GONE VIRAL, AGAIN
Hospitals fill with respiratory patients, this time from an old virus causing a new threat
Hospitals fill with respiratory patients, this time from an old virus causing a new threat
After the last several years of “are you serious” living in the United States, I have no doubt that we don’t have to ever have to seriously worry about impeaching Donald Trump again.
I would be foolish to say he will never run again for president. Trump is a criminally ill narcissist so twisted, that he will threaten another trip down the magic escalator even from his jail cell or death bed.
But watching the achingly right states of Arizona and Nevada vote for progressive Democrats over their home-grown brand of twisted fascists restored my confidence in saying, “eventually, we’ll all be OK.”
Oh, yes. I’m confidently throwing out the political F-bomb there. Trump and failed gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake are outed, tried and true fascists.
Doubts? Check any expert definition you like, they all sound like this:
DAVE PERRY EditorFascism is a cult of the leader who promises national restoration in the face of humiliation brought on by supposed communists, Marxists and minorities and immigrants who are supposedly posing a threat to the character and the history of a nation.” That summary, which is like almost every other, came from Yale University philosophy professor Jason Stanley as told in a Sept. 6, 2020, NPR story.
If you know anyone who retold stories of life in Germany, Italy and Spain before and during World War II, you know how the fascist ideals and claims were at first scoffed at, then eye-rolled, then acknowledged, then widely accepted and then, well the story of fascism in our lifetime was cataclysmic.
In talking to my own family and other survivors about how people could ever believe such deluded things before World War II, and even later during the McCarthyism debacle in the 1950s and 1960s, the response was always the same: People were scared.
They were afraid of losing their jobs, like during the Great Depression. They were afraid of minorities owning businesses and homes and treating white people like so many white people treated minorities. They were afraid of Russia.
The common thread of all these fears were the overarching fear of someone taking something from you, directly or indirectly.
It’s an offshoot of the mentality that if someone wins, someone else must lose.
In reality, it doesn’t work that way. Black and brown people can own businesses, homes and even banks, and white
people don’t have to worry about living in their cars.
We can send extra money to schools in Aurora where kids struggle more than others to read and do math, and it doesn’t mean that schools where kids don’t struggle as much will have to learn to read in dark, cold classrooms.
Spending Colorado tax money to boost the pay of nurses and doctors in rural Colorado, to ensure residents there can get medical services, doesn’t mean worse medical care in the cities.
Spending Aurora tax dollars on providing livable space for a homeless drug addict doesn’t mean we can’t pave the potholes in the streets. It also doesn’t mean that everyone will want to quit their jobs to become homeless drug addicts so they can have a free place to live.
Need a generations-long test that this kind of “socialism” won’t have us all saluting XI Jinping in new American Red Squares?
Social Security. We all give to it. We all get something back from it. Creating Social Security didn’t prevent businesses from thriving, and it didn’t turn us all into communists, like conservatives of the day said it surely would.
We don’t have to be afraid to improve the lives of everyone, we just have to be committed and clever.
I think we’re on the way back to that. Colorado voters soundly rejected the unified war drum of fear most of the GOP candidates started pounding out a few years ago.
Republican District Attorney John Kellner, a reasonable, affable and dedicated prosecutor, couldn’t even carry his home Arapahoe and Adams counties in his bid last week to unseat Democratic Attorney General Phil Weiser.
Kellner boasted the partisan torch of “be afraid,” but he came across as relatively restrained and cogent compared to the antics of GOP Gubernatorial hopeful Heidi Ganahl, who saw “furry” conspiracies virtually everywhere and undeniable denier running mates trying to deny the undeniable all over the state.
I have faith that well-heeled and truly powerful Republicans will see there’s no future in Trump’s personal brand of fascism and flick him and his cronies aside, just like people did Il Duce and, just recently, Jair Bolsonaro.
No need to be coy. Call out lunacy and fascism when you see it so we can get back to the anguish of partisan politics like we used to know it.
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When it’s important to be the first to know - Follow us.Former President Donald Trump speaks to members of the media at Mar-a-lago on Election Day, Nov. 8, in Palm Beach, Fla. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik Editorials Sentinel
There’s no time for partisan praise nor penance in Colorado.
The election is over, and Republican candidates were decimated in elections across the state.
It wasn’t surprising in any way.
GOP hopefuls across the spectrum focused on stoking fears about crime, the economy and assorted conspiracy theories without offering any real or practical solutions.
The voting public wasn’t fooled by candidates promising a safer state by re-enacting so-called “tough on crime” laws and policies, when neighboring states controlled by Republicans have the same crime, economy and dismal education problems we have in Colorado.
The challenge for Colorado’s Democratic leaders now is to make good on promises to find working solutions, not soundbites, to the plethora of problems facing the state.
They must do this with the solid understanding that congressional gridlock will be as bad as it has been for more than a decade, or even worse.
It’s bad news for all Americans, including those in Colorado. Critical issues such as immigration, health care, opioid overdoses, women’s health rights, inflation and the pandemic are federal problems being dumped onto states because partisan pout fests clog the Congress.
Gov. Jared Polis and recent past legislatures have been successful in making inroads against some of the more serious issues facing the state, but there is much work to do.
Polis has been successful in leading the state into full-day, free kindergarten and providing some free preschool options to all families. Here is where cooperation with the federal Head Start program and legislation matching employee day-care and preschool benefits could leverage that into state programs making meaningful differences to every family, and giving every child a true head start in their education.
The health care system in Colorado, like those across the nation, is sick and corrupt, especially in rural Colorado. While state lawmakers and Polis have successfully helped people without Medicaid, Medicare or employer-provided benefits find better options on the state health insurance exchange, health care in Colorado is nowhere close to being affordable or adequate.
Massive mistakes were made when the 2010 Affordable Care Act was created by Congress. The legislation failed to regulate the industry, allowing it to greedily hike hidden prices and hide even greater costs to consumers with massive co-pays and out-of-pocket perks created for insurance companies. And Congress failed to create meaningful antitrust measures, and a so-called “public option,” to act as a real, market force to counter generations of monopoly and industry collusion.
The result is a medical system that offers “free” annual check-ups, can’t cancel coverage for cancer patients — but costs hundreds of times what better coverage and care is available all over the Western world.
While Colorado’s own “public option” is coming, legislators must do more to intervene in a system that clearly has no limits in how much it can charge for health care, no matter how little the system actually provides.
Likewise, it’s welcome news that Polis in his 2023 budget proposal is asking lawmakers for more money for state colleges in an effort to stem seemingly endless tuition hikes.
It’s not enough, however, to hope to keep “most” of expected tuition hikes under check. State lawmakers should convene a special committee to find ways to force colleges to throw unaffordable expenses overboard and restore affordable higher education to the state.
Rather than charge students what colleges deem they need, the state must set a fair price for state school tuition and require colleges and state lawmakers to determine how they will meet that goal. Tuition alone for most four-year state colleges is approaching $7,000 a year. Living expenses push past $12,000 a year easily. University of Colorado at Boulder tuition is about $11,000 a year.
Few things provide greater equity among everyone in Colorado than does education. Making this critical option available to all state residents is imperative.
Also, crime and opioid drug addiction are problems Polis and state lawmakers can work to provide solutions, not just rhetoric.
Clearly, ineffective “tough on crime” notions, ditched after the 1980s, and currently touted by many Republicans, are useless. States that hand out harsh sentences, little parole and actually encourage the public to carry handguns have the same theft, drug and gun violence problems as do Aurora and much of Colorado.
What does work to actually prevent crime, not just prosecute it, are education, community involvement, engaged schools and valid diversion programs.
Providing police with resources to identify stolen vehicles, and technology for cars to be clearly tagged and labeled as stolen, won’t just shuffle a dysfunctional criminal justice program in hopes of a different outcome.
Similarly, if the federal government is unable to provide resources to stem the spread of illicit and illegal opioids, state, regional and even neighboring state officials must work to interrupt the source of these drugs. Colorado must improve ways to provide education and treatment to address the real impact of this addiction scourge, being realistic that addicts can’t just choose to quit using and then make it happen.
While all the misinformation, delusion and distraction of the election are gone for now, the real problems in Colorado aren’t.
It’s time for those elected to work together to provide real solutions now.
Asheriff’s deputy roared into our driveway the other morning, rang the bell, and asked my wife if she knew my whereabouts.
Alarmed at first, then puzzled, Amy answered honestly: “He’s gone over to the Apple Store to see if they can fix his iPhone.”
Across town, I was telling a friendly clerk named Sheila how I had been walking our dog when the phone in my pants pocket made an odd sound. Finding that the screen was frozen, I tried to power it off. This action somehow triggered an SOS call to 911. Soon I heard a police dispatcher offering help, but she was unable to hear me. I tried repeatedly to shut-off the phone and each time another 911 call was triggered.
Sheila didn’t seem surprised. She said such an occurrence — a “glitch” is what she called it — happens frequently. Indeed, the deputy was telling Amy the same thing: Increased use of smartphones and watches is causing a rash of accidental emergency calls and distracting officers from legitimate missions.
Of the many mixed blessings that technology has bestowed upon us, this is a doozy. Yes, many people have been rescued by their smart devices — as commercial reenactments for Apple watches so dramatically illustrate. Yet, as I poked around local news sites I found that numerous municipalities have been struggling with time consuming false alarms.
Two summers ago, the state police in Maine noticed what Lt. Brian Harris termed “quite an uptick” in accidental emergency calls. He mentioned a local golfer who placed his phone in his cart’s cup holder as he bounced around the course, unaware that the movement was initiating calls to 911.
In Grand Traverse County, Michigan, police get about 120 emergency calls a day and about every fourth one is a misdial.
In Canada, the E-Comm emergency service says accidental calls are flooding its lines. In a news release, E-Comm said operators often hear singing in the background or cheering at sporting events during 911 calls. Still, the operators must do whatever is needed to confirm it is not an actual emergency.
There has been publicity recently about problems with the iPhone 14 Pro’s car-crash detection system. A significant number of false re-
ports come from amusement parks, where roller coasters and other high-speed rides are fooling the devices into thinking the owner has been in a crash. The Arkansas State Fair put out a warning last month about false iPhone messaging. In Sevier County, Tennessee, dispatchers reported a 150 percent increase in bogus 911 calls, most of them from the Dollywood amusement park.
But as my experience (with an iPhone 12) confirms, the problem goes beyond crash detection. With some Apple products, simply holding the side button for several seconds can trigger an SOS. Depending on the information stored on the device, this can result in emergency messages being sent to not only police but to your personal contacts as well.
A check of Apple message boards shows that complaints go back several years. Typical was the 2019 post from “TH55” who reported making three accidental calls to 911 and wrote, “Emergency SOS is literally the stupidest feature Apple has ever implemented.”
Apple’s website provides instructions on how to end emergency calls that are triggered by mistake. “If you start an emergency call by accident, tap the End Call button, then tap Yes to confirm that you want to stop the call,” it explains. But Apple says continuing to hold the buttons down will automatically prompt an SOS call. With police and rescue personnel stretched thin in many parts of the country, it’s unacceptable for hundreds of false alarms to be triggered needlessly. As my experience showed, simply walking with an iPhone in your pocket can lead to the dispatching of police, while the phone’s owner is unable to communicate or correct the error.
It turns out that just last month Apple issued the first beta version of its iOS 16.2 software. It doesn’t correct the problem, but it does include a new option for users to notify Apple whenever they accidentally report an emergency.
I suppose that’s a start. But it would be better to implement an actual fix that preserves the life-saving aspects of smartphone technology without sending so many police officers on wild SOS chases.
Peter Funt’s new memoir, “Self-Amused,” is now available at CandidCamera.com.
Starting this fall, period products are now available at no cost in female and gender-neutral bathrooms throughout the Cherry Creek School District, a move the district said is intended to cut down on stigma around menstruation and decrease the number of student absences.
“We all know there is nothing worse than being caught unaware when you don’t feel well or you’ve started menstruating, it just changes your whole day,” said Michelle Weinraub, the district’s chief health officer.
Meena Sheehan, a student wellness specialist in the district’s office of student health, said former superintendent Scott Siegfried instructed the department to start looking into the possibility of putting menstrual products in bathrooms, and the work continued after he left. When doing research, Sheehan said the department was motivated by studies showing that students who can’t afford period products are more likely to skip school.
“It became clear that this is a really important thing to have in our schools so that our students feel safe and provided and cared for,” she said.
One in five teens in the U.S. struggled to afford period products, and more than four out of five students had either missed class time or knew someone who missed class time because they didn’t have period products, according to a study from the Alliance for Period Supplies.
With some state-level exceptions, period products are not covered by food stamps or WIC, which can make it hard for families living in poverty to afford them. Earlier this year Colorado passed a bill exempting feminine hygiene products from the state sales tax.
Cherry Creek started putting menstrual supplies in school this school year and completed installation over fall break. The district was able to receive a grant from the Colorado Department of Education to fund its implementation, and also received funding from its Title IV schools and Medicaid offices, Sheehan said.
Products are available in every school across the district, includ-
ing alternative sites like the Joliet Center, in girl’s bathrooms as well as single-stall gender neutral bathrooms on campuses. Products are available at the elementary, middle and high school level but vary based on age.
Dispensers containing menstrual pads are available in all schools, and tampons are also available in the school health clinics at every high school. Only pads are available at elementary and middle schools.
Weinraub said that when implementing the project the district made sure that each school was given the same resources and that they were being sensitive to what was appropriate for the developmental level of each age group. Though some girls at the younger levels have already started menstruating, they may not know how to use tampons, and some families may be uncomfortable with their students using them at a young age.
“We’re not just throwing tampons at young girls and hoping they know what to do with them,” Weinraub said. “We’re always looking at those families for the education piece like we do with any part of their health.”
The menstrual pads in dispensers are from Aunt Flow, a woman-owned period product company that sells dispensers to schools and other organizations. Aunt Flow’s menstrual pads are made of organic cotton and have minimal packaging, which is more eco-friendly and cuts down on trash, Sheehan said.
Aunt Flow’s dispensers also stock 100 pads at a time, Sheehan said, which is more than many other dispensers carry. This was a plus for the districts because it means dispensers are much less likely to run out in the middle of the day.
Aunt Flow first came to the district as part of a project from students at Liberty Middle School’s Girl Scout troop, which raised money to put dispensers in all the school’s bathrooms. Lauren Campbell and Annaliese Austin, who are now juniors at Grandview High School, earned the Girl Scout Silver Award for the project.
The Colorado Department of Education grant is for three to five years, but Weinraub said the district intends to continue to offer menstrual supplies in perpetuity.
