storytelling does — pulls us into the life of someone else. Talk about power. Clarke Reader’s column on how music connects to our lives appears every other week. A community editor with Colorado Community Media, he sure doesn’t know how to steer the ship. Check out his music blog at calmacil20.blogspot.com. And share your favorite story songs at creader@coloradocommunitymedia.com.

events, the more I wanted to look the part,” Wann said. “From being a pack burro racer to reindeer wrangler, it just fit well.” In addition to being a good fit for the climate and character of the state, Lough said Colorado also offers a number of barbershops that know how to maintain and trim your beards because of their popularity. “I really don’t think I’ll shave it off completely,” Lough said. “There were times throughout the years that I trimmed it down pretty short, but I felt bad about it and grew it back.”


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August 19, 2016

Sports-themed sculpture offers moving experience “Balance in Motion,” a newly installed kinetic sculpture, has spheres, hoops and swooping arcs that refer to the balls, racquets and clubs that see daily use in warm weather at the Littleton Golf and Tennis Club at 5800 S. Federal Blvd. Sonya Ellingboe Sculptor John King of Lyons created the SONYA’S new piece that can SAMPLER reach 15 feet at its highest point. “The motion of the piece is a seeming dance of balance between the elements of the game,” King said. The sculpture was selected by the South Suburban Public Art Committee and approved by the South Suburban Parks and Recreation District board. SSPRD also owns King’s “Cornerstone Snapdragon,” which greets guests at Cornerstone Park at Belleview Avenue and Windermere Street. Jazz in the park Swing Shift, the big band jazz component of the Highlands Ranch Concert Band, will perform its final concert of the summer season at 6:30 p.m. on Aug. 20 at Civic Green Park, 9370 Ridgeline Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Free. Affordable Arts Festival The fifth annual Affordable Arts Festival opens at 9 a.m. on Aug. 28 at Arapahoe Community College (West Lawn) and runs until 3 p.m. Artists display work that costs $100 or less at this popular show on the campus at 5900 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton. (It may be an older piece in their inventory that originally had a much higher price tag.) Net proceeds for the festival go to the Arapahoe Community College foundation. Admission costs $5 at the gate, $6 online, arapahoe.edu. Stage training Young people who love to perform will want to register for fall classes at the St.

“Balance in Motion” by sculptor John King of Lyons was installed at the Littleton Golf and Tennis Club recently. The kinetic work reaches 15 feet in the air at its highest point. It was chosen by the South Suburban Public Art Committee. Courtesy photo Luke’s United Methodist Church Performing Arts Academy, at the church, 8817 S. Broadway, Highlands Ranch (303-7910659). The fall performance will be “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown.” Auditions are Aug. 30, performances Nov. 11, 12. Classes are offered by skill set. Also available: Glee Club, Acting for the Stage, grades 7-12 and Grades 2-6; Theatre Dance Grades 2-12; Theatre Tech (costumes, props); special classes for K-1. For information, visit the Performing Arts Academy website, www. stlukespaa.org. Watercolor workshop Registration is open for the three day watercolor workshop, Oct. 19-21 at the Littleton Museum, 6028 S. Gallup St., Littleton. It will be offered by Chinese artist Lian Quan Zhen, who will jury Heritage Fine Arts Guild’s annual “This is Colorado” exhibit, which will run Oct. 11-Nov. 3 at the Colorado Gallery of the Arts at Arapahoe Community College, 5900 S. Santa Fe

Drive, Littleton. Lian will demonstrate his method of integrating Eastern and Western art. Registration costs $120 for guild members and $165 for non-members. Details and supply list available at heritageguild.com/current-workshops. Workshop director is Mary kay Jacobus, mkstudio@ comcast.net. ‘History Lessons’ Artist/musician Reed Weimer and his new band, the Flat Out Five, will present “History Lessons” at 7 p.m. on Aug. 21 at the Bug Theatre, 3654 Navajo St., Denver Tickets cost $10, available at the door. The new album, “History Lessons,” presents 10 songs that tell the story of 10 paintings based on family stories and characters. 303-477-5977, bugtheatre.org. Thriller author Author Sandra Brown, a New York Times best-selling writer, will appear at Castle Rock’s Phillip S. Miller Library, 100 Wilcox St., at 6:30 p.m. on Aug. 19 to discuss and

Family Owned, Family Run

sign her latest thriller, “Sting.” Register at 303-791-7323 or DouglasCountyLibraries. org/NewsEvents. DIY Tara Rex of Taradaramadeit.com will be in the DIY corner of the Highlands Ranch Goodwill Store, 9579 S. University Blvd. on Saturday, Aug. 20 to show shoppers how they can use jeans found at Goodwill to create a new look. See: www.instagram. com/taradaramadeit/.

Conversational skills “Mastering the Fine Art of Conversation” will be the topic of a program geared toward developing face to face skills by communication guru Debra Fine from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Aug. 27 at Koelbel Library, 5955 S. Holly, Centennial. Her new book, “Beyond Texting: the Fine Art of Face-to-Face Communication for Teenagers,” will be available for purchase and signing. 303-LIBRARY, arapahoelibraries.org

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Parker Chronicle 15

August 19, 2016

e

The fear is that law enforcement agencies, the government, is going to use facial recognition technology to scan through our videos and locate people. We never intended to use it in that regard, but we never said that we wouldn’t, so it’s one of those heads-up things.” Lt. Chris Peters, Parker Police Department

Body cam Continued from Page 4

The report praised Parker’s policy for allowing citizen access to footage, even citizens filing misconduct complaints. Personal privacy protections and use of cameras to record “all investigative or enforcement contacts” were also acclaimed. Areas the report said needed improvement were details about when officers could review footage and rules regarding the use of facial recognition technology. “The fear is that law enforcement agencies, the government, is going to use facial recognition technology to scan through our videos and locate people,” Peters said. “We never intended to use it in that regard, but we never said that we wouldn’t, so it’s one of those heads-up things.” A July revision addressed that issue and spelled out when officers should have access to review footage, and this year’s score is even higher. Police may still retrieve quotes from

footage before filing a report in some cases, but officers suspected of wrongdoing or who were involved in a shooting or “serious use of force” may not view the footage before filing a report on the incident. The revision also directly prohibits any outside government agency from using biometric scanning to go through the department’s videos, Peters said. For the second year, Marlow singled out Parker’s policy as a national leader, adding that policies drafted by Commerce City and the Westmoreland County, Virginia, sheriff’s department were “inspired by” Parker’s policy. Marlow said many police departments take a “defensive” approach to body cam codes, focusing on “protect(ing) police from their own cameras.” Parker’s rules, are the opposite, he said, offering access to everyone affected by the cameras, from the officers using them to the citizens being filmed. “I would say that Parker’s body camera policy is a national model,” Marlow said. “It is so clearly designed to take into account the needs of everyone who will be impacted by the use of the cameras.”


16 Parker Chronicle

‘The Big Bang’ is world of fun High-speed journey through global history offers laughs

Large-scale works of art show built environment ‘Structured’ exhibit on display in Greenwood Village gallery

By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@coloradocommunitymedia.com Vintage Theatre has announced a fourperformance extension this weekend for the popular “The Big Bang,” so if readers are in the mood for something silly, check to see if there are any tickets available. Well-done silliness is a good thing! And this production is fast-moving and clever. The time is now. The scene is the wellfurnished apartment of Mr. and Mrs. Tim Lipbalm. The project: Obtain backers for Jed and Boyd’s proposed musical, “The Big Bang,” projected to run 12 hours (in three four-hour intervals) and cost $83 million — it will tell the entire history of the world! “An enormous opportunity,” the pair assures the audience! The pair of entrepreneurs (Ben Hilzer is Boyd and Joe Von Bokern is Jed — accompanied by the talented Blake Nawa’a on piano, Albert) begin, minus any costume at all, behind a pair of concealing boxes — playing, of course, Adam and Eve. Props include that apple and a wacky serpent and the script includes a pass at the “begots.” Egyptians, Greeks and Romans follow, then Columbus and Queen Isabel, as he pitches a voyage to the New World. In each segment, they manage to use apartment furnishings as costumes, including several well-chosen lampshades. (One immediately suggests the bust of Queen Nefertiti that has been pictured so often.) Act II begins with a scene in Henry VIII’s kitchen, where our guides recite the menu. (He was a big eater!) The cleverly written script and catchy score continue to 1595 and the Manhattan Indians plus Minnehaha and Pocahontas. (Don’t even try for accuracy! Just chuckle at these inventive actors.) A vertically challenged Napoleon crowned with a particularly silly headdress woos soon-to be Empress Josephine … and we visit Eva Braun in World War II Berlin and then Woodstock a few years later …

August 19, 2016

By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@coloradocommunitymedia.com

Ben Hilzer plays Queen Nefertiti and Joe Von Bokern is a servant in the Egyptian segment of “The Big Bang,” which is a history of the world since the beginning, extended a week at Vintage Theatre due to popular demand. (Through Aug 21.) Courtesy photo

IF YOU GO “The Big Bang” is extended at 7:30 p.m. on Aug. 19 and 20 and 2:30 p.m. on Aug. 20 and 21 at Vintage Theatre, 1468 Dayton St., Aurora. Tickets cost $24 to $30. Check on availability in advance of showing up at the theater: vintagetheatre.com or 303-856-7830.

Curtis Arts and Humanities Center in Greenwood Village has a light, airy gallery — a perfect setting for the large works of art currently exhibited there in the new exhibit, “Structured,” the first for new Cultural Arts Coordinator Chris Stevens. Three painters and a photographer have contributed related, but different works: Rick Dula, Sharon Feder, Sarah McKenzie and Dallas Perkins. The show runs through Sept. 16 and should appeal to architecture buffs as well as those who are interested in skilled painting technique and interesting composition. A statement by architect Dan O’Brien greets the viewer on the right. It sets the tone as it discusses “architecture as an object” and concludes: “Images of the built environment are a reflection of humanity. Sometimes we are pleased and excited by what we see — and sometimes it makes us pause to think about what we are doing … hopefully this exhibit will raise your consciousness of the built environment that we all inhabit — and help remind you that you too can shape that environment.” Nearest to the entrance, one finds bright, crisp paintings by Sarah McKenzie of Boulder, whose work captures architecture in transition — perhaps on its way to a different use … Sharon Feder’s more textured, more subtly colored palette gives a sense of aging to her scenes. She has

IF YOU GO Curtis Arts and Humanities Center is at 2349 E. Orchard Road, Greenwood Village (at University Boulevard). Hours: Mondays through Fridays, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Admission is free. 303-797-1779. experience as a set designer in her past, which may lend to a feeling that someone will enter soon. Photographer Dallas Parkins, a Montana native, focuses on the interrelationship of nature and the human-made world and his really large-scale works are “referenced from industrial, urban and agricultural sites in locations ranging from Europe to the Western United States.” They are fascinating. Rick Dula’s paintings are at the back of the gallery. Viewers may remember his wall-sized painting in progress on the second level of Denver Art Museum’s Hamilton Building when it opened. Museum visitors watched him complete the painting, which showed the interior beams and steel structure, done from photographs he shot while the building was under construction. “My current work focuses on a type of urban landscape, mostly in the run-down and decaying vestiges of an earlier time,” he writes. “I like to visit cities and seek out the industrial edges, where either side of the train tracks is lined with factories and plants near death. Rust, ruin and abandonment are my roadside attractions …” Walk into the Curtis gallery, housed in a turn-,of-the-century schoolhouse and see structures through the artist’s eye — it’s a delightful way to spend an hour!

Child Development Center Our high-quality child care center has openings for 3, 4, and 5 year-olds in our preschool classrooms. Visit araphoe.edu/cdc or call 303.797.5678 to learn more about the affordable, safe, and stimulating environment for your child.

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Parker Chronicle 17

August 19, 2016

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schneiderjobs.com 800-44-PRIDE Construction continues at the Parker location for Douglas County Libraries on Aug. 5. The new branch will feature an open design plan that will accommodate future demands. Photos by Tom Skelley

Continued from Page 1

Ancieaux said. The lab will have a green screen for making videos and digital resumes, and equipment to convert VHS tapes to digital formats, all free for anyone with a library card. Ancieaux and Long said they think patrons will enjoy the building’s spacious design, featuring shorter shelves for better browsing and wall-length windows to let in lots of natural light. The added room will allow for a 20 percent larger collection as well as more meeting and reading areas. “There aren’t a lot of walls, and that was done intentionally,” Long said. “I’ve worked in Douglas County libraries for 10 years. What I’ve seen is that we get penned in by the walls.” The open design also allows the staff to rearrange the space to accommodate a growing number of members or changes in format demand, Long said. “We can be as flexible as we need to be, to handle the changing needs of the community and the things

you can’t control,” she said. “Say 20 years from now nobody uses DVDs anymore… We could flip this whole space.” A rainy spring delayed construction progress slightly, but Ancieaux doesn’t mind that builders are a little behind their original schedule.

“You want them to do it right and that’s what they’re doing,” Ancieaux said. Long agreed the new building is worth the wait. “Honestly, the end result is so gorgeous,” Long said. “We can’t begrudge a little delay.”

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Continued from Page 1

hiccups like a renegade spigot creating a small stream amid the five-gallon buckets of paint in the center’s driveway. Mortensen, a Boy Scout and soon-to-be senior at Chaparral High School, organized the project for his Eagle Scout Service Project. But the promotion to scouting’s highest rank didn’t seem as important to Mortensen as beautifying the building. “Apparently, it’s some big award — everybody keeps telling me I’ll be super glad I earned it,” Mortensen said, as he stopped walking, briefly, to point out some worn paint on the wood trim. “You can see the ‘before and after’ where we’ve painted, so it does make the building look more appealing. It actually makes people notice there’s a senior center here. Most people don’t even know that there’s a senior center in Parker.” Jan Dengal, center manager, couldn’t agree more with Mortensen’s appraisal of the building’s façade. But she said a paint job wasn’t in the budget. “It was something that was badly needed,” Dengal said. “But it’s something that we really didn’t have the money for.” Mortensen first volunteered at the center, located just off of

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Trevor Mortensen, right, directs Brian Johnson during a volunteer project to paint the Parker Senior Activity Center on Aug. 6. Sherwin-Williams gave the center a 50 percent discount on paint, and the job cost the center approximately $500. Photo by Tom Skelley Mainstreet on Longs Way, when he was in eighth grade. He decided not to go on a class trip to Washington, D.C., and instead spent the week helping out around the facility. “That’s how I met this place,” he said. “So I returned here for my Eagle Scout project.” The easy part, Mortensen said, was enlisting the help, primarily volunteers from Parker’s Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. “All I had to do was pass out a sign-up sheet,” he said. Other volunteers saw a notice on JustServe.org, a website that promotes localized service projects,

and came on their own. The biggest challenge for Mortensen was directing the controlled chaos that ensued once everyone showed up. “I’m a really timid, shy person so it’s hard for me to tell people what to do,” he said. “It’s actually kind of scary for me, so that’s the hardest part.” Mortensen’s leadership paid off though, and 25 gallons of paint later, Dengal said the result speaks for itself. “They did a top-notch job,” she said. “It means a lot to us.”

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Amy Long, Parker branch manager for Douglas County Libraries, has a little fun in the children’s section of the new building on Aug. 5. Long said the design of the new building will provide more room for residents to stay and enjoy the space, rather than just picking up their items and leaving.

Register online for upcoming workshops:

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18 Parker Chronicle

August 19, 2016 19

Chayse Coggins leads her lambs to get weighed in for participation in the Douglas County Fair and Rodeo livestock shows held Aug. 2-5 at the Douglas County Fairgrounds. She showed three lambs this year, weighing 135 pounds, 121 pounds and 118 pounds.

Hailey Coggins hangs her ribbons on the stall where her three lambs were kept during the fair. She said she was very proud of how she did. It was the first time in her three years of showing that she won a reserve champion ribbon.

Chayse Coggins, 9, shakes hands with the judge after winning grand champion in the junior showmanship show with her lamb, Buttercup. The showmanship contests judge how youths handle their animals and their ability to control their animal while showing.

Hailey Coggins, 11, gets a pep talk from her mom, LeighAnn Coggins, before entering the show ring. The young lamb raiser said talking with her mom before showing her animals makes her feel calm.

The Road to Market

Chayse Coggins braces her lamb for the judge during the class five market lamb division. Her lamb, Charlie, at 135 pounds, won second place in the weight class.

Hailey Coggins prepares to show her lamb, Pickles, during the intermediate showmanship show at the Douglas County Fair. She won reserve champion in her division. Brooke Holschuh, 10, walks her goat, Tulip, to the show arena for the market goat show at the Douglas County Fair. She placed fifth in her market class.

Douglas County sisters complete their animal-raising journeys A photo essay by Shanna Fortier sfortier@coloradocommunitymedia.com Editor’s Note: Journalist Shanna Fortier began documenting the animal-raising journeys of sisters Brooke and Natalie Holschuh and Hailey and Chayse Coggins in May. This is the second of two photo essays, which focuses on their participation at the Douglas County Fair and Junior Livestock Sale. The first photo essay, published July 21, showed the process of raising animals for market. Hailey Coggins, 11, stood with her lamb, Pickles, outside the show ring at the Douglas County Fair and Rodeo Aug. 3 before participating in intermediate showmanship. Her mother, Leigh-Ann Coggins, reminded her to be confident. “The hardest thing was the competitive people and how good they are,” Hailey Coggins said. “But we did good after all.” Coggins won reserve champion for her showmanship, the highest place she has received in three years of showing lambs at the fair. “It made me really happy, knowing that I haven’t gotten a ribbon like that before,” she said. Her sister, Chayse, 9, won grand champion in junior showmanship with her lamb, Buttercup,

which is also the highest ribbon she has won. The Coggins sisters, of Sedalia, are two of 150 Douglas County 4-H youths who raised animals to go to market at this year’s Douglas County Fair and Rodeo. “These kids really understand animal husbandry and how to treat an animal,” Sue Weinroth, sheep superintendent, said of the 4-H youths. The Coggins sisters each showed three lambs. On the day of the market lamb show, the family started readying the lambs at 6 a.m. for the 9 a.m. show. That included washing and blowdrying each lamb and fluffing their legs. The main goal was to place high enough to earn the right to sell the animal at the Junior Livestock Sale. Market animals are separated by weight class, much like wrestling weight classes. They are then judged by their muscle. “These animals have been bred for market and if (4-Hers) don’t get them, they’re going to go to a feed lot somewhere,” Weinroth said. “But when they get them, it’s going to be washed and loved on and their lives are greatly enhanced by being a 4-H animal.” Market goat is a growing category in Douglas County 4-H and a great project for first-time animal raisers, Weinroth said. That’s why sisters Brooke and Natalie

Holschuh, of Parker, chose market goat as their first livestock project. At the Douglas County Fair, both sisters placed well in junior showmanship, with Brooke, 10, winning grand champion and Natalie, 8, winning reserve champion. In their market divisions, Natalie Holschuh’s goat, Zoe, which outweighed her by 22 pounds, placed second, earning the right to be sold at the livestock sale. At the Friday evening event, Zoe sold the animal for $600 to Douglas County resident Bob Snodgrass, who likes to buy animals to help local youth. “I was kind of nervous,” Natalie Holschuh said, after selling her goat. “But it was fun.” Both Coggins sisters also participated in the Junior Livestock Sale, selling one lamb each — Chayse’s sold for $1,750 and Hailey’s for $1,300. They will use the money to purchase their lambs for next year’s 4-H projects. But Hailey Coggins is not done yet. She will show her remaining lambs at the Colorado State Fair Aug. 26 to Sept. 5 in Pueblo. “As the county becomes more urban, we’re seeing a little less participation in the market animals,” Weinroth said. “However, I think it’s more important now to understand what a food source is and to understand that a child who’s raising an animal for market is making (the animals’) lives the best it can be.”

Brooke Holschuh watches as other Douglas County 4-H members show their animals at the Douglas County Fair. Earlier that afternoon, she won grand champion in junior goat showmanship. But her goat did not place high enough in the market show to sell at the Junior Livestock Sale.

Natalie Holschuh thanks Douglas County resident Bob Snodgrass, who bought her goat for $600 at the Junior Livestock Sale. Snodgrass said he likes to buy animals at the show to help out the kids who are showing them.


20 Parker Chronicle

August 19, 2016

Littleton art show features 99 works

Western Welcome Week event runs until Aug. 28

By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@coloradocommunitymedia.com The Aug. 5 First Friday crowd was shoulder to shoulder and lined out the front door as Littleton’s Depot Art Gallery opened its 33rd Annual All Colorado Show, which celebrates Western Welcome Week. Juror Rob Gratiot was talking about his final selection of 95 pieces for the show — after sorting through 458 entries from area artists. The show will run until Aug. 28. (A sleek painting in Gratiot’s distinctive style hangs just inside the front door — don’t miss it.) He awarded Best of Show to Centennial painter Judith Berlinger for her large oil painting, “Deep in the Woods,” suggestive of a walk in the woods after a spring snow. It is hung on the upper level of the baggage room, straight across from the door, so one sees it immediately upon arrival. Its lively pattern and contrasts set a tone for the show’s engaging assortment. Three-dimensional works are displayed in front of the upper level, where they stand out clearly with varied shapes and textures. (Hard not to touch!) First place ribbon went to Gina Bickerstaff for “Spring Sunset,” while second place went to James Bohling for “Lake Dreams of Sky.” Philip Williams received third place for “Grizzly Creek Spring Runoff.”

“Deep in the Woods” by Judith Berlinger, oil on canvas, won the “Best of Show” award in the 2016 All Colorado Show at the Depot Art Gallery. The juror was artist Rob Gratiot. Courtesy photo Three-dimensional awards went to Sandy Friedman for “Grid Flow,” Dorothy Peck for “Indian Pony” and Joni Leib for “Rainy Day.” Gratiot awarded honorable mentions to Nicholas Kremske, Steve Keating, Jenny Yu, Donna Lyons and Jeanine Strasia.

Careers

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IF YOU GO

Ave., Littleton, through Aug. 28. Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday; 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free. Next show: “Fall Into Art” from Aug. 30 to Sept. 25.

Careers

The 33rd Annual All Colorado Show hangs at the Depot Art Gallery, 2069 W. Powers

Advertise: 303-566-4100

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Earn Extra Income for Christmas. Castle Pines Golf Club, in Castle Rock, is hiring temporary part time, full time, and weekend positions. All Housekeeping and Laundry positions are available with flexible hours. Call 303-814-6252 for an interview appointment.

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NOW HIRING FOH Positions for new urban winery and Italian concept in Littleton Offering competitive wages in a fun friendly environment Send all inquiries to gabriel@carboywinery.com

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Parker Station Professional Offices in Parker needs P/T General Maintenance for 2 Sat/mo. Call 303-805-0047 or 720-412-1470 during business hours/weekdays with experience/availability.


Parker Chronicle 21

August 19, 2016

Cultural entrepreneur put Taos on the map Mabel Dodge Luhan is focus of new exhibit

IF YOU GO The Harwood Museum of Art is at 238 Ledoux St. in Taos, New Mexico, near the Plaza. Phone: 595-758-9826. Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays; noon to 5 p.m. Sundays; 5 to 7 p.m. on the First Friday (Sept. 2), with free admission.

By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@coloradocommunitymedia.com “Mabel Dodge Luhan and Company: American Moderns and the West” is the title of an exhibit that has taken over the Harwood Museum in Taos, New Mexico, an affiliate of the University of New Mexico since 1935. Readers in our area who plan a Taos trip by Sept. 11 should be sure to include a couple of hours for this opportunity to learn a bit of local lore. The exhibit offers a strong portrait of the truly exceptional Mabel Dodge Luhan, who fell in love with the location, light and color of New Mexico (and Taos Indian Tony Luhan) and encouraged a band of American artists to follow her there. The concept for this beautifully displayed exhibit has been on the museum’s agenda since 1979, when the first grant request was written to the National Endowment for the Arts in Washington. It is the largest ever for the Harwood, according to Director of Development Juniper Manley, who said “we couldn’t have borrowed these works 10 years ago.” Curators of the exhibit are MaLin Wilson-Powell, who is credited with bringing artistic vision through her experience elsewhere as a curator, and Dr. Lois Rudnick, author and pre-eminent scholar on Mabel Dodge Luhan. Arranged chronologically, the exhibit begins with a story of Mabel Ganson’s lonely childhood as the only child of a prominent Buffalo, New York banking family. Product of an unhappy marriage, she found her life interests through her second mentor, Violet Shillito, who introduced Mabel to late 19th-century avant-garde poetry, music and literature, according to a gallery guide produced by the museum. Two lifetime principles developed: “la grande vie interieure” (cultivating an inner life of spiritual beauty) and the pursuit of art “for life’s sake.” In 1904, as a young widow with a 4-year-old son, she headed to Florence,

Castle Rock/Franktown

Portrait of Mabel Dodge Luhan by Taos painter Nicolai Feccin, which belongs to the Anschutz Collection at Museum of Western Art in Denver, is included in the exhibit “Mabel Dodge Luhan and Company” at the Harwood Museum in Taos, New Mexico, through Sept. 11. Courtesy photo Italy. She met and married Boston architect Edwin Dodge and bought and restored the Villa Curonis, a former Medici palace. Here, she also met the famous author and hostess Gertrude Stein, who had a collection of modern art. During World War I, she moved to New York and became involved with organizing the 1913 Armory Show, which was a milestone in Modern American art. She started to host the Salon Dodge and became involve in social causes.

Castle Rock/Franktown

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

  Services:

Sunday 8:30am (held in Outdoor chapel)  10am (in Sanctuary) Children’s Sunday School 10:00am Little Blessings Day Care www.littleblessingspdo.com





Trinity

 

Lutheran Church & School

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 

 



Centennial

She married a third husband, Russian artist Maurice Stern, and sent him to New Mexico in 1917 to find new inspiration for his work. He soon wrote her to come “save the Indians, their art-culture — reveal it to the world.” She arrived in Taos on Jan. 1, 1918 and later wrote, ”My life broke in two right then, and I entered the second half, a new world that replaced all the ways I had known with the others, more strange and terrible and sweet than any I had been

Littleton

able to imagine.” (Quoted from her book, “Edge of the Taos Desert: An Escape to Reality,” 1937.) This is one of a number of books she wrote about her life in New Mexico. They are exhibited among the art treasures at the museum.) In June 1918, she bought a property at the edge of Taos and built “Los Gallos,” assisted by Taos Indian activist Tony Luhan, who became her next husband. The home was designed to be a meeting place for artists from New York and elsewhere and the combination with Hispanic art formed the “Southwest Modernism,” exhibited in this Harwood show. Works by Marsden Hartley, Dorothy Brett, Victor Higgins, John Marin, Andrew Dasburg, Georgia O’Keeffe and Emil Bistram are included in this exhibit. Other prominent guests who visited her in Taos included Martha Graham, Willa Cather, Mary Austin, D.H. Lawrence, Paul Strand and Edward Weston, Alfred Stieglitz, Ansel Adams, Maynard Dixon, Dorothea Lange and more. The exhibit moves to the Albuquerque Museum Oct. 29 to Jan. 22, 2017, and then to the Burchfield Penney Museum in Buffalo, New York, March 10 to May 28, 2017. The Harwood Museum of Art was formed in 1923 by Lucy Harwood and the Taos Society of Artists and is affiliated with the University of New Mexico since 1935. It was purchased by artists Burt and Elizabeth Harwood in 1916, when they moved from Paris and remodeled in the Pueblo/Spanish architectural style. Since there was no library in Taos, the Harwoods shared their private collection. The handsome adobe building was remodeled in 1937 under famous architect John Gaw Meem and became a base for UNM programs.

Parker

Parker

St. Thomas More Catholic Parish & School

Pastor Nevin Bass Sunday Worship: 10:00am & 6:00pm 821 5th Place in downtown Castle Rock Sunday School for all ages Free Home Bible Studies www.churchofpentecost.us Community Bible Study in Castle Rock will be studying 1&2 Corinthians this year starting on August 31st. It is open to all women from 18 years and older. We meet every Wednesday at Ridgeline Community Church at 555 Heritage Ave, Castle Rock, 80104 from 9:15-11:15. A Children’s program is available. Contact Linda Noe(303-809-3920) to register.

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

Welcome Home!

Weaving Truth and Relevance into Relationships and Life

worship Time 10:30AM sundays 9:00am Spiritual Formation Classes for all Ages 90 east orchard road littleton, co

303 798 6387 www.gracepointcc.us

tapestry umc JOIN US FOR WORSHIP AT THE WILDLIFE EXPERIENCE

10035 Peoria Street

9:30 am

Second and fourth Sundays

All are welcome! Tapestry United Methodist Church on Facebook

www.tapestryumc.org

Parker evangelical Presbyterian church Connect – Grow – Serve

Sunday Worship

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

Parker Congregation Beth Shalom Serving the Southeast Denver area

Call or check our website for information on services and social events! www.cbsdenver.org

303-794-6643

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

Sunday Services - 10 a.m.

Joy Lutheran Church

Ruth Memorial Chapel 19650 E. Mainstreet Parker, CO 80138 www.CSLParker.org

Sharing God’s Love

SERVICES:

SATURDAY 5:30pm

SUNDAY 9:30am

Pastor Rod Hank Joyful Mission Preschool 303-841-3770 7051 East Parker Hills Ct. • Parker, CO 303-841-3739 • ELCA www.joylutheran-parker.org

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


22 Parker Chronicle

August 19, 2016

Clubs

For more information about the guild and upcoming events, visit parkerartistsguild.com. Parker Artists Guild presents free art classes for kids and teen on the second Saturday of each month at Hobby Lobby at Parker Road and Mainstreet. Lessons and Lemonade classes for ages 10-12 are at 9:30 or 11 a.m., and the Teen Art Studio for grades 7-9 are at 1 or 3 p.m. Reservations required by the Wednesday before class. Go to www.parkerartistsguild.com and click on Youth Programs. 20 students maximum.

Continued from Page 11

“A Novel Approach” Book Club. This group enjoys great novels and spirited discussions. New members can join at any time. The “A Novel Approach” Book Club usually meets the second Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. in Parker’s Douglas County Library. For details or for directions to our special December meeting site, e-mail Renee Albersheim at realbers@earthlink.net, and put “Book Club” in the subject.

Parker Area Historical Society has monthly meetings and lectures, as well as annual outings and events designed to educate the public about early frontier life. Members meet at 6:30 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at Ruth Memorial Chapel, 19650 E. Mainstreet, Parker. There are some exceptions. Please look on our website www.parkerhistory.org.

OPOCS Singles Club, ages 55-plus, meets all around the metro area. Meet new friends. Sign up and receive a monthly newsletter that lists all monthly activities. Contact JoAnn Cunningham, membership chair, 303-751-5195, or Mary Riney, president, 303-985-8937. Parker Artists Guild meetings are the third Wednesday of each month at Deep Space, 11020 S. Pikes Peak Drive, Parker. A short business meeting starts at 6:15 p.m. is followed by an interesting and informative program on a variety of topics beginning at around 7 p.m. The mission of the Parker Artists Guild is to advance the development of fine arts in the community. To accomplish this the Guild offers instructional demonstrations, workshops and opportunities to promote all forms of fine art. Our goal is to increase awareness, knowledge and appreciation of the arts. Everyone is welcomed.

aviation, aerospace education, leadership and emergency services. The unit has an active ground team which teenagers and adults are welcome to train for and become members of. Membership is open to anyone 12 and older. For further information, contact Capt Glen Peters at 303-621-2182 or copierglen@aol.com. Empty-nesters, seniors, widows, any who want to keep in the word: Parker Bible Study (ongoing for more than 20 years) will begin the study of Romans in September. We are a non-denominational group focusing on our love for Jesus. To join, call Diane at 303-8418799 Parker Breakfast Club meets from 7-8:30 a.m. the first and third Monday of each month at Parker Adventist Hospital. The club is free and open to anyone. Contact Nancy Bruscher at 303-617-9082 or Nancy@GenerationstoGenerations.com.

Parker Bible Study (ongoing for more than 20 years) will study Hebrews and Galatians from September to December. We are a non-denominational group focusing on the love Jesus has for us. To sign up call Diane at 303-841-8799 or email Diane@Telcoa.org. Open to empty nesters, seniors and widows - any who want to keep in the word.

Parker Creatives If you are a writer, artist, song writer, comedian, painter, inventor, etc. and are looking for a group to just bounce off ideas, this is for you. We don’t want to critique, judge or date you, we just want a group of people who meet once a month over a beer to talk about ideas, new thoughts or share projects. We meet at 7 p.m. every third Wednesday at Elk Mountain Brewing in Parker.

The Parker Cadet Squadron of the Civil Air Patrol meets at 7 p.m. every Thursday at The Parker Evangelical Presbyterian Church, East Mainstreet, Parker.The unit focuses on

Parker-Franktown-Elizabeth Paper Crafting Club is open to anyone interested in card making and scrapbooking. We meet regularly throughout the month on various weekday

evenings and weekends. Club events take place at 7786 Prairie Lake Trail, Parker (in the Pinery). Contact Alison Collins at 720-212-4788 for information or find us online at http:// www.meetup.com/ParkerFranktown-Elizabeth-PaperCrafting-Club/ Parker Genealogical Society meets at 1 p.m. p.m. the second Saturday of every month at the Stroh Ranch Fire Station, 193100 Stroh Ranch Road, Parker. Parker Newcomers Club is a social club for women in Parker, Douglas and surrounding counties. Monthly coffee socials are the first Wednesday of each month. Monthly luncheons in conjunction with our general meeting are the third Wednesday of every month. Other club activies include lunch and dinner groups, potlucks, card and game groups, book clubs, knitting and crochet group, touring groups and more. Go to www.parkernewcomersclub. com or contact Kathy Diak at 303-841-8017 or Kathleendiak@msn.com or Linda Hailey at lindahailey@comcast.net. Book Club: Parker NonFiction Club members read stories about real people who made a difference in this world, or who inspire us because they overcame great setbacks in life. Some people wield great power or enlighten us about cultures or events in history. Non-fiction adds to your knowledge and increases critical thinking skills. History can be so much stranger than fiction. Our meetings will be individuals reading different books on the

RidgeGate August, September and October 2016

The RidgeGate calendar of fun starts here. Yoga in the Park

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It’s time again for sunset salutations. Join RidgeGate, South Suburban Parks and Recreation and the Lone Tree Recreation Center for free Yoga in the Park classes in Belvedere Park, at the corner of RidgeGate Circle and Belvedere Lane. Please bring your own yoga mat to the park. In case of heavy rain or lightning, class will be cancelled. No yoga experience is necessary. No need to register – just drop in!

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Each year, RidgeGate teams up with the South Suburban Parks and Recreation District to provide free, guided nature hikes throughout the spring, summer and fall. These hikes are led by professional naturalists from SSPRD, and offer insight and education into the natural ecosystems within the open space at RidgeGate, while offering a chance to get some fresh air and exercise. Hikes are free to the public – register at ridgegate.com.

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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 historic restoration of the ranch and its buildings, led by the nonprofit Schweiger Ranch Foundation, gives us an important glimpse into the settlers’ lives in the late 1800s. Today, Schweiger Ranch is open to the public for self-guided visits each weekend (Saturdays and Sundays from 1-5pm) as well as free guided tours with the caretaker of the property. Register for or learn more about these events online at ridgegate.com.

Sunday, August 28, 1-3pm — Free Guided Tour of Schweiger Ranch Saturday, October 8, 10am-2pm — City of Lone Tree Fall Festival

same subject, discussing what we learned, liked or didn’t like. Contact evelyn.poulo@gmail. com for a list of books and submit your own favorites.

toward graduation requirements. For information about a group at a library in your area, call 303-791-7323 or visit with a youth librarian.

Parker Piece Keepers Quilt Guild meets at 6:30 p.m. the fourth Tuesday of each month at the Conference Center, Parker Adventist Hospital. Guests welcome. For information call Tami at 303-346-8405 or Sandy at 303-319-2392.

VFW Post 4266, serving veterans of foreign wars in Parker, e Castle Pines and Castle Rock areas, meets at 7 p.m. the third Monday of every month at the r Pinery Fire Station, Community Room Lower Level, 8170 m N. Hillcrest Way, Parker. Go to a www.vfwpost4266.org. P.O. Box s 4266, Parker, CO 80134. On Facebook at VFW Post 4266, p Parker. v Woodworking Club meets at A 7 p.m. every third Thursday at N Wood-n-U, 10510 S. Progress E Way, No. 100 in Parker. Call t 720-851-4222.

Rotary Club of Parker Join the group for breakfast to learn more about Rotary and how you can participate. For information, call 720-215-7554 or e-mail info@parkerrotary. org. Club meets from 6:45-8:15 a.m. every Thursday, except there is no meeting when there is a fifth Thursday in the month. Meetings are at Parker Adventist Hospital Conference Center, 9395 Crown Crest Blvd. in Parker. Go to www.parkerrotary.org. Parker Scottish Country Dance meets from 7-9 p.m. Thursdays at Parker Mainstreet Center, 19650 E. Mainstreet. The cost is $4 per class. Call Sam Reynolds at 303-8051446 or sam@SpinwardStars. com. The Parker Sunrise Lions Club is a service club that supports the Parker community. Meetings are at 7 a.m. the first and third Wednesdays of each month at Fika Coffee House on Mainstreet, in the old section of Parker. Join us. We have fun while doing good. For information, contact Lonnie Farmer at 303-841-3332. Parker Toastmasters Club “Where Leaders Are Made” meets from 7-8 p.m. every Thursday in Room 206 on the second floor at Southeast Christian Church, 9560 Jordan Road, Parker. Club is open to all. For information, visit www. parkertoastmasters.com, or call Eric Dunham at 303-3866119. Parker Writers Group memberships and monthly workshops are free and open to anyone interested in writing. Our members range from new writers to internationally published authors. The group meets from 2-4 p.m. the second Sunday of each month at the Parker Library, 10851 S. Crossroads Drive, Parker. Go to www.parkerwritersgroup.org or contact parkerwritersgroup@ gmail.com for event details. The South East Beekeeping Club. This Beekeeping Club meets the first Wednesday of every month at the North Pinery Firehouse, Parker, at 6:308:30 p.m. We welcome all levels of beekeeping from no-bees to wanna-bees to tons of bees. Our meeting time is spent solving beekeeping challenges, networking and refreshments. There is no fee for this meeting and a lending library is available. The South East Beekeeping Club was formerly called the High Prairie Bee Club. For more information, call Louise at 303 840 7184. South Metro Newcomers Club We welcome women who are new to the area as well as women looking to meet new friends. We are a social organization with many interesting and fun activities. For information, email our new member chairperson at southmetronewcomers@gmail.com or visit southmetronewcomersclub. com. Teen Library Council. Douglas County Libraries’ teen groups meet monthly to help plan events, weigh in on library materials and serve the library community. Members earn community service hours

Words for the Journey 3 Christian Writers Guild meets from 9:30-11 a.m. Tuesdays at Southeast Christian Church, 9650 Jordan Road in Parker. a The group has a guest speaker from 7-9 p.m. on the last Tues- a day of the month at Barnes and Noble Booksellers, 8374 S. Wil- i low St. in Lone Tree. Visit www. wordsforthejourney.org then go to the Rocky Mountain Region o link for more information. b b The XY Zingers, a male a cappella gospel singing group, p meets every Thursday morning G in Parker. We perform all over the state, with 130 performanc-t es the past six years. See and i hear us at www.xyzingers.info. For more information, contact xyzingers@aol.com We sing for t t fun and fellowship.

Zeta Rho Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha meets every d second Tuesday from September to May at members’ housesv in Parker, Aurora and Littleton. w Call 303-841-0332 or 303-805-fl 5135.

G Support AA at Crossroads Community Church meets from 8-9 p.m. Mondays at 10816 S. Parker Road, Parker. Meetings are closed discussion. Open meetings are the first Monday of every month. Affordable Colleges Online has created a guidebook to help women find and secure financial aid. The guide includes a collection of scholarships for women, including due dates and award amounts; insight into the financial aid application process; and other funding opportunities, such as industry-specific scholarships and funding for special groups. The guide is available online at http://www.affordablecollegesonline.org/womens-guidepaying-for-college/. Alcoholics Anonymous. The Parker Group at 8 p.m. Thursdays at 18632 Pony Express Drive, Parker. AA “Came to Believe” meets from noon to 1 p.m. Wednesdays at Southeast Christian Church, 9650 S. Jordan Road. The meetings are closed and there will be a book study and discussion. AA “Living is the answer” meets from noon to 1 p.m. Tuesdays at Southeast Christian Church, 9650 S. Jordan Road. The meetings are closed and feature step study. AA “Living is the Answer” meets from noon to 1 p.m. Thursdays at Southeast Christian Church, 9650 S. Jordan Road in Parker. The discussions are closed featuring big book study. AA at Crossroads Community Church beginner’s meeting is at 6:45 p.m. Thursdays in the basement at 10816 S. Parker Road. The meetings are nonsmoking and discussions are open.


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August 19, 2016

Douglas County Schools Age requirement: Must be 50 and older Contact: Jaime Gotlieb, 303-688-7626 or jgotlieb@dclibraries.org South Metro Medical Equipment Loan Closet Loans durable medical supplies to those 18 and older in the South Metro area. Need: Volunteers to help answer phones, in three-hour intervals, mostly from your home or cell phone; work is done from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Other volunteers are needed to clean, distribute and accept equiptment from donors. Requirement: Must be 18 or older; periodig training provided as needed. Next session is in late July Contact: Donna Ralston, 720-443-2013, info@medicalequipmentloan.org or www. medicalequipmentloan.org. South Platte Park Need: Help with programs ranging from hikes, overnights, gold panning, sunset canoeing or HawkQuest events Contact: 303-730-1022 Sunset Hospice Provides end-of-life support Need: Volunteer training is from 6-10 p.m. every second and fourth Tuesdays; they also meet from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. every first and third Saturday Contact: Jami Martin at 303-693-2105 Volunteer Connections - Arapahoe County “Take an active role in your government, make a difference in the lives of your neighbors, and extend the reach of services into your local communities. Your enthusiasm, personal talents and fresh perspectives keep Arapahoe County First in Colorado, First in Service.” Need: Numerous volunteer roles for individuals, families and groups including one-time events and ongoing/weekly shifts. Human services, senior resources, open spaces, special events, etc. See website for complete list: www.arapahoegov. com/volunteer. Age: Ages 6 and older, depending on the opportunity. Contact: Nira Duvan, volunteer coordinator, at 303-738-79387 or nduvan@ arapahoegov.com Other: Arapahoe County Fair needs volunteers from July 28-31. Go to http://www. arapahoecountyfair.com/volunteer.html

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Paladin Rescue Alliance Christian non-government organization dedicated to rescuing human trafficking victims and building alliances to combat trafficking locally, nationally and internationally Need: Volunteers to help organize supplies; donations of supplies. All donations are tax-deductible. Needed items include cleansers, skin cream, ointment, disinfectants, dressings, bandages, rolls, sponges, pads, dressing tape, gloves, alcohol pads, asprin, Tylenol. Age requirement: All ages can participate. Contact: www.paladinrescue.org; Paladin Rescue Alliance, P.O. Box 79, Littleton, CO 80160; 888-327-3063 PeopleFirst Hospice Denver hospice Need: Volunteers to provide companionship to hospice patients and their families. Contact: Rachel Wang at 303-546-7921 Project CURE Delivers medical supplies and equipment to developing countries around the world Need: Groups of 7-15 people to help sort medical supplies; those with medical/ clinical backgrounds to become Sort Team Leaders; truck drivers to help pick up donations (no CDL required). Age requirements: Ages 15 and older (if a large group of ages 15 and younger is interested, we can try to accommodate different projects). Location: 10377 E. Geddes Ave., Centennial Contact: Kelyn Anker, 303-792-0729 or 720-341-3152; kelynanker@projectcure.org; www.projectcure.org. Red Cross Supports the elderly, international causes and social services Need: Volunteers to provide support Contact: 303-607-4768 or 303-266-7855 SMARTS! South Metro Arts Center Need: Help with public relations, marketing to public officials, fundraising, and special projects Contact: 303-790-8264 or gdnguy@ comcast.net Spellbinder Storytellers Connects the generations through storytelling Need: Adults to tell stories to children in

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Send volunteer opportunities to hharden@coloradocommunitymedia.com Gateway Battered Women’s Shelter Serves victims of family violence in Aurora and Arapahoe County Need: Volunteers help with crisis-line management, children’s services, legal advocacy, community education and other shelter services. Donations: Also accepts used cell phones (younger than 4 years) to give to victims. Mail to Gateway at P.O. Box 914, Aurora, CO 80040, or drop them off at Neighborly Thrift Store, 3360 S. Broadway, Englewood Requirements: Must attend a 26-hour training session; bilingual skills welcome Contact: Jeneen Klippel-Worden, 303343-1856 or jkworden@gatewayshelter.com Girl Scouts of Colorado Youth organization for girls Need: Troop leaders, office support, administrative help and more Age requirement: Men and women, 18 and older Contact: www.girlscoutsofcolorado.org, inquiry@gscolorado.org or 1-877-404-5708 GraceFull Community Cafe Provides a place in Littleton where people of all backgrounds can gather, eat well and be inspired to give back. Cafe is open for breakfast and lunch, from 6:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday to Saturday. A partner of the GraceFull Foundation. Need: Opportunities for food preparation, guest service, cleaning and dishwashing. Location: 5610 Curtice St., Littleton Contact: Sign up for volunteer opportunities at http://gracefullcafe.com/volunteer/ Habitat ReStore Nonprofit home improvement stores and donation centers Need: Volunteers for Wheat Ridge, Denver or Littleton Habitat ReStores, helping with the cash register, dock and warehouse floor Contact: 303-996-5468, email Alice Goble at Alice@habitatmetrodenver.org The Children’s Hospital of Denver,

Highlands Ranch chapter Contact: 303-861-6887 Hospice at Home Need: Volunteers help patients and their families with respite care, videotaping, massage and other tasks. Home study training is available. Contact 303-698-6404 Hospice of Covenant Care Nonprofit, faith-based hospice Need: Volunteers to support patients and families Contact: 303-731-8039 Lutheran Family Services: Cultural Mentoring Program We welcome refugee families and help them adjust to their new home Need: People who can commit to working with refugees on skills for self-sufficiency and helping them learn about their new home. Requirements: Must be 18 or older (although children of volunteers are welcome to participate). One-hour training and orientation required. Contact: David Cornish, 303-225-0199 or david.cornish@lfsrm.org; go to www. lfsrm.org. Meals on Wheels Delivers meals to residents in Englewood, southern Jefferson County and western Arapahoe County Need: Drivers to deliver meals; volunteers to help prepare, box and label meals Requirements: Must dedicate one to two hours a week Contact: Phil or Mary at 303-798-7642 (from 8 a.m. to noon Mondays through Fridays) Neighbor Network Nonprofit that helps older adults stay independent. Serves all of Douglas County Need: Volunteers who can provide transportation, light housekeeping, handyman and companion services to seniors. Requirements: Must be at least 21 years old and have a valid driver’s license and auto insurance. Contact: 303-814-4300, loday@douglas. co.us or dcneighbornetwork.org. Nonprofit Wildlife Group Works to protect native wildlife in Greenwood Village Need: Volunteers help protect wildlife Requirements: Must work two hours per week, schedule flexible Contact: info@wildearthguardians.org


24 Parker Chronicle

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August 19, 2016

THINGS TO DO TOP 5

THEATER/FILM

Theater Auditions Spotlight Performing Arts Center, 6328 E. County Line Road, Highlands Ranch, will have auditions for several upcoming musical theater classes. For tuition rates and information, go to www.spotlightperformers.com. Upcoming auditions include: “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 23. This 15-week class for ages 7-18 years meets from 5:30-7 p.m. Tuesdays. “Phantom of the Opera,” 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 24. This advanced class for grades 6-12 meets from 1:30-4 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays. “High School Musical,” 4 p.m. Friday, Sept. 16. This 15-week class for ages 7-18 years meets from 4-5:30 p.m. Fridays. Legend Theater Production Legendary Theatre Company presents “Proof,” a play by David Auburn, at 7 p.m. Aug. 25-27, and at 2 p.m. Aug. 27, at Legend High School. Tickets available at the door or online at seatyourself.biz/legendtitans. Not recommended for children younger than 13.

Family River Hike Explore the South Platte River as a family with Audubon staff and naturalist volunteers from noon to 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 21, at Audubon Center at Chatfield. Experience the birds and aquatic wildlife that live near one of Denver’s most iconic waterways. Search for tracks, skulls and scat just beyond the river’s edge. Participants will enjoy river races, beaver dam building and the scenery. Program is dependent on safe water levels and river flow, so keep an eye on weather conditions. A change of clothes is recommended. Registration is required. Go to www.denveraudubon.org/programs/ familyriverhikereg-2/. Minimum age to participate is 8 years old. History of the Stock Show Join Dr. Colorado, aka author and professor Tom Noel, for a talk about the National Western Stock Show. Noel also will discuss his book “Riding High: Colorado Ranchers and 100 Years of the National Western Stock Show.” Program is at 2 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 21, at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. It is part of the History of Ranching in Douglas County series, sponsored by the Douglas County History Research Center. Registration is required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www. DouglasCountyLibraries.org. Frontier Doctor at Timberline: Dr. Charles Fox Gardiner Step back in time to experience the exciting life of frontier doctor, Charles Fox Gardiner. Presented by popular storyteller John Stansfield, program runs from 2-3 p.m. Monday, Aug. 22, at Bemis Public Library, 6014 S. Datura St., Littleton. Gardiner’s story began in 1883 when the young doctor from Manhattan took a train west to tend to miners in Crested Butte and cowboys in the remote cattle camps near Meeker. Gardiner eventually moved his practice to Colorado Springs where he cared for everyone from General Palmer, the city’s founder, to its poorest residents, especially tubercular patients. For more than thirty-five years, storyteller and award winning author John Stansfield has recounted stories from the American West and the world; he has shared stories with more than a million people nationwide and is the founder of the Rocky Mountain Storytelling Festival. Call 303-795-3961. Roxborough History Authors Flo Tonelli and Char Nauman will talk about Roxborough’s history, geologic wonders and wilderness, all featured in their book “Images of America: Roxborough,” at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 25, at the Roxborough Library, 8357 N. Rampart Range Road. Books will be on sale at the event, and a book signing will follow the authors’ talk. Registration is required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www.DouglasCountyLibraries.org. Music and a Movie Enjoy an evening of live music by The Modniks, a 60s-era cover band, followed by a screening of “The Princess Bride.” Event runs from 7-10 p.m. Friday, Aug. 26, at Centennial Center Park, 13050 E. Peakview Ave., Centennial. Kids can enjoy a free bounce house. Food and beverages will be available for purchase. Live music begins at 7 p.m. and movie starts at dusk. Event has lawn seating, so bring chairs and blankets. FIND MORE THINGS TO DO ONLINE ColoradoCommunityMedia.com/events

Theatre of Dreams Shows Shoot Ogawa, stage magician of the year, performs at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Aug. 26-27 at Theatre of Dreams, 735 Park St., Suites C & D, Castle Rock. Ogawa uses simple props - rope, cards, handkerchiefs and coins - but what he does with them will leave the audience spellbound. This family show is suitable for all ages. Las Vegas illusionists Kyle and Mistie Knight perform at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 4-6 at Theatre of Dreams, 735 Park St., Suites C & D, Castle Rock. The husband and wife team customizes its show depending on the demographic. Reservations required; go to http://tickets.amazingshows.com or call 303-660-6799.