In 2021, the Colorado state legislature passed a law creat-
ing a grant program to provide menstrual products to qualifying schools. Cherry Creek did not qualify for that program, which was aimed at low-income schools, but Weinraub said she thought it was a positive step. Ultimately, she said she would love to see the state create a funded mandate for all schools to offer menstrual supplies.
“That would be the right thing to do for kids, for sure,” she said.
Along with Colorado, the Alliance for Period Supplies said on its website that 20 states and Washington, D.C. have some sort of requirement for period supplies to be in schools, but not all requirements are universal or come with funding from the state government.
Sheehan said she hopes Cherry Creek’s program eliminates a source of unnecessary stress for students and helps to destigmatize menstruation, which too often can be a source of anxiety and embarrassment for teen girls wrestling with the changes that puberty brings.
“It’s a normal bodily function for approximately half of the population,” she said. “We need to normalize that.”
ond Chance, Betty said she is committed to making sure her father’s legacy lives on.
“I told him, come hell or high water, we’re going to keep it going,” she said.
— MAX LEVY, Sentinel Staff WriterAdults seeking a high school diploma could soon earn theirs through a dedicated institution in Aurora, as the city is poised to become the first in the state to welcome Goodwill’s “high school for adults.”
“The school’s model started with the Goodwill in Indiana about 13 years ago, and it’s changing lives every day,” the nonprofit’s local vice president of human resources and workforce development, Gary Smith, said last Monday in an Aurora City Council meeting. “We want to bring those same results to Colorado.”
The Goodwill Excel Center would be located at the northeast corner of Iliff Avenue and Chambers Road, where the nonprofit owns a shopping center and runs a thrift store.
Representatives from Goodwill described their plans for the center to the City Council last Monday.
Around 11.5% of Americans and 12.6% of Aurorans aged 25 and older are without their high school
diploma or its equivalent, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Diplomas are an educational milestone and a prerequisite for many jobs and college programs.
Sarah Thomas, who represents Excel Center schools at the national level, said Goodwill’s model grew out of the nonprofit’s workforce development work in Indiana, where they found around half of the adults who they were placing in entry-level jobs lacked their high school diplomas.
She said the Excel Center meets its students where they are and doesn’t have any minimum educational requirements for enrollment. The center also helps prepare students for jobs and obtaining a college degree once they graduate, and offers free transportation assistance and free on-site childcare.
According to the University of Notre Dame, five years after applying to the Excel Center, students on average are earning 39% more than they did before and are more likely to be employed and have some college education. Thomas said about 38% of students go on to earn a two- or four-year degree.
“Typically for adults, a high school diploma on its own isn’t going to be enough to get that good, family-sustaining wage,” she said. “Ultimately, we want our students to have good jobs … that offer living wages, benefits and opportunities for growth.”
Goodwill operates more than 30 of the schools across the country. James Sanchez, director of Good-
will of Colorado, said the nonprofit looked at opening the school in Colorado Springs, but settled on the Aurora location because of their property’s size and location to public transportation.
Sanchez said the school would accommodate between 200 and 300 students at a time, and feature a dozen classrooms as well as computer labs, study areas and a dropin daycare center.
He said Goodwill was prepared to invest as much as $2.5 million to set up the school, and another said state Sen. Janet Buckner would be helping them get funding from the state to fund tuition for each student.
Councilmember Angela Lawson said the school could open in Aurora as soon as 2024.
— MAX LEVY, Sentinel Staff WriterArt Acevedo is being considered to lead the Aurora Police Department on an interim basis, and has been named as a consultant to help the city implement public safety reforms, according to a city spokesman.
Sources close to the matter previously told The Sentinel that Acevedo was being considered for the job, requesting anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.
“We would certainly welcome
someone of Art Acevedo’s caliber to lead the Aurora Police Department,” city spokesman Ryan Luby wrote Monday in a statement.
“He recently began discussions with city management about assisting us with the consent decree. During the discussions we asked him if he would consider applying for our interim police chief position. He has not committed to the job until he has had the opportunity to meet with city officials.”
Dan Oates — who previously served as chief between 2005 and 2014 — returned to lead the department on an interim basis after Vanessa Wilson was fired earlier this year.
While Oates’ contract with the city terminates at the end of November, the city previously said in a statement that he had “agreed to extend his service as the interim chief here, as needed.” A job opening for interim chief was posted earlier this month with a salary range of $192,000-$250,000. Wilson was salaried at $215,000.
Acevedo formerly led the police departments of Austin, Houston and, most recently, Miami. During that time, the 36-year law enforcement officer cultivated a reputation of openness to reform and working collaboratively with troubled police departments.
Acevedo made national headlines in June 2020 in Houston when he marched with Black Lives Matter protesters during a series of protests across the nation after the death of George Floyd.
Acevedo was fired by Miami city officials last year and filed a federal lawsuit in January, claiming protection as a whistleblower. The lawsuit was filed against Miami City Manager Arthur Noriega and city lawmakers Joe Carollo, Alex Díaz de la Portilla and Manolo Reyes, according to a report by CNN.
He also faced criticism from the Miami police union for his stance on police ethics and reform, according to local news reports, similar to the criticism directed at Wilson by Aurora’s police unions and critics on city council. An attorney for Wilson recently announced she would file a wrongful termination lawsuit against the City of Aurora.
Sources told The Sentinel that Acevedo came to Aurora to meet with the City Council. An item titled “police chief recruitment” was included on the agenda for an executive session scheduled to come before the group’s Monday night meeting.
— MAX LEVY, Sentinel Staff WriterAn afternoon shooting in north Aurora Nov. 11 left one 12-year-old boy dead and a 14-year-old boy hospitalized with serious injuries. Police arrested 18-year-old Rolando Felipe in connection with the shooting, asking prosecutors to file murder and attempted murder charges.
Officers responded to a shooting about 3 p.m. Friday in the 900 block Zion Street, according to a statement by Aurora Police Agent Matthew Longshore.
“Initial details obtained by responding officers indicated that shots were fired from the inside of an Acura sedan at the two boys walking up the street,” Longshore said.
The car left the scene, but it was later located, police said. Police did not say who was driving the car or if others are involved in the shooting.
When police and rescuers arrived, they found two young boys, who police say are related, suffering gunshot wounds. Both were transported to the hospital, where the younger boy was pronounced dead.
It’s unclear whether the boys were alone or other people were at the scene at the time of the shooting.
Police did not release a motive in the shooting but said the victims knew Felipe.
The Arapahoe County Coroner’s Office will identify the deceased victim after family has been notified.
Police said anyone with information can call Metro Denver Crime Stoppers at 720-913-7867. Tipsters can remain anonymous and still be eligible for a reward of up to $2,000, police said.
— KARA MASON, Sentinel Managing EditorAn unidentified 41-year-old man was found dead from a gunshot wound in an Aurora parking lot early Nov. 12, according to police.
Police were called to the 900 block of South Crystal Way at about 3 a.m. after reports of gunfire there.
“When they arrived, they found 41-year-old male lying in the parking lot suffering from a fatal gunshot wound,” Aurora Police Sgt. Faith Goodrich said in a statement. “He was pronounced deceased on scene.”
Police said investigators were looking for witnesses and evidence to the homicide.
“This is an open investigation and no arrests have been made,” Goodrich said.
Police said anyone with information can call Metro Denver Crime Stoppers at 720-913-7867. Tipsters can remain anonymous and still be eligible for a reward of up to $2,000, police said.
— SENTINEL STAFFPolice say a hit and run crash near Meadow Hills Golf Course last week left one man dead.
Aurora police officers were called to the intersection of East Hampden Avenue and South Dawson Street just before 11 p.m. Nov. 10. They discovered a man, who has
›› See METRO, 10
yet to be identified, was lying in the left land of eastbound traffic when he was hit by a black SUV.
The SUV did not stop upon hitting the man, who was pronounced dead at the scene, police said.
The death marks the 42nd traffic fatality in 2022.
Police are asking anybody with information about the crash or the driver to contact Metro Crime Stoppers. Tipsters could earn a reward up to $2,000.
— KARA MASON, Sentinel Managing EditorAurora police announced last week a man has been arrested and accused of helping his cousin, wanted for a quadruple murder, evade police.
Carlos Casillas-Flores, 22, was arrested in Denver on Nov. 10, according to the Aurora Police Department. While law enforcement officials say they don’t believe Casillas-Flores was involved in the murders of four people on Oct. 30, they do think he helped 21-year-old Joseph Mario Castorena with “avoiding apprehension.”
Last week, Castorena’s 18-year-
old brother Juan Angel Castorena was also arrested in Denver and faces charges of accessory after the fact. It’s not believed he was directly involved in the shooting either.
The shooting happened in the early hours of Oct. 30. Police were called to the 900 block of Geneva Street just after 2 a.m. for “suspicious activity.” Police say a dispatcher heard gunshots while on the call three minutes later and the call was upgraded.
At 2:15 a.m. police arrived at a home near East 10th Avenue and Geneva street, where they found four dead adults. The Arapahoe County coroner’s office identified the four as: 51-year-old Jesus Serrano, 22-year-old Maria Anita Serrano, 20-year-old Kenneth Eugene Green Luque and 49-year-old Rudolfo Salgado Perez. The deaths were classified as homicides.
Police said they also “rescued” two young children and a woman, who was later identified as Castorena’s ex-girlfriend, at the scene. All were unharmed.
Police say they believe the incident stemmed from a domestic situation between the surviving woman and Castorena. Last week, the Associated Press reported that court documents show Castorena threatened to kill his ex-girlfriend a week before the shooting.
There is now a combined
May 22, 1954 - November 3, 2022
Diana was born May 22, 1954, in Colorado Springs, Colorado at ‘Camp’ Carson, in the days before they called it ‘Fort’ Carson. She was born to Milton Eugene and Maxine E. Killion. She had a brother David who preceded her in death and a sister Dora Lee Shay. Her father was career military, so they moved frequently, living in Texas, Kansas, and California and even for a time in Newfoundland, Canada. He retired from the Air Force in Denver in the late 1960’s. They lived in Northglenn while Diana attended High School. She was very active in theatre and music throughout her school days. After she graduated, she took herself on a European trip visiting Great Britain, France and Italy.
After High School she became a Dental Assistant. In January of 1974 she was asked by a friend to meet up with some Cadets from the US Air Force Academy for a ‘blind’ date at a Beach Boys concert. As she was talking to her friend about her relatives in Kansas a young Cadet from Topeka introduced himself. They hit it off and started dating. She and Tom ‘T David’ Rutherford married in 1977 in Northglenn Colorado. They lived in Wichita Kansas when their daughters, Heather and Andrea were born. The family moved back to Colorado in 1992 and have lived in Aurora since that time. Diana worked in the healthcare field and supported her daughter and husband as they pursued projects in theatre. She retired in 2016, wrote music and created artistic designs on the internet. She created custom jewelry designs and loved all things pretty and sparkly. She was also a loving ‘Lhasa Apso’ Mom. They had four Lhasas over the years. She loved her fur babies. She loved, is loved and will be missed by many.
She is survived by her husband T. David Rutherford, daughters Heather and Andrea as well as her grandchildren, Ella and Nolie. Her mother Maxine E. Killion lives in Aurora. Her sister Dora Lee Shay lives in Michigan with her husband Guy and family.
Services will be Wednesday November 16, 2022 at 2:00PM MST.
Olinger Chapel Hill Mortuary & Cemetery
6601 S. Colorado Blvd. Centennial, CO 80121
Phone: 303.771.3960 • http://www.olingerchapelhill.com/
In lieu of flowers please consider a donation to the Denver Dumb Friends League in Diana’s name. https://www.ddfl.org/donate
$15,000 reward for information leading to Castorena’s arrest. Anybody with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 720-9137867. Tipsters may remain anonymous.
— KARA MASON, Sentinel Managing EditorAurora911 has a new resource to improve wait times and assist people calling for help with medical problems that don’t require treatment by paramedics or hospital physicians.
Between Oct. 5, when the agency’s Nurse Navigator Program launched, and Nov. 2, when the city’s shared data about the program, licensed nurses with Global Medical Response helped 203 people whose calls were forwarded to them by 911 dispatchers.
Nurses have helped set up remote visits with board-certified emergency physicians and appointments with local health care providers for patients as young as infants and as old as 96 years, according to the city. They’re also able to give health advice and arrange transport without an ambulance to and from non-emergency medical care.
In a news release, city staff said the program, for which translation services are also available for non-English-speaking callers, is designed to save time and money for callers as well as keep dispatchers and ambulances from responding to situations that aren’t true emergencies.
“The Aurora911 Nurse Navigation program ensures people with non-emergency health concerns are diverted to the care they need,” Aurora911 director Tina Buneta said in the release. “It also frees first responders to better address high-priority calls and supports our mission to get the right resources to the right place at the right (time), for everyone, every time.”
As staffing has fallen at Aurora’s emergency communications agency, the city has at times struggled to keep up with the volume of incoming 911 calls. Last year, 435 of the calls received by the agency took more than 2 minutes to answer, according to reporting by Channel 4 News.
Information provided this week to a council subcommittee indicates
The National Emergency Number Association recommends that 90% of 911 calls be answered by an operator within 15 seconds and 95% within 20 seconds. City spokesman Michael Brannen wrote in an email that, in 2022, it has taken an average of 10.56 seconds for operators to answer a 911 call, with about 80% being answered within 15 seconds and 85% within 20 seconds.
“We expect to see that number increase over time through the influence of this program, as 9-1-1 professionals will not need to remain on the line with low-acuity callers to provide additional instructions until EMS is on scene,” Brannen wrote.
“This will have a positive impact on our bandwidth to answer incoming calls in a shorter timeframe, and decrease the total average duration of calls over time, as we increase the types of low-acuity medical calls which qualify for nurse triaging.”
In addition to the Nurse Navigator Program, first responders in Aurora have other resources — such as the Crisis Response Team, which pairs police officers with mental health clinicians to de-escalate situations involving a suspect experiencing mental health problems — meant to reduce stress on the city’s emergency response system.
Brannen said Aurora911 program was not “intended to deal with mental health issues, but nurses are capable of handling those calls, and the “vast majority” of mental health problems contributing to incidents are not known to 911 operators or to the third-parties making the call.
The program has only dealt with one call involving overlapping physical and mental health problems, Brannen said. The nurse referred a person to Aurora Mental Health Center.
“For calls which involve any form of immediate safety concern, or are connected with suspicious behavior or crime, or are reported by a third party who does not (have) any personal knowledge about the person they are reporting, those calls would not qualify for Nurse Navigation and would be more suited for other programs connected with police response,” Brannen said.
The program is currently funded through the state’s Nurses in 911 Pilot Grant Program. Aurora joins other cities such as Boulder, Longmont and Pueblo as recipients of the grant.
An Aurora woman is accused of felony fraud for overbilling Medicaid for home healthcare services reportedly provided by her company, Aggie’s Angels Care Providers.