MUSIC/CONCERTS

Colorado Jazz Repertory Orchestra Concert The Colorado Jazz Repertory Orchestra will perform from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 19, at the Littleton Jazz Festival at the Town Hall Arts Center, 2450 W. Main St., Littleton. Hear classic Big Band selections. Call 303-794- 2787 or go to http://coloradojazz.org. Street Fair, Concerts Celebrate Park Meadows’ 20th anniversary with a street fair and concerts Friday, Aug. 19, and Saturday, Aug. 20. Firefall performs Aug. 19 on the outdoor stage in the Vistas as Par Meadows. On Aug. 20, grab your beach towels and enjoy a California Dreamin’ concert with tributes to the Beach Boys, Jimmy Buffet and more. Enjoy balloon twisters, caricature artists, food trucks, a beer garden, HawkQuest, a giant photo booth and more. Go to www.parkmeadows. com/events. Hudson Gardens Summer Concerts Hudson Gardens presents its 2016 summer concert series at 6115 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton. Parking is free. Tickets on sale at www.altitudetickets.com. Prices and show times vary by artist. For information, go to www.hudsongardens. org or call 303-797-8565. Concert lineup: Sunday, Aug. 21, Gin Blossoms with special guest Tonic; Sunday, Aug. 28, Michael McDonald; Sunday, Sept. 4, Foreigner; and Sunday, Sept. 11, Kenny Loggins. Adventures in Dance Learn a number of dances at Adventures in Dance, 1500 W. Littleton Blvd., Littleton. Classes are for adults. Go to www.adventuresindance.com for cost information and to sign up. Class schedule includes Lindy hop swing from 7-8 p.m. Tuesdays through Aug. 23. Intermediate swing class from 8-9 p.m. Tuesdays through Aug. 23. Intermediate salsa from 7-8 p.m. Wednesdays through Aug. 24. Argentine tango from 7-8 p.m. Thursdays through Aug. 25. Line dance aerobics from 7:30-8:30 p.m. Mondays through Aug. 29.

ART

Memorial Lights Project Photographer Mark Mennie’s solemn tribute to Air Medical’s fallen heroes opens the 2016 Air Medical Memorial Remembrance Ceremony, which is Friday, Aug. 19, and Saturday, Aug. 20, at the future site of the Air Medical Memorial, 10901 W. Toller Drive, Littleton. Mennie’s traveling memorial includes more than 400 modest flickering tea lights, which are solemnly placed by hand recognizing the individual sacrifices given to the air medical industry since the early 1970s. This year’s tribute will pay special respect last year’s tragic crash of Flight For Life Colorado’s helicopter, including the loss of their beloved pilot Patrick Mahany and the continuing bold recovery of flight nurse Dave Repsher. Additionally, the recent tragic loss of Cal-Ore Life Flight on July 29 is being recognized. In support of their Air Ambulance community, AirLife Denver will coordinate with the West Metro FD to land an aircraft at the site prior to the volunteers’ placement of the lights. Go to airmedicalmemorial.com.

EVENTS

Nocturnal Wildlife Hike Join the Audubon Nature Center for its popular Bats, Beavers, and More! Program from 7-9 p.m. Friday, Aug. 19, at the Audubon Center at Chatfield, 11280 S. Waterton Road, Littleton. Listen for coyote calls, check out the bat houses around the ponds, and see if the beaver are making progress on their South Platte River dam. Topics differ each date and highlight the curious critters of the Colorado night. Registration required at www.denveraudubon.org, by calling 303973-9530, or via email at info@denveraudubon.org. Author Visit Bestselling author Sandra Brown will talk about her latest thriller “Sting” at 6:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 19, at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. Book signing will follow Brown’s talk, and books will be for sale courtesy of Tattered Cover Book Store. Registration is required at 303-791-7323 or DouglasCountyLibraries.org. National Parks Celebration Explore the National Park System at 100 Years of America’s National Parks at 1 p.m. Friday, Aug. 19, at the James H. LaRue Library, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Presented by Larry Walling of Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at DU, this program for adults provides a quick overview of America’s national parks, 100 years and going strong. Registration is required at 303-791-7323 or DouglasCountyLibraries.org. Veterans Fun Shoot VFW Post 10649, which serves Elbert, Douglas and Elizabeth, presents the veterans fun shoot from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 20, at the Family Shooting Center at Cherry Creek State Park. East entrance is at Parker Road and LeHigh Avenue (3800 S. Parker Road); West entrance is at Dayton Street and Union (4700 S. Dayton St.). Proceeds will benefit the Post and the children’s fund. Cost is $40 for 50 rounds of trap or 50 rounds of 5 stand. Shooters may enter more than one event. Veterans, firefighters and police officers get $5 discount. Gun rental is available and ammo is available on site. Eye and ear protection required. No experience necessary; certified safety instructors on site. Corporate sponsorships available. Contact Chip Allen at 303-947-2109 or

email loanchip@hotmail.com. Adoption Day The Audubon Society and the mobile adoption unit of the Humane Society plans an adoption day from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 20, at the Audubon Nature Center at Chatfield, 11280 S. Waterton Road, Littleton. See what critters are up for adoption, learn about the importance of keeping cats indoors to help protect wild birds, find out the benefits of the Chatfield State Park Dog Off-Leash Area, or take a nature hike with your pet around the beautiful ponds. Registration not required. ‘Walk in the Woods’ Join a book discussion of “A Walk in the Woods” by Bill Bryson at 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 20, at the James H. LaRue Library, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Library staff will lead a spirited discussion of the book, which was the feature read of DCL’s 2016 One Book, One Walk program, and offer fun facts about the Appalachian Trail. Perfect for hiking enthusiasts and book clubs. Registration is required at 303-791-7323 or DouglasCountyLibraries.org. Hands-On Arts and Crafts Drop in for fun at the Kids’ Zone, where kids ages 6-12 can participate in hands-on activities such as creating an origami masterpiece or trying the latest tech gadget. Time is 4 p.m. Monday, Aug. 22, at the Parker Library, 10851 S. Crossroads Drive. No registration required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www. DouglasCountyLibraries.org. Iraq: 25 Years Later Twenty-five years ago, the United States began Operation Desert Storm in response to Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait. Twelve years later, the second Gulf War led to the U.S. invasion of Iraq and toppled the government of Saddam Hussein. Today, Iraq is still attempting to maintain itself as a stable, self-governing nation. This task has become more difficult as the Sunni extremist group ISIS has mounted a serious military offensive against the Shia led government of Iraq. The regional roots and implications of this conflict are extensive and potentially disastrous to stability in this part of the world. Join Active Minds from 6-8 p.m. Monday, Aug. 22, as we examine the past, present, and potential future of this volatile area in crisis. Program takes place at Charter Financial Resources Memory Lane, 9335 Commerce Center St., B5, Highlands Ranch. Call 303-468-2820 to RSVP. Author, Writing Coach Castle Rock Writers Group welcomes author and creative writing coach Deb McLeod, BA, MFA, at its next workshop at 6:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 22, at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. The topic is Character Transformation by the Beat, which helps with genre fiction, literary fiction and memoir. Group is open to all writers, in the Front Range and beyond. Contact Alice Aldridge-Dennis at 303-521-8615. The Refugee Crisis Millions of refugees are fleeing from danger zones in Syria, Iraq, and elsewhere, creating a humanitarian crisis of epic proportions. Many are dying in transit and the nations receiving them are being overwhelmed. Join Active Minds from 1-2 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 25, as we explore how the migrants and the international community are struggling to cope with these challenges. Program takes place at the Castle Rock Senior Center, 2323 Woodlands Blvd., Castle Rock. Call 303688-9498 to RSVP. Global Pandemics Concern over the recent spread of the mosquito-borne Zika virus has alarmed health officials throughout the world. While Zika itself is rarely a serious illness, the World Health Organization is studying whether the virus is causing an increase in serious birth defects and a rare neurological disease. The outbreak is focused in Central and South America, raising additional concerns about the summer Olympics in Brazil. Join Active Minds from 10-11 a.m. Friday, Aug. 26, as we seek to understand the threats by examining both the science of how diseases spread as well as the history of pandemics. Program takes place at Malley Senior Center, 3380 S. Lincoln St., Englewood. Call 303-762-2660 to RSVP. If parking in the lot, get pass from inside center. Fashion Show Get a glimpse of the latest trends in fashion at 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 27, in the Macy’s Court at Park Meadows. What’s your personal style? Follow the fashion show and get the opportunity to walk the runway and show off your style. Go to www.parkmeadows.com/events. Scavenger Hunt Parker Quest will take you on a scavenger-hunt-style tour through historic downtown Parker at 9 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 27. The journey begins at the Parker Schoolhouse, 19650 E. Mainstreet, where families, teams and individuals receive a passport of clues to solve. The Quest is a partnership among Douglas County Libraries, the Town of Parker, Parker Area Historical Society, and Parker Arts. Registration is required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www. DouglasCountyLibraries.org. Walking Tour Castle Rock Museum plans a walking tour of historic Castle Rock at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 27. The 45-minute tour begins at The Courtyard on Perry Street, between Third and Fourth streets, and concludes at the museum, 420 Elbert St. Group tours are available by reservation. Call 303-814-3164 or email museum@castlerockhistoricalsociety.org. 100 Years of Birds Aug. 16 marks the centennial anniversary of the Migratory Bird Treaty signed between the United States and Great Britain. This legislation has protected many bird species from extinction over the past century. The Audubon Society of Greater Denver will celebrate this legislation Sunday, Aug. 28 at the Audubon Nature Center at Chatfield, 11280 S. Waterton Road, Littleton. Registration recommended; go to www.denveraudubon.org, call 303-973-9530, or message info@denveraudubon.org. Non-Fiction Book Club The Parker Non-Fiction Book Club meets from 6:30-8:30 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at the Parker Library. To find out what books that have already been read, or to get a list of recommended books, contact Evelyn Poulo, club organizer, at evelyn.poulo@gmail.com. In September, the club will read “The Day the World Came to Town,” by Jim Defede (for this month’s meeting, meet is at Gnarly Root’s Tea Room). October’s subject is the Wright Brothers; suggested book is “The Wright Brothers” by David McCulloug, but any book about the brothers is acceptable. In November, the group will discuss teachers in the early Alaskan territory. Suggested books are “A is for Alaska: Teacher to the Territory” and “A is for Anaktuvuk: Teacer to the Numamiut Eskimos” by Naomi Penner, an author from Highlands Ranch. Saturday Surprise Drop in and learn a craft, home improvement skill or what to read next. Saturday Surprise is at 10 a.m. Saturdays at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. No registration required. Call 303-791-7323 or go to www. DouglasCountyLibraries.org.


August 19, 2016

Marketplace Misc. Notices

Antiques & Collectibles

SELL YOUR STUFF HERE Email up to 140 characters of items totaling under $200 and we will run your ad at no charge for 2 weeks submit to- kearhart@coloradocommunitymedia.com Ads must be submitted by email

is coming to the Douglas County Fairgrounds in Castle Rock Aug 26-28. For more information visit http://www.vintagemarketdays.com/Market/central-denver/home or visit us on Facebook.

ANNOUNCEMENTS Auctions

FARM & AGRICULTURE

Instruction

Farm Products & Produce

PRIVATE MUSIC LESSONS

Grain Finished Buffalo

quartered, halves and whole

719-775-8742

BEGINNING GUITAR

Over 100 Classic Cars, street Rods & Muscle Cars! All auctioned off Saturday, Sept 10th! 3:00pm Thomas H. McKee Building at the Larimer County Fairgrounds. NO RESERVE#'s: $150 & 5% Commission RESERVE#'s: $250 & 8% Commission BUYERS FEE: 5% Fee To consign or buy visit us online at: www.specialtyautoauction.com

or call 970-266-9561

GARAGE & ESTATE SALES

30 Years Music Teaching Experience!

Dan Christian

Garage Sales

303-908-3322 dharroldchristian@gmail.com

Arvada

7096 Dudley Drive Friday August 19th and Saturday August 20th 9am-4pm Crockery, Wicker Baskets, Dish Sets, Goblets, Fruit Jars, Silk Flowers, Antique Chairs and much more

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

Arvada Church of God Yard Sale/Bake Sale/ Craft Sale/Bar-B-Q Food, Fun, Furniture, Tools, Household & Kitchen Items Kid Stuff, Books, Antique Memorabilia, Linens, Lace, & Cast Iron, Hoosier Cabinet, Gun Cabinet Quality Items Priced To Sell Friday Aug. 26 & Saturday Aug. 27 8 a.m.--3 p.m. Bar-B-Que 11 a.m.--2 p.m. 7135 68th Ave., Arvada

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Bicycles

Fun & easy to ride Fly up hills with ease Peddles Like a Regular Bike No Drivers License Needed BEST PRICES IN-TOWN 303-257-0164

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Garage Sale 7102 Quay Street August 19th & 20th 8am-3pm. Collectables, plates, furniture, household items, too much to list. Something for everyone Lakewood Moving Sale - Come See Power Tools, Garden Tools, Antique Glassware, Wheel Barrel, a pair bar stools, Green Futon, Lots of Misc. stuff, Books, 13255 West Warren Circle Friday & Saturday 8/19-20th 8am-1pm MOVING SALE 2444 East 98th Way Thornton Saturday August 20th & Sunday August 21st 9am-4pm

Estate sale August 19/20/21. Friday, Saturday & Sunday 550 So. Miller St. Lakewood. 9 am - 5 pm. Bedroom/Dining/Livingroom/ Deck furniture, home decor, tools, 1974 Toyota Landcruiser and 1976 BMW and much more.

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Estate Sales

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Vintage Market Days

Violin, Viola, Bass, Electric Bass Specialty Auto Auction is proud to announce a classic car auction in conjunction with Goodguys!

Parker Chronicle 25

Lakewood 1720 Upham Street Friday August 19th & Saturday August 20th 9am-3pm Japanese Dishes/Trays/Pictures and Nick Nacks. Complete set of Noritake China. Furniture, Pots & Pans, Bedding, Jewelry, Tools, Books, DVD's, and much more!

Building Materials From Sunward Factories Big & Small Steel Buildings Ultimate quality Below Dealer Pricing Free Free Consulting Services Available Wholesale Construction Erection Ask about seconds, Quick Delivery No Broker One Time Factory Deals 800-964-8335 Sunwardsteel.com

Computers Computers 2005 Server in excellent condition– HP ProLiant ML370 G4 with software $50 Tandberg Video Conferencing System with all components and monitor - best offer 19" Computer Monitor $10 303-981-2466

Firewood

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Furniture Metal and wood daybed with pop-up trundle. Two, twin-sized mattresses included. Only used a handful of times. Asking $300 cash for whole set. You pick up. Call to inquire or for details, Phil 303-501-9493 Piano $100 Dresser with mirror $100 Armoire with a TV $75 Desk with office chair $50 2 office chairs $25 each (303)995-7648

Miscellaneous

EMAIL kearhart@coloradocommunitymedia.com

Before you buy your doggie online or from a store, find out where it came from. Find out more at caninewelfare.org

I am a really sensitive dog that is looking for someone to be patient and loving with me. I am, after all a puppy (8 mos) so sometimes it's,hard to control myself but I love being praised and told that I am a good boy. I came from a high kill shelter in N.M. and my foster mom tells me I was the next in line,to go and that she had to save me partly cuz of my little freckles. I'm a male heeled cross, better with older kids and I want and need tons of love. Can you adopt me ? $99 call 720,519,4415 Please adopt me. I was rescued from a high kill shelter in N.M. I am a 7 month old male pit/lab mix. I am loving and intelligent and need a little space to have fun! Call 720-519-4415 $99.00.

Lost and Found Lost dog 7/31 "Elmer" Neutered border collie Black/white, 50lb Microchipped REWARD Contact 720-202-0459

Other Pets Ferrets - must stay together Sweet sisters 2 years old Must sell transferring $80 for both Ferret Nation Cage model 182 36"x25"x63 1/4" new condition 4 door easy access, heavy gauge steel on rollers $200 for Ferrets, cage, food & bedding (785)214-3304

TRANSPORTATION Autos for Sale

Split & Delivered $250 a cord Stacking available extra $35 Delivery charge may apply Call 303-647-2475 or 720-323-2173

ADVERTISE IN THE MARKETPLACE CALL 303-566-4091

Dogs

Rainbow Vacuum $1000 Excellent Condition (303)424-9577

Sporting goods Camping Equipment Camping Equipment Used Twice like new condition REI BaseCamp IV Tent includes footprint $250 Sleeping bags 2 mummy style $40 each Sleeping Pads (2) - $10 each Camp Stove $20 303-981-2466

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DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK, BOAT, RV; Running or not, to www.developmentaldisabled.org Tax deductible! 303-659-8086. 19 years of service (go onto website to see 57 Chevy)


26 Parker Chronicle

August 19, 2016

Tall or small, talented setters a hit While there’s a movement toward finding girls with more height, it’s the skill that sets the pace By Jim Benton jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com There has been a trend in girls high school volleyball toward having taller players as setters. Setters in volleyball are like the quarterback in football or the point guard in basketball. They run the offense and determine which of the attackers should be set for a hit. It used to be that smaller, OUTLOOK quicker girls fit into the role Volleyball teams of a setter, but play for a little more coaches are than nine weeks in now looking for an attempt to qualify taller athletes for the regionals in all who are fast, classes, which must be quick and can completed by Nov. 5. beat the ball to The all-class the necessary state tournament is spot on the scheduled for Nov. 11 court to set up and 12 at the Denver teammates. Coliseum. And taller setters are able to more effectively attack on the front line. “In the perfect world, I would have a tall, left-handed setter,” Arapahoe coach Jordan Emily Wright said. “Since I cannot recruit at the high school level, I would take a setter that is difficult to read and smart on the court any day.” Jasmine Schmidt, a senior who plays at Chaparral, is what could be termed a perfect setter. She is 6 feet 1 and is lefthanded. “It helps to be taller, especially if you are running your offense from the front row just to have a bigger person up front,” Schmidt said. “When you’re taller, you

Lauren Lowry, a junior at Castle View, is only 5-foot-6 but excels as a setter for the Sabercats Courtesy photo

PLAYERS TO WATCH The following are some of the south metro-area players expected to stand out during the 2016 volleyball season: Chaparral: Jasmine Schmidt, S, Sr.; MaKenna Davis, OH, Sr.; Ava Larkin, S, Sr. Legend: Katie Turner, OS, Sr,; Hannah Haveman, MB, Sr.; Kayleigh Thompson, S, Sr.

Jasmine Schmidt is a 6-foot-1, left-handed senior setter for Chaparral. Photo courtesy of KeyserImages.com can reach the ball at a high contact point. When you are taller, you can set your middle at a faster tempo. They are reaching about as tall as I am reaching so they can hit it out of my hand faster. The ball

doesn’t have to travel as far to them since we are the same height.” Being left-handed is also a benefit. Volleyball continues on Page 28

Lutheran: Tori Bjorgum, OH, Jr.; Cora Rice, OH, Soph. Ponderosa: Taylor Kassel, OH, Sr.; Hunter Barker, OH, Sr.; Solei Daniels, OH, Jr.; Taylor Wiebold, MH, Soph.; Rylee Gallegos, MH, Jr.; Jessica Searle, MH/RS, Jr.; Abigail Hildenbrand, S, Jr.; Keilani Hiller, RS, Sr. Alexa Carney, DS, Sr.; Grace Ottenberg, DS, Sr.; Brianna Byrns, DS, Jr.

Taking control can turn the tide Players who consistently seize possession give teams their best shot By Jim Benton jbenton@colorado communitymedia.com An exceptional striker, solid midfielder, steady defender and a good keeper are important for any successful boys soccer team. But the most valuable player is often the athlete who consistently wins or controls 50/50 balls, which allows his team to keep possession and many times, helps his team score goals and play good defense. A 50/50 ball is one in which two players from opposing teams approach a loose ball either on the ground or in the air, with both having an equal chance of getting the ball. A first touch is when a player makes first contact with the ball and tries to control it. “Winning 50/50s is a premier quality of every winning team,” Valor Christian coach Brian Schulz said. “From scoring off 50/50 set plays to winning balls in the run of play to caring if you win even a 50/50 throw-in, it says something about your desire to achieve, win, compete

and beat your opponent.” players to be in good positioning defensively to create turnovers Players need anticipation, confidence and physicality to be or create chances to win the ball,” Hayes said. “There are successful on 50/50 balls. those opportunities to win 50/50 “Especially for good 50/50 challenges, but they only really players, it’s anticipating a ball occur when a change in possesbefore it’s played and undersion happens.” standing what “Ideally, we keep could happen,” OUTLOOK possession on ofHeritage coach fense and create Adam Buseck said. There will be 32 opportunities to win “Then for the rest teams that qualify the ball on defense. of them, it’s like for the Class 3A, 4A Playing small side basketball — boxand 5A state playoffs games is the best ing out and having that begin Oct. 28. way to simulate some skill to get out Last season, Heritage, the idea of keeping of pressure.” Cherry Creek, state the ball or winning Legend coach runner-up Mountain it. Knowing when Jordan Ivey said Vista and Arapahoe to step or when to challenging the were among the teams engage an attacksecond ball is most that advanced to the ing player is a tough quarterfinals. important. skill that requires Semifinals are set “We stress the timing, physicality for Nov. 9 with the importance of and a bit of luck.” state finals for all three challenging the first Heritage senior classes scheduled 50/50 ball but don’t Nate Reisler has for Nov. 12 at Dick’s focus on it,” he said. been skilled at Sports Goods Park in “When you chalcompeting for loose Commerce City. lenge a 50/50 ball it balls. typically creates a “Winning a 50/50 second 50/50 ball, ball is most important off our and we focus on surrounding goalie’s kick,” Reisler said. “We the original 50/50 so that we can just won possession and it’s a win the second ball.” waste if you don’t win it right ThunderRidge coach Jeremy away. Obviously, we want to Hayes said positioning is eskeep possession.” sential. Soccer continues on Page 28 “It is more important for

Heritage seniors Nate Reisler, left, and Sayan Mehrani battle for a 50/50 ball during an Eagles’ conditioning workout. Photo by Jim Benton

Ideally, we keep possession on offense and create opportunities to win the ball on defense. Playing small side games is the best way to simulate the idea of keeping the ball or winning it.”

Jeremy Hayes, ThunderRidge soccer coach


Parker Chronicle 27

August 19, 2016

Skill tough to master but yields big returns The way tennis players handle opponents’ serves is crucial in the outcome of matches

service return,” Castle View coach Joel Justice said. “If a team cannot keep it away from the ‘net’ guy they will not be in the point. “The opportunity to hit a cross-court return will get a team into the position of attack, and younger players struggle with that By Jim Benton type of pressure.” jbenton@colorado communitymedia.com Mountain Vista senior Hunter Hostelley was a state qualifier at No. 3 singles in 2015 There isn’t much debate about the serve but had to adjust his service returns after being the most important part of tennis. playing doubles the year before. The importance of the return of a serve, “Normally, if you watch the however, can’t be overlooked. toss, you can tell where the “Service return in general is server is going to hit the ball,” OUTLOOK one of the two most important Hostelley said. “The players are assets of match play,” Cherry Teams started really good at our level. They Creek boys tennis coach Art practice Aug. 15 with could go out wide or down the Quinn said. “The service is the many ladder matches middle. Sometimes you don’t first shot of the point and the to determine the know. return is the second shot of the varsity lineup. Matches “It’s definitely a lot tougher point. start Aug. 18, with the to return in singles. In doubles “Maybe a generation ago, the regional state-qualthey usually hit more of a spin biggest servers in the pro game ifying tournaments serve. In singles, it is more of dominated the rankings and scheduled for Oct. 5-8. a flat serve and it’s coming dominated portions of the game. Cherry Creek, a lot harder. You have to get Nowdays, it’s not the biggest servthe five-time defendready a lot quicker. I always tell ers, it’s the most effective returning Class 5A state myself to do the same thing ing percentage of games won. So champion, has to every time, split step and move the return game has really taken rebuild this season, forward.” a forefront — not to say that big especially since two Grant Smith, a Mountain servers can’t win.” of last season’s state Vista senior, was a state qualifiIt’s the same in high school finalists decided not to er last season in No. 4 doubles. tennis, where service return is play this season. “In doubles, service return tough to master. The 5A state touris a little different because “One of the key factors about nament will be played you have to make sure you get returning service is there is less Oct. 13-15 at the it cross court and not float it time to react, there is less time to Gates Tennis Center where it can be cut off,” he said. read the factors that will help dein Denver, with the 4A “Just kind of a low cross-court termine where the ball is going,” tourney held the same ball is what’s good. Quinn said. “Read, process and days in Pueblo. “In singles, you can get away execution are very compressed.” with just blocking it back. In And, there’s a difference bedoubles you kind of have to tween service returns in singles learn to stay in front and just get a low ball, and doubles. maybe a little harder. Cross court is really “For high school tennis, it is really imthe biggest thing. In singles you don’t have to portant for a doubles team to have a great worry so much about where to place it.”