An investigation by the Colorado Department of Law’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit found that DeJane Reaniece Lattany regularly filed and received Medicaid reimbursement for services that Aggie’s Angels had not provided. The company mainly serves seniors and people with developmental disabilities.
An arrest affidavit for Lattany says she was billing “hundreds of man-hours of service, sufficient to cover anywhere from a 6-12-month timeframe of services…within a matter of a couple of calendar days, a timeframe in which it is not possible to perform that quantity of service hours.”
Investigators say between Nov. 9, 2019 and Oct. 1, 2022 there were a total of 319 claims paid, totaling $526,293.89. The total value of the alleged theft is $372,150.47, according to the affidavit.
Lattany first told investigators that the overfilling was due to an issue with a billing company called Affordable Professional Billing Services and she was trying to correct it, but investigators later learned the company didn’t exist at all and that the company was “fabricated in an effort to hinder the investigation.”
Aggie’s Angels says on its website that the company “has been built upon solid, wholesome morals and ethics.”
Lattany is charged with Medicaid fraud and waste, which is a class three felony. She also faces charges for cybercrime, falsifying documents and attempting to influence a public servant, all felonies.
“Home healthcare is sometimes a patient’s only option, and taking advantage of a system that helps the most vulnerable Coloradans puts this care in jeopardy,” Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser said in a statement about the case. “We will continue to hold accountable those who take advantage of the state’s Medicaid system.”
— KARA MASON, Sentinel Managing EditorGrandview and Regis Jesuit both reached the quarterfinals of the Class 5A state football playoffs and couldn’t have gotten there in more different fashions.
The fourth-seeded Wolves and seventh-seeded Raiders — both coming off opening round byes —earned home victories just a few miles away from each other, but did so on opposite ends of the spectrum.
Regis Jesuit moved into the final eight by lighting up the scoreboard for more points than it had in its past 74 games, while Grandview pitched a shutout and even scored defensively to advance.
of 74 games — as senior quarterback Exander Carroll passed for five touchdowns, rushed for two more and led nine scoring drives as the Raiders qualified for the quarterfinals for the fourth straight season and eighth time in the last nine.
The Raiders received the opening kickoff against Fossil Ridge and drove 80 yards with ease, as junior running back Anthony Medina did a lot of the work with his legs before Carroll stretched the ball across the goal line from 2 yards out for an opening touchdown.
The Raiders moved into a rematch with parochial school rival and second-seeded Valor Christian at 7 p.m. Nov. 18 on the same field at Valor Stadium where they knocked off the Eagles in overtime in the season opener. The Wolves, meanwhile, get an extra day to prepare for its 1 p.m. Nov. 19 contest at Legacy Stadium against No. 5 Pine Creek.
Regis Jesuit was held to a season-low 14 points in its regular season finale, a loss to Fountain-Fort Carson, but 10th-seeded Fossil Ridge got the full force of its offense.
The Raiders found points much easier to come by when they got into postseason play as they piled up a season-high 63 on their way to a 63-28 victory over the SaberCats at frigid Lou Kellogg Stadium.
Coach Danny Filleman’s team invoked the running clock mercy rule as it scored its most points since a 64-point effort in the 2016 season — a span
Carroll would rush for a 1-yard touchdown in the third quarter to invoke the running clock and in between threw three touchdown passes to senior tight end Andrew Metzger and others to seniors D’Andre Barnes and Dylan McCollough.
Medina and Jaden Thermidor rushed for touchdowns as Regis Jesuit cashed in three recoveries of pooched kickoffs that were mishandled by Fossil Ridge’s special teams.
The Raiders haven’t made it to the 5A semifinals since the 2016 season, but can do so with another win over Valor Christian. They knocked off the Eagles in thrilling fashion in Week 1 when Carroll found sophomore Grayson McPherson for an overtime touchdown in a 23-17 win.
Grandview made it to the semifinals in three of the past four seasons and has a physical obstacle in front of it in Pine Creek, which has made the move up from 4A (where it was a semifinalist in 2021) to 5A.
The Wolves certainly will not be whole when they play the Eagles, as coach Tom Doherty’s team had six offensive starters go down with injuries in their 20-0 win over 20th-seeded Rocky Mountain Nov.
Junior quarterback Liam Szarka threw touchdown passes to senior Davion Henderson and sophomore Xay Neto on Grandview’s first two drives, but exited and didn’t return after throwing consecutive interceptions in the second quarter. His replacement, Cole Swanson, turned the ball over on the next drive and the Wolves’ offense couldn’t add anything the rest of the way.
Fortunately, Grandview’s defense picked the offense up by forcing turnovers on downs all game long from the Lobos, who had starting quarterback Gage Brook back in the lineup after he missed most of the season.
The play of the game defensively came in the fourth quarter when Rocky Mountain reached the Grandview 25 and a pass from Brook that would have put them in the red zone was picked off by senior Luke Trinrud. Trinrud, a member of the Wolves back-to-back 5A state championship-winning boys track team, sped up the sideline 95 yards for a touchdown.
Senior Max Kibbee had another interception on the final possession for the Lobos as the Grandview defense made sure to lighten the late game pressure on the offense.
Right: The Grandview girls volleyball team came through with an epic five-set win over Rampart on Nov. 10 at the Denver Coliseum in a Class 5A girls volleyball state second round match despite trailing two sets to none.
Middle: Cherokee Trail’s Ashlynne Manuel (5) rises to the net to contest a 50/50 ball with Cherry Creek’s Natalie Murphy during the second set of the Cougars’ Class 5A girls state volleyball first round match Nov. 10.
Below: Emerson Deferme and Grandview battled eventual Class 5A state champion Valor Christian before falling in three sets Nov. 11.
Only one team could come out on top in an epic match between Grandview and Rock Canyon Nov. 12 in the semifinals of the Class 5A girls state volleyball tournament.
The fifth-seeded Wolves and third-seeded Jaguars both played well enough to advance to the state championship match against top-seeded Valor Christian, but Rock Canyon came through in the key junctures and outlasted Grandview 16-25, 35-33, 29-27, 25-20 in one of the tightest matches of the competitive three-day tournament.
had a 24-22 advantage, but it was the Wolves’ turn to hold off set point twice to extend the match. Grandview had set points at 25-24 (on a Placide finish), 26-25 (on Deferme’s putaway) and 27-26 (after an errant Rock Canyon serve), but the Jaguars won the final three points to take the lead in the match.
Another back-and-forth set in the fourth finally tipped toward Rock Canyon in the middle. The Wolves got as close as one point at 21-20, but a block, two kills and an ace for the Jaguars put an end to the match.
Coach Rob Graham’s Wolves had planned to make to the 5A state final for a third straight season — where they would have had a rematch with the Eagles, who swept them in winners bracket play Nov. 11 — but they lost three straight tight sets after winning the opener to fall short.
The Wolves finished the season 22-8.
BY COURTNEY OAKES Sports EditorGrandview started strong against Rock Canyon and maintained a decent lead until it was able to close out the opening set. The Jaguars got within 20-16, but senior Abbey Hemp served out the last five points of the set. Senior Haley Glunz and junior Emerson Deferme had two kills apiece in the closing series.
The Wolves had a 24-22 lead in the second set as they looked to take a 2-0 lead, but the Jaguars staved it off to forge a 25-25 that would be just the start of an epic race for the two-point margin needed to win.
In all, Grandview had six set point chances — including at 33-32 after senior Gabi Placide’s kill down the line — but Rock Canyon battled back tied it and got the winning points on a service ace that landed just inside the back line and a block on an attack from Deferme that also was ruled to have touched down on the court near the backline.
The Jaguars tried to build on the momentum and raced out to a 20-14 lead in the third set and
Grandview started the final day with a 25-18, 25-17, 18-25, 26-24 win over No. 6 Chaparral in an elimination bracket match, which came after a loss to Valor Christian Nov. 11. On the opening day, the Wolves swept Denver South (25-6, 25-15, 25-16 to start the tournament and made a huge rally to win three straight sets to beat Rampart in five sets (26-28, 21-25, 25-23, 25-20, 15-9).
Grandview should have a good number of players who got on the floor at the state tournament back next season, but graduate regulars in Placide and Glunz, who were two of the team’s top four offensive weapons.
Cherokee Trail’s stay in the tournament lasted just two matches, but the 10th-seeded Cougars were on the court for a total of 10 sets over two days. Unfortunately, the key sets in both its first round match with Cherry Creek Nov. 10 and the Nov. 11 elimination bracket match against Fossil Ridge got away from the Cougars, who were eliminated from the tournament with their second loss.
Coach Harry Hendon’s team forced a fifth set with the eighth-seeded SaberCats, but ended up on the short end of a 25-19, 20-25, 25-18, 23-25, 15-6 decision that ended its season.
Cherokee Trail — which qualified for the 5A state tournament for the first time since 2019 — finished the season 17-10. All but one of the losses sustained by the Cougars came to teams that were still alive in the state tournament in the championship or elimination bracket on the final day.
For more on both teams at the state tournament,visitsentinelcolorado.com/preps
The Lotus School For Excellence boys soccer team ended up with the same result as the previous season, but in a much different way and with a vastly different feeling.
The Meteors were short several of their best players due to COVID-19 protocols and overwhelmed because of it by Crested Butte when they played for last season’s Class 2A state championship at Switchbacks Weidner Field and fell 2-0.
Even so, Lotus (14-5) played a challenging regular season schedule and then took the No. 6 seed and went all the way through the bracket to the final, knocking off No. 2 Bishop Machebeuf in the semifinals and No. 3 Thomas MacLaren School in the quarterfinals.
That brought them into a matchup with top-seeded Vail Mountain, one of those 3A teams that dropped down. The Gore Rangers made it to the quarterfinals last season.
Just seven-plus minutes into the morning championship game at frosty Weidner Field, the
In its return to the same pitch Nov. 12, sixth-seeded Lotus scored the opening goal of the game against top-seeded Vail Mountain and held the advantage past the midway point in the second half before the Gore Rangers scored twice in a three-minute span and denied the Meteors the title with a 2-1 victory.
BY COURTNEY OAKES Sports Editor“There were no what-ifs this time, what if we had certain players, what if this situation was different,” coach Bennett Pang said. “We went out and played at full strength and Vail were the better team on the day. It’s a much different feeling. It’s almost like we were just happy to be there last year and that’s a contrast to the lockerroom this year. Now, we expect to be there, so it makes it a bit harder to take.”
The residual effect of last season’s championship game appearance gave Pang some needed cache as he attempts to build the program at Lotus, a school of 900-plus students in kindergarten through 12th grade.
The Meteors got some additional players — which allowed them to play some junior varsity games that they weren’t able to have last year — and it gave them confidence they could still compete at the highest level in 2A, which experienced an influx of teams that dropped down from 3A.
Meteors took the lead when they had a free kick opportunity taken by junior Fredy Peraza, who was fouled outside the box.
Peraza — whose 38 goals put him second in the final 2A goal scoring leaderboard — bent a shot around the Vail Mountain wall and was batted down by diving keeper Mason Geller, but senior Abeneazer Getachew crashed the play and put in the rebound. It was the second straight big goal for Getachew, whose score held up to be the game-winner in the semifinals.
The early goal brought out a noticeable change to the flow of the game — and not in a good way for Lotus — noted Pang.
“So much emotion dictates the run of play and it’s almost like once we scored, we had a hard time transitioning out of our defensive third,” Pang said. “It was almost a natural reaction that we were just trying to make sure we stayed up.”
The desperate Gore Rangers pressured the remainder of the half — including several dangerous free kick chances — but was unable to get anything past Lotus senior keeper Fernando Alcantar-Barajas, who was also in net for last season’s state championship game for the Meteors.
In the 60th minute, Vail Mountain nearly got the equalizer, but senior defender Carlos Martinez slid to clear the ball off the line. That held
off the Gore Rangers for just one more minute, however, as Javier Braun capitalized on a loose ball in front of the goal to tie the game.
A few minutes later, a corner kick chance for Lotus turned into disaster when Vail Mountain quickly transitioned it out of its own end. Drew Johnson fed Rutley Heinemann on a give-andgo that saw Heinemann get the ball in the clear, dribble it into the box and slip it inside the far post with Alcantar-Barajas coming out.
A number of free kick chances were taken by Peraza in the closing minutes, but none found the mark. Geller made a diving save and smothered the loose ball on one opportunity to keep the Gore Rangers in the lead.
Alcantar-Barajas made a huge stop with just over seven minutes remaining to give the Meteors a chance to rally. Peraza’s free kick try with just over two minutes left went just wide to the right of a diving Geller.
Six starters from the lineup graduate, but Pang hopes the momentum of the last two seasons has now created something sustainable.
“We lost quite a few seniors last year, too, and there was some doubts as to whether we would still be sucessful,” he said. “Those will still be there going into next year. There will be turnover,
The first set of Aurora prep athletes who have earned the opportunity to compete for college programs signed National Letters of Intent on Nov. 9.
Eaglecrest had an morning celebration that featured all female athletes, who signed in softball, volleyball, soccer and basketball, while Regis Jesuit had a midday ceremoney that recognized signess from its Boys Division and its Girls Division together. The Raiders had athletes sign NLIs in swimming, field hockey, lacrosse, softball, soccer and volleyball.
Grandview traditionally honors its full group of signees at a ceremony in April, while several athletes firmed up their committments in private ceremonies, as did other athletes from Cherokee Trail and Rangeview.
Here’s a full list of Aurora’s NLI signees/honorees on Nov. 9 (please email additions to sports@sentinelcolorado.com):
CHEROKEE TRAIL: Bowen Tabola , baseball, Western Carolina University; EAGLECREST: Ryann Bergen , softball, Hiram College; Micala Boex soccer, Northern Arizona; Hailey Buttshaw , softball, Colby Community College; Maddie Demoss , softball, Colby Community College; Maddie Jones , volleyball, Avila University; Nia McKenzie , basketball, Washburn; Jolene Ramiro , basketball, Colorado State-Pueblo; Laci Roffle , basketball, Metro State; Rilyn Snyder , soccer, Washburn;
GRANDVIEW: Naomi Clark , soccer, Washington State University; Paige Dailey , swimming, UC Davis; Haley Glunz , volleyball, Arkansas State University; Gabriella Placide , volleyball, University of Northern Colorado; Makayla Valle , softball, Lamar University;
RANGEVIEW: Mikayla Brown softball, Upper Iowa University;
REGIS JESUIT: Samantha Aguirre , swimming, United States Naval Academy; MaryKate Berg , field hockey, Davidson College; Jack Casey , lacrosse, United States Military Academy; Spencer Day , lacrosse, Villanova University; Charlotte Ford , lacrosse, Brown University; Sophia Frei , swimming, University of North Carolina; Amery Galan volleyball, Center College; Kendall Kersey , softball, University of Missouri-Kansas City; Ronan Krauss , swimming, Georgetown University; Ava Rogala , lacrosse, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University-Daytona; Olivia Roumph , swimming, Indiana University; Hailey Simco , softball, Lee University; Fletcher Sullivan , lacrosse, Monmouth University; Julia Tierney , soccer, United States Air Force Academy
Winter sports get the OK to begin practice and tryouts for the upcoming 2022-23 season on Nov. 14, when boys and girls basketball, boys and girls wrestling, girls swimming and ice hockey get underway.