C A S T L E

Mountain Vista senior Hunter Hostelley qualified for last season’s Class 5A state tournament at No. 3 singles but had to adjust his service return after playing doubles as a sophomore. Photo by Jim Benton

PLAYERS TO WATCH The following are boys tennis players who qualified for the 2015 boys state tournaments and are expected to play

this season. Ponderosa: Henry Cox, Hayden Smith, Conor Smith, Josh Peterson.

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28 Parker Chronicle

A LOOK AT OUR LOCAL OLYMPIANS Mallory Pugh About Pugh: U.S. women’s soccer team, 2016 Mountain Vista graduate, Highlands Ranch resident, 18 years old.

a corner kick over the goal in the 45th minute of the 2-2 tie with Colombia on Aug. 9. Horan scored the first USA penalty shot goal in the shootout against Sweden following a 1-1 tie Aug. 12.

Rio update: Nursing an injured ankle, she replaced Megan Rapinoe in the 33rd minute and scored the second goal for the U.S. in the 45th minute of the 2-2 tie against Colombia Aug. 9. Pugh became the youngest player to score an Olympic goal for the United States. In the Aug. 12 quarterfinal match, she was helped off the field with an apparent ankle injury in the 114th minute of the match that ended in a 1-1 tie. Sweden, however, eliminated the Americans 4-3 in a penalty kick shootout.

Janine Beckie About Beckie: Canadian’s women’s soccer team, 2012 Valor Christian graduate, born in Highlands Ranch, Denver resident, 21 years old.

Lindsey Horan About Horan: U.S. women’s soccer team, 2012 Golden High School graduate, Golden resident, 22 years old. Shutterstock image

Rio update: She started in the midfield for her first Olympic start and she headed

Volleyball Continued from Page 26

“The left hand is a huge advantage, especially when you are in the front row, you can attack the ball on the second contact without having the ball cross over your body,” said Schmidt, who is committed to play next season at Palm Beach Atlantic University. “It’s a lot more comfortable and faster for me to swing on second contact because the ball doesn’t have to cross to the right side on my body so it is faster and more natural. “Also if there is a stop jump to the middle of the floor, most setters kind of do that with their left hand, and your left hand is naturally stronger, so you don’t have to worry about missing it or tipping it to the wrong spot because you have more control and power.” Lauren Lowry, a junior at Castle View, also fits Wright’s model as a good — though not tall — setter because she is smart and deceptive.

Rio update: He was in the lineup and played well for the U.S., which was eliminated from medal rounds Aug. 10 with a 24-19 loss to Fiji. In the first two matches held on Aug. 9, the U.S. lost 17-14 to Argentina and beat Brazil, 26-0. The U.S. beat Brazil 24-12 in a placing semifinal and captured ninth place on Aug. 11 with a 24-12 victory over Spain. Missy Franklin About Franklin: U.S. women’s swimming team, 2013 Regis Jesuit graduate, Centennial resident, 21 years old

Rio update: After scoring three goals in Canada’s first two wins, she was rested in a 2-1 win over Germany in the third game Aug. 9. She assisted on Canada’s lone goal in a 1-0 quarterfinal win over France on Aug. 12. Canada was scheduled to play Germany in the Aug. 16 semi-final match.

Rio update: She didn’t qualify for the 200-meter finals Aug. 9 but swam in the prelims on the 4x200 meter relay team. She wasn’t in the lineup for finals but earned a gold medal when the American team won Aug. 10. It was her fifth gold medal after winning four golds and one bronze in the 2012 Olympics. She was 14th in the Aug. 11 semifinals of the 200-meter backstroke, an event in which she holds the world record, and didn’t qualify for the finals.

Ben Pinkelman About Pinkelman: U.S. men’s rugby team, 2012 Cherry Creek High School graduate, Centennial resident, 22 years old.

“Coaches want taller setters to compete with the taller hitters, but in my opinion I don’t think that necessarily matters,” Lowry said. “I’m like 5-foot-6, which is small for a setter. I feel like the most important thing is if you set your hitters and score points doing that.” It takes familiarity with the game and teammates to be a valuable setter, particularly amid chaotic rallies. “As a setter, you are involved every single play,” Lowry said. “The goal is to run a fast offense, to get your hitters in a one-on-one situation so they have more area to hit the ball, and I guess setting up your hitters so they have a chance to score points for the team. You definitely have to know your players. “In general, being a shorter setter, it’s better to run a faster offense to keep the ball along the net more rather than shooting it up high. That gives the other team less time to go block and gives your hitters more time. You have to run the plays and tell your hitters what you are running on every single play.”

August 19, 2016

Soccer Continued from Page 26

Keeping control of 50/50 balls can be tough. “For me, I kind of have to spot where I think the ball is going to go and get there before anybody else to the spot, and from there I kind of have to get physical a little bit to make sure I’m in a better position...” Reisler said. “I have to physically go get the ball. I have to have that will to get the ball.

“If I know I can’t get to it, I try to position myself at the best possible position to receive the second ball where it is going to rebound out to.” Reisler’s teammate, senior Shayan Mehrani, said players need to mix it up and not get pushed away from the 50/50 balls. “I just use my body,” Mehrani said. “I just go in just being strong and not backing away from the ball, using your arms and obviously not playing dirty. With a 50/50 it is not that hard not to foul as long as you are not tugging a jersey or holding onto someone’s shoulder and just jump straight up on air balls and use your body.”

HAVE A SPORTS STORY IDEA? Email Colorado Community Media Sports Reporter Jim Benton at jbenton@ coloradocommunitymedia.com or call 303-566-4083.

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Parker Chronicle 29

August 19, 2016

Nicaraguan boys ‘bless’ donations of baseball gear Players used sticks for bats, rolled-up socks wrapped with adhesive tape for balls By Tom Munds tmunds@colorado communitymedia.com Hamberto Gardian, a San Isidro, Nicaragua 16-year-old, grinned as he tried on the full set of baseball catcher’s gear that once belonged to a Highlands Ranch baseball player his age. “This equipment is special for me and for others who catch for our school team. It is the first time I have used a batter’s helmet like this and it feels good,” Gardion said through an interpreter. “I thank the catcher who shared his equipment with me and I thank those who brought it here to our school. God bless them all.” The catcher’s gear was part of the baseball equipment that members of the Casa Unida Foundation delivered to Eben-Ezer School in San Isidro on July 25. It was the first of three schools visited during the week-long trip. The Lakewood-based all-volunteer organization began the equipment program when the foundation learned Nicaraguan schools receive no money for sports or physical education equipment. The three schools visited in July make a total of seven Nicaraguan schools that have received equipment from the foundation. The foundation team came to northern Nicaragua the last week in July to deliver equipment to three schools, to gather information on how much baseball equipment the average school had and to check out the playing fields as part of a project the organization hopes will generate the support to deliver equipment to many more schools. The foundation team delivered the catcher’s gear along with a duffel bag of three bats, two dozen baseballs, 12 righthanded gloves, two left-handed gloves and a catcher’s mitt to San Isidro. The coach at the San Isidro school thanked the team for the equipment, because so many school players didn’t have gloves and the school had no bats or balls. “The catcher’s gear is very special,” he

said with a smile. “Our catcher will probably be the best protected catcher we will see all season.” The catcher’s gear originally belonged to Sean Healey, who played baseball at Mountain Vista High School in Highlands Ranch. He graduated in 2015. The baseball equipment project took on added importance when local officials told the foundation that baseball has replaced soccer as the number one sport in Nicaragua. The lack of adequate equipment is compounded because schools have no money for equipment and few families can afford to buy equipment for their sons, they said. In the Somoto area, the average daily wage is about $5 and a cheap baseball costs $6. Gloves like the foundation delivered to the schools would cost a family $80 to $100. At all three schools that the foundation visited and donated to in July, coaches told foundation members that their leagues provide some equipment for players. The borrowed equipment makes playing the game better, but there still were no gloves, bats or balls at the schools for team practices. One coach told foundation members that the players used sticks for bats and rolled-up socks covered with adhesive tape for balls. Reymundo Lopez, coach at Solomon Ibaria School in San Luan Rio Coco, told foundation members the game of baseball was important to the school because players learn sportsmanship and discipline, plus they learn the importance of maintaining good academic standings in the school and the importance of strong moral values. Coach Marvin Cruiz Rios at Instituto National Palacaguino had similar comments. “This equipment is a blessing to the school and to the students,” he said through an interpreter. “We now work on skills in practice we will use in games. It also helps us spend time with the players, teaching them about important values like strong academic work, good sportsmanship and strong Christian values.” The foundation’s effort to supply baseball equipment to schools began more than a year ago when Englewood High

School’s baseball team donated some used gloves to the effort to gather equipment for Nicaraguan schools. Healey enclosed a note with the catcher’s gear. The note said: “I hope you enjoy your new catcher’s gear! It served me well over many years of catching and I hope it can do the same for you. Baseball is an amazing sport and has given me many lifelong memories over the years. Baseball has taught me how to believe in myself, think strategically and created many great friendships that I will have forever. I am extremely happy to be able to pass on my gear to you and I hope it treats you well!” Gardian read the note, then wrote a reply. The interpreted reply said: “Well, first we thank God for these blessings, for everything you have given to our school,” he said of Casa Unida Foundation. “I also want to thank the catcher who sent the equipment. Bless you for sharing your equipment with us.”

Consider the What ifs

Hamberto Gardian, a student at Eben-Ezer High School in San Isdiro, Nicaragua, tries on the catcher gear as teammate Elieze Norvazz holds his catcher’s helmet. The catcher gear was donated to the school by Highlands Ranch resident Sean Healey and delivered along with other baseball equipment by members of the Lakewoodbased Casa Unida Foundation. Photo by Tom Munds

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Parker Chronicle 31

August 19, 2016

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32 Parker Chronicle

Public Notices Public Notice DOUGLAS COUNTY GOVERNMENT Salary Publication June 2016 Position Title

Notices

August 19, 2016

Wages

4-H Admin Support Specialist 3,400.83 911 Data Specialist 5,305.00 911 Finance Coordinator 5,511.31 ACA Coordinator 3,637.00 ACA Coordinator 4,800.00 Accountant I 3,914.24 Accountant II 4,652.00 Accounting Clerk 3,870.00 Accounting Clerk 2,817.36 Accounting Clerk II 3,899.92 Accred/Policy Unit Program Manager 4,715.00 Administrative Coroner Investigator 5,364.27 Administrative Assistant 4,664.58 Administrative Assistant 4,990.00 Administrative Assistant 3,893.00 Administrative Assistant 3,618.00 Administrative Assistant 4,017.00 Administrative Assistant 4,653.53 Administrative Assistant 4,932.71 Administrative Assistant 3,664.00 Administrative Secretary 4,165.00 Administrative Secretary 3,670.00 Administrative Secretary 3,625.00 Administrative Secretary 1,737.40 Administrative Secretary 4,282.67 Administrative Secretary 4,575.00 Administrative Secretary 4,560.00 Administrative Specialist 3,810.00 Administrative Specialist 4,155.00 Adminstrative Services Manager 5,591.92 Administrator, Child Welfare 8,314.83 All Hazard Mitigation Team Supervisor 4,395.30 All Hazard Mitigation Specialist 2,870.40 All Hazard Mitigation Specialist 2,870.40 Applications Specialist 6,890.00 Applications Specialist 7,885.00 Applications Specialist 6,890.00 Applications Specialist 9,208.50 Applications Support Specialist 5,651.25 Applications Support Specialist 5,978.33 Applications Support Specialist 6,218.67 Appraisal Solutions Administratior 5,959.96 Appraiser I 4,003.42 Appraiser I 4,338.75 Appraiser I 3,900.00 Appraiser I 3,900.00 Appraiser I 4,660.50 Appraiser I 4,033.25 Appraiser I 4,012.58 Appraiser I 3,900.00 Appraiser II 4,583.33 Appraiser II 4,583.33 Appraiser II 4,575.74 Appraiser II 4,839.83 Appraiser III 5,666.67 Appraiser III 5,333.33 Appraiser III 5,749.79 Appraiser III 5,496.80 Appraiser III 5,333.33 Appraiser III 5,666.67 Appraiser IV 6,037.50 Apprentice Appraiser 3,500.00 Apprentice Appraiser 3,499.53 Assessment Administrator 7,203.86 Assessment Technician I 2,160.00 Assessment Technician I 3,488.40 Assessment Technician II 4,121.80 Assessment Technician II 3,960.20 Assessment Technician II 4,113.52 Assessment Technician II 3,833.33 Assessment Technician II 3,996.06 Assessment Technician II 3,900.00 Asset Management Technician 4,695.00 Assistant County Attorney 6,196.08 Assistant County Attorney 6,057.33 Assistant Supervisor, Concrete 5,500.00 Assistant Supervisor, District 6,490.43 Assistant Supervisor, District 5,750.00 Assistant Supervisor, District 5,833.33 Assistant Supervisor, District 6,345.25 Assistant Supervisor, District 5,625.00 Assistant Supervisor, District 5,666.67 Assistant Supervisor, District 6,428.81 Assistant Supervisor, District 6,040.90 Assistant Supervisor, Drainage 6,251.83 Assistant Supervisor, Mechanic 5,870.92 Assistant Supervisor, Mechanic 6,392.33 Assistant Supervisor, Signal 6,100.31 Assistant Supervisor, Traffic 5,745.75 Assistant Training Coordinator 2,844.90 Associate Analyst 5,000.00 Assistant Manager, Motor Vehicle 5,687.25 Assistant Supervisor, Residential Appraisal 5,666.67 Assistant Director Planning Services 9,110.92 Assistant Director, PW & Engineering 12,331.75 Assistant Director, Finance 10,276.33 Assistant Supervisor, Facilities 5,478.17 Assistant Supervisor, Recording 4,724.69 Assistant Dir,Parks,Trails,Building Grounds 9,725.08 Auto CAD Operator 3,856.33 Auto CAD Operator 3,808.17 Bankruptcy & Tax Technician 3,536.00 Benefits Assistant 3,949.83 Building Contractor Licensing Specialist 4,003.83 Building Maintenance Technician 3,411.33 Building Maintenance Technician 4,235.17 Building Maintenance Technician 4,485.58 Building Maintenance Technician 3,528.51 Building Maintenance Technician 3,228.05 Building Maintenance Technician 3,239.17 Building Maintenance Technician 3,686.50 Building Maintenance Technician 4,128.48 Building Maintenance Technician 2,889.83 Building Maintenance Technician 3,134.95 Building Maintenance Technician 3,401.83 Building Maintenance Technician 3,259.81 Budget Analyst 6,560.00 Budget Analyst I 2,781.16 Building Elevator Specialist 3,769.58 Building Inspector I 4,634.00 Building Inspector I 4,900.75 Building Inspector I 5,000.00 Building Inspector III 18,758.00 Building Inspector III 6,257.67 Building Inspector III 5,491.17 Building Inspector III 6,512.42 Building Inspector III 6,731.42 Building Inspector III 7,073.89 Building Maintenance Worker 2,462.58 Building Maintenance Worker 2,656.25 Building Maintenance Worker 3,210.00 Building Maintenance Worker 3,563.75 Building Maintenance Worker 2,619.08 Building Support Technician 3,065.58 Busines Resource & Engineering Fin Svcs Mgr. 7,065.00 Business Resource Technician 3,416.67 Business Support Specialist 3,960.83 Capital Projects Engineer IV 9,615.00 Captain 10,060.00 Captain 11,010.00 Captain 10,060.00 Captain 10,975.00 Captain 10,780.00 Case Services Technician 3,499.33 Caseworker 4,611.33 Caseworker 4,450.83 Caseworker 4,034.00 Caseworker 4,000.00 Caseworker 3,915.92 Caseworker 4,747.00 Caseworker 4,213.83 Caseworker 3,750.00 Caseworker 4,967.08 Caseworker 4,077.08 Caseworker 5,304.52 Caseworker 4,096.92 Caseworker 4,475.67 Caseworker 5,117.75 Caseworker 4,014.50 Caseworker 4,014.50 Caseworker 3,915.92 Caseworker 2,249.52 Caseworker 4,152.92 Caseworker 3,916.66

Caseworker A - Screener Caseworker A - Screener Caseworker A - Screener Caseworker A-Program Specialist Cashier Cashier CDBG Program Specialist Central Receiving / Mail Clerk Central Receiving / Mail Clerk Chief Building Official Chief Deputy Chief Deputy Chief Deputy Clerk & Recorder Chief Deputy Coroner Chief Information Officer Chief Planner Chief Planner Chief Planner Chief Planner Child Support Specialist Child Support Specialist Civil/Warrant Specialist Civil/Warrant Specialist Civil/Warrant Specialist CJRA Support Specialist CJS Division Manager CJS Division Manager CJS Officer I CJS Officer I CJS Officer II CJS Officer II CJS Officer II CJS Officer II CJS Officer II CJS Officer II CJS Officer II CJS Specialist CJS Specialist CJS Specialist CJS Supervisor Clerk III Clerk III Clerk III Clerk III Clerk III Clerk III Clerk III Clerk III Clerk III Clerk III Clerk III CO Works Assessment Specialist Collaboration Services Specialist Communications Manager Communications / Web Administrator Community of Care Navigator Community Resource Coordinator Concrete Finisher Concrete Finisher Concrete Finisher Contract Coordinator Coroner Investigator I Coroner Investigator II Coroner Investigator II Coroner Investigator II Coroner Investigator III Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal County Attorney County Commissioner County Commissioner County Commissioner County Manager Crime Analyst Crime Scene Technician Crime Scene Technician Crime Scene Technician Crime Technician/Forensic Chemist CSU Extension Coordinator Customer Support Specialist Cyber Security Officer Data Imaging Clerk Data Imaging Clerk Database Developer II Demographic Program Analyst Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy

3,205.48 3,334.23 3,536.33 3,583.33 717.75 747.58 4,216.25 3,225.00 3,105.00 8,549.58 11,875.00 11,875.00 7,520.83 7,607.25 13,325.67 6,444.25 7,321.75 6,387.67 6,697.17 3,553.17 5,022.33 4,316.18 4,780.00 3,779.27 5,648.01 6,695.00 7,032.17 1,104.32 3,300.27 3,930.94 4,604.95 4,058.42 2,958.18 5,087.92 3,873.00 4,816.00 3,134.08 2,958.75 2,895.08 6,189.71 2,165.57 3,083.33 4,338.56 3,406.25 3,584.26 3,620.49 3,926.08 1,400.00 3,029.08 3,413.00 3,341.08 3,108.45 8,016.83 6,565.00 6,123.75 4,965.83 5,322.65 4,017.31 3,638.02 4,034.62 5,606.25 4,671.14 5,235.12 4,508.83 5,524.68 4,949.42 6,819.13 6,744.96 6,300.00 7,500.32 6,150.00 7,208.78 6,304.00 6,455.00 6,605.00 14,214.00 7,275.00 7,275.00 7,275.00 14,857.75 6,475.00 6,898.36 7,059.24 5,808.72 5,693.44 4,857.04 2,778.42 11,179.58 636.38 3,418.64 8,179.42 5,581.42 6,455.00 1,117.20 15,864.24 6,659.82 6,125.44 6,089.59 5,374.00 5,074.92 6,917.40 3,501.17 5,405.00 5,986.00 5,927.00 6,885.92 8,198.04 5,374.00 5,688.63 4,851.00 4,920.98 4,400.00 7,050.84 6,455.00 6,864.64 6,296.54 4,564.97 6,247.57 5,910.03 5,699.50 6,455.00 6,455.00 4,943.13 5,826.00 5,437.43 6,265.96 4,571.32 6,603.96 6,455.00 6,455.00 5,194.38 5,963.00 4,739.46 4,966.45 4,450.76 7,119.43 7,026.36 6,362.88 6,455.00 7,032.22 6,529.48 6,548.10 4,400.00 5,166.33 4,400.00 6,752.92 4,400.00 6,529.48 6,398.36 4,455.90 4,851.00 4,955.96 6,150.00 6,603.96 5,916.50 6,341.23 4,626.66 4,976.96 6,254.35 9,490.06 5,223.84 6,717.68 6,094.88 5,994.05 4,438.30 6,641.20 4,488.83 5,073.05 7,050.84 6,482.25

Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Deputy Cadet Deputy Cadet Deputy Chief Bldg Official Deputy County Attorney Deputy County Manager Deputy Director HR Deputy, Appraisal Deputy, Elections Deputy, Motor Vehicle Deputy, Recording Detention Specialist Detention Specialist Detention Specialist Detention Specialist Detention Specialist

7,348.76 6,548.10 6,580.00 5,130.90 8,144.77 7,311.52 5,164.92 4,990.95 5,876.42 6,394.93 6,656.72 6,566.72 4,878.99 6,492.24 4,400.00 7,171.91 4,400.00 3,435.56 6,753.96 4,888.57 6,603.96 5,926.83 9,266.62 5,885.50 4,603.04 5,407.97 6,494.94 9,266.62 5,246.00 6,044.47 5,513.50 6,455.00 6,455.00 6,503.95 6,455.00 5,859.61 6,529.48 6,150.00 6,585.34 4,793.39 5,449.11 6,939.12 5,136.54 6,920.50 4,539.59 6,936.73 6,455.00 5,106.00 8,078.05 5,102.91 7,255.66 3,000.00 5,982.30 6,885.92 5,400.60 6,055.06 6,558.59 6,566.72 4,552.28 5,746.00 6,304.00 6,799.47 6,203.65 6,603.96 6,161.77 4,539.59 5,943.64 5,297.76 5,505.60 4,779.90 6,337.19 6,510.86 7,013.60 6,124.55 6,725.00 6,433.84 6,545.00 5,374.00 6,349.00 6,439.00 5,826.00 4,673.30 6,473.62 4,450.20 6,455.00 4,686.63 5,960.44 4,461.70 6,566.72 6,455.00 4,507.87 7,851.50 6,455.00 5,978.50 4,400.00 5,826.00 4,447.13 6,455.00 6,525.00 4,537.84 6,957.74 4,932.98 6,558.59 6,455.00 4,539.59 5,393.24 5,904.50 5,491.14 6,566.72 6,455.00 6,455.00 8,104.94 4,514.21 6,641.20 6,603.96 6,659.82 6,455.00 7,144.98 6,469.32 6,665.00 6,481.74 6,650.00 5,102.91 6,817.58 5,047.19 6,566.72 4,806.08 4,461.70 5,986.00 6,603.96 7,405.66 4,501.52 5,713.10 6,986.19 6,455.00 6,901.88 6,455.00 6,455.00 5,986.00 6,455.00 6,864.64 6,665.00 5,936.52 4,789.95 6,976.36 6,455.00 7,178.60 4,492.88 5,083.51 7,436.15 6,669.13 6,455.00 5,156.00 5,518.44 4,926.00 1,081.20 3,123.00 8,361.75 14,237.17 11,716.25 10,415.00 7,840.82 7,624.00 6,604.08 6,666.67 3,230.00 3,230.00 3,123.00 3,444.84 4,475.00

Detention Specialist 1,078.80 Detention Specialist 3,339.24 Detention Specialist 3,230.00 Detention Specialist 3,123.00 Detention Specialist 3,635.00 Detention Specialist 4,095.00 Detention Specialist 3,230.00 Detention Specialist 3,330.00 Detention Specialist 3,860.00 Detention Specialist 4,981.75 Detention Specialist 3,123.00 Detention Specialist 3,530.00 Detention Specialist 3,339.61 Detention Specialist 3,276.58 Detention Specialist 4,095.00 Detention Specialist 4,254.06 Detention Specialist 3,490.00 Detention Specialist 3,330.00 Detention Specialist 4,095.00 Detention Specialist 4,422.14 Detention Specialist 4,720.00 Detention Specialist 3,530.00 Detention Specialist 4,095.00 Detention Specialist 3,430.00 Detention Specialist 3,230.00 Detention Specialist 3,230.00 Detention Specialist 3,369.73 Detention Specialist 3,230.00 Detention Specialist 3,123.00 Detention Specialist 3,330.00 Detention Specialist 3,123.00 Detention Specialist 4,095.00 Detention Specialist 4,215.00 Detention Specialist 4,095.00 Detention Specialist 4,865.00 Detention Specialist 3,123.00 Detention Specialist 3,860.00 Detention Specialist 3,123.00 Detention Specialist 3,635.00 Detention Specialist 3,230.00 Detention Specialist 3,123.00 Detention Specialist 5,512.58 Detention Specialist 4,735.00 Detention Specialist 3,123.00 Detention Specialist 3,565.34 Detention Specialist 3,230.00 Detention Specialist 3,435.00 Detention Specialist 4,645.00 Director, Open Space & Natural Resource’s 10,253.33 Director, CJS Division 10,046.42 Director, Community Development 12,175.00 Director, Emergency Management 8,040.00 Director, Facilities 11,705.25 Director, Finance 1 1,644.33 Director, Human Resources 11,266.67 Director, Human Services 11,000.00 Director, Public Affairs 11,149.58 Director, Public Works Engineer 13,196.25 Director, Public Works Operator 9,146.00 Discovery Support Specialist 4,700.00 Dispatcher 3,530.00 Dispatcher 4,105.00 Dispatcher 4,050.85 Dispatcher 5,315.84 Dispatcher 5,498.00 Dispatcher 1,283.40 Dispatcher 4,243.81 Dispatcher 4,598.90 Dispatcher 4,189.52 Dispatcher 5,150.00 Dispatcher 3,776.39 Dispatcher 4,304.72 Dispatcher 3,530.00 Dispatcher 4,841.74 Dispatcher 5,878.28 Dispatcher 3,707.00 Dispatcher 3,935.40 Dispatcher 3,774.44 Dispatcher 5,335.65 Dispatcher 3,705.00 Dispatcher 3,743.89 Dispatcher 4,618.99 Dispatcher 4,636.62 Dispatcher 3,865.34 Dispatcher 4,320.00 Dispatcher 3,707.00 Dispatcher 3,671.00 Dispatcher 3,824.44 Dispatcher 3,530.00 Dispatcher 4,465.00 Dispatcher 3,591.11 Dispatcher 3,707.00 Driver’s License Supervisor 3,931.93 Economic Development Coordinator 7,302.42 Elected Official - Assessor 7,275.00 Elected Official - County Survey 458.33 Elected Official - Coroner 7,275.00 Elected Official - Sheriff 9,258.33 Elected Official - Treasurer 7,275.00 Elected Official - Clerk & Recorder 7,275.00 Election Coordinator 4,301.97 Election Technician 791.30 Elections Specialist I 3,493.38 Elections Specialist I 2,950.00 Elections Specialist I 3,779.99 Elections Specialist I 3,116.00 Elections Specialist III 4,624.42 Elections Specialist III 4,358.92 Elections Technology Coordinator 4,265.84 Electrical Inspector II 6,568.77 Electrical Inspector II 5,387.75 Electrical Inspector III 7,578.24 Electrical Inspector III 5,796.91 Electrical Inspector III 5,522.08 Electronic Equipment Technician 4,824.58 Eligibility Specialist 3,000.00 Eligibility Specialist 3,592.90 Eligibility Specialist 3,079.13 Eligibility Specialist 3,525.60 Eligibility Specialist 3,423.82 Eligibility Specialist 3,218.93 Eligibility Technician 2,773.33 Eligibility Technician 2,870.42 Eligibility Technician 2,347.50 Eligibility Technician 2,969.90 Eligibility Technician 2,808.00 Emergency Management Coordinator 5,110.00 Emergency Management Supervisor 5,475.00 Engineer Inspector IV Contract Maintenance 9,537.09 Engineer II 5,267.17 Engineer II 5,166.83 Engineer II 5,860.92 Engineer II 5,603.25 Engineer III 8,001.67 Engineer III 7,435.08 Engineer III 8,577.58 Engineer III 7,600.00 Engineer III 8,325.83 Engineer III 8,368.08 Engineer IV 8,955.08 Engineer IV 7,422.83 Engineer IV 8,965.00 Engineer IV 8,575.00 Engineer IV 9,832.50 Engineer IV 8,769.42 Engineer IV 8,752.42 Engineer IV 9,487.17 Engineer IV 9,845.92 Engineer, Special Projects 7,325.50 Engineering Inspector II 4,734.43 Engineering Inspector II 6,488.80 Engineering Contracts Specialist 5,161.00 Engineering Inspector I 6,449.46 Engineering Inspector III 7,968.41 Engineering Inspector III 6,165.25 Engineering Technician 4,541.42 Engineering Technician 4,301.42 Engineering Technician 4,182.58 Engineering Technician 4,833.58 Environmental Inspection Supervisor 6,936.67 Environmental Resources Specialist 6,570.00 Equipment Operator 4,421.33 Equipment Operator 4,896.24 Equipment Operator 4,774.22 Equipment Operator 4,692.33 Equipment Operator 4,606.67 Equipment Operator 3,887.33 Equipment Operator 4,756.82 Equipment Operator 4,595.58 Equipment Operator 4,555.64

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Equipment Operator 3,768.42 Equipment Operator 4,408.83 Equipment Operator 4,924.67 Equipment Operator 3,535.25 Equipment Operator 3,951.00 Equipment Operator 3,556.38 Equipment Operator 4,782.42 Equipment Operator 3,399.00 Equipment Operator 3,951.00 Equipment Operator 4,231.50 Equipment Operator 4,818.17 Equipment Operator 4,525.33 Equipment Operator 4,063.25 Equipment Operator 4,267.83 Equipment Operator 3,312.80 Equipment Operator 3,774.08 Equipment Operator 4,146.67 Equipment Operator 3,951.00 Equipment Operator 4,858.10 Equipment Operator 4,893.17 Equipment Operator 4,243.00 Equipment Operator 4,145.42 Equipment Operator 4,786.41 Equipment Operator 3,557.42 Equipment Operator 4,126.86 Equipment Operator 4,806.88 Equipment Operator 3,557.42 Equipment Operator 4,910.92 Equipment Operator 4,067.83 Equipment Operator 3,670.50 Equipment Operator 4,750.08 Equipment Operator 4,861.57 Equipment Operator 4,919.49 Equipment Operator 4,852.42 Equipment Operator 4,751.08 Erosion Control Inspector II 6,325.63 Erosion Control Inspector II 4,280.64 Erosion Control Inspector II 4,808.83 Erosion Control Inspector III 6,316.88 ERP Manager 8,833.33 ERP System Analyst 8,046.58 ERP System Analyst 7,658.67 Evidence Technician 5,000.00 Evidence Technician 5,290.00 Facilities Projects & Maintenance Manager 8,243.00 Facilities Safety & Security Coordinator 4,625.00 Facilities Security Tech 5,847.62 Facilities Security Tech 4,200.00 Fair Coordinator 9,574.56 Fairgrounds Admin Support Spec 4,624.51 Family Egmt Mtg Facilitator 4,227.60 Field Investigator 4,334.75 Finance Specialist 5,703.19 Fleet Admin Support Specialist 4,615.75 Foreclosure Technician II 3,744.88 Froensic Crime Lab Manager 7,334.00 Geospatial Database Administrator 7,118.25 GIS Analyst 5,290.23 GIS Analyst 6,057.99 GIS Services Manager 7,550.67 GIS Specialist 5,077.35 GIS Specialist II 5,880.44 Grants / Contracts Administrator 6,030.00 Historical Restoration Special 5,925.00 HRIS Specialist 5,284.50 HRLETF Range Specialist 4,460.20 HRLETF Range Specialist/ Equipment Operator 3,700.00 Human Service Manager & IV-D Administrator 6,416.67 Human Resources Generalist 225.04 Human Resources Generalist 4,792.50 Human Services Clerk 2,680.25 Human Services Clerk 2,977.00 Integrated Services 3,750.00 Investigations & Recovery Specialist 4,420.42 Investment Administrator/Accountant 7,697.00 Justice Center Asst Facilities Supervisor 5,154.47 Justice Center Asst Facilities Supervisor 5,831.42 Justice Center Facilities Supervisor 5,141.17 Journeyman Electrician 5,977.67 Journeyman Electrician 6,060.67 Land Management Specialist/Park Ranger 5,249.60 Land Management Specialist/Park Ranger 6,054.11 Land Management Specialist/Park Ranger 5,004.80 Land Record & License Tech I 2,551.48 Land Record & License Tech I 2,674.92 Land Record & License Tech I 2,790.65 Land Record & License Tech I 2,698.07 Land Record, PP & Lic. Tech II 4,080.67 Land Record, PP & Lic. Tech II 3,316.67 Land Record, PP & Lic. Tech II 3,373.00 Lead Building Specialist 4,106.42 Lead Caseworker 4,333.66 Lead Caseworker 4,463.25 Lead Caseworker 5,020.58 Lead Child Support Specialist 5,370.00 Lead Eligibility Specialist 4,534.42 Lead Janitorial Worker 3,022.33 Lead Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,792.19 Lead Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,390.42 Lead Motor Vehicle Specialist 4,121.62 Lead Motor Vehicle Specialist 4,101.67 Lead Parks Worker 3,703.00 Lead Parks Worker 3,577.18 Lead Parks Worker 4,270.83 Lead Parks Worker 3,595.17 Lead Parks Worker 4,193.33 Lead Parks Worker 4,310.52 Lead Parks Worker 3,757.46 Lead Parks Worker 3,880.92 Lead Parks Worker 5,285.00 Lead Parks Worker 3,651.73 Lead Records Clerk 3,961.99 Legal Analyst 6,055.58 Legal Analyst 5,003.33 Legal Assistant 4,119.67 Lieutenant 9,300.00 Lieutenant 9,300.00 Lieutenant 9,139.00 Lieutenant 8,340.00 Lieutenant 9,300.00 Lieutenant 9,495.00 Lieutenant 9,360.00 Lieutenant 9,300.00 Lieutenant 8,549.00 Lieutenant 9,300.00 Lieutenant 9,340.00 Lieutenant 9,300.00 Lieutenant 9,300.00 Lieutenant 9,139.00 Lieutenant 9,139.00 Lobby Control Specialist 5,605.00 Mail Courier 3,086.00 Manager, Accounting 8,084.75 Manager, Adult Services Prog. 7,705.58 Manager, Budget & Logistics 10,230.00 Manager, Business Resources 6,605.83 Manager, Development Review 9,772.25 Manager, Elections Operations 5,641.67 Manager, Fleet Services 6,870.50 Manager, Fleet Transportation 4,805.00 Manager, Public Safety Technician 9,895.00 Manager, Zoning Compliance 7,374.50 Mechanic 4,394.08 Mechanic 6,008.62 Mechanic 4,394.08 Mechanic 4,394.08 Mechanic 4,394.08 Mechanic 5,724.96 Mechanic 4,394.08 Mechanic 4,432.11 Mechanic 4,394.08 Mechanic 5,645.48 Mechanic 4,741.42 Mechanic’s Assistant 3,392.08 Medicaid & PREA Coordinator 4,190.00 Manager, Capital Improvement Project 11,821.00 Manager, Community & Resource Services 8,085.67 Manager, Permits, Inspect & Utilities 12,167.25 Manager, Software Development 11,370.75 Manager, Youth Services Program 6,165.50 Manager, Business Office Program Integrity 8,769.67 Manager, Parks, Trails, Building Grounds 10,247.25 Mobility Manager 4,500.00 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,083.33 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,961.67 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,990.42 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,443.08 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,531.12

Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,083.33 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,879.87 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,974.03 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,474.39 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,019.17 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,068.05 Motor Vehicle Specialist 4,044.96 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,463.32 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,823.89 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,445.53 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,759.92 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,797.61 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,990.42 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,283.83 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,218.75 Motor Vehicle Specialist 4,004.52 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,791.67 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,322.53 Motor Vehicle Specialist 4,165.07 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,206.67 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,847.50 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,997.58 Motor Vehicle Specialist 4,091.10 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,180.17 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,489.34 Motor Vehicle Specialist 4,199.99 Motor Vehicle Specialist 2,922.17 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,110.17 Motor Vehicle Specialist 3,282.88 Motor Vehicle Technical Support Specialist 3,972.06 Natural Resource Specialist 5,941.00 Night Custodian 2,127.42 Night Custodian 2,334.00 Night Custodian 2,469.42 Night Custodian 2,127.42 Night Custodian 986.32 Night Custodian 2,474.25 Night Custodian 2,127.42 Noxious Weed Field Supervisor 5,833.33 Noxious Weed Support Specialist 4,176.58 Office Manager 6,564.67 Public Trustee Foreclosure Specialist 4,913.67 Park District Supervisor 6,935.50 Park District Supervisor 6,627.83 Park District Supervisor 5,461.25 Park District Supervisor 6,275.75 Parks & Trails Support Specialist 3,688.92 Parks Specialist 4,193.33 Parks Worker 1,662.00 Parks Worker 2,298.75 Parks Worker 2,080.00 Parks Worker 1,626.00 Parks Worker 2,214.88 Parks Worker 2,250.00 Parks Worker 2,080.00 Parks Worker 2,094.63 Parks Worker 1,920.00 Parks Worker 2,430.00 Parks Worker 1,792.00 Parks Worker 1,920.00 Parks Worker 1,965.00 Parks Worker 1,599.00 Parks Worker 2,240.00 Parks Worker 1,686.00 Parks Worker 1,536.00 Parks Worker 1,664.00 Parks Worker 2,193.75 Parks Worker 2,016.00 Parks Worker 1,824.00 Parts Inventory Specialist 4,791.90 Payroll/Accounts Payable Specialist 3,570.67 Personnel Coordinator 5,605.49 Plan Review Technician 3,031.80 Planning Manager 8,104.17 Planning Manager 7,688.42 Planning Technician 4,264.33 Planning Technician 3,416.67 Planning Technician 715.52 Planning / Addressing Specialist 6,204.50 Plans Examiner I 4,583.33 Plans Examiner II 6,422.75 Plans Examiner II 7,317.74 Plans Examiner Specialist 4,602.67 PMO Services Manager 10,361.58 Principal Planner 5,623.33 Principal Planner 6,540.42 Principal System Administrator 10,480.75 Problem Manager 7,424.63 Producer / Editor 5,037.51 Program Development Manager 7,710.75 Program Development Manager 3,162.72 Program Development Manager 1,924.80 Program Manager 6,529.58 Program Manager 6,472.66 Project & Systems Coord 7,331.25 Project Analyst 5,014.50 Project Cooordinator / CTTB 5,022.50 Project Coordinator 6,990.15 Project Coordinator 5,557.25 Project Coordinator 5,253.42 Project Coord-Youth Education 6,335.00 Project Manager 5,592.60 Property Tax Adjustment Spec 4,406.00 Public Trustee 6,041.67 Purchasing Specialist 3,952.00 Quality Assurance Engineer II 7,000.00 Quality Assurance Engineer II 7,950.67 Radio Systems Administrator 7,935.00 Radio Systems Specialist 7,001.68 Radio Systems Specialist 6,947.04 Real Prop Acquisition Specialist II 7,700.00 Receptionist 3,215.00 Receptionist 2,856.00 Records Clerk 4,110.00 Records Clerk 3,168.80 Records Clerk 3,970.50 Records Clerk 2,842.39 Records Clerk 2,800.00 Records Clerk 1,720.32 Records Clerk 3,265.00 Records Clerk 2,866.62 Revenue Collection Specialist 4,597.50 Risk Manager 6,500.00 Sales Tax Investigator 2,652.96 Self-Sufficiency & Family Support Manager 6,666.67 Sergeant 8,475.24 Sergeant 8,765.90 Sergeant 8,158.41 Sergeant 8,100.00 Sergeant 6,956.96 Sergeant 8,155.25 Sergeant 8,684.13 Sergeant 8,993.60 Sergeant 6,650.00 Sergeant 8,216.83 Sergeant 8,800.95 Sergeant 8,346.61 Sergeant 8,794.63 Sergeant 8,473.84 Sergeant 8,100.00 Sergeant 9,164.16 Sergeant 6,650.00 Sergeant 7,866.35 Sergeant 8,543.94 Sergeant 7,187.18 Sergeant 8,684.13 Sergeant 8,640.44 Sergeant 8,673.84 Sergeant 8,340.00 Sergeant 6,909.00 Sergeant 8,100.00 Sergeant 6,650.00 Sergeant 8,462.16 Sergeant 8,345.33 Sergeant 8,468.00 Sergeant 8,473.84 Sergeant 8,520.57 Sergeant 6,949.00 Sergeant 1,214.98 Sergeant 9,945.84 Sergeant 8,177.80 Sergeant 8,567.30 Sergeant 8,941.14 Service & Parts Coordinator 4,394.08 Service Desk Manager 6,872.83 Signal Electronics Specialist 5,436.17 Signal Technician 4,043.48 Site Developement Administrator 6,118.33 Continued to Next Page 929396, 929397

Parker * 1


August 19, 2016 Public Trustees PUBLIC NOTICE Parker NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2016-0149 To Whom It May Concern: On 6/6/2016 1:28:00 PM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: LESHA A REESE Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., ACTING SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR DHI MORTGAGE COMPANY, LTD. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: PINGORA LOAN SERVICING, LLC Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 9/29/2014 Recording Date of DOT: 10/1/2014 Reception No. of DOT: 2014056753 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $391,619.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $383,888.82 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 3, BLOCK 4, PINE BLUFFS FILING N O . 3 A , C O U N T Y O F D O U G L A S, STATE OF COLORADO Which has the address of: 20395 Twin Pine Avenue, Parker, CO 80134 NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, September 28, 2016, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended. If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855-411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process. First Publication: 8/4/2016 Last Publication: 9/1/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 6/6/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: LISA CANCANON Colorado Registration #: 42043 1199 BANNOCK STREET , DENVER, COLORADO 80204 Phone #: (303) 350-3711 Fax #: Attorney File #: 3850.100243.F01 *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No. 2016-0149 First Publication: 8/4/2016 Last Publication: 9/1/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Fax #: Attorney File #: 3850.100243.F01 *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/

Public Trustees

Legal Notice No. 2016-0149 First Publication: 8/4/2016 Last Publication: 9/1/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press PUBLIC NOTICE AMENDED Parker NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2015-0205 To Whom It May Concern: On 8/11/2015 3:20:00 PM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: MARK E LEHKER Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR THE CIT GROUP/CONSUMER FINANCE, INC. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON, AS TRUSTEE FOR CIT MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 2007-1 Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 2/6/2007 Recording Date of DOT: 2/14/2007 Reception No. of DOT: 2007013860 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $306,000.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $302,610.10 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: the failure to make timely payments required under said Deed of Trust and the Evidence of Debt secured thereby. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: L O T 6 0 , W I L L O W R I D G E F I L I NG THREE, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 21720 Mount Elbert Pl, Parker, CO 80138 NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, September 21, 2016, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended. If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855-411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.

Social Media Coordinator/PIO 5,400.00 Special Projects Adminstrator 7,112.42 Sr. Land Record, Pers Prop & License Tech 4,671.92 Sr. Land Record, Pers Prop & License Tech 4,242.58 Sr. Accounting Clerk 4,078.92 Sr. Accounting Clerk 4,395.83 Sr. Accounting Clerk 4,626.42 Sr. Accounting Clerk 4,169.25 Sr. Accounting Clerk 4,744.00 Sr. Accounting Clerk 4,167.83 Sr. Accounting Clerk 3,708.33 Sr. Assessor Analyst 6,333.33 Sr. Assistant County Attorney 9,583.33 Sr. Assistant County Attorney 5,526.08 Sr. Asst Cnty Atty Spec. HS 7,916.67 Sr. Asst Cnty Atty Spec. HS 11,254.83 Sr. Building Maintenance Technician 2,243.58 Sr. Building Maintenance Technician 3,862.50 Sr. Building Maintenance Technician 3,400.09 Sr. Building Maintenance Technician 3,312.00 Sr. Budget Analyst 6,813.75 Sr. Business Analyst 8,333.33 Sr. Database Administrator 8,982.93 Sr. Database Developer 9,005.42 Sr. Database Developer 10,928.67 Sr. Facilities Security Technician 5,846.39 Sr. Fairgrounds Maintenance Technician 4,236.92 Sr. GIS Analyst 6,137.63 Sr. Human Resources Generalist 6,820.83 Sr. Human Resources Generalist 7,181.92 Sr. HVAC Technician 5,693.42 Sr. HVAC Technician 5,250.00 Sr. HVAC Technician 5,866.08 Sr. Land Management Specialist/Park Ranger 7,621.89 Sr. Legal Analyst 7,750.42 Sr. Manager, Collabration Services 11,558.58

Public Trustees

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2015-0205 First Publication: 08/18/2016 Last Publication: 08/18/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press PUBLIC NOTICE Parker NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2016-0138 To Whom It May Concern: On 6/1/2016 11:50:00 AM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: DANA KIRCHMAR Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., ACTING SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR OWNIT MORTGAGE SOLUTIONS, INC. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: HSBC BANK USA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR OWNIT MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST, MORTGAGE LOAN ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2005-2 Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 3/16/2005 Recording Date of DOT: 3/21/2005 Reception No. of DOT: 2005024068 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $308,550.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $283,452.02 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 130, MERIDIAN INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS CENTER FILING NO. 5 FIRST AMENDMENT, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 10265 Nottingham Dr., Parker, CO 80134 NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, September 21, 2016, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

Dated: 8/3/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855-411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

First Publication: 7/28/2016 Last Publication: 8/25/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

ERIN ROBSON Colorado Registration #: 46557 7700 E. ARAPAHOE ROAD, SUITE 230, CENTENNIAL, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (303) 952-6903 Fax #: Attorney File #: CO-14-633958-JS

Dated: 6/2/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

First Publication: 08/18/2016 Last Publication: 08/18/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2015-0205 First Publication: 08/18/2016 Last Publication: 08/18/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Continued From Last Page 929396, 929397

Colorado Registration #: 46557 7700 E. ARAPAHOE ROAD, SUITE 230, CENTENNIAL, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (303) 952-6903 Fax #: Attorney File #: CO-14-633958-JS

Sr. Manager, Infrastructure Services Sr. Network Engineer Sr. Network Engineer Sr. Planner Sr. Planner Sr. Planner Sr. Planning Technician Sr. Progam Manager Sr. Progam Manager Sr. Progam Manager Sr. Progam Manager Sr. Quality Assurance Engineer Sr. Signal Technician Sr. Signal Technician Sr. Software Engineer Sr. Software Engineer Sr. Software Engineer Sr. Software Engineer Sr. Software Engineer Sr. Software Engineer Sr. Software Engineer Sr. Software Engineer Sr. Support Specialist Sr. Support Specialist Sr. Support Specialist Sr. Support Specialist Sr. Support Specialist Sr. Systems Administrator Sr. Systems Administrator Sr. Systems Administrator Sr. Systems Administrator Sr. Systems Administrator Sr. Telecommunications Engineer Sr. Traffic Technician Sr. Traffic Technician Sr. Wildfire Mitigation Specialist Sr. Manager, Application Services Statutory Programs Clerk Statutory Programs Clerk

11,083.33 8,289.30 9,145.00 4,481.58 4,549.17 6,112.68 4,028.42 9,158.42 9,665.42 10,058.42 9,666.67 7,526.45 5,128.25 4,762.52 9,144.58 9,475.25 9,373.92 9,319.83 8,952.25 9,406.75 7,893.42 9,242.08 6,159.52 6,335.74 4,276.01 5,734.83 5,636.07 7,433.21 9,612.92 7,553.08 9,448.17 7,775.08 8,096.99 4,864.83 5,331.57 6,889.08 11,487.25 1,500.00 640.00

The above is a statement of gross salaries for Douglas County Government employees. This includes regular pay, overtime, sick and vacation pay, (where applicable) paid to employees during the month ending June 30, 2016. In addition to wages paid, Douglas County Government offers the following fringe benefits to all benefit eligible employees: Employee-paid health, dental, vision, and supplemental insurance premiums; matching retirement; the required employer’s match for Social Security and Medicare; unemploy-

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: LISA CANCANON Colorado Registration #: 42043 1199 BANNOCK STREET , DENVER, COLORADO 80204 Phone #: (303) 350-3711 Fax #: Attorney File #: 4500.101860.F01

CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Public Trustees

LISA CANCANON Colorado Registration #: 42043 1199 BANNOCK STREET , DENVER, COLORADO 80204 Phone #: (303) 350-3711 Fax #: Attorney File #: 4500.101860.F01

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2016-0138 First Publication: 7/28/2016 Last Publication: 8/25/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press PUBLIC NOTICE Parker NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2016-0140 To Whom It May Concern: On 6/2/2016 11:43:00 AM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: TODD V BALLARD AND LAURA J CURRY Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., ACTING SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR LEHMAN BROTHERS BANK, FSB Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: BANK OF NEW YORK AS TRUSTEE FOR THE STRUCTURED ASSET SECURITIES CORPORATION MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2003-37A Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 9/9/2003 Recording Date of DOT: 9/19/2003 Reception No. of DOT: 2003139976 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $261,600.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $85,272.43 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 7, BLOCK 2, BRADBURY RANCH SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 6A, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO Which has the address of: 11562 Terrawood Lane, Parker, CO 80134 NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, September 21, 2016, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended. If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855-411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process. First Publication: 7/28/2016 Last Publication: 8/25/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 6/2/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Government Legals