Scrimmages can begin Nov. 19, while the regular season is scheduled to begin on Nov. 28 in all sports.
Boys and girls basketball — which has gained a 6A classification this season — will again be played to its conclusion at the Denver Coliseum with the semifinals and finals March 9-11, while girls swimming will hold its state meet again at the Veterans’ Memorial Aquatic Center in Thornton with the Class 5A diving competition on Feb. 7, 5A swim prelims on Feb. 9 and finals on Feb. 10. The boys and girls state wrestling tournaments will run concurrently Feb. 16-18 at Ball Arena, which will also be the site of the ice hockey state championship game, which has a date that is yet to be determined.
Besides the addition of a new classification in basketball, the smallish number of ice hockey teams in the state will grow with two programs. including one at Grandview, which has previously sent players to the Cherry Creek co-op.
Aurora has two state championships to defend from last season, including the Class 5A state crown won by the Grandview girls basketball team. There’s also an individ-
ual state champion in Eaglecrest’s Blythe Cayko, who returns as a senior after she won last season’s 185-pound state champion at the girls state wrestling tournament held at Ball Arena.
The Cherokee Trail boys cross country team didn’t finish the season racing at the Class 5A state meet last month. The Cougars are among the Colorado contingent set to compete in the Nike Cross Southwest Regional meet Nov. 19 in Mesa, Arizona.
Colorado runners join those from Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah in racing at the Coyote Run Golf Course as they attempted to qualify for the Nike Cross Nationals Meet Dec. 3 in Portland, Oregon.
The Colorado Coaches of Girls Sports (CCGS) will give top senior girls volleyball players a final opportunity to play at the prep level with a handful of all-state matches in multiple classifications Nov.
20 at Fossil Ridge High School in Fort Collins.
Final rosters were not available at press time — visit sentinelcolorado.com/preps for rosters — but at least one local player had been selected in senior Gabi Placide of Grandview. The University of Northern Colorado signee helped the Wolves make it to the semifinals of the Class 5A state tournament, which concluded Nov. 12.
Several softball players and coaches from Aurora programs got the chance to take the diamond and represent their schools one more time Nov. 6 at the Colorado Coaches of Girls Sports (CCGS) Class 5A All-State Game.
The game was contested at the Lutz Complex and included six senior players from four Aurora programs — Hailey Buttshaw and Maddie Demoss of Eaglecrest, Gabi Giroux and Elliana Trujillo of Smoky Hill, Makayla Valle of Grandview and Cherokee Trail’s Jenna Fullmer —while two of the three coaches were locals in Liz Carter, who led Grandview to the 5A state tournament, and Smoky Hill’s Brennan Brown.
The CCGS organization has honored top senior softball players in Colorado with all-state games since 1987.
The novel coronavirus was a new and startling threat that scientists and doctors rushed to confront when it made its first appearance three years ago. But after two winters of COVID-19 spikes, this season, there’s an old virus behaving in new ways that’s causing problems for the health care field in Colorado and across the nation. And unlike COVID-19, it’s the youngest people who are most at risk.
Children’s Hospital Colorado is currently operating at full capacity due to a record number of pediatric patients with respiratory illnesses.
The increase is driven by a nationwide surge in RSV, a respiratory virus that primarily affects very young children, the immunocompromised and the elderly. The virus circulates every fall and winter, but began earlier than normal this year and has been unusually severe.
The increase has led Children’s Hospital to bring back surge tactics that it employed during peak times in the pandemic, and healthcare providers across the state are coordinating to try to increase resources for pediatric patients.
“We’re managing patient volumes like we’ve never seen before,” said associate chief medical officer Dr. Kevin Carney
during a press conference last week hosted by Children’s and the Colorado Department of Health and Environment. “It’s truly like nothing we’ve ever seen before at Children’s Hospital Colorado.”
Carney said the hospital’s beds across the state are at or above capacity and that urgent care and emergency room visits are 30% higher than they have been on the busiest day of a normal flu season.
Since Oct. 1, 554 people have been hospitalized with RSV in the five-county Denver metro area, according to data from state health department officials. The department only tracks the illness in the Denver metro area, where there have also been 144 reported outbreaks in school and childcare facilities. The overwhelming majority of those hospitalized are young children.
Dr. Lalit Bajaj, chief quality, equity and outcomes officer at Children’s Hospital Colorado, said that RSV is one of the main causes of a condition called bronchiolitis, which is what the hospital is seeing a steep rise in young patients needing treatment for.
RSV stands for respiratory syncytial virus, a common cause of mild cold-like symptoms such as runny nose, cough and fever. Nearly all U.S. children normally catch an RSV infection by age 2.
A tent for overflow patients is seen near the ambulance entrance to Children’s Hospital Colorado, Nov. 11, 2022. Photo by PHILIP B. POSTON/Sentinel ColoradoPeople infected are usually contagious for three to eight days. Babies and people with weakened immune systems can spread RSV for up to four weeks. There is no vaccine for it, though several candidates are in testing.
Everyone can get RSV. But it causes the most threat to infants, older adults and other vulnerable people, who can get serious airway and lung infections. Reinfections are not uncommon, and people can be reinfected more than once in a season, according to disease experts.
Among U.S. kids under age 5, RSV typically leads to 58,000 hospitalizations and up to 500 deaths in a year. For adults 65 and older, RSV causes 177,000 hospitalizations and 14,000 deaths yearly.
For babies, the struggle to breathe can interfere with eating. “And that’s really when we start to worry,” said Dr. Melanie Kitagawa of Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston, where more than 40 children have RSV.
“They’re breathing fast, breathing deep. We see them using muscles in their chest to help them breathe,” Kitagawa said. “These are kids who are having difficulty taking a bottle because their breathing is being impacted and they can’t coordinate both at once.”
RSV usually just shows up as a mild cold in older kids and adults, but it is extremely transmissible, Bajaj said. Unlike COVID-19, it can live for a number of hours on hard surfaces. It is also much more likely than COVID-19, which rarely sickened the very young, to require hospitalization for children. It mainly affects children below the age of 2, and can be especially dangerous for infants
age zero to six months.
That’s because they have smaller airways and are more susceptible to respiratory distress, or difficulty breathing, Bajaj said. For the same reason, children who were born premature or have heart disease are also at higher risk because they have less lung capacity.
“The thing about RSV is healthy children over the age of two or three as well as adults handle it well, but adults act as a reservoir to transmit it,” he said.
Children’s is “very familiar” with the disease, which Bajaj said they usually track in a predictable pattern from December through April. The early and sudden influx has put a strain on the hospital system.
Similar situations are playing out across the country as the virus is encountering a highly vulnerable population of babies and children who were sheltered from common bugs during the pandemic lockdowns.
Immune systems might not be as prepared to fight the virus after more than two years of masking, which offered protection, according to Dr. Elizabeth Mack of Medical University of South Carolina. For babies, their mothers may not have been infected with RSV during pregnancy, which could have given the children some immunity.
“South Carolina is drowning in RSV,” Mack said in a news release.
U.S. health officials have noted a rise this month in national reports of respiratory illnesses, which they say is at least partly due to the early spread of flu in much of the South. Last week, more than 7,000 tests came back positive for RSV, according to CDC figures.
That’s more than in previous surges.
At Children’s, the hospital has filled every single space on its inpatient side and is activating beds that aren’t usually used as inpatient beds, Bajaj said. Some days there are 30 to 40 patients waiting for an inpatient bed to open up.
“On any given night in our ED we will have full waiting rooms,” Carney said at the press conference.
Even more so than regular ICU beds, pediatric ICU beds are “an incredibly specialized resource,” Scott Bookman, the state’s COVID-19 incident commander, said at the conference.
On average, Bookman said there are 22 pediatric ICU beds available across Colorado but that number currently has been hovering between zero and five.
The hospital is falling back on contingency plans it has for when it reaches capacity, Bajaj said, including opening up alternative bed sites, asking employees to take on additional work and by working with other healthcare providers to transfer some patients to other facilities.
The hospital is also adding additional contract team members, including travel nurses and respiratory therapists, Carney said. Part of the hospital’s contingency plans include postponing some non-urgent surgeries and other treatments for children, which he acknowledged is “extremely stressful” for the families’ whose care is delayed.
During the peaks of COVID-19, which did not seriously affect children, Children’s helped other facilities that were at capacity to
care for some of their patients. During this surge, Bajaj said those providers have reciprocated and some are lowering the minimum age of patients they will accept to their emergency departments to treat teenage patients.
“They’ve been really gracious to help us with some of the older kids,” he said, freeing up space at Children’s for the youngest patients.
The hospital has also brought back its medical tent that it set up outside its emergency department during the pandemic. During that time it mostly used the tent to isolate patients, and it is now using it to treat about eight patients at a time who have low acuity issues.
CDPHE is communicating with
schools and childcare providers across the state to make sure they understand the potential danger, Bookman said. One of the most important things that can be done to reduce the spread is to have children and employees stay home if they are sick to avoid spreading disease.
“A mild cold for one person can be incredibly serious for someone else,” he said.
Aurora’s school district both said they are aware of the situation and like during the pandemic, school nurses continue to monitor symptoms in their schools. Both districts receive communications from CDPHE and the Tri-County Health Department.
Cherry Creek nurses are receiving
training in recognizing signs and symptoms of RSV, spokesperson Lauren Snell said.
“We continue to have strong mitigation layers in place at schools including encouraging students to stay home when sick, washing hands frequently, thorough cleaning of surfaces, etc.” Aurora Public Schools spokesperson Patti Moon said in an email. “Also, nurses continue to work with families to track symptoms and illness reporting.”
Medical professionals say the increase in RSV is part of a several-year-long trend of the coronavirus disrupting the usual patterns of infectious disease but that the specific causal factors are not yet known.
Dr. Bernadette Albanese, is a pediatric infectious disease specialist with the Tri-County Health Department, said that rates of flu and RSV have been very low over the past few years when the coronavirus was more severe.
“We saw lots of things become uncommon during the two years of the pandemic when people were more separated,” she said.
The resurgence is likely a reflection of the fact that people are “kind of getting back to normal” this year and also have less immunity, Albanese said.
Bajaj concurred that a lack of immunity was likely a factor, but said there are still a lot of unknowns about how the pandemic is affecting disease transmission.
“It’s going to keep infectious disease experts busy for a while,” he said.
State epidemiologist Dr. Rachel Herlihy said that RSV is impacting children much more than flu or COVID-19, but that both other viruses are currently on the rise as well. She said she’s concerned about potentially seeing RSV, the flu and COVID-19 peak at the same time.
“It’s difficult to know how that’s all going to play out,” she said.
As of this week, Adams, Arapahoe and Douglas counties all have low transmission levels of COVID-19, according to the Tri-County Health Department. As of the most recent data, Adams and Arapahoe counties both had a percent positivity testing rate of just over 10%.
At the press conference, Herlihy and the other medical professionals urged Coloradans to get vaccinated for the flu and COVID-19, including the updated omicron booster, to wash your hands frequently and encourage young children to wash their hands and cover their coughs and sneezes as much as possible, to clean frequently-touched surfaces like counters and doorknobs and to stay home if they have symptoms of a disease.
“If I would say anything to the community, it’s please wash your hands and please clean your surfaces,” Bajaj said.
Medical professionals were more reticent when it came to recommending mask wearing, which at this point in the pandemic has become a personal decision as Colorado has not had a statewide mask mandate for over a year. However, multiple people said it would serve as an additional layer of protection.
Bajaj said that since he works in the emergency department and needs to stay healthy, he masks more than most people. Wearing a mask in indoor spaces will help protect the wearer from disease and will likely help the people around them as well, he said.
Unlike for COVID-19, there is currently no vaccine for RSV. There’s no specific treatment, so it’s a matter of managing symptoms and letting the virus run its course. Doctors may prescribe oral steroids or an inhaler to make breathing easier. In serious cases, patients in the hospital may get oxygen, a breathing tube or a ventilator.
Warning signs that children might be seriously ill include if they are having difficulty staying hydrated — diaper-aged children should have some urine output at least every eight hours, Bajaj said. Difficulty breathing is also a red flag. If children are wheezing, breathing quickly and shallowly or if their lips and fingernails are turning blue, seek medical attention.
Bajaj said that one major thing parents should do to be prepared is to know how to contact their primary care provider or pediatrician so that they can get ahold of them easily if something comes up. If their child starts to show symptoms of an illness, being able to get advice from their doctor about whether or not they need to go to the hospital can save them from hours of waiting in an emergency department.
He also said that the hospital’s freestanding emergency department in Wheat Ridge is a good option for parents to take their kids to if they need to get looked at but aren’t too sick.
“This is going to be a challenging winter,” Bajaj said. “But it will end.”
More information for parents and caretakers about RSV is available from Children’s Hospital Colorado at www. childrenscolorado.org/rsvinfo.
Information about where to get COVID-19 vaccines and boosters is available at covid19.colorado.gov.
— The Associated Press contributedtothisreport
Skye Barker Maa sees Denver’s fashion industry through rose-colored glasses. Literally.
It was more than a halfhour into arriving back at Factory Fashion, a small batch manufacturing studio in north Aurora, on a recent October afternoon that she even realized she still had the glasses on.
Barker Maa had been across town at a fabric shop picking up more supplies so that the team at Factory Fashion could continue assembling her first collection to be shown at Denver Fashion Week, Nov. 12-20.
“They asked for 12 (pieces), but I’m sending 14 because I can’t control myself,” Barker Maa said with a laugh, sketches of the vibrant ensembles splayed out across a coffee table at the front of the studio.
The line is called SKYE|AIRE and the first collection has its roots in Denver, by way of the deep sea. The pieces mimic the patterns and shapes of stingrays, jellyfish and other aquatic life. Barker Maa has dozens and dozens of photos on her iPhone from the Denver Aquarium, where the inspiration struck earlier this year.
“My 14-year-old son and I had a momson date, and he wanted me to take him to the aquarium and I was cranky about it, because I didn’t want to spend 30 bucks a pop. I’m like, we’ve been to the aquarium a million times. Let’s go to the movies or something,” Barker Maa recalled. “But he took me to the aquarium and I was just watching these stingrays and I was like that’s it. I saw an entire collection in the Denver aquarium.”