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustStatutory Programs Clerk 680.00 ee/ Statutory Programs Clerk 1,340.00 Statutory Programs Clerk 540.00 Legal Notice No.:Specialist 2016-0138 Statutory Programs 3,571.00 First Publication: 7/28/2016 Statutory Programs Specialist 3,975.00 Last Publication: 8/25/2016 Supervisor, Outreach & Assistant 6,629.67 Publisher:Public Douglas County News Press Supervisor, Accounting 6,445.75 Supervisor, Accounting 7,046.08 Supervisor, Appeals 7,735.76 Supervisor, Building Inspection 7,778.75 Supervisor, Branch 4,500.00 Supervisor, Branch 4,515.42 Supervisor, Branch 4,536.75 Supervisor, Branch 4,812.50 Supervisor, Budget 7,698.50 Supervisor, Caseworker 5,169.25 Supervisor, Caseworker 5,969.92 Supervisor, Caseworker 5,169.25 Supervisor, Caseworker 5,169.25 Supervisor, Child Support 5,276.58 Supervisor, Dispatch 5,381.40 Supervisor, Dispatch 5,301.25 Supervisor, Dispatch 7,589.92 Supervisor, Dispatch 7,089.92 Supervisor, Dispatch 5,065.02 Supervisor, Dispatch 7,943.97 Supervisor, District 7,394.17 Supervisor, District 7,498.92 Supervisor, District 7,406.17 Supervisor, District 6,929.67 Supervisor, Eligibility 3,823.17 Supervisor, Eligibility 5,152.58 Supervisor, Facilities Maintenance 7,478.67 Supervisor, Financial Services 5,788.50 Supervisor, Human Resources 7,834.33 Supervisor, Land Appraisal 7,121.92 Supervisor, Payroll 6,532.25 Supervisor, Plans Examiner 6,465.58 Supervisor, Purchasing 7,014.92

LISA CANCANON Colorado Registration #: 42043 1199 BANNOCK STREET , DENVER, COLORADO 80204 Phone #:Records Supervisor, 4,813.53 Fax #: Resource Services Supervisor, 5,793.42 Attorney File Supervisor, Signal#: 1175.100305.F01 6,585.17 Supervisor, Traffic Services 7,432.08 *YOU MAY TRACK Supervisor, Business ServicesFORECLOSURE 5,507.47 SALE Specialist DATES Ion the Public Trustee webSupport 4,421.73 site: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustSupport Specialist II 5,188.40 ee/ Support Specialist II 5,530.90 Support Specialist II 4,562.14 Legal Notice No.: Support Specialist II 2016-0140 4,642.16 First Publication: 7/28/2016 Support Specialist II 6,007.62 Last Publication: Support Specialist II 8/25/2016 5,261.17 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Support Specialist II 830.72 Supervisor, Engineering Inspections 8,976.08 Supervisor, Personal Prop. Appraisal 6,674.63 Supervisor, Special Projects District 7,430.33 Supervisor, Special Projects Facilities 7,474.33 Supervisor, Commercial Appraisal 7,654.17 Supervisor, Facilities Tech Systems 7,361.08 Supervisor, Residential Appraisal 7,175.91 Surveyor/CADD Administrator 6,597.75 System Administrator I 4,871.58 System Administrator II 7,178.50 System Administrator II 7,083.33 Systems Coordinator 7,966.05 Systems Support Specialist 6,212.92 Tax Workoff Specialist 157.89 Tax Workoff Specialist 245.15 Tax Workoff Specialist 243.65 Tax Workoff Specialist 58.17 Tax Workoff Specialist 282.54 Tax Workoff Specialist 149.58 Tax Workoff Specialist 452.90 Tax Workoff Specialist 33.24 Tax Workoff Specialist 136.12 Tax Workoff Specialist 182.82 Tax Workoff Specialist 157.89 Tax Workoff Specialist 166.20 Tax Workoff Specialist 124.65

ment insurance; short-term and long-term disability insurance; life insurance; accidental death and dismemberment insurance; workers’ compensation; flexible spending program administration fees (if applicable); and an employee assistance program. Some employees may also be offered auto, uniform, phone, and / or tool allowances, as well as recognition awards. The County wide average percentage of salaries paid for the aforementioned benefits is 35.51%. This notice is published under the direction of the

First Publication: 7/28/2016 Last Publication: 8/25/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Public Trustees

Dated: 6/2/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: LISA CANCANON Colorado Registration #: 42043 1199 BANNOCK STREET , DENVER, COLORADO 80204 Phone #: Fax #: Attorney File #: 1175.100305.F01 *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2016-0140 First Publication: 7/28/2016 Last Publication: 8/25/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press PUBLIC NOTICE Parker NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2016-0146 To Whom It May Concern: On 6/2/2016 12:42:00 PM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: ASHLEY J HENRICKSON Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: WELLS FARGO BANK, NA Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 6/21/2012 Recording Date of DOT: 7/10/2012 Reception No. of DOT: 2012049437 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $233,840.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $217,588.45 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: the failure to make timely payments as required under the Deed of Trust. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 17, BLOCK 5, COMPARK FILING NO. 1, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 8376 Dove Ridge Way, Parker, CO 80134 NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

plaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.

Parker Chronicle 33

First Publication: 7/28/2016 Last Publication: 8/25/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Public Trustees

Dated: 6/2/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: KELLY MURDOCK Colorado Registration #: 46915 9800 S. MERIDIAN BLVD. SUITE 400, ENGLEWOOD, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (303) 706-9990 Fax #: Attorney File #: 16-011029 *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2016-0146 First Publication: 7/28/2016 Last Publication: 8/25/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Government Legals PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 23, 2016 beginning at 2:30 p.m. or as soon thereafter as possible, in the Commissioner’s Hearing Room, Philip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Douglas will conduct a public hearing concerning the proposed adoption of a resolution amending the 2016 adopted budget. Any interested elector of Douglas County may file an objection to the proposed amendment to the budget at any time prior to it’s final adoption by the Board of County Commissioners. A copy of said resolution may be obtained for inspection at the offices of the County Commissioners at the above address in Castle Rock, Colorado, or viewed on-line at www.douglas.co.us. Legal Notice No.: 929606 First Publication: August 18, 2016 Last Publication: August 18, 2016 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF FINAL PAYMENT

Please be advised that the Board of Trustees of Douglas County Libraries has received notice that construction work has been completed on the Parker library located at 20105 East Mainstreet, Parker, CO. The contractor, Fransen Pittman is requesting final payment.

This notice is to advise anyone with a claim to contact the Director of Finance, Karen Gargan, via phone at (303) 6887623, or via e-mail at kgargan@dclibraries.org on or before 2:00 PM on Thursday, September 1, 2016. Karen Gargan Director of Finance Douglas County Libraries

“Trust Us!”

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, September 21, 2016, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

Legal Notice No.: 929607 First Publication: August 18, 2016 Last Publication: August 25, 2016 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855-411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.

Public notices are a community’s window into the government. From zoning regulations to local budgets, governments have used local newspapers to inform citizens of its actions as an essential part of your right to know. You know where to look, when to look and what to look for to be involved as a citizen. Local newspapers provide you with the information you need to get involved.

First Publication: 7/28/2016 Last Publication: 8/25/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 6/2/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

Without public notices, the government wouldn’t have to say anything else.

Noticesaremeanttobenoticed. Readyourpublicnoticesandgetinvolved!

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: KELLY MURDOCK Colorado Registration #: 46915 S. MERIDIAN Tax9800 Workoff Specialist BLVD. SUITE 400, 89.33 TaxENGLEWOOD, Workoff SpecialistCOLORADO 80112 232.68 Phone #: (303) 706-9990 Tax Workoff Specialist 419.73 #: Specialist TaxFax Workoff 648.18 Attorney File #: 16-011029 Tax Workoff Specialist 207.75 Telecommunications / Fiber Technician 4,844.25 *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE Temp Professional Support 578.25 SALE DATES on the Public Trustee webTemp Support 3,038.34 site:Professional http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustTemp Professional Support 2,200.53 ee/ Temp Professional Support 1,840.00 Temp Professional Support 3,559.82 Legal Notice No.: 2016-0146 Temp Professional Support 2,448.00 First Publication: 7/28/2016 Temp Support 960.00 LastProfessional Publication: 8/25/2016 Temp Professional Support 486.00 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Temp Professional Support 270.00 Temp Professional Support 688.50 Temporary Clerical Support 2,067.00 Temporary Clerical Support 1,680.75 Temporary Clerical Support 2,779.82 Temporary Clerical Support 2,234.25 Temporary Clerical Support 1,798.50 Temporary Clerical Support 1,768.50 Temporary Clerical Support 2,082.00 Temporary Clerical Support 1,872.00 Temporary Clerical Support 1,781.25 Temporary Clerical Support 185.63 Temporary Clerical Support 2,415.00 Temporary Clerical Support 1,441.13 Temporary Clerical Support 1,320.00 Temporary Clerical Support 1,724.63 Temporary Clerical Support 850.00 Temporary Clerical Support 1,248.75 Temporary Engineering Support 576.00 Temporary Labor 1,395.00 Temporary Labor 2,345.00 Traffic Engineer/Traffic Operations Manager 10,416.67 Traffic Support Specialist 3,793.25 Traffic Technician 3,880.44

Traffic Technician 3,781.95 Traffic Technician 4,237.57 Traffic Technician 3,528.33 Traffic Technician 3,472.82 Traffic Technician 3,325.10 Traffic Technician 4,063.02 Training Supervisor 4,818.50 Training Support Specialist 4,095.00 Transcriber 3,865.00 Undersheriff 12,150.00 Utility Locator 4,466.00 Veterans Services Officer 1,518.08 Victim Assistance Advocate 4,902.19 Victim Assistance Advocate 5,337.92 Victim Assistance Advocate 5,170.00 Victim Assistance Advocate 4,098.54 Victims Assistance Coordinator 7,075.00 Video Production Administrator 5,874.50 Volunteer Coordinator 3,930.00 Warehouse & Logistics Technician 5,000.00 Water Resource Planner 8,625.00 Weed & Mosquito Control Coordinator 6,055.33 Weed Technician 3,886.83 Wrap Around Facilitator 3,588.00 Wrap Around Facilitator 3,129.84 Wrap Around Facilitator 3,139.50 Zoning Compliance Official 4,270.83 Zoning Compliance Official 3,879.00 June 2016 Total

6,541,968.80

Legal Notice No.:929396, 929397 First Publication: August 18, 2016 Last Publication: August 18, 2016 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

Board of County Commissioners in accordance with C.R.S. 30-25-111. ANDREW COPLAND, DIRECTOR OF FINANCE Legal Notice No.: 929398 First Publication: August 18, 2016 Last Publication: August 18, 2016 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

Parker * 2


34 Parker Chronicle

August 19, 2016 Government Legals Public Notice

Commissioners Proceedings, July 2016 18TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT JUVENILE 18TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT VALE FUND 402 WILCOX LLC 5 STAR TALENT & ENTERTAINMENT INC A TURNING POINT OF COLORADO SPRINGS INC A3 MERCHANDISE ABSOLUTE GRAPHICS INC ACORN PETROLEUM INC ADAGIO METALS LTD ADAME, LESA ADAPTIVE INTERVENTIONS ADVANCED PROPERTY MAINTENANCE INC AERIAL EQUIPMENT SPECIALISTS AGENCY FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS INC AGGREGATE INDUSTRIES AGGREGATE INDUSTRIES ALEXANDER HALPERN LLC ALL ANIMAL RECOVERY ALLEGRETTO, KELLY A ALLHEALTH NETWORK ALLHEALTH NETWORK ALPINE LUMBER COMPANY ALUWIND INC AMBU INC AMERICAN JAIL ASSOCIATION ANDERSON SOFTWARE LLC ANDERSON, AIMEE L ANDREWS, CAROLYN AON HEWITT LLC AQUATIQUE INDUSTRIES INC ARAPAHOE COUNTY HUMAN SERVICES ARAPAHOE/DOUGLAS WORKS ARAPAHOE/DOUGLAS WORKS ARCHDIOCESE OF DENVER ARCHITERRA GROUP INC AREA NEWSLETTERS ARMORED KNIGHTS INC ARNESON-SEFIC, SARAH JOAN ATSSA AUTOBAHN AUTOBODY INC AUTOMATED BUILDING SOLUTIONS AZOFEIFA, KATHERINE Y AZTEC CONSULTANTS INC BAHR, TIMOTHY AARON BALDRIDGE, SAM BARRETT, JULIE BASELINE ASSOCIATES INC BCM GLOBAL TECHNOLOGIES CONSULTANTS INC BECHT, NICOLE ADAMS BECKEL PC, LAURIE FOWLER BERENS, BRITTAINY MARIE BEYOND TECHNOLOGY INC BILLS, BONNIE BIRD, SCOTT MICHAEL BISHOP MSW, AMY BLACK HILLS ENERGY BLACK, TAMMY JANETTE BOB BARKER COMPANY BOB POPP BUILDING SERVICES INC BOBCAT OF THE ROCKIES BOGART, PAUL BOX INC BOYLE, DEBBIE BRIDGEVIEW IT INC BURK, MARY ELLEN BURKHART, KRISTEN ANN BUTTERFLY MIST JEWELRY BUTTON, ANGEL MARIE BUYS, MYRA JEAN CALIFORNIA CONTRACTORS SUPPLIES INC CAMPBELL, DRU (PETTY CASH) CAPSTONE GROUP LLC CARRELL, HOLLY CASTLE ROCK SENIOR CENTER CASTLETON CENTER WATER & SANITATION CATA CATA CATHOLIC CHARITIES OF CENTRAL COLORADO CBM CONSULTING CCMSI CCMSI (FEE PAYMENTS ONLY) CCS PRESENTATION SYSTEMS CED (CONSOLIDATED ELECTRIC) CENTURY LINK CERTEX COMPANY INC CES CITY ELECTRIC SUPPLY CH2M INC CHAPPLE, KATHLEEN RUDDY CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS INC CHASE, DAN AND ANDREA CHATO’S CONCRETE LLC CHEMATOX LABORATORY INC CHESTNUT, ELIZABETH ANN CHRYSTAL SETTLEMENT SERVICES CHSDA-COLORADO HUMAN SERVICES DIRECTORS ASSOCIATION CINTAS FIRE PROTECTION CITY OF AURORA CITY OF CASTLE PINES CITY OF CASTLE PINES CITY OF LITTLETON CITY OF LONE TREE CITY OF LONE TREE CL CLARKE INC CLANTON, PAUL CLARK, ABIGAIL JO CLARKSON, COREY JOE CLEAN DESIGNS CLOUGH CATTLE & FENCE COMPANY CNDC-COLORADO NONPROFIT DEVELOPMENT CENTER CO PUBLIC HUMAN RESOURCES COBB, DARREN COFFIN, DONNA J TALMICH COLORADO BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION COLORADO COALITION OF LAND TRUSTS COLORADO CODE CONSULTING LLC COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & EMPLOYMENT COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE COLORADO DESIGNSCAPES INC COLORADO DOORWAYS INC COLORADO JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT COLORADO PRESERVATION INC COLORADO STATE PATROL COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY COLUMBIA ULTIMATE INC COMBINED SYSTEMS COMMERCIAL FENCE & IRON WORKS COMPUTRONIX INC CONSOLIDATED DIVISIONS INC CONTINUUM OF COLORADO COOK STREET CONSULTING INC COOK, STEVE OR STEPHANIE COSTAR REALTY INFORMATION INC COUNTY SHERIFF’S OF COLORADO CRISIS CENTER CROP PRODUCTION SERVICES CROUSHORE, STEVE CROWLEY, BOB & MARSHA CRUZ, STEVEN CSNA ARCHITECTS CT LIEN SOLUTIONS CUMMINS ROCKY MOUNTAIN LLC CUNNINGHAM, DWIGHT CUSTOM SERVICES OF COLORADO CYBER SOURCE D2C ARCHITECTS INC DARLING MILLIGAN HOROWITZ PC DAVID R KEMP PLUS INC DAWN B HOLMES INC DEEP ROCK WATER DELL MARKETING LP DENOVO VENTURES LLC DENVER INDUSTRIAL SALES & SERVICE CO DENVER REGIONAL COUNCIL OF GOVERNMENTS DERTZ, DAN DESIGN CONCEPTS CLA INC DESIGN CONCEPTS CLA INC DESIX TRUST DEVELOPMENTAL PATHWAYS INC DIAMONDBACK ENGINEERING & SURVEYING DIEXSYS LLC DINO DIESEL INC DISCOVER GOODWILL COLORADO

Other Professional Services $8,950.00 Due to 18th Judicial Dist-VALE 6,880.00 Building/Land Lease/Rent 4,911.81 County Fair Service/Fair Event 2,150.00 Other Purchased Services 208.00 Clothing & Uniforms 2,361.35 Clothing & Uniforms 15,866.55 Fleet Tanks Fuel 79,777.69 Other Professional Services 8,565.00 Travel Expense 296.46 Other Professional Services 15,570.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service4,833.00 Repairs-Equipment/Motor Vehicle 7,843.00 County Fair Service/Fair Event 22,500.00 Aggregate Products 185,790.03 Escrow Payable 12,713.25 Legal Services 1,994.00 Other Purchased Services 1,300.00 Travel Expense 97.42 Other Professional Services 17,075.48 Treatment Services Contribution 30,000.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies1,105.44 BPPT Tax Rebate 2015 7,164.02 Operating Supplies/Equipment 123.96 Professional Membership & Licenses 48.00 Software/Hardware Subscription 2,239.00 Vendor Surcharge 200.00 Travel Expense 70.20 Accrued Consulting Fees 1,083.95 Fleet Outside Repairs 30.00 Legal Services 7,442.42 Human Services Refunds 1,525.00 Other Professional Services 5,009.94 Security Deposit Refund-Fairground 326.00 Other Improvements 7,901.14 Newspaper Notices/Advertising 160.00 Service Contracts 1,501.40 Travel Expense 255.96 Conference, Seminar, Train Fees 3,750.00 Insurance Claims 2,384.85 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies Equipment 9,184.00 Mohawk LID 2015 1,575.32 Roads, Street, Drainage-Engineering 12,050.00 Travel Expense 22.14 Other Professional Services 500.00 Travel Expense 175.46 Recruitment Costs 420.00 Contract Work/Temporary Agency 19,070.00 Travel Expense 151.64 Conference, Seminar, Train Fees 250.00 Travel Expense 409.43 Operating Supplies/Equipment 2,246.40 Travel Expense 154.44 Travel Expense 102.00 Other Professional Services 700.00 Utility Gas 16,287.87 Travel Expense 24.19 Prisoner Maintenance. Supplies 10,699.29 Service Contracts 1,681.00 Operating Supplies/Equipment 980.10 County Fair Service/Fair Event 1,250.00 Software/Hardware Supplies/ Maintenance 30,400.75 Travel Expense 140.80 Other Professional Services 17,424.00 Metro Area Meeting Expense 152.09 Travel Expense 67.28 Vendor Surcharge 200.00 Travel Expense 341.93 Travel Expense 345.00 Clothing & Uniforms 599.76 Travel Expense 286.53 Other Professional Services 4,500.00 Travel Expense 83.16 OPS/2016 CDOT Castle Rock Senior Center 2,944.15 Water & Sewer 124.20 Conference, Seminar, Train Fees 7,150.00 Professional Membership & Licenses 750.00 Other Professional Services 182.74 Other Professional Services 6,951.91 Workers Compensation Claims 46,844.20 Review Fees/Bonds 7,766.66 Other Machinery & Equipment 14,616.55 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies3,432.00 Cell Phone Service 46,241.24 Office Supplies 393.13 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies 301.50 BPPT Tax Rebate 2015 69,913.68 Travel Expense 144.18 BPPT Tax Rebate 2015 78,591.11 Arbitration Fee Award 75.00 2016 Concrete Pavement Repair Project 462,489.45 Medical, Dental & Veteran Services 2,785.00 Travel Expense 1,040.58 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 30.00 Professional Membership & Licenses 2,000.00 Service Contracts 12,187.82 Due to Aurora - MV License Fee 23,496.45 Due to Castle Pines MV License 291,134.14 Intergovernmental-Castle Pines 18,517.05 Due to Littleton-MV License 11,435.59 Due to Lone Tree-MV License 780,698.70 Intergovernmental-Lone Tree 154,389.65 Other Professional Services 6,356.16 Travel Expense 416.00 Travel Expense 299.70 Travel Expense 102.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service10,555.47 Other Professional Services 3,885.00 Transportation Grant Services 11,535.83 Conference, Seminar, Train Fees 40.00 CJS- Electric Alcohol Monitor 240.00 Conference, Seminar, Train Fees 202.74 Due to CBI - Concealed Handgun 10,376.50 Professional Membership & Licenses1,000.00 Other Purchased Services 95,500.00 Newspaper Notices/Advertising 6,150.50 Due to State-PH Marriage License 576.00 Due to State-CO TBI Trust 7,905.00 Due to State-HS Marriage License 3,840.00 Due to State - Handicap Parking 175.00 Due to State - MV License Fees 2,918,893.98 Due to State -Drivers License 31,032.20 Parks & Recreation Improvement 380,501.87 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies3,127.46 Due to State - Family Friendly Court 683.00 Professional Membership & Licenses 100.00 Other Professional Services 4,975.00 Other Professional Services 456.72 Other Professional Services 13,100.00 Conference, Seminar, Train Fees 2,085.00 Other Equipment 7,817.00 Other Professional Services 39,761.25 Other Professional Services 9,176.75 Other Professional Services 2,500.00 Other Professional Services 12,500.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 93.87 Software/Hardware Supplies/ Maintenance 5,564.63 Operating Supplies/Equipment 875.00 Other Professional Services 13,021.05 Operating Supplies 15,402.60 Travel Expense 102.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 58.77 Facilities Use Fees 75.00 Design/Soft Costs 1,700.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 15.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service 500.20 Other Professional Services 10,264.41 Other Construction/Maintenance Materials 2,090.00 BPPT Tax Rebate 2015 11.73 Design/Soft Costs 2,250.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 12.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service1,185.00 Medical, Dental & Veteran Services 25,815.74 Operating Supplies/Equipment 101.98 Computer-Related 3,132.64 Other Professional Services 2,574.00 Asphalt & Asphalt Filler 2,441.68 DRCOG-Membership Dues 40,750.00 Travel Expense 248.24 Design/Soft Costs 1,315.80 Parks & Recreation Improvement 3,775.29 Other Professional Services 5,013.33 Mill Levy Distribution for June 20161,235,896.12 Other Professional Services 1,250.00 Other Professional Services 6,720.00 Repairs-Equipment/Motor Vehicle 5,530.00 Other Professional Services 1,112.16

DISTRICT ATTORNEY DOMENICO, PHILIP SAMUEL DOO-WAH RIDERS DOUGLAS COUNTY DEPUTY SHERIFF’S ASSOCIATION DOUGLAS COUNTY INMATE WELFARE ACCOUNT DOUGLAS COUNTY SEARCH & RESCUE DOUGLAS LAND CONSERVANCY DOUGLAS/ELBERT TASK FORCE DRAKE, BARBARA DUMAS, CHRISTOPHER J DUMB FRIENDS LEAGUE DUNNAWAY, KELLY DUVALL CONSTRUCTION E-470 PUBLIC HIGHWAY AUTHORITY E-470 PUBLIC HIGHWAY AUTHORITY ECKHARDT, MARK E ECONOLITE CONTROL PRODUCTS INC EDWARD KRAEMER & SONS EIDE BAILLY LLP EL PASO COUNTY ELIZABETH GARAGE DOORS LLC ELK CREEK SAND AND GRAVEL LLC ELKHART PLASTICS INC EMBASSY SUITES HOTEL DENVER EMPLOYERS COUNCIL SERVICES INC EMU CONSULTING ENDPOINT DIRECT ENGLUND, GARTH ENNIS TRAFFIC SAFETY SOLUTIONS ENTERPRISE ENTERSECT ENVISION IT PARTNERS EON OFFICE PRODUCTS ERO RESOURCES CORPORATION ESKER SOFTWARE INC EURTON ELECTRIC COMPANY INC EVANS, SANDRA A EZ LINER INDUSTRIES FAMILY TREE FASTENAL COMPANY FAULK, MARSHA FEDEX FELSBURG, HOLT AND ULLEVIG FIRST NATIONAL BANK FISHER, CHRISTOPHER M & NANETTE L FLYING HORSE CATERING INC FLYING W RANCH FLYNT, DARLENE KAY FRANKTOWN ANIMAL CLINIC PC FRANKTOWN ANIMAL CLINIC PC FRISKE, VALERIE DIANNE FRONT RANGE DUTCH OVEN COOKOFFS FRONT RANGE LEGAL PROCESS SERVICE FRONT RANGE TIRE RECYCLE INC FRONTIER FERTILIZER & CHEMICAL COMPANY FRONTIER HELICOPTERS G2E PRODUCTIONS GADZIALA, CAMILLE LOUISE GAIKOWSKI, KASH GALE, BRADLEY & MELISSA HENDERSON GALLS LLC GENERAL AIR SERVICE & SUPPLY GENESIS EVENT SOLUTIONS GENOGRAM ANALYTICS LLC GIBBONS II, JOHN THOMAS GILA LLC DBA MUNICIPAL SERVICES BUREAU GIRARD, DAVID E GMCO CORPORATION GOLDEN TRIANGLE CONSTRUCTION GOORABIAN, LEON M & LYNDA J GORMAN, THOMAS J GOUDY, MALISA ANNABELLE GOVCONNECTION INC GRAYBAR ELECTRIC COMPANY INC GROSSMAN, SHERYL ANNE GROUND ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS INC GUARDIAN TRACKING LLC HAMILTON, DOUGLAS G HAMMERS, MACKENZIE LEE HANSEN & COMPANY INC HANSON, JOEL HARBISON EQUIPMENT REPAIR INC HARPER, TRACY J HARVEY, RON HASS, PATRICK J HAULAWAY STORAGE CONTAINERS HDR ENGINEERING INC HEALTH ONE CLINIC SERVICES HEALTHCARE MEDICAL WASTE SERVICES LLC HELENA CHEMICAL COMPANY HICO DISTRIBUTING OF COLORADO INC HIGHLANDS RANCH METRO DISTRICTS HIGHWAY HANDYMAN PRODUCTS HILBINK, PAUL HIPSTER MAMA PRODUCTIONS HML TRAINING INC HODITS, SARAH HONEYCUTT, BRIAN KEITH HOOPES, KRISTIANA J HORIZON LABORATORY LLC HORIZON VEGETATION MANAGEMENT HRUBY, KENNETH E HSS - HOSPITAL SHARED SERVICES HSS - HOSPITAL SHARED SERVICES HUMANE SOCIETY OF PIKES PEAK HUSSAIN, ADIL ICON SHELTER SYSTEMS INC ID EDGE INC ID INVESTIGATIVE SERVICES LLC IDEAL IMAGE PRINTING INGALLS, LANCE INOVANT INTEGRATED VOICE SOLUTIONS INTERMOUNTAIN RURAL ELECTRIC ASSOCIATION INTERMOUNTAIN TRAFFIC LLC ment INTERNATIONAL CODE COUNCIL INC INTERSTATE COWBOY INTOXIMETERS IREA IRVIN, SHAWN MICHAEL J P MORGAN CHASE BANK JAMES R PEPPER LLC JAY DEE CLEANING & RESTORATION INC JAY DEE CLEANING & RESTORATION INC JBS PIPELINE CONTRACTORS JEFFERSON COUNTY HUMAN SERVICES JILL’S SOUND LLC JOEL HILL LLC JOHNSON, JOI MARIE JOHNSON, KRISTINE JOHNSON, LISA A JORDAN PHD, KENYON P JPL CARES JULIET BRAVO LEARNING SOLUTIONS JVA INCORPORATED KEITH, JIM KEN CARYL GLASS INC KENNEDY - COLORADO LLC KFORCE INC KHW INC KIEFER FARM KISSINGER & FELLMAN PC KOCHHEISER, DAVID KRAMER, MICHELLE KRUG, SHANNON LEIGH KULPAN, MICHAELA R KUMAR AND ASSOCIATES INC LA QUINTA INNS & SUITES CASPER LABORATORY CORP OF AMERICA LAKE, BARBARA E LASER TECHNOLOGY INC LAURIA BUILDERS & LAND LLC LAW OFFICE OF JEFFREY J TIMLIN LAWRENCE CONSTRUCTION COMPANY LEXISNEXIS RISK SOLUTIONS LINCOLN STATION METRO DISTRICT LINGUISTIC STATEMENT ANALYSIS LINIEWICZ, ELIZABETH DIANE LONE TREE ARTS CENTER LOPEZ, ARMANDO LORD, EMILY MARY LYLE SIGNS INC LYTLE WATER SOLUTIONS LLC MAGIC RABBIT CAR WASH & DETAIL MAILFINANCE INC MAKELKY, DAN

Legal Services 587,949.50 Travel Expense 201.90 County Fair Service/Fair Event 2,500.00 Event Security 560.00 Booking Fees 871.00 2016 Annual Support 12,000.00 Other Professional Services 3,836.84 Rent & Utility Assistance 10,741.48 Travel Expense 166.42 Clothing & Uniforms 130.00 Other Purchased Services 6,624.00 Travel Expense 35.75 Roofing Permit Fees 125.25 Due to E-470 Authority 226,128.50 Due to State-E470 Road Fees 18,339.35 Travel Expense 88.44 Traffic Signal Parts 3,528.60 Intergovernmental-Castle Rock 852,064.88 Accounting & Financial Services 10,785.00 Conference, Seminar, Train Fees 2,100.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service 390.00 Aggregate Products 37,276.05 BPPT Tax Rebate 2015 2,849.36 Instructor & Student Travel 1,742.00 Recruitment Costs 4,750.00 Conference, Seminar, Train Fees 2,700.71 Postage & Delivery Services 1,519.85 Travel Expense 147.96 Paint & Road Striping 50,487.00 Travel Expense 1,573.10 Software/Hardware Supplies/ Maintenance 158.00 Software/Hardware Supplies/ Maintenance 2,412.00 Office Supplies 34.49 Other Professional Services 3,948.00 Software/Hardware Supplies/ Maintenance 1,264.95 Other Repairs & Maintenance 1,239.10 Other Professional Services 8,074.58 Equipment & Motor Vehicle Parts 302.70 Other Professional Services 23,740.62 Paint & Road Striping 113.04 Office Supplies 15.58 Postage & Delivery Services 121.51 Roads, Street, Drainage-Engineering 3,961.52 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 15.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 140.87 Catered Meal Service 265.91 County Fair Service/Fair Event 2,500.00 Travel Expense 12.63 Medical, Dental & Veteran Services 848.96 Operating Supplies - Dog Food 270.06 Travel Expense 63.95 County Fair Service/Fair Event 750.00 Other Purchased Services 83.70 Equipment & Motor Vehicle Parts 240.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies1,282.66 Other Purchased Services 1,071.00 County Fair Service/Fair Event 600.00 Travel Expense 247.75 County Fair Service/Fair Rodeo 2,500.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 1,065.00 Operating Equipment Accessories 941.54 Equipment Rental 22.42 Service Contracts 584.00 Computer Software/License 2,500.00 Travel Expense 97.09 Banking Service Fees 197.54 Other Professional Services 500.00 Dust Suppressant 58,664.46 Parker Service Center Project 271,137.60 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 90.87 Other Professional Services 14,146.83 Travel Expense 61.99 Computer-Related 6,418.84 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies 633.02 Travel Expense 13.82 Road Repair, Maintenance & Overlay 32,085.50 Software/Hardware Subscription 378.00 Arbitration Fee Award 75.00 County Fair Services/Fair Live 1,450.00 Other Professional Services 776.30 Metro Area Meeting Expense 53.97 Repairs-Equipment/Motor Vehicle 35,521.24 Instructor Travel and Fee 1,810.00 Travel Expense 310.00 Travel Expense 43.30 Equipment Rental 70.00 State-CDOT 64,538.87 Recruitment Costs 1,975.00 Biohazard Waste Removal 196.00 Operating Supplies 440.35 Office Supplies 18.00 Bulk Water 1,000.00 Equipment & Motor Vehicle Parts 132.25 Arbitration Fee Award 75.00 County Fair Service/Fair Event 475.00 Other Professional Services 5,771.91 Travel Expense 172.80 Travel Expense 212.02 County Fair Service/Fair Event 200.00 Forensic Testing 3,646.00 Other Professional Services 38,124.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 43.27 Other Equipment 70,565.00 Security Services 39,765.62 Animal Control Services 63,616.68 Travel Expense 60.30 Parks & Recreation Improvement 47,811.00 Building Security Supplies 1,465.60 Other Professional Services 3,426.83 Printing/Copying/Reports 159.00 Travel Expense 80.98 BPPT Tax Rebate 2015 281,391.46 Software/Hardware Supplies/ Maintenance 660.00 Other Professional Services Relocation Fee 6,010.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service Equip36,835.00 Books & Subscription 453.50 County Fair Service/Fair Event 650.00 Operating Equipment Accessories 465.50 Utility 142,753.13 Wellness Program-AETNA 65.00 Purchasing Cards 06/05-07/04/16 559,215.62 Other Professional Services 10,631.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service 15,708.00 Service Contracts 52,793.00 Major Maintenance of Assets 2,423.40 Other Professional Services 418.17 County Fair Service/Fair Rodeo 2,250.00 Printing/Copying/Reports 437.50 Travel Expense 327.24 Travel Expense 479.47 Clothing & Uniforms 250.00 Recruitment Costs 1,800.00 Service Contracts 21,408.11 Other Professional Services 400.00 Parks & Recreation Improvement 1,619.39 Other Professional Services 1,727.50 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies1,434.00 Building/Land Lease/Rent 10,692.37 Other Professional Services 11,280.00 Other Professional Services 6,753.25 County Fair Service/Fair Event 2,500.00 Legal Services 855.00 Travel Expense 61.40 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 581.22 Travel Expense 680.94 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 81.57 Construction Parker Yard Project 4,340.00 Student Travel 1,805.04 Other Professional Services 456.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 214.06 Other Repair & Maintenance Service & Supplies 403.00 Building Permits 1,511.06 Legal Services 31,350.10 Columbine Open Space Bridge Replacement 193,239.58 Software/Hardware Supplies/ Maintenance 1,147.30 Lincoln Station LID 815.45 Other Professional Services 3,300.00 Travel Expense 545.19 Leadership Academy 956.00 Travel Expense 7.45 Travel Expense 200.37 Sign Parts & Supplies 2,993.76 Other Professional Services 3,506.26 Fleet Outside Repairs 588.00 Vehicle & Equipment Rent/Lease 1,037.94 Travel Expense 160.00

MANCUSO, ERIC DANIEL MANZANARES,TED MARCHBANKS, AARON MARTIN MARIETTA MATERIALS INC MARTINSON, LYNN RENEE MATABI, JOTHAM MCCANN, MEGHAN NICOLE MCDOWELL, PHILLIP MEIER, THOMAS J MEREDITH, RODNEY L MEYER, ELAINE SUZANNE MICHAEL BAKER JR INC MILE HIGH POWDER COATING INC MILLER WENHOLD CAPITOL MILLER, HANFORD J MONTANA HIGHWAY PATROL MOORE, MICHAEL THOMAS MOUNTAIN STATES EMPLOYERS MOUNTAIN VIEW ELECTRIC INC MOYE WHITE LLP MTM RECOGNITION MULLER ENGINEERING COMPANY INC MURRELL, TIM NASH-JOHNSON ASSOCIATES INC NEW PARADIGM COUNSELING NICOLETTI-FLATER ASSOCIATES NIKOLSKIY, VALADISLAV NILEX INC NILEX INC NONPROFIT MANAGEMENT SERVICES COLORADO NORCHEM DRUG TESTING NOVAD MANAGEMENT CONSULTING LLC NUNN CONSTRUCTION INC O’CONNOR, KATHRYN REBECCA ODESSA ROSE WEST ODNEAL, RYAN OGNIE, PATRICIA JULIANA OLSSON ASSOCIATES ORLADY, PAUL W & CHERYL L ORMSBEE, SONIA ORMSBEE, SONIA OSTLER, CLAUDIA OUTREACH SMARTPHONE MONITORING OWENS, SEAN PACIFIC OFFICE AUTOMATION INC PAC-VAN INC PARKER ELECTRIC INC PARKER SENIOR CENTER INC PARKER TASK FORCE PARKER WATER AND SANITATION PARKS, COLORADO STATE PATEL, JULIE LYNN PATRIOT CONCRETE PUMPING LLC PATTERSON, SUSAN-PETTY CASH PAWNEE BUTTES SEED INC PEAK OFFICE FURNITURE INC PENDERGAST, MARY PHOENIX SUPPLY LLC PINERY HOMEOWNERS PINERY WATER & WASTEWATER PINNACLE TECHNOLOGIES INC PIONEER LANDSCAPING MATERIALS PIPES, CONNIE PLANET TECHNOLOGIES INC PLATTNER ENTERPRISES PLUM CREEK CATERING PLUMB MARKETING PMAM CORPORATION POLICEONE.COM ACADEMY POTTER, SHAWNA POWDER RIVER RODEO LLC POWER EQUIPMENT COMPANY PR DIAMOND PRODUCTS INC PREMIER EXPO SHOWS PRICE, MALLORIE AMBER PRO COM -PRO COMPLIANCE PROFESSIONAL RODEO COWBOYS ASN PROMISE RANCH THERAPEUTIC RIDING PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF COLORADO QUALITY LANDSCAPE AND SOIL PRODUCTS QUIGLEY, DALE GPO1916 LLC RANCHERS SUPPLY OF LA JUNTA REA PLUMBING & WATER HEATER RECONSTRUCTION EXPERTS INC RED WING SHOE STORE REDWOOD TOXICOLOGY LABORATORY INC REEBER, FRANK REMY CORPORATION RENEWAL BY ANDERSON REPP, THOMAS RICHARD RESTAURANT SOURCE, THE REVISION INC RICHARDS, RUBY RICHDELL CONSTRUCTION RICHMOND AMERICAN HOMES RIO GRANDE COMPANY RJH CONSULTANTS INC RK WATER RMOMS ROBENSTEIN, BRAD ROBERT HALF TECHNOLOGY ROCKY MOUNTAIN EXCAVATING INC ROCKY MOUNTAIN MAIL SERVICES ROCKY MOUNTAIN MAP SUPPLY ROCKY TOP RESOURCES INC ROSE, KENNETH ROTTSCHAFER, BERNADETTE & JOHN ROYAL PROCESS SERVING & PARALEGAL SRVC RUFFER, CARRIE RUNNING CREEK COUNSELING RUSSELL, RHIANNA RYAN, KEVIN SAFETY AND CONSTRUCTION SUPPLY INC SAFEWARE INC SAUNDERS CONSTRUCTION INC SCHARTZKOPF, BRET A SCHMIDT CONSTRUCTION COMPANY SCHMIDT, SANDRA SUE SCHWARZKOPF, RYAN CHARLES SCOTT, EVAN LAWRENCE SEDALIA LANDFILL SEDALIA WATER & SANITATION SEMPERA SHADY TREE SERVICE LLC SHERWIN-WILLIAMS SHILOH HOME INC SHILOH HOME INC SHIPLEY, ANNETTE SHOWTEK EVENTS SHOWTIME AWARDS SHRED-IT SILVA CONSTRUCTION INC SKILL SURVEY INC SKYE TEAM LLC SLATE COMMUNICATIONS SMITH, KAREN A SMITH, WARD SMYTH, RICHARD SOFTAIRE DIFFUSERS INC SOLAR CITY SOMANI, MANISH SOURCE OFFICE PRODUCTS SOUTH METRO DENVER CHAMBER OF COMM SOUTH METRO FIRE RESCUE AUTHORITY SPAULDING, MELINDA SPECTRA CONTRACT FLOORING SERVICES SSB CONSULTING GROUP LLC STANLEY CONSULTANTS INC STARKEY, VICTORIA STATE OF COLORADO STATEWIDE INTERNET PORTAL AUTHORITY STEVENSON, VICTORIA MARIE STEVESON, LESLIE S STONEGATE VILLAGE METRO STRATEGIC DECISIONS GROUP STRUCTURES INC SUDS FACTORY CAR WASH & DETAIL CENTER SUMMIT PATHOLOGY SUMMIT PRO RODEO LLC SUPPLYWORKS SURREY SATELLITE TECHNOLOGY SUSO 4 ROXBOROUGH LP SWANSON, DEBBIE SWARCO REFLEX INC SWARTZ, RICHARD S SWEEP STAKES UNLIMITED SYBERTECH WASTE REDUCTION LTD

Travel Expense 42.67 Community Outreach 100.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 48.77 2016 Asphalt Overlay 2,170,027.33 Travel Expense 23.11 Travel Expense 771.55 Travel Expense 31.81 Travel Expense 102.00 Other Professional Services 500.00 Travel Expense 438.44 Travel Expense 40.23 Other Improvements 454.94 Major Maintenance of Assets 11,756.28 Other Professional Services 10,000.00 Escrow Payable 2,500.00 DHE Conference 5,253.15 Travel Expense 72.36 Conference, Seminar, Train Fees 199.00 Electric/Prairie Canyon Ranch 288.60 Legal Services 2,280.00 Recognition Programs 3,436.11 Roads, Street, Drainage-Engineering 18,922.58 Travel Expense 305.65 Arbitration Fee Award 450.00 Other Purchased Services 380.00 Other Professional Services 110.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 81.57 Consumable Tools 1,251.75 Other Construction/Maintenance Materials 3,145.00 Transportation Grant Services 1,625.00 Medical, Dental & Veteran Services 808.27 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 15.00 Escrow Payable 2,484.00 Travel Expense 703.51 County Fair Service/Fair Event 800.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 105.00 Travel Expense 192.00 Roads, Street, Drainage-Engineering4,487.50 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 106.77 Operating Supplies/Equipment 71.76 Travel Expense 57.88 Travel Expense 234.79 Other Professional Services 140.00 Travel Expense 1,000.21 Copier Charges 1,476.14 Equipment Rental 194.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service 420.00 OPS/2016 CDOT Parker Senior Center 123.25 Other Professional Services 3,592.05 Bulk Water 2,387.12 Due to State - State Park Pass 1,292.00 Travel Expense 63.13 Other Professional Services 3,447.75 Metro Area Meeting Expense 124.31 Other Construction/Maintenance Materials 1,206.70 Furniture/ Office Systems 153,701.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 180.59 Prisoner Maintenance. Supplies 1,052.98 Security Services 296.62 Water & Sewer 5,054.93 Operating Supplies/Equipment 880.97 Aggregate Products 599.25 Metro Area Meeting Expense 90.30 Other Professional Services 675.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Service1,215.00 Catered Meal/Fair Livestock 4,235.00 Postage & Delivery Services 578.61 Alarm Administration Expenses 9,060.05 Software/Hardware Subscription 13,416.67 Travel Expense 24.73 County Fair Service/Fair Rodeo 41,000.00 Equipment Rental 1,625.00 Other Construction/Maintenance Materials 189.00 Security Deposit Refund-Fairground 1,000.00 Travel Expense 537.84 Other Professional Services 2,030.00 Fair Golf Sponsorship 1,000.00 Job Coaching Salary 1,684.15 Construction - New Gas Service 17,715.00 Aggregate Products 1,634.10 Other Professional Services 9,155.25 Other Equipment - Gates for Livestock 7,042.00 Other Equipment 2,325.00 Escrow Payable 84,135.00 Clothing & Uniforms 200.00 Other Professional Services 6,427.69 Travel Expense 14.09 Other Professional Services 6,807.50 Building Permits 175.80 Travel Expense 219.34 Other Machinery & Equipment 5,390.34 Douglas Co Innovation League 5,765.00 Travel Expense 274.24 Retainage Payable 180,073.30 Escrow Payable 10,000.00 Other Construction/Maintenance Materials 760.60 Other Professional Services 11,621.52 Service Contracts 806.67 Other Professional Services 585.00 Travel Expense 64.58 Other Professional Services 27,240.00 Other Professional Services 7,000.00 Postage & Delivery Services 40,000.00 Operating Supplies/Equipment 358.50 Other Purchased Services 4,820.00 Travel Expense 64.59 3,745.00 Escrow Payable Postage & Delivery Services 110.00 Clothing & Uniforms 129.98 Other Purchased Services 40.00 2016 Fair Royalty Judge 75.00 Travel Expense 56.44 Clothing & Uniforms 19,778.71 Other Repair & Maintenance Service2,295.50 Use Tax-Building 64,601.20 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 106.17 Asphalt & Asphalt Filler 2,053.43 Other Professional Services 958.75 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 226.48 Travel Expense 192.86 Waste Disposal Services 368.57 OPS/2015 Sedalia Water Lines 28,000.00 Other Professional Services 8,360.00 Other Professional Services 360.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies 429.70 Building/Land Lease/Rent 1,320.00 Other Professional Services 11,470.00 Travel Expense 201.58 County Fair Service/Fair Event 9,500.00 County Fair Awards/Fair Livestock 5,400.00 Shred & Recycle Services 2,581.63 2016 Sidewalk Repair and Handicap Retrofit 454,392.19 Recruitment Costs 4,500.00 Leadership Academy 1,200.00 Other Professional Services 3,421.25 Election Judges/Referee Fees 412.50 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 100.00 Clothing & Uniforms 97.41 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies 17,995.00 Building Permits 1,361.60 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 869.17 Office Supplies 1,235.61 Professional Membership & Licenses 600.00 Annual Stipend for SWAT 30,000.00 Travel Expense 138.96 Major Maintenance of Assets 10,131.89 Other Professional Services 36,820.00 Roads, Street, Drainage-Engineering 51,256.92 Travel Expense 153.50 June Registration Date Mailers 200.32 Contract Work/Temporary Agency 4,980.61 Travel Expense 551.11 Clothing & Uniforms 80.93 Water & Sewer 7,345.34 Accounting & Financial Services 101,104.65 Plum Creek Bridge Replacement Project 72,526.72 Fleet Outside Repairs 155.00 Forensic Testing 30.00 County Fair Service/Fair Rodeo 11,353.00 Janitorial Supplies 2,696.35 BPPT Tax Rebate 2015 849.45 Building/Land Lease/Rent 847.00 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 140.43 Paint & Road Striping 40,480.00 Travel Expense 100.98 Other Purchased Services 470.00 Janitorial Supplies 607.58

Continued to Next Page No.: 929525 and 929526

Parker * 3


August 19, 2016 Public Trustees PUBLIC NOTICE Parker NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2016-0164 To Whom It May Concern: On 6/22/2016 6:33:00 AM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: KARYN E TRUITT Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR E VERBANK, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: DITECH FINANCIAL LLC Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 4/21/2009 Recording Date of DOT: 5/7/2009 Reception No. of DOT: 2009034260 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $155,180.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $135,259.87 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: the failure to make timely payments as required under the Deed of Trust. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: Unit E, Building 18, Cottonwood South Condominium, Map No. 29, for Prairie Meadows Condominiums according to the Condominium Map for Cottonwood South Condominium Map No. 29 recorded on November 15, 2006 at Reception No. 2006097769, in the records of the Office of the Clerk and Recorder of Douglas County and as defined and described in the Condominium Declaration for Cottonwood South Condominiums for Prairie Meadows Condominiums recorded on November 23, 2004 at Reception No. 2004120167 as amended in Technical Amendment to Declaration recorded on February 3, 2005 at Reception No. 2005010456, in said records, County of Douglas, State of Colorado. Which has the address of: 17251 Lark Water Lane #E, Parker, CO 80134 NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, October 12, 2016, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended. If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855-411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.

“Trust Us!”

First Publication: 8/18/2016 Last Publication: 9/15/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 6/22/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Without public notices,

the government wouldn’t NICHOLAS H. SANTARELLI Colorado #: 46592 else. have Registration to say anything 9800 S. MERIDIAN BLVD. SUITE 400, ENGLEWOOD, COLORADO 80112 Public notices are a community’s window into #: the government. Phone (303) 706-9990 From zoning to local budgets, governments Faxregulations #: have used local newspapers to inform Attorney File #: 16-011854

citizens of its actions as an essential part of your right to know. You know where to *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE look, when to look and what to look for to SALE DATESason the Public webbe involved a citizen. Local Trustee newspapers site: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustprovide you with the information you ee/need to get involved.

Legal Notices Notice No.: 2016-0164 are meant to be noticed. First ReadPublication: your public 8/18/2016 notices and get involved! Last Publication: 9/15/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

(720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855-411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process.