Factory Fashion, which employs a dozen sewers with full-time work, is Barker Maa’s latest creative endeavor. She owns Factory Five Five, a self described funky art warehouse, co-owns the Sky Bar, a cocktail lounge that “celebrates the golden age of air travel,” and sold Neighborhood music, which she started after her son expressed interest in learning piano, earlier this year. All are located in or near Stanley Marketplace, the former manufacturing center for Stanley Aviation, in north Aurora.
Like the other businesses Barker Maa has started, Factory Fashion was a jumping-off point. The new designer’s background is in corporate sales and political campaigns. Sewing classes at her theater company quickly turned to a full-blown manufacturing concept where Barker Maa has been able to create opportunities for
up-and-coming artists, designers and anybody interested in producing their own textile products.
“I think Denver is a great place for it,” she said of the location. “And I think there’s a good solid need for it, but finding a place where you can pay the rent and do that is hard. The arts in general are like that… You’re not going to drive the Mercedes in the arts, but keeping the lights on and keeping people paid and hopefully driving the Honda that works is kind of the goal. But there’s a super high need for what we’re doing.”
Geli Hayes, one of the workers at the studio, started customizing her own clothing in high school a decade ago. It turned out to be a career with Factory Fashion, where she helped construct pieces in Barker Maa’s fashion week line. The challenge, especially in creating ultra-structured stingray-like wings, is good, she said.
“I didn’t start making clothes probably until 2017… and I basically didn’t pay rent, and I bought my first sewing machine. And it just took off from there,” Hayes, 27, said. “I wanted to go to school. However, I felt like I was learning so much on YouTube and from other people that I already knew…I kind of just wanted to master my craft every single day.”
Factory Fashion has also been a place where refugees and immigrants have found work they might not have otherwise. Najibullah Dowrankhil was a professional tailor for the U.S. military for 17 years in his home country of Afghanistan. He moved to Colorado in 2021 and says working at Factory Fashion is his “dream job.”
Barker Maa hopes the inspiration she found underwater in the Mile High city will continue to grow. She wants to take her ideas and future collections global, perhaps to fashion weeks in New York or Milan, though she’s also invested in growing the scene locally, too.
“I’ve been interested in fashion all my life and have been a consumer and a follower and devour of fashion for my whole life. But it never occurred to me that I could be in the industry,” she said. “When we started with sewing classes, I was so intrigued, just by the possibilities, we started with kids and with the stuff they were cranking out was insane… (Now) our students are actually designing for professional models. And then they send them down the runway, do hair and makeup, the whole nine yards. It was insane what they threw down the runway, and now we’re doing it again. I’m just so blown away by that innate core that exists in so many people.”
Dec. 1 through 24 with showtimes varying depending on performance date. 9995 E Colfax Ave, Aurora, CO 80010. Visit rattlebrain.vbotickets. com/events for more information.
Running for 20 years now, Santa’s Big Red Sack has become a mainstay in the canon of holiday events in the metro area. Described as a non-stop sketch comedy experience, it is full of music and technology, offbeat wit and memorable characters. You’ll likely burst at the seams as these players take your run-of-the-mill traditions of the holiday season and transform them into an amalgam of all things silly. After two decades, you can be confident in the gut-busting entertainment that’s lined up for 24 days at The People’s Building in Aurora.
General Admission tickets are available for $15.
Not only will you be cutting a rug to a live Swing band, but you will also have the opportunity to learn about your favorite Christmas tunes. If you’re rusty at throwing your partner around, in the style of Swing dancing, there is a 20-minute Swing Class for a quick lesson on some appropriate moves. If getting your dance on isn’t your thing, you can still enjoy the festive jaunty tunes singing along or simply spectating and taking it all in. Plus, it’s in the museum which is an old hangar filled with real aircraft. Tickets are available for pre-purchase now, with adult entry being $25 and $15 for those 16 and under.
Nov. 26, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 13005 Wings Way, Centennial, CO 80112. Visit wingsmuseum.org/events/ homebuilt-showcase/ for more information.
towering sculptures shaped like our favorite Charles Schultz characters from various scenes of the cartoon. It won’t stop there though. Throughout the grounds of the hotel, you can take in the more than 3 million lights, ride bumper cars on an ice rink or grab a S’mores kit and get to roasting.
Whatever you choose, be it one or all, you can be assured that you won’t be starved for activity if you head out to Gaylord for the festivities.
through the sci-fi fantasy that took the world by storm starting in the 1970’s. Take the high ground and scoop up tickets to “experience the epic adventures of Star Wars anew.” The show will run through January with ticket prices varying.
Nov. 11 - Feb. 26 with hours varying based on the day. 6155 S Main St, Aurora, CO 80016. Visit www. shopsouthlands.com for more information.
Oct. 21-Jan. 29 with ticketing times varying. 2501 Dallas St. Aurora, CO 80010. Visit www.thelumecolorado.com for more information.
Every Monday at 6:30 p.m. with doors opening at 6:00 p.m. 2430 S Havana St, Aurora, CO 80014. Visit www.stampedeclub.net/tm-event/ modern-swing-mondays/ for more information.
Fancy yourself a dancer, eh?
Yes? No? Either way, Modern Swing Mondays at Stampede is a great opportunity to cut a rug, or even just learn the skills necessary for aforementioned rug cutting should you not yet possess the required skill set. You read that right, you can pop in to Stampede every Monday, grab a swing lesson at 6:30 p.m. and then showcase your newly-learned moves the same night during Open Dance which begins at 7:30 p.m.. This seems like a truly perfect date night as well, so definitely keep it in mind when trying to woo your significant other(s). Admission is $10.
Holiday S’Wing-A-Long with Bianca and the Flyboys at Wings Over the Rockies Air & Space Museum Nov. 27 from 6-9 p.m. 7711 E. Academy Blvd. Denver, CO 80230. Visit https://wingsmuseum.org/ events/swing-a-long-with-biancaand-the-flyboys/ for more information.
I can think of few feats greater than the dawn of flight. The early 20th century success at Kill Devil Hills, in the Outer Banks of North Carolina, inadvertently laid the groundwork for events like this one. Wings Over the Rockies is inviting you to come out to the Exploration of Flight center in Centennial to see aircraft which was built from scratch, if you will. Each aircraft different than the rest, this unique opportunity allows for up close and personal experiences with these modern marvels. Price for admission ranges from Free to $12.
Rockies
Nov. 25 - Jan. 10, with showtimes varying. 9900 E. Colfax Ave. Aurora, CO 80010. Visit www.aurorafoxartscenter.org for more information. There is no try, only do. And in that fashion, make sure you go ahead and plan on getting tickets from The Aurora Fox Arts Center to see this coming-of-age tale where escape is made possible from the trials and tribulations of growing up
Opening scene… A Charlie Brown Christmas. Now, replace yourself with the ever so graceful Snoopy and glide your way around The Pond, the skating rink located in the town square of Southlands Mall. It’s the quintessential holiday activity, so you’re going to want to do yourself a favor and check the schedule so you can head out east and show your best Kristi Yamaguchi impersonation. Times and admission prices vary.
The Immersive Art experience is returning to Aurora for a second year with the work of another renowned artist, Salvador Dalí. The Dalí Alive exhibit will provide the fullest extent of immersive experiences of large displays of classic works through projecting animated canvases on the walls and floors of the gallery created inside of The Hangar.
Beyond that, you will be able to hear the voice of the master himself through a specially produced Lobster Phone, plus experience a variety of aromas and a specially curated soundtrack both sure to tickle all of your senses, giving the guest what is referred to as a 360-degree experience.
Ticket prices vary depending on dates, with certain price breaks for mid-week visits, groups and families.
Nov. 18 - Jan. 1 6700 N Gaylord Rockies Blvd, Aurora, CO 80019. Visit christmasatgaylordrockies.marriott. com for more information.
If you’ve been to Christmas at Gaylord in the past, then you know they go all out when it comes to their interactive displays. This year is no different, and this hack could argue it is their finest yet. A Charlie Brown Christmas is the theme and Gaylord is coming in hot with ice sculptures. In the vein of their previous ICE! Show, you can expect
After you’ve gone to Stampede to get some tips in Swing Dancing, you can take those new dance moves and show them off at the Holiday S’Wing-A-Long at Wings Over the Rockies.
COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0464-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On August 30, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Amanda Warren
Original Beneficiary(ies)
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR GUILD MORTGAGE COMPANY, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt COLORADO HOUSING AND FINANCE
AUTHORITY
Date of Deed of Trust
January 18, 2019
County of Recording Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust
January 22, 2019
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
D9006063
Original Principal Amount
$201,286.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$197,381.32
Pursuant to CRS §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 thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
LOT 113, BLOCK 2, SUNSTONE SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 1, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
Also known by street and number as: 1602 South Idalia Circle Unit J, Aurora, CO 80017.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 10/20/2022
Last Publication 11/17/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel 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; DATE: 08/30/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Alison L Berry #34531
N. April Norton #34861
David R. Doughty #40042
Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592
Lynn M. Janeway #15592
Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990
Attorney File # 22-027799
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015
COMBINED NOTICEMAILING CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0442-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On August 19, 2022, the undersigned
Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Julie Caldera Bershas
Original Beneficiary(ies)
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRA-
TION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN FINANCING CORPORATION, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
COLORADO HOUSING AND FINANCE
AUTHORITY
Date of Deed of Trust
May 09, 2017
County of Recording
Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust
June 13, 2017
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
D7066376
June 14, 2017
Re-Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.)
D7066500
Re-Recording Date of Deed of Trust
Original Principal Amount
$383,426.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$387,369.54
Pursuant to CRS §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 thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
LOT 72, BLOCK 4, MISSION VIEJO, FILING NO. 1, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
Also known by street and number as: 3665 SOUTH JASPER STREET, AURORA, CO 80013. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 10/20/2022
Last Publication 11/17/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel NOTICE OF RIGHTS YOU MAY HAVE AN INTEREST IN THE REAL PROPERTY BEING FORECLOSED, OR HAVE CERTAIN RIGHTS OR SUFFER CERTAIN LIABILITIES PURSUANT TO COLORADO STATUTES AS A RESULT OF SAID FORECLOSURE. YOU MAY HAVE THE RIGHT TO REDEEM SAID REAL PROPERTY OR YOU MAY HAVE THE RIGHT TO CURE A DEFAULT UNDER THE DEED OF TRUST BEING FORECLOSED. A COPY OF SAID STATUTES, AS SUCH STATUTES ARE PRESENTLY CONSTITUTED, WHICH MAY AFFECT YOUR RIGHTS SHALL BE SENT WITH ALL MAILED COPIES OF THIS NOTICE. HOWEVER, YOUR RIGHTS MAY BE DETERMINED BY PREVIOUS STATUTES.
A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE FILED
PURSUANT TO SECTION 38-38-104
SHALL BE FILED WITH THE PUBLIC TRUSTEE AT LEAST FIFTEEN (15) CALENDAR DAYS PRIOR TO THE FIRST SCHEDULED SALE DATE OR ANY DATE TO WHICH THE SALE IS CONTINUED; A NOTICE OF INTENT TO REDEEM FILED PURSUANT TO SECTION 38-38302 SHALL BE FILED WITH THE PUBLIC TRUSTEE NO LATER THAN EIGHT (8) BUSINESS DAYS AFTER THE SALE;
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 THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOLATED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT IN SECTION 3838-103.1 OR THE PROHIBITION ON DUAL TRACKING IN SECTION 38-38103.2, THE BORROWER MAY FILE A COMPLAINT WITH THE COLORADO ATTORNEY GENERAL, THE FEDERAL CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU (CFPB), OR BOTH. THE FILING OF A COMPLAINT WILL NOT STOP THE FORECLOSURE PROCESS.
Colorado Attorney General 1300 Broadway, 10th Floor Denver, Colorado 80203 (800) 222-4444
P.O. Box 4503
Iowa City, Iowa 52244 (855) 411-2372
www.consumerfinance.gov
DATE: 08/19/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Alison L Berry #34531
N. April Norton #34861
David R. Doughty #40042
Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592
Lynn M. Janeway #15592 Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990
Attorney File # 18-017762
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015
COMBINED NOTICE -
PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0426-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On August 12, 2022, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
CARRIE F SCHAFFER
Original Beneficiary(ies)
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR CROSSCOUNTRY MORTGAGE, INC.
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC
Date of Deed of Trust
June 27, 2017 County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
June 29, 2017
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
D7073199
Original Principal Amount
$270,019.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$267,599.70
Pursuant to CRS §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.