Publisher: Douglas County News Press

First Publication: 8/18/2016 Last Publication: 9/15/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Dated: 6/22/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

JOAN OLSON Colorado Registration #: 28078 7700 E. ARAPAHOE ROAD, SUITE 230, CENTENNIAL, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (303) 952-6906 Fax #: Attorney File #: CO-16-732809-JS

Public Trustees

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: NICHOLAS H. SANTARELLI Colorado Registration #: 46592 9800 S. MERIDIAN BLVD. SUITE 400, ENGLEWOOD, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (303) 706-9990 Fax #: Attorney File #: 16-011854 *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2016-0164 First Publication: 8/18/2016 Last Publication: 9/15/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press PUBLIC NOTICE Parker NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2016-0148 To Whom It May Concern: On 6/6/2016 1:27:00 PM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: JOHN L MENDELSOHN AND TERA R MENDELSOHN Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR FIRST COMMUNITY MORTGAGE, A DIVISION OF FIRST COMMUNITY BANK Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 8/28/2006 Recording Date of DOT: 9/5/2006 Reception No. of DOT: 2006076579 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $234,000.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $253,966.77 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: the failure to make timely payments required under said Deed of Trust and the Evidence of Debt secured thereby.***Loan Modification Agreement effective 4/1/2014 and recorded on 4/14/2014 at Reception No. 2014018216, Douglas County, Colorado. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 5, BLOCK 5, STROH RANCH FILING NO. 5A, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 12576 South Mann Creek Court, Parker, CO 80134 NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, September 28, 2016, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended. If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855-411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process. First Publication: 8/4/2016 Last Publication: 9/1/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 6/6/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: JOAN OLSON Colorado Registration #: 28078 7700 E. ARAPAHOE ROAD, SUITE 230, CENTENNIAL, COLORADO 80112 Phone #: (303) 952-6906 Fax #: Attorney File #: CO-16-732809-JS

Continued From Last Page 929525 and*YOU 929526MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE TAYLOR, VIVIAN A TEATS, BEN A TELERUS INC TERRACARE ASSOCIATES LLC TEXAS ROADHOUSE OF PARKER THD AT HOME SERVICES INC THE DENVER POST THE ROCK THOMPSON, STACY THOMSON REUTERS WEST TO THE RESCUE TODD COMPANIES INC TOLL BROTHERS TOWN OF CASTLE ROCK TOWN OF CASTLE ROCK TOWN OF CASTLE ROCK MILLER ACTIVITY TOWN OF LARKSPUR TOWN OF LARKSPUR TOWN OF PARKER TOWN OF PARKER TPM STAFFING SERVICES TRANE US INC TRAVCO INC TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMPANY TRI-COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT TRI-LAKES DISPOSAL TRINITY SERVICES GROUP INC TRIP SAVERS COURIERS TRIZETTO CORPORATION

SALE DATES on the Public Trustee webProfessional Services 9,678.50 site: Other http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrust102.00 ee/ Travel Expense Telephone/Communications 1,500.00 Other Professional Services 262.50 Legal Notice No.: 2016-0148 Meal/Fair 3,044.75 FirstCatered Publication: 8/4/2016 Permits9/1/2016 94.00 Last Building Publication: Books &Douglas Subscription 254.95 Publisher: County News Press Other Professional Services 13,394.37 Other Purchased Services 137.50 Books & Subscription 1,730.33 Transportation Grant Services 11,262.50 Other Repair & Maintenance Service 725.00 Escrow Payable 2,500.00 Due to Castle Rock-MV License 461,991.43 Intergovernmental-Castle Rock 890,300.39 Employee Program Costs 1,800.00 Due to Larkspur-MV License 6,859.33 Intergovernmental-Larkspur 1,080.70 Due to Parker - MV License 1,081,194.77 Intergovernmental-Parker 399,657.93 Contract Work/Temporary Agency 12,666.57 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies 8,144.75 Contract Work/Temporary Agency 4,312.44 Other Professional Services 262.51 Waste Disposal Services 16,666.66 Waste Disposal Services 138.00 Inmate Meals 42,842.04 Postage & Delivery Services 157.50 BPPT Tax Rebate 2015 75,467.40

Dated: 6/6/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

Public Trustees

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2016-0148 First Publication: 8/4/2016 Last Publication: 9/1/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press PUBLIC NOTICE Parker NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2016-0162 To Whom It May Concern: On 6/22/2016 6:31:00 AM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: TIMOTHY FRANCIS SAVOY AND DONNA MECHE SAVOY Original Beneficiary: NEW CENTURY MORTGAGE CORPORATION Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO WELLS FARGO BANK MINNESOTA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE F/K/A NORWEST BANK MINNESOTA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER CAPITAL I INC. TRUST 2002-NC3 Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 5/30/2002 Recording Date of DOT: 6/3/2002 Reception No. of DOT: 02052403 Book 2339 Page 2256 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $295,950.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $241,221.96 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 2, BLOCK 4, STONEGATE FILING NO. 15-A, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 16243 Creekview Drive, Parker, CO 80134 NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, October 12, 2016, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended. If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38-103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855-411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process. First Publication: 8/18/2016 Last Publication: 9/15/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 6/22/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: WELDON P. PHILLIPS JR Colorado Registration #: 31827 1199 BANNOCK STREET, DENVER, COLORADO 80204 Phone #: (303) 350-3711 Fax #: Attorney File #: 4500.101879.F01

WELDON P. PHILLIPS JR Colorado Registration #: 31827 1199 BANNOCK STREET, DENVER, COLORADO 80204 Phone #: (303) 350-3711 Fax #: Attorney File #: 4500.101879.F01

Parker Chronicle 35

Public Trustees

Misc. Private Legals

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/

DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT STATE OF COLORADO 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO Douglas County, CO 80109

Legal Notice No.: 2016-0162 First Publication: 8/18/2016 Last Publication: 9/15/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Misc. Private Legals PUBLIC NOTICE DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT STATE OF COLORADO 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO Douglas County, CO 80109 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: BIANKA REUBILEE TOKOV, D.O.B. 12/17/2013; MATTHEW KUEBER; D.O.B. 9/22/2009; AALIYAH KUEBER, D.O.B. 1/31/2008; and LANDON KUEBER, D.O.B. 7/29/2006, Children, And concerning: JENNIFER MICHELLE TOKOV, D.O.B. 10/22/1988, Mother; JAMES MATTHEW KUEBER, D.O.B. 10/30/1980, Father, RAY CORTAZAR, Possible Father of Landin Kueber, JOHN DOE, Possible Father of Bianca Kueber, Respondents. Attorney for Department: John Thirkell, #13865 R. LeeAnn Reigrut, #28833 4400 Castleton Ct. Castle Rock, CO 80109 (303) 663-7726; FAX 877.285.8988 jthirkel@douglas.co.us lreigrut@douglas.co.us CASE NUMBER: 16JV79 DIVISION 7 DEPENDENCY SUMMONS This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2014. TO JOHN DOE: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed which alleges that the above-named children are dependent or neglected as per the facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which can be obtained from John Thirkell. A hearing has been set for October 17, 2016 at 9:00 a.m. in Division 7, Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, 80109. Your presence before this court is required to defend against the claims in this petition. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABSENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, TO CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY HEARING AND MAY ENTER A JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUDICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEPENDENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN. You have the right to request a trial by jury at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also have the right to legal representation at every stage of the proceedings by counsel of your own choosing, or if you are without sufficient financial means, appointment of counsel by the Court. Termination of your parent-child legal relationship to free your children for adoption is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If that remedy is pursued, you are entitled to a hearing before a Judge. You also have the right, if you are indigent, to have the Court appoint, at no expense to you, one expert witness of your own choosing at any hearing on the termination of your parent-child relationship. If you are a minor, you have the right to the appointment of a Guardian ad litem to represent your best interests. You have the right to have this matter heard by a district court judge rather than by the magistrate. You may waive that right, and in doing so, you will be bound by the findings and recommendations of the magistrate, subject to review as provided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. 2014, and subsequently, to the right of appeal as provided by Colorado Appellate Rule 3.4. This summons is being initiated by the Douglas County Department of Human Services through its counsel. Dated: August 9, 2016 John Thirkell, #13865 R. LeeAnn Reigrut, #28833 Assistant Douglas County Attorney Legal Notice No.: 929600 First Publication: August 18, 2016 Last Publication: August 18, 2016 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/

Government Legals

Legal Notice No.: 2016-0162 First Publication: 8/18/2016 TRUE NORTH SURVEYING & MAPPING LastINFRASTRUCTURE Publication: 9/15/2016 TST LLC Publisher: Douglas County News Press UMB BANK UNCC UNIFIRST CORPORATION UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH UNITED REPROGRAPHIC SUPPLY INC UNITED SITE SERVICES UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE UNITED STATES WELDING INC URS CORPORATION US BANK EQUIPMENT FINANCE US POSTAL SERVICE USI COLORADO LLC VAN DIEST SUPPLY COMPANY VAN WINKLE, CHERI A VANCE BROTHERS INC VECTORS INC VEDOVELLI, DENISE VENDINI INC VERIZON WIRELESS SERVICES VIGIL, KATRINA RAE VISA U.S.A. VOLUNTEERS FOR OUTDOOR COLORADO VOSS SIGNS LLC VWR INTERNATIONAL LLC WADDLE, RANDY & CINDY WAGNER EQUIPMENT COMPANY WALTON SCOREBOARDS WASTE MANAGEMENT DENVER ARAPAHOE SITE WEMBER INC

ORDINANCE NO. O-016-002

bers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:

Other Professional Services 4,800.00 Other Professional Services 9,997.50 Banking Service Fees 2,707.69 Other Professional Services 2,665.52 Clothing & Uniforms 1,683.14 Security Deposit Refund-Fairground 344.00 Operating Supplies/Equipment 50.59 Waste Disposal Services 2,005.00 Postage & Delivery Services 50,000.00 Equipment Rental 54.90 Roads, Street, Drainage-Engineering 8,527.50 Service Contracts 295.00 Postage & Delivery Services 15,000.00 Liability Insurance 7,009.00 Operating Supplies 224.96 Other Professional Services 876.68 Equipment Rental 1,200.00 Other Repair & Maintenance Supplies 450.00 Security Deposit Refund-Louviers 300.00 Equipment Rental/Fair Guest Services 2,211.00 Cell Phone Service 2,072.66 Travel Expense 472.59 BPPT Tax Rebate 2015 27,449.01 Other Improvements 3,500.00 Sign Parts & Supplies 1,386.33 Operating Supplies/Equipment 98.98 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 82.17 Repairs-Equipment/Motor Vehicle 29,334.60 Equipment Rental/Fair Rodeo 5,400.00 Waste Disposal Services 4,349.82 Design/Soft Costs 22,307.28

PUBLIC NOTICE

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: NEVAEH JIRON D.O.B. 08/08/2014 And BRITTANY ALAZAE CAGLE D.O.B. 03/17/2000 And concerning: TASHA NICOLE CAGLE D.O.B. 04/20/1983, VICTOR DOUGLAS HALL, Father of NEVAEH JIRON, and SAMMY JOHNSON, AND JOHN DOE, Possible Father of BRITTANY ALAZAE CAGLE, Respondents. Attorney for Department: John Thirkell, #13865 4400 Castleton Ct. Castle Rock, CO 80109 (303) 663-7726 FAX 877.285.8988 E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us CASE NUMBER: 14JV230 DIVISION 2 DEPENDENCY SUMMONS This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2015. TO SAMMY JOHNSON and JOHN DOE: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed which alleges that the abovenamed child is dependent or neglected as per the facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which is being served upon you. A hearing has been set for August 30, 2016 AT 3:00 P.M. in Division 2, Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, 80109. Your presence before this court is required to defend against the claims in this petition. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABSENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, TO CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY HEARING AND MAY ENTER A JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUDICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEPENDENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN. You have the right to request a trial by jury at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also have the right to legal representation at every stage of the proceedings by counsel of your own choosing, or if you are without sufficient financial means, appointment of counsel by the Court. Termination of your parent-child legal relationship to free your children for adoption is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If that remedy is pursued, you are entitled to a hearing before a Judge. You also have the right, if you are indigent, to have the Court appoint, at no expense to you, one expert witness of your own choosing at any hearing on the termination of your parent-child relationship. If you are a minor, you have the right to the appointment of a Guardian ad litem to represent your best interests. You have the right to have this matter heard by a district court judge rather than by the magistrate. You may waive that right, and in doing so, you will be bound by the findings and recommendations of the magistrate, subject to review as provided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. 2015, and subsequently, to the right of appeal as provided by Colorado Appellate Rule 3.4. This summons is being initiated by the Douglas County Department of Human Services through its counsel. Dated: August 9, 2016 /s/LeeAnn Reigrut John Thirkell, #13865 R. LeeAnn Reigrut, #28833 Assistant Douglas County Attorney Legal Notice No.: 929401 First Publication: August 18, 2016 Last Publication: August 18, 2016 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

Government Legals PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following ordinance was adopted on second and final reading at a regular public hearing of the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Douglas on August 9, 2016. ORDINANCE NO. O-016-002 THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, COLORADO AN ORDINANCE REGULATING THE GROWING, CULTIVATING, AND PROCESSING OF MARIJUANA

THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, COLORADO

Public Trustees

AN ORDINANCE REGULATING THE GROWING, CULTIVATING, AND PROCESSING OF MARIJUANA BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, COLORADO By:/s/ Meghan McCann Deputy Clerk to the Board Legal Notice No.: 929605 First Publication: August 18, 2016 Last Publication: August 18, 2016 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press PUBLIC NOTICE Parker NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2016-0153

To Whom It May Concern: On 6/9/2016 3:06:00 PM the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County.

Original Grantor: SERGIO ORTEGA Original Beneficiary: BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC D/B/A CHAMPION MORTGAGE COMPANY Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 4/26/2010 Recording Date of DOT: 5/6/2010 Reception No. of DOT: 2010027809 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $277,500.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $137,191.44

Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Pursuant to, but not limited to, Paragraph 9, Section b(iii) of the Deed of Trust, the debt has been accelerated because the borrower has not performed an obligation under the Deed of Trust, namely, the non-payment of property taxes and insurance.

THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.

The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust.

Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 3, BLOCK 2, VILLAGES OF PARKE R F I L I N G N O . 4 C C O U N T Y OF DOUGLAS STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 22930 Blackwolf Way, Parker, CO 80138 NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.

THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, September 28, 2016, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. If the sale date is continued to a later date, the deadline to file a notice of intent to cure by those parties entitled to cure may also be extended.

If you believe that your lender or servicer has failed to provide a single point of contact (38-38-103.1 CRS) or they are still pursuing foreclosure even though you have submitted a completed loss mitigation application or you have been offered and have accepted a loss mitigation option (38-38103.2 CRS), you may file a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General (720-508-6006) or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (855-411-2372) or both. However, the filing of a complaint in and of itself will not stop the foreclosure process. First Publication: 8/4/2016 Last Publication: 9/1/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 6/10/2016 CHRISTINE DUFFY DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee

The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: LISA CANCANON Colorado Registration #: 42043 1199 BANNOCK STREET, DENVER, COLORADO 80204 Phone #: (303) 350-3711 Fax #: Attorney File #: 8686.100238.F01

*YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/ Legal Notice No.: 2016-0153 First Publication: 8/4/2016 Last Publication: 9/1/2016 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, COLORADO By:/s/ Meghan McCann Deputy Clerk to the Board Legal Notice No.: 929605 First Publication: August 18, 2016 WES TEST Last Publication: August 18, 2016 WESTERN PAPER DISTRIBUTORS INC Publisher: Douglas County News-Press WESTERNAIRES WESTSIDE TOWING INC WETHERBEE, ERIN LEIGH WHITE, ANGELA KAY WILLIAMS, KELLY ANN WILLIAMS, MATT WIZ-QUIZ DRUG SCREENING SERVICE WIZ-QUIZ LAKEWOOD WL CONTRACTORS INC WOOLBRIGHT, KENDRA & STEPHEN WORTH, WILLIAM J WPRA-WOMEN’S PROFESSIONAL RODEO ASSOC. WYOMING HIGHWAY PATROL XCEL ENERGY XPERIENCE PROMOTIONS YOUNG WILLIAMS PC ZIA CONSULTING INC

Road Repair, Maintenance & Overlay 360.00 Janitorial Supplies 78.52 County Fair Service/Fair Event 2,500.00 Vehicle Tow Services 186.50 Travel Expense 258.98 Travel Expense 20.13 Travel Expense 310.85 Travel Expense 450.42 Other Purchased Services 220.00 Other Purchased Services 325.00 Major Maintenance Repair Projects 3,852.78 Fee Refunds - Clerk & Recorder 132.72 Travel Expense 32.62 County Fair Awards/Fair Rodeo 3,000.00 Travel Expense 4,420.88 Traffic Signal Utilities 3,903.37 Leadership Academy 1,239.84 Other Professional Services 20,216.06 Other Professional Services 16,837.50

TOTAL AMOUNT OF DISBURSEMENTS FOR THE MONTH OF JULY 2016

$18,988,620.80

THE ABOVE AND FOREGOING IS A CONDENSED STATEMENT OF THE BILLS APPROVED FOR PAYMENT DURING THE MONTH OF JULY 2016 BY THE DOUGLAS COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS UNDER WHOSE DIRECTION THIS NOTICE IS PUBLISHED. N. ANDREW COPLAND, CPA, DIRECTOR OF FINANCE Legal Notice No.: 929525 and 929526 First Publication: August 18, 2016

Last Publication: August 18, 2016 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

Parker * 4


36 Parker Chronicle

August 19, 2016 PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Knee Arthritis Pain: One HUGE Mistake And Two “Smart Moves”

Doctor’s Simple Advice Gets Rave Reviews By Patients Lucky Enough To Give It A Try By Matt Edgar America’s Health Writer

Denver- Have you been told that exercise will help your knee arthritis pain? Well... has it helped? If it hasn’t, one local doctor has a very good reason why. Not only that - he says if you are trying to exercise with knee arthritis - you might be making a HUGE mistake. Sounds crazy? Yes it does. In fact, I thought it was a ridiculous thing to say. That is until I talked to some of his patients who gave him rave reviews. Many said he completely changed their life. When they first came to the office, their knee arthritis pain was so bad they could barely walk and were scheduled for total knee replacement surgery. In a relatively short period of time, they cancelled surgery and are enjoying their lives again. Why is exercising a HUGE mistake and what does this doctor recommend that is helping so many knee arthritis sufferers who come to see them from all over the state? Double Edged Sword The doctor says that exercising with knee arthritis is a double edged sword. It is true, your knee joints need motion to be healthy.

And lack of motion can be very detrimental. Without motion joints become “sick.” And in theory exercising should help knee arthritis. But here is the BIG problem: Knee arthritis is condition that dries up the lubricating fluids in your knee. It also changes the joint surface and creates bone spurs. Because of these changes - exercising on an arthritic knee can cause more swelling, more pain and more arthritic changes. Imagine driving your car without any oil. What happens? The engine parts scrape together and wear out. You can’t simply drive your car more and make it better. And in many cases - you simply can’t just exercise your knee and make it better, either. What’s the answer? In a car it’s simple - put in more oil. And then make sure the oil level is correct and it is changed when necessary. With your knee joints - it is a little more complicated. The major lubricating fluid in your knee joint is called synovial fluid. Synovial fluid is the fluid that “dries up” when you suffer with arthritis. But there is good news: Now doctors can inject one of the building blocks of synovial fluid

Making Knee Arthritis Pain Worse: Research has discovered that people are suffering with arthritis much younger than expected. Making the right treatment choices now can possibly stop the progression and eliminate the pain.

directly into your knee joint. This building block of synovial fluid is called hyaluronic acid. And when hyaluronic acid is injected directly into the knee joint, many experts believe it helps lubricate the joint. Some say it is like squirting oil on a rusty door hinge. This allows the knee joint to glide more smoothly and often reduces or even eliminates pain. And here is the most important part: Now that the joint is lubricated and can move with

less or no pain - specific exercises can be a tremendous help. That’s why the doctors (when patients qualify) treat knee arthritis patients with hyaluronic acid injections FIRST and then prescribe a very specific rehabilitation and exercise program specially developed to help knee arthritis pain. This comprehensive knee arthritis pain program is called, “P.A.C.E.” and has been getting wonderful results. So what is the HUGE mistake? If you suffer with knee arthritis and are exercising and the pain is either not getting better - or getting worse - you may be making a mistake. You may actually be making things worse. And that’s the last thing you want to do. What are the two “smart moves?” If you have knee arthritis pain, look into viscosupplementation with hyaluronic acid. In many cases treatment with hyaluronic acid followed by a specific rehabilitation or exercise program can get results when everything else has failed. In fact, it is not uncommon to get pain relief just from the hyaluronic acid treatments alone - without doing any rehabilitation or exercising at all. And the results can be dramatic. If you are thinking about

giving hyaluronic acid treatments a try - this is VERY IMPORTANT: In our opinion the doctor you choose should use advanced imaging technology such as fluoroscopy to guide the injections and make sure the hyaluronic acid goes where it is supposed to. Laser guided digital imaging is one of the best technologies to guide injections. Research shows that without fluoroscopy, doctors miss the joint space up to 30% of the time. Obviously, if the joint space is missed - the treatment cannot work. If you have already had viscosupplementaion without this advanced imaging technology and it did not work - you may want to give it another try with a doctor who uses this cutting edge technique to get the best results possible. So, if you suffer with knee arthritis pain, talk to a specialist about viscosupplementation with hyaluronic acid especially if exercise is not working or making things worse. And make sure the doctor you choose works in a state-ofthe-art medical facility and uses advanced fluoroscopic imaging (Like laser guided digital imaging) to guide the injections to make sure the treatments have the best chance to work. For more information on viscosupplementation for knee arthritis or to get a free screening to see if this treatment is right for you, one of the specialists at Osteo Relief Institute can be reached at 720-500-1045.

Knee Pain Treatment Craze In Denver

After thousands already helped knee pain suffers face 48 hour cut off to get risk free screening for incredibly popular treatment (ORI) - The clock is ticking. There is only 48 hours to go. If you suffer with knee arthritis pain and would like to get a risk free knee pain screening to see if the experts at Osteo Relief Institute in Greenwood Village, CO can help you with their extremely popular knee pain relief program - read this right now. Here is why: For the past several years, the experts at Osteo Relief Institute have been literally swarmed with knee arthritis sufferers looking for relief. Nearly all these knee pain sufferers chose Osteo Relief for one reason - their top-notch knee pain relief program featuring viscosupplementation with hyaluronic acid and specially designed rehabilitation program. The SecretTo Success? The experts at Osteo Relief Institute believe one of the biggest reasons for their success is the fact that they have some of the best technology money can buy. Laser Guided Digital Imaging The clinic uses extremely advanced imaging equipment that allows them to see directly into the knee joint that they are treating. This advanced imaging is called, “Laser Guided Digital Imaging” and many experts believe is the difference between success and failure with this knee pain treatment. And probably the best thing about this technology is that it has allowed the experts at Osteo Relief Institute to get results with knee pain when so many others have failed. What Is This Treatment? This treatment is viscosupplementation with hyaluronic acid (HA). Those are big medical terms that basically means this... When you have knee arthritis - the lubricating fluid (synovial fluid) in your knee joint dries up.

This means instead of gliding smoothly - your bones start to rub and grind against each other. This causes a little pain in the beginning - but over time the pain steadily gets worse until it is excruciating. Hyaluronic acid works so well because it is like “joint oil.” It is a natural substance and is one of the natural building blocks of the synovial fluid that lubricates your knee. Scientists and researchers discovered this natural building block to synovial fluid in the rooster’s comb - that big red thing on top of the roosters head. It is extracted from the roosters comb, purified and concentrated. When it is injected directly into your knee joint, it is like squirting oil on a rusty door hinge. Hyaluronic acid allows your joints to glide more smoothly eliminating a lot of the rubbing, grinding and pain. Why You Should Try This Even If You’ve Already Had Similar Treatments Without results... “We have been able to help so many knee pain sufferers - even many who have already tried other injections like Synvisc, Supartz, Orthovisc and even Hyalgan. We use special and very advanced low-dose videofluoroscopy imaging called “Hologic Digital Imaging” so we can see right into the joint. This allows us to put the Hyalgan exactly where it needs to be. Studies show doctors doing joint injections without fluoroscopy miss the joint up to 30% of the time.” said the director of Arthritis Treatment at Osteo Relief Institute. Osteo Relief Institute is a state of the art medical facility offering only the best technology. And that’s not all - Osteo Relief Institute has a complete knee relief program called “P.A.C.E.” to make sure you get the most

Hyalgan Injected Directly Into Knee Joint Like “Joint Oil”

Research Shows Doctors Miss The Joint Space About 30% Of The Time Without Advance Imaging

Successful Treatment - Hyalgan being precisely injected directly into the knee joint using Hologic digital imaging. Advanced imaging allows treatments to be as precise as possible. Hyalgan can lubricate the joint and decrease pain.

Failed Treatment - the injection (and Hyalgan) misses the joint space. Research shows this occurs up to 30% of the time without the use of holistic digital imaging to guide the injection. This is why Hyalgan may not have worked for you.

pain relief and the best possible results from treatment. “Every case is individual. Some patients get quite a bit of relief right away - others take a little more time. But most have been extremely happy and the results usually last for at least 6 months. Patients who were suffering for years with bad knee pain are getting their lives back... going for walks again and exercising. It’s amazing to see. They tell all their friends - that’s why we are swarmed. I can’t tell you how many patients have cancelled their total knee replacement surgeries.” added one of the doctors. How To Get It If you have knee pain, the doctors and staff would like to invite you for a risk free screening to see if you are a candidate for Hyalgan treatments and the P.A.C.E program. All you have to do is call 720-500-1045 right now and when the scheduling specialist answers the phone tell her you would like your free “Knee Pain Screening.” Your screening will only take about 25-30 minutes... you will get all your questions an-

swered and leave knowing if you have possibly found the solution to your knee pain. But You Must Do This RIGHT NOW The specialists at Osteo Relief

Institute can only accept a limited amount of new patients each month for this screening. And because of the demand, we can only guarantee you a spot if you call within the next 48 hours. If you are suffering in pain - make the call right now so you can make your appointment today. Why not take 20 minutes for your risk free screening to discover how you may be able to end your knee arthritis pain? So call 720-500-1045 right now and find out if the experts at Osteo Relief Institute can help you like they have already helped thousands of others in your community. And here’s something really important - Hyaluronic acid treatments and the P.A.C.E program are covered by most insurance and Medicare. To schedule your risk free screening, call 720-500-1045.

If You Can Answer Yes - You Are Eligible For A Knee Arthritis Screening With The Experts At Osteo Relief Institute Do you have pain and osteoarthritis (arthritis) of the knee? Have you tried other treatments such as NSAIDS and other anti-inflammatory medications without success? Have you already tried viscosupplementation (Hyalgan, Supartz, Synvisc) without satisfactory results? If you answered yes to any of these questionscall Osteo Relief Institute and schedule your risk free knee pain screening screening 720-500-1045

Non-Surgical Spine Pain, Vein Treatment, And Joint Arthritis Relief


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