SEE ATTACHED LEGAL DESCRIPTION
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
PARCEL A: LOT 13, BLOCK 1, AND ALL IMPROVEMENTS THEREON, SUNRIDGE SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 2, ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO, AND DECLARATION OF COVENANTS AND RESTRICTIONS RECORDED IN BOOK 2757 AT PAGE 768, ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO AND ANY AMENDMENTS THERETO; TOGETHER WITH: PARCEL B: (1) A NONEXCLUSIVE RIGHT AND EASEMENT OF ENJOYMENT IN AND TO THE COMMON AREA IN COMMON WITH OTHER OWNERS OF PATIO HOMES IN SUNRIDGE; (2) A NONEXCLUSIVE EASEMENT IN, ON AND THROUGH THE COMMON AREA FOR INGRESS TO AND EGRESS FROM THE LOT DESCRIBED ABOVE. COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 91 S EAGLE CIRCLE, AURORA, CO 80012. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE
A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
DATE: 08/12/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Anna Johnston #51978
Ryan Bourgeois #51088
Joseph D. DeGiorgio #45557
Randall Chin #31149
Barrett, Frappier & Weisserman, LLP 1391 Speer Boulevard, Suite 700, Denver, CO 80204 (303) 350-3711
Attorney File # 00000009557877
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015
COMBINED NOTICE -
PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0428-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described
Deed of Trust:
On August 12, 2022, the undersigned
Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Daniel J Wensien
Original Beneficiary(ies)
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Guild Mortgage Company, a California Corporation, Its Successors and Assigns
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
Guild Mortgage Company LLC
Date of Deed of Trust
April 11, 2019
County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
April 15, 2019
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
D9032102
Original Principal Amount $315,185.00
Outstanding Principal Balance $304,840.19
Pursuant to CRS §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 thereof THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
LOT 11, BLOCK 3, SUMMER VALLEY
SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 11 AMENDED, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 18115 E Milan Place, Aurora, CO 80013. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 10/20/2022
Last Publication 11/17/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel
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;
DATE: 08/12/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Erin Croke #46557
Steven Bellanti #48306
Holly Shilliday #24423
Ilene Dell’Acqua #31755
McCarthy & Holthus LLP 7700 E Arapahoe Road, Suite 230, Centennial, CO 80112 (877) 369-6122
Attorney File # CO-22-913562-LL
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015
COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0431-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On August 12, 2022, the undersigned
Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Kendal R Emery
Original Beneficiary(ies)
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR NORTHPOINTE BANK, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt COLORADO HOUSING AND FINANCE
AUTHORITY
Date of Deed of Trust
June 26, 2020
County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
July 01, 2020
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
E0080150
Original Principal Amount $213,069.00
Outstanding Principal Balance $206,527.70
Pursuant to CRS §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 thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
LOT 2, BLOCK 29, THE UNION PACIFIC LAND COMPANY SECOND ADDITION TO THE TOWN OF DEER TRAIL, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
PARCEL NUMBER: 2061-13-1-05-005
Also known by street and number as: 1122 4Th Avenue, Deer Trail, CO 80105. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 10/20/2022
Last Publication 11/17/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel
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;
DATE: 08/12/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Alison L Berry #34531
N. April Norton #34861
David R. Doughty #40042
Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592
Lynn M. Janeway #15592
Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990
Attorney File # 22-028138
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015
AND IS DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
LOTS 41 AND 42, EXCEPT THE REAR OR WESTERLY 8 FEET THEREOF, BLOCK 9, AURORA, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
Also known by street and number as: 1365 Iola St, Aurora, CO 80010.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 10/20/2022
Last Publication 11/17/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel
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;
DATE: 08/19/2022
Susan Sandstrom,
Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Erin Croke #46557
Steven Bellanti #48306
Holly Shilliday #24423
Ilene Dell’Acqua #31755
McCarthy & Holthus LLP 7700 E Arapahoe Road, Suite 230, Centennial, CO 80112
(877) 369-6122
Attorney File # CO-21-895195-LL
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015
COMBINED NOTICE -
PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0448-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On August 19, 2022, the undersigned
Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Pedro Miguel Martinez-Diaz
Original Beneficiary(ies)
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as beneficiary, as nominee for Loanpal, LLC
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
PennyMac Loan Services, LLC
Date of Deed of Trust
August 11, 2020
County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
August 27, 2020
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
E0111656 Book: N/A Page:
Original Principal Amount
$280,000.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$271,317.89
Pursuant to CRS §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 thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
Lot 2, Block 2, Aurora Highlands Subdivision Filing No. 10, County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado.
Also known by street and number as: 1659 South Pitkin Street, Aurora, CO 80017.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN
IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
DATE: 08/19/2022 Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Alexis R. Abercrombie #56722
David W Drake #43315
Scott D. Toebben #19011
Randall S. Miller & Associates PC 216 16th Street, Suite 1210, Denver, CO 80202 (720) 259-6710
Attorney File # 22CO00206-1
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015
COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0449-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described
Deed of Trust:
On August 19, 2022, the undersigned
Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Sara Synko
Original Beneficiary(ies)
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR JLB Corporation dba Golden Oak Lending, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.
Date of Deed of Trust
June 07, 2017 County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
June 13, 2017
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
D7066305
Original Principal Amount
$186,900.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$177,613.44
Pursuant to CRS §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 thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
Lot 42, Block 11, Trail Ridge Subdivision Filing No. 3, County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado.
Also known by street and number as:
21970 E Crestline Ln, Aurora, CO 80015.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 10/20/2022
Last Publication 11/17/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel
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;
DATE: 08/19/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Alison L Berry #34531
N. April Norton #34861
David R. Doughty #40042
Nicholas H. Santarelli
COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0453-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described
Deed of Trust:
On August 23, 2022, the undersigned
Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
KALTHAM MOH’D ALSHAIBANI
Original Beneficiary(ies)
WASHINGTON MUTUAL BANK, FA
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
CITIGROUP MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST
2021-RP5
Date of Deed of Trust
October 22, 1997
County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
October 28, 1997
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
A7135918
Original Principal Amount
$43,500.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$18,441.47
Pursuant to CRS §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. CONDOMINIUM UNIT NO. 305, BUILDING NO. F, BROOKSHIRE DOWNS AT HEATHER RIDGE, IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE DECLARATION RECORDED ON MAY 23, 1979, IN BOOK 2997 AT PAGE 358 AND CONDOMINIUM MAP RECORDED ON MAY 23, 1979, IN BOOK 39 AT PAGE 10 AND THE FIRST SUPPLEMENT THEREOF RECORDED JUNE 6, 1979, IN BOOK 39 AT PAGE 25 OF THE ARAPAHOE COUNTY RECORDS, TOGETHER WITH THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE THE FOLLOWING LIMITED COMMON ELEMENTS: STORAGE SPACE 305F AND PARKING OR CARPORT SPACE 305F, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 2120 SOUTH VAUGHN WAY #F-305, AURORA, CO 80014. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 10/20/2022
Last Publication 11/17/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel 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; DATE: 08/23/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Anna Johnston #51978
Ryan Bourgeois #51088
Joseph D. DeGiorgio #45557
Randall Chin #31149
Barrett, Frappier & Weisserman, LLP 1391
Speer Boulevard, Suite 700, Denver, CO 80204 (303) 350-3711
Attorney File # 00000009515255
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015
COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0454-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On August 23, 2022, the undersigned
Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
GERARD SCHNEIDER AND JANET H.
SCHNEIDER
Original Beneficiary(ies)
VECTRA BANK COLORADO, NATIONAL
TION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS OWNER TRUSTEE FOR RCF 2 ACQUISITION TRUST C/O
U.S. BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIA-
TION
Date of Deed of Trust
October 25, 2002
County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
October 31, 2002
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
B2206758
Original Principal Amount
$140,000.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$116,672.36
Pursuant to CRS §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.
LOT 35, BLOCK 11, MEADOWOOD SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 5, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
Also known by street and number as:
14995 EAST COLUMBIA DRIVE, AURORA, CO 80014. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 10/20/2022
Last Publication 11/17/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel
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;
DATE: 08/23/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Anna Johnston #51978
Ryan Bourgeois #51088
Joseph D. DeGiorgio #45557
Randall Chin #31149
Barrett, Frappier & Weisserman, LLP 1391 Speer Boulevard, Suite 700, Denver, CO 80204 (303) 350-3711
Attorney File # 00000009522418
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015
COMBINED NOTICE -
PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0455-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On August 23, 2022, the undersigned
Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
ANTHONY GLASPEY
Original Beneficiary(ies)
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR CATALYST LENDING, INC., ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
SELENE FINANCE LP
Date of Deed of Trust
September 08, 2008
County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
September 25, 2008
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
B8107287
Original Principal Amount
$194,434.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$228,453.93
Pursuant to CRS §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 thereof.
Also known by street and number as:
17974 E BATES AVE, AURORA, CO
80013-2192.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 10/20/2022
Last Publication 11/17/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel 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;
DATE: 08/23/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Alison L Berry #34531
N. April Norton #34861
David R. Doughty #40042
Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592
Lynn M. Janeway #15592
Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990
Attorney File # 17-015275
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015
COMBINED NOTICE -
PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0461-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On August 26, 2022, the undersigned
Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
ISAIAH J. OLIVERAS
Original Beneficiary(ies)
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. ACTING SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR UNITED WHOLESALE MORTGAGE
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
LAKEVIEW LOAN SERVICING, LLC
Date of Deed of Trust
April 01, 2019
County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
April 09, 2019
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
D9030608
Original Principal Amount
$314,451.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$298,280.54
Pursuant to CRS §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. LOT 65, BLOCK 6, AURORA HIGHLANDS SUBDIVISION - FILING NO. 1, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 17819 E LOUISIANA AVE, AURORA, CO 80017.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/14/2022, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 11/17/2022
Last Publication 12/15/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel
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;
DATE: 09/09/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Alison L Berry #34531
N. April Norton #34861
David R. Doughty #40042
Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592
Lynn M. Janeway #15592
Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990
Attorney File # 22-028311
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015 COMBINED NOTICEPUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0481-2022
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described
Deed of Trust:
On September 9, 2022, the undersigned
Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Virginia De La Paz
Original Beneficiary(ies)
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR SWBC MORTGAGE CORPORATION, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS
Current Holder of Evidence of Debt
COLORADO HOUSING AND FINANCE
AUTHORITY
Date of Deed of Trust
August 29, 2014
County of Recording
Arapahoe
Recording Date of Deed of Trust
September 03, 2014
Recording Information (Reception No. and/ or Book/Page No.)
D4081474
Original Principal Amount
$216,505.00
Outstanding Principal Balance
$187,649.77
Pursuant to CRS §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 thereof.
THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN.
LOT 5, BLOCK 14, KINGSBOROUGH KNOLLS SUBDIVISION FILING NO. 1, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
Also known by street and number as: 16700 East Arkansas Drive, Aurora, CO 80017.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 01/11/2023, at The East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the 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 issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication 11/17/2022
Last Publication 12/15/2022
Name of Publication Sentinel
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; DATE: 09/09/2022
Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado
By: /s/ Susan Sandstrom, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Alison L Berry #34531
N. April Norton #34861
David R. Doughty #40042
Nicholas H. Santarelli #46592
Lynn M. Janeway #15592
Janeway Law Firm, P.C. 9800 S. Meridian Blvd., Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112 (303) 706-9990
Attorney File # 22-028252
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado
Revised 1/2015 CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-56
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, ZONING APPROXIMATELY 308.6 ACRES OF LAND, MORE OR LESS, GENERALLY LOCATED NORTH AND SOUTH OF SMITH ROAD AND WEST OF POWHATON ROAD, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO, TO BUSINESS/TECH ZONE DISTRICT AND AMENDING THE ZONING MAP ACCORDINGLY (HARVEST MILE INITIAL ZONING)
Ordinance 2022-56 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-57
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, ZONING APPROXIMATELY FIVE- ACRES OF LAND, MORE OR LESS, GENERALLY LOCATED 400 FEET EAST OF THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF PICADILLY ROAD AND EAST 26TH AVENUE, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO, TO BUSINESS/TECH ZONE DISTRICT AND AMENDING THE ZONING MAP ACCORDINGLY (26TH AVENUE INITIAL ZONING)
Ordinance 2022-57 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-58
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, ADOPTING AN OPERATING AND CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS PROJECTS BUDGET FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 2023, AND ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2023
Ordinance 2022-58 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO
Ordinance 2022-59
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, APPROPRIATING SUMS OF MONEY TO DEFRAY EXPENSES AND LIABILITIES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 2023 AND ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2023
Ordinance 2022-59 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022 Sentinel
CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO
Ordinance 2022-60
FOR AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, CREATING THE TRANSPORTATION MAINTENANCE FUND
Ordinance 2022-60 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO
Ordinance 2022-61
FOR AN ORDINANCE ESTABLISHING
THE TAX LEVY ON ALL TAXABLE PROPERTY WITHIN THE CORPORATE LIMITS OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, FOR THE TAX COLLECTION YEAR BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 2023, AND ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2023
Ordinance 2022-61 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-62
CONSIDERATION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF AURORA TO APPROVE AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CERTAIN SECTIONS OF CHAPTER 138 OF THE CITY CODE OF THE CITY OF AURORA RELATING TO SERVICES FOR THE PROVISION OF WATER
Ordinance 2022-62 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022 Sentinel CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-63
AN ORDINANCE OF GENERAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT 3-2008 (MEADOW HILLS COUNTRY CLUB) ADOPTING AN OPERATING BUDGET, ESTABLISHING THE TAX LEVY, AND APPROPRIATING SUMS OF MONEY TO DEFRAY EXPENSES AND LIABILITIES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 2023, AND ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2023
Ordinance 2022-63 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-64
AN ORDINANCE OF THE AURORA CONFERENCE CENTER GENERAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT (NO. 2-2011) ADOPTING AN OPERATING BUDGET, ESTABLISHING THE TAX LEVY, AND APPROPRIATING SUMS OF MONEY TO DEFRAY EXPENSES AND LIABILITIES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 2023, AND ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2023
Ordinance 2022-64 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s
website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-65
AN ORDINANCE OF GENERAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT 1-2007 (CHERRY CREEK RACQUET CLUB) ADOPTING AN OPERATING BUDGET, ESTABLISHING THE TAX LEVY, AND APPROPRIATING SUMS OF MONEY TO DEFRAY EXPENSES AND LIABILITIES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 2023, AND ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2023
Ordinance 2022-65 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-66
AN ORDINANCE OF COBBLEWOOD GENERAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT 1-2016 (COBBLEWOOD GENERAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT) ADOPTING AN OPERATING BUDGET, ESTABLISHING THE TAX LEVY, AND APPROPRIATING SUMS OF MONEY TO DEFRAY EXPENSES AND LIABILITIES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 2023, AND ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2023
Ordinance 2022-66 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-67
AN ORDINANCE OF GENERAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT 1-2008 (PEORIA PARK) ADOPTING AN OPERATING BUDGET, ESTABLISHING THE TAX LEVY, AND APPROPRIATING SUMS OF MONEY TO DEFRAY EXPENSES AND LIABILITIES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 2023, AND ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2023
Ordinance 2022-67 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-68
AN ORDINANCE OF PIER POINT 7 GENERAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT 2-2009 ADOPTING AN OPERATING BUDGET, ESTABLISHING THE TAX LEVY, AND APPROPRIATING SUMS OF MONEY TO DEFRAY EXPENSES AND LIABILITIES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 2023, AND ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2023
Ordinance 2022-68 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022 Sentinel
CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-69
FOR AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, ADOPTING AN UPDATED MAP OF WARD BOUNDARIES PURSUANT TO THE MANDATE OF SECTION 545(B) OF THE CITY CODE
Ordinance 2022-69 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022 Sentinel
CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-70
FOR AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, AMENDING SECTION 54-5 OF THE CITY CODE OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, BY ADOPTING ADDITIONAL CLARIFYING LANGUAGE TO SUBSECTIONS (b) AND (c) TO DIRECT THE AURORA ELECTION COMMISSION TO COMPLETE ITS REVIEW OF WARD BOUNDARIES AND SUBSEQUENT RECOMMENDATIONS FOR REALIGNMENT OF WARD BUNDARIES, IF ANY, AND TO TRANSMIT THE SAME TO CITY COUNCIL NO LATER THAN THE FIFTEENTH (15TH) DAY OF OCTOBER IN THE YEAR PRECEDING THE YEAR IN WHICH THE REALIGNMENT SHALL TAKE EFFECT, CURRENTLY IN CALENDAR YEARS ENDING IN “3” AND “9 Ordinance 2022-70 was finally passed at the November 14, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council and will take effect on December 17, 2022. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/ city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022 Sentinel
CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-71
PUBLIC HEARING WITH RELATED ORDINANCE FOR AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 146 OF THE CITY CODE OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, RELATING TO STANDARDS FOR OTHER TYPES OF SIGNS
Ordinance 2022-71, which was introduced on November 14, 2022, will be presented for final passage at the November 28, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022 Sentinel
CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO Ordinance 2022-72
INTRODUCTION OF AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO, VACATING TWO PORTIONS OF THE PUBLIC RIGHT-OFWAY FOR GUN CLUB ROAD, LOCATED EAST OF E-470, BETWEEN EAST 38TH AVENUE AND EAST 48TH AVENUE, CITY OF AURORA, COUNTY OF ADAMS, STATE OF COLORADO (GUN CLUB ROAD RIGHTS-OF-WAY VACATIONS NO. 2)
Ordinance 2022-72, which was introduced on November 14, 2022, will be presented for final passage at the November 28, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022 Sentinel
CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO
Ordinance 2022-73
FOR THE 2022 FISCAL YEAR
Ordinance 2022-73, which was introduced on November 14, 2022, will be presented for final passage at the November 28, 2022, regular meeting of the City Council. The full text of the ordinance is available for public inspection and acquisition in the City Clerk’s Office, 15151 E. Alameda Parkway, Suite 1400, Aurora, Colorado, and on the city’s website at: https://www.auroragov.org/city_hall/public_records/legal_notices/ordinance_notices/.
Kadee Rodriguez City Clerk
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
As required by the Colorado Liquor Code, as amended, notice is hereby given that an application for a Beer & Wine Liquor License has been received by the Local Licensing Authority for the granting of a license to sell fermented malt and vinous liquors by the drink on premise. The application was filed on November 4th, 2022, by Modmarket, LLC dba Modern Market for a location at 12100 East Colfax Avenue, Suite D, Aurora, CO 80011. The corporate officers live in Colorado.
A Public Hearing to consider the application has been scheduled to be held before the Local Licensing Authority on December 20th, 2022 at 9:00 a.m. The hearing will be held virtually. Please contact Lisa Keith at 303-739-7568 or lkeith@auroragov.org for meeting information.
Provided either the applicant or protestant(s) desire to use petitions to prove the needs of the neighborhood, and the desires of the inhabitants, the petitions may not be circulated before November 17th, 2022, and must be returned by 12:00 noon on December 8th, 2022 for review and verification by the City of Aurora Liquor Licensing staff.
Information as to the application, procedures, or remonstrances, may be handled with the Liquor Licensing Office up to and including the date of the public hearing.
Lisa Keith Licensing Officer 303-739-7568
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel DISTRICT COURT, ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO NOTICE OF APPEARANCE
Case No. CV000141
Division: 14/34
In the Matter of:
Engel, Rhiannon
You are hereby notified that the above captioned case has been set for HEARING. You are required to appear at 7325 S. Potomac St., Centennial, CO 80112 on December 21, 2022 at 11:00 a.m. in Division 14/34.
https://judicial.webex.com/meet/D18ARAP-Div34
And the phone +1-720-650-7664 Access code: 2594 408 0614 then press #, # (no attendee ID is needed)
Date of Motion: October 26, 2022
/s/ NDH for Shana Kloek, Clerk/Clerk of Court
First Publication: November 17, 2022
Final Publication: December 1, 2022
Sentinel DISTRICT COURT, ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
Case No. 2021PR30323
Plaintiff:
Holly Nelson, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Maureen M. Elliot, Deceased
v. Defendants:
The unknown trustees and beneficiaries of the Maureen M. Elliot Loving Trust dated October 1, 1990; The Heather Gardens Association; and Any and All Unknown Persons with an Interest in the Subject Matter of this Action
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO TO THE ABOVE-NAMED
DEFENDANT(S):
You are hereby summoned and required to appear and defend against the claims of the complaint filed with the court in this action, by filing with the clerk of this court an answer or other response. You are required to file your answer or other response within 35 days after the service of this summons upon you. Service of this summons shall
be complete on the day of the last publication. A copy of the complaint may be obtained from the clerk of the court.
If you fail to file your answer or other response to the complaint in writing within 35 days after the date of the last publication, judgment by default may be rendered against you by the court for the relief demanded in the complaint without further notice.
This is an action: to quiet title of Plaintiff
Holly Nelson, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Maureen M. Elliot, along with other relief, related in and to the property situated in Arapahoe County, Colorado, to wit:
LOT 6, BLOCK 1, HEATHER GARDENS FILING NO. 1, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO, TO-WIT:
PARCEL 1 – AN UNDIVIDED 1/72ND INTEREST IN AND TO SAID LOT, SUBJECT TO EASEMENTS OF RECORD, INCLUDING SUCH EASEMENTS AS MAY BE SET OUT IN THE DECLARATION OF CONDOMINIUM OF HEATHER GARDENS AS FILED OF RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO IN BOOK 205 AT PAGE 436, AND ANY AMENDMENTS THERETO, EXCLUDING ANY INTEREST IN THE BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT SITUATE ON SAID LOT AND BLOCK ABOVE DESCRIBED IN WHICH APARTMENT BUILDING AND EQUIPMENT HEREIN CONVEYED.
PARCEL 2 – ALL OF THAT SPACE OR AREA WHICH LIES BETWEEN THE CEILING AND THE FLOOR, AND THE WALLS OF THE APARTMENT AT 13800 EAST MARINA DRIVE #210, (FOR CONVENIENT REFERENCE NUMBERED AS UNIT 27128 IN BUILDING NO. 236), NOW OR HEREAFTER CONSTRUCTED ON SAID LOT, SAID BUILDING BEING LOCATE SUBSTANTIALLY AS SHOWN ON THE AREA PLAT PLAN FILED OF RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF THE COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO, IN BOOK 69 AT PAGE 27-32.
PARCEL 3 – AND UNDIVIDED 1/72ND INTEREST IN AND TO THE BUILDING AND EQUIPMENT THEREIN INSTALLED AND APPURTENANT THERETO WITHIN WHICH THE ABOVE DESCRIBED SPACE OR AREA IS LOCATED.
PARCEL 4 – AND UNDIVIDED 1/432ND INTEREST IN AND TO LOT 7, BLOCK 1, FILING #1, HEATHER GARDENS SEVILLE SUBDIVISION, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
TOGETHER WITH:
(1) THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE THE PATIOS AND BALCONIES, AIR CONDITIONS OR OTHER APPLIANCES WHICH PROJECT BEYOND THE SPACE OR AREA ABOVE DESCRIBED AND CONTIGUOUS THERETO.
(2) A RIGHT OF WAY, IN COMMON WITH OTHERS, FOR INGRESS AND EGRESS TO AND FROM THE PROPERTY ABOVE DESCRIBED.
(3) THE RIGHT TO USE STAIRS, HALLS, PASSAGE WAYS AND OTHER COMMON AREAS IN THE BUILDING DESCRIBED IN PARCEL 2 ABOVE IN COMMON WITH OTHER OWNERS OF SUCH BUILDING, INCLUDING THEIR AGENTS, SERVANTS, EMPLOYEES AND INVITEES.
(4) THE RIGHT TO USE COMMON AREAS IN SAID LOT IN COMMON WITH OTHER OWNERS OF SPACE OR AREAS IN BUILDINGS NOW OR HEREAFTER CONSTRUCTED IN SAID LOT, EXCEPT THE USE OF THE COMMON AREAS LOCATED IN BUILDINGS OTHER THAN THAT DESCRIBED IN PARCEL 2 ABOVE, INCLUDING THEIR AGENTS, SERVANTS, EMPLOYEES AND INVITEES.
(5) THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE AND OCCUPY PARKING STALL NO. 38 IN PARKING LOT NO. 236 LOCATED SUBSTANTIALLY AS SHOWN ON THE PROPOSED AREA PLAT PLAN FILED OF RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK RECORDER OF ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO, SHOWING THE LOCATION OF THE ABOVE NUMBERED STALL, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO.
Commonly known and numbered as: 13800 E. Marina Dr., Apt. 210, Aurora, CO 80014
And assessor’s schedule or parcel no.: 1975-31-2-22-087
Dated: October 11, 2022
Attorney for Plaintiff: Russell J. Sprague, Atty. Reg. 40558 CLINE WILLIAMS WRIGHT JOHNSON & OLDFATHER, L.L.P. 215 Mathews Street, Suite 300 Fort Collins, CO 80524 Phone: (970) 221-2637
Facsimile: (970) 221-2638
E-mail: rsprague@clinewilliams.com
First Publication:
DISTRICT NOTICE CONCERNING 2022 BUDGET AMENDMENT AND PROPOSED 2023 BUDGET
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all interested parties that the necessity has arisen to amend the Highline Crossing Metropolitan District (the “District) 2022 Budget and that a proposed 2023 Budget has been submitted to the Board of Directors of the District; and that copies of the proposed Amended 2022 Budget and 2023 Budget have been filed at the District’s offices, 141 Union Boulevard, Suite 150, Lakewood, Colorado, where the same are open for public inspection; and that adoption of Resolutions Amending the 2022 Budget and Adopting the 2023 will be considered at a public meeting of the Board of Directors of the District on Monday, November 21, 2022 at 6:00 p.m. This District Board meeting will be held via Zoom.
Join Zoom Meeting https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86267550643?
pwd=V3RnRGRtWkRyUlZZc1VMWTJFZ
jFHdz09 Meeting ID: 862 6755 0643
Passcode: 987572 Dial In: 1-719-359-4580
Any elector within the District may, at any time prior to the final adoption of the Resolutions to Amend the 2022 Budget and adopt the 2023 Budget, inspect and file or register any objections thereto.
HIGHLINE CROSSING
METROPOLITAN DISTRICT
By /s/Peggy Ripko District ManagerPublication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED AMENDED 2022 BUDGET AND HEARING COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK
METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 1
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a proposed amended budget will be submitted to the COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 1 for the year 2022. A copy of such proposed amended budget has been filed in the office of CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, 8390 East Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111, where the same is open for public inspection. Such proposed amended budget will be considered at a hearing at the special meeting of the Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 1 to be held at 9:30 A.M., on Tuesday November 29, 2022. The meeting will be held via video conference at https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ ZWZmNDQ5NTktNGIyNy00MTYxLTlmY WYtMTkzY2Q4N2FmZmZh%40thread.v2/ 0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%224aaa 468e-93ba-4ee3-ab9f-6a247aa3ade0%22 %2c%22Oid%22%3a%2278e91a46-bdcc4fe5-980c-8ff3dcc70755%22%7d and via telephone conference at Dial-In: 1-720547-5281, Conference ID: 490 331 173#. Any interested elector within Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 1 may inspect the proposed amended budget and file or register any objections at any time prior to the final adoption of the amended 2022 budget.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS: COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 1
By: /s/ ICENOGLE | SEAVER | POGUE A Professional Corporation
ence and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 3 may inspect the proposed amended budget and file or register any objections at any time prior to the final adoption of the amended 2022 budget.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS: COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK
METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 3
By: /s/ ICENOGLE | SEAVER | POGUE
A Professional Corporation
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED
AMENDED 2022 BUDGET AND HEARING
THE POINT METROPOLITAN DISTRICT
INVITATION TO BID
TAH Filing 18 Park
JHL Constructors on behalf of the Aerotropolis Area Coordinating District (AACMD), a quasi-municipal corporation and political subdivision of the State of Colorado, notifies all qualified persons/companies that proposals will be received for contracting work and services in connection with the Filing 18 Park at The Aurora Highlands in Aurora, CO. Scope of work under this Request for Proposal includes plantings, landscaping, hardscapes, irrigation, earthwork, storm drainage, asphalt paving, Curb & gutter, sidewalks, playground equipment and site amenities. Electronic submission of proposals must be submitted and received by JHL at AuroraHighlandsInfo@ jhlconstructors.com on or before 2:00 p.m. MST on November 15th, 2022.
Instruction to Respondent documents may be obtained from the CMaR Contractor, JHL Constructors, Inc. on or after Thursday November 2nd, 2022. Please contact AuroraHighlandsInfo@jhlconstructors.com for access to the Instruction to Respondent documents. Upon inquiry from interested parties, RFQ documents will be made available electronically through BuildingConnected only. JHL Constructors will accept proposals from respondents that represent best capabilities to perform contracting services. JHL reserves the right to waive irregularities in any proposals. Performance and Payment bonds and proper insurance coverage will be required.
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
INVITATION TO BID
TAH Filing 19 – 32nd Ave.
JHL Constructors, on behalf of the Aerotropolis Area Coordinating District (AACMD), a quasi-municipal corporation and political subdivision of the State of Colorado, notifies all qualified persons/ companies that proposals will be received for contracting work and services in connection with Filing 19 – 32nd Ave. at The Aurora Highlands in Aurora, CO. Scope of work under this Request for Proposal includes Surveying, 3rd Party Testing, Street Lighting, Erosion Control, Asphalt Paving, Site Concrete, Signage & Striping, and Wet Utilities. Electronic submission of proposals must be submitted and received by JHL at AuroraHighlandsInfo@jhlconstructors. com on or before 2:00 p.m. MST on December 9th, 2022.
Instruction to Respondent documents may be obtained from the CMaR Contractor, JHL Constructors, Inc. on or after Thursday November 17th, 2022. Please contact AuroraHighlandsInfo@jhlconstructors.com for access to the Instruction to Respondent documents. Upon inquiry from interested parties, RFQ documents will be made available electronically through BuildingConnected only. JHL Constructors will accept proposals from respondents that represent best capabilities to perform contracting services. JHL reserves the right to waive irregularities in any proposals. Performance and Payment bonds and proper insurance coverage will be required.
First Publication: November 17, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022 Sentinel
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED AMENDED 2022 BUDGET AND HEARING COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 2
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a proposed amended budget will be submitted to the COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 2 for the year 2022. A copy of such proposed amended budget has been filed in the office of CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, 8390 East Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111, where the same is open for public inspection. Such proposed amended budget will be considered at a hearing at the special meeting of the Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 2 to be held at 9:30 A.M., on Tuesday November 29, 2022. The meeting will be held via video conference at https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ ZWZmNDQ5NTktNGIyNy00MTYxLTlmY WYtMTkzY2Q4N2FmZmZh%40thread.v2/ 0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%224aaa 468e-93ba-4ee3-ab9f-6a247aa3ade0%22 %2c%22Oid%22%3a%2278e91a46-bdcc4fe5-980c-8ff3dcc70755%22%7d and via telephone conference at Dial-In: 1-720547-5281, Conference ID: 490 331 173#. Any interested elector within Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 2 may inspect the proposed amended budget and file or register any objections at any time prior to the final adoption of the amended 2022 budget.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS: COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 2
By: /s/ ICENOGLE | SEAVER | POGUE A Professional Corporation
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED AMENDED 2022 BUDGET AND HEARING COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 3
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a proposed amended budget will be submitted to the COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 3 for the year 2022. A copy of such proposed amended budget has been filed in the office of CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, 8390 East Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111, where the same is open for public inspection. Such proposed amended budget will be considered at a hearing at the special meeting of the Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 3 to be held at 9:30 A.M., on Tuesday November 29, 2022. The meeting will be held via video conference at https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_
ZWZmNDQ5NTktNGIyNy00MTYxLTlmY WYtMTkzY2Q4N2FmZmZh%40thread.v2/ 0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%224aaa
468e-93ba-4ee3-ab9f-6a247aa3ade0%22 %2c%22Oid%22%3a%2278e91a46-bdcc4fe5-980c-8ff3dcc70755%22%7d and via telephone conference at Dial-In: 1-720547-5281, Conference ID: 490 331 173#. Any interested elector within Colorado Sci-
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a proposed amended budget will be submitted to THE POINT METROPOLITAN DISTRICT for the year 2022. A copy of such proposed amended budget has been filed in the office of Koelbel and Company, 5291 East Yale Avenue, Denver, Colorado, where the same is open for public inspection. Such proposed amended budget will be considered at a hearing at the meeting of The Point Metropolitan District to be held at 9:00 A.M., on Thursday, December 1, 2022. The meeting will be held via video conference at https://us02web.zoom. us/j/85301079480?pwd=MWVsRUwvWn ZGa3RRN3EyNndEMHY4UT09 and via telephone conference at Dial-In: 1-253215-8782, Meeting ID: 853 0107 9480, Passcode: 381670. Any interested elector within The Point Metropolitan District may inspect the proposed amended budget and file or register any objections at any time prior to the final adoption of the amended 2022 budget. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS: THE POINT METROPOLITAN DISTRICT By: /s/ ICENOGLE | SEAVER | POGUE A Professional Corporation
Publication: November 17, 2022 Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED 2023 BUDGET AND HEARING COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 2
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a proposed budget has been submitted to the COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 2 for the ensuing year of 2023. A copy of such proposed budget has been filed in the office of CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, 8390 East Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111, where the same is open for public inspection. Such proposed budget will be considered at a hearing at the special meeting of the Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 2 to be held at 9:30 A.M., on Tuesday, November 29, 2022. The meeting will be held via video conference at https://teams.microsoft. com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NTdkZ jYxMzItN2Q1NS00ZTgyLWI5ZTctNzkwM mYzNzlkNTZh%40thread.v2/0?context=% 7b%22Tid%22%3a%224aaa468e-93ba4ee3-ab9f-6a247aa3ade0%22%2c%22Oi d%22%3a%2278e91a46-bdcc-4fe5-980c8ff3dcc70755%22%7d and via telephone conference at Dial-In: 1-720-547-5281, Conference ID: 490 331 173#. Any interested elector within the Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 2 may inspect the proposed budget and file or register any objections at any time prior to the final adoption of the 2023 budget.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS: COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 2
By: /s/ ICENOGLE | SEAVER | POGUE A Professional Corporation
Publication: November 17, 2022 Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED 2023
BUDGET AND HEARING COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN
DISTRICT NO. 3
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a proposed budget has been submitted to the COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 3 for the ensuing year of 2023. A copy of such proposed budget has been filed in the office of CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, 8390 East Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111, where the same is open for public inspection. Such proposed budget will be considered at a hearing at the special meeting of the Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 3 to be held at 9:30 A.M., on Tuesday, November 29, 2022. The meeting will be held via video conference at https://teams.microsoft. com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NTdkZ jYxMzItN2Q1NS00ZTgyLWI5ZTctNzkwM mYzNzlkNTZh%40thread.v2/0?context=% 7b%22Tid%22%3a%224aaa468e-93ba4ee3-ab9f-6a247aa3ade0%22%2c%22Oi d%22%3a%2278e91a46-bdcc-4fe5-980c8ff3dcc70755%22%7d and via telephone conference at Dial-In: 1-720-547-5281, Conference ID: 490 331 173#. Any interested elector within the Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 3 may inspect the proposed budget and file or register any objections at any time prior to the final adoption of the 2023 budget.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS: COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 3
By: /s/ ICENOGLE | SEAVER | POGUE A Professional Corporation
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED 2023 BUDGET AND HEARING
THE POINT METROPOLITAN DISTRICT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a proposed budget has been submitted to THE POINT METROPOLITAN DISTRICT for the ensuing year of 2023. A copy of such proposed budget has been filed in the office of Koelbel and Company, 5291 East Yale Avenue, Denver, Colorado, where the same is open for public inspection. Such proposed budget will be considered at a hearing at the regular meeting of The Point Metropolitan District to be held at 9:00 A.M., on Thursday, December 1, 2022. The meeting will be held via video conference at https:// us02web.zoom.us/j/853010794 80?pwd=
MWVsRUwvWnZGa3RRN3EyNndEMH
Y4UT09 and via telephone conference at Dial-In: 1-253-215-8782, Meeting ID: 853 0107 9480, Passcode: 381670. Any interested elector within The Point Metropolitan District may inspect the proposed budget and file or register any objections at any time prior to the final adoption of the 2023 budget.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS: THE POINT METROPOLITAN DISTRICT
By: /s/ ICENOGLE | SEAVER | POGUE A Professional Corporation
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED 2023 BUDGET AND AMENDMENT OF 2022 BUDGET PRAIRIE POINT COMMUNITY AUTHORITY BOARD AND PRAIRIE POINT METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NOS. 1-3
ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Sections 29-1-108 and 109, C.R.S., that proposed budgets have been submitted to the Boards of Directors of the Prairie Point Community Authority Board and Prairie Point Metropolitan District Nos. 1 – 3 (the “Districts”) for the ensuing year of 2023. The necessity may also arise for the amendment of the 2022 budgets of the Districts. Copies of the proposed 2023 budgets and 2022 amended budgets (if appropriate) are on file in the office of the District’s Accountant, at the offices of CliftonLarsonAllen LLP 8390 E. Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, CO 80111, where same are available for public inspection. Such proposed 2023 budgets and 2022 amended budgets will be considered at a joint regular meeting to be held on December 1, 2022 at 9:00 a.m. at the offices of CliftonLarsonAllen LLP 8390 E. Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, CO 80111 and via video teleconference.
To join the meeting by video teleconference, visit https://teams.microsoft.com/l/ meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MjI3ZmQ2 OGItMTA4YS00YzIxLWIyNWYtMGJjN2 U2ZjZhY2I5%40thread.v2/0?context=% 7b%22Tid%22%3a%224aaa468e-93ba4ee3-ab9f-6a247aa3ade0%22%2c%22O id%22%3a%225b9f6fa2-e9dd-42cc-bfd8f7dd2ed196a6%22%7d. To join the meeting by phone, call 720-547-5281 and enter Conference ID: 592 129 275 #.
Any interested elector within the Districts may, at any time prior to the final adoption of the 2023 budgets or the 2022 amended budgets, inspect the 2023 budgets and the 2022 amended budgets and file or register any objections thereto.
PRAIRIE POINT COMMUNITY
AUTHORITY BOARD AND PRAIRIE POINT METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NOS. 1-3
CLIFTONLARSONALLEN LLP
Managers for the District
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED 2023
BUDGET AND AMENDMENT OF 2022 BUDGET
THE AURORA HIGHLANDS
METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 1
ADAMS COUNTY, COLORADO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Sections 29-1-108 and 109, C.R.S., that the proposed budget has been submitted to the Board of Directors of The Aurora Highlands Metropolitan District No. 1 (the “District”) for the ensuing year of 2023. The necessity may also arise for the amendment of the 2022 budget of the District. Copies of the proposed 2023 budget and 2022 amended budget (if appropriate) are on file in the office of the District’s Accountant, CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, 8390 E. Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111, where same are available for public inspection. Such proposed 2023 budget and 2022 amended budget will be considered at a special meeting to be held on November 22, 2022 at 9:00 a.m. at the Construction Trailer, 3900 E. 470 Beltway, Aurora, Colorado 80019 and via Microsoft Teams, video/ teleconference. Any interested elector within the District may, at any time prior to the final adoption of the 2023 budget or the 2022 amended budget, inspect the 2023 budget and the 2022 amended budget and file or register any objections thereto. Members of the public are encouraged, but not required to participate by telephone or videoconference in one of the following ways:
1. To attend via Microsoft Teams, see the below link: https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetupjoin/19%3ameeting_MDAwODE5NjgtY Tg1Zi00NzliLWExNjQtY2U4NzE5NzA2 MTlh%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22 Tid%22%3a%224aaa468e-93ba-4ee3ab9f-6a247aa3ade0%22%2c%22Oid% 22%3a%2278e91a46-bdcc-4fe5-980c8ff3dcc70755%22%7d
2. To attend via telephone, dial 1-720-5475281 and enter the following additional information:
a. Phone Conference ID: 867 387 961# THE AURORA HIGHLANDS METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 1
/s/ Denise Denslow Districts’ Manager
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED 2023 BUDGET AND HEARING COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 1
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a proposed budget has been submitted to the COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 1 for the ensuing year of 2023. A copy of such proposed budget has been filed in the office of CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, 8390 East Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111, where the same is open for public inspection. Such proposed budget will be considered at a hearing at the special meeting of the Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 1 to be held at 9:30 A.M., on Tuesday, November 29, 2022. The meeting will be held via video conference at https://teams.microsoft. com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NTdkZ
jYxMzItN2Q1NS00ZTgyLWI5ZTctNzkwM mYzNzlkNTZh%40thread.v2/0?context=% 7b%22Tid%22%3a%224aaa468e-93ba4ee3-ab9f-6a247aa3ade0%22%2c%22Oi d%22%3a%2278e91a46-bdcc-4fe5-980c8ff3dcc70755%22%7d and via telephone conference at Dial-In: 1-720-547-5281, Conference ID: 490 331 173#. Any interested elector within the Colorado Science and Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 1 may inspect the proposed budget and file or register any objections at any time prior to the final adoption of the 2023 budget.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS: COLORADO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PARK
METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 1
By: /s/ ICENOGLE | SEAVER | POGUE
A Professional Corporation
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED 2023 BUDGETS AND AMENDMENT OF 2022 BUDGETS
HM METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NOS.
1, 2 & 3 ADAMS COUNTY, COLORADO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Sections 29-1-108 and 109, C.R.S., that proposed budgets have been submitted to the Boards of Directors of the HM Metropolitan District Nos. 1, 2, & 3 (the “Districts”) for the ensuing year of 2023. The necessity may also arise for the amendments of the 2022 budgets of the Districts.
Copies of the proposed 2023 budgets and 2022 amended budgets (if appropriate) are on file in the office of the Districts’ Accountant, CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, 8390 E. Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111, where same are available for public inspection. Such proposed 2023 budgets and 2022 amended budgets will be considered at a regular meeting to be held on December 7, 2022 at 2:00 p.m. via video and teleconference. Members of the public are encouraged, but are not required to participate by telephone or videoconference in one of the following ways:
1. To attend via Teams Videoconference, see the below link: https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetupjoin/19%3ameeting_NjFmYzZkY2YtNG EzYS00ZTA2LWEzY2YtZjI3Y2MzOTI3 OTEy%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%2 2Tid%22%3a%224aaa468e-93ba-4ee3ab9f-6a247aa3ade0%22%2c%22Oid% 22%3a%2278e91a46-bdcc-4fe5-980c8ff3dcc70755%22%7d
2. To attend via telephone, dial 1-720-5475281 and enter the following additional information:
a. Phone Conference ID: 492 923 888# Any interested elector within the Districts may, at any time prior to the final adoption of the 2023 budgets or the 2022 amended budgets, inspect the 2023 budgets and the 2022 amended budgets, and file or register any objections thereto.
HM METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NOS. 1, 2, & 3
/s/Matthew
Urkoski District ManagerPublication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE AS TO PUBLIC HEARING REGARDING PROPOSED 2023 BUDGET AND AMENDED 2022 BUDGET
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a proposed 2023 budget has been submitted to the ILIFF COMMONS METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 2 for the fiscal year 2023. A copy of such proposed budget and if necessary, an amended 2022 budget have been filed in the office of the accountant, Simmons & Wheeler, P.C., 304 Inverness Way South, Suite 490, Englewood, Colorado, where same is open for public inspection. Such proposed budget and, if necessary, amended budget, will be considered at a special meeting of the Iliff Commons Metropolitan District No. 2 to be held at 10:30 a.m. on Friday, December 2, 2022. The meeting will be held by Zoom video/ teleconference Meeting ID: 892 8099 8302 Passcode: 630634 Telephone: 1-719-3594580. Any interested elector within the Iliff Commons Metropolitan District No. 2 may inspect the proposed budget and, if necessary, the amended budget and file or register any objections at any time prior to the final adoption of the 2023 budget and, if necessary, the 2022 amended budget.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS: ILIFF COMMONS METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 2
By: /s/ SETER & VANDER WALL, P.C.
Attorneys for the District
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
statement of the amount due and unpaid on account of such claim with Aerotropolis Area Coordinating Metropolitan District, Attention: Denise Denslow, 8390 East Crescent Parkway, Suite 300,Greenwood Village, CO 80111 with a copy to McGeady Becher P.C., 450 E. 17th Avenue, Suite 400, Denver, CO 80203-1254 at or before the time and date hereinabove shown.
Failure on the part of any claimant to file such written verified statement of claim prior to such final settlement will release AEROTROPOLIS AREA COORDINATING METROPOLITAN DISTRICT, its Board, officers, agents, and employees of and from any and all liability for such claim.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS Aerotropolis Area Coordinating Metropolitan District
First Publication: November 17, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE OF FINAL PAYMENT
On or after December 1, 2022, THE CHERRY CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 5 of ARAPAHOE COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO, will make final payment to GE JOHNSON SPECIAL PROJECTS, LLC as the general contractor for the renovation project at VILLAGE EAST ELEMENTARY, located at 1433 s Oakland Street, Aurora, Colorado, 80012. All claims relating to this contract must be filed with David Henderson, Deputy Chief of Operations, Cherry Creek School District No. 5, 9301 E Union Avenue, Greenwood Village, Colorado, 80111 before December 1, 2022.
Board of Education
Cherry Creek School District No. 5 County of Arapahoe State of Colorado
First Publication: November 17, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE OF FINAL PAYMENT
On or after November 25, 2022, THE CHERRY CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 5 of ARAPAHOE COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO, will make final payment to ARAPAHOE ROOFING AND SHEET METAL as the general contractor for phase one of the ROOF REPLACEMENT PROJECT AT CHERRY CREEK HIGH SCHOOL - WEST BUILDING, located at 9300 E Union Avenue, Greenwood Village, Colorado, 80111. All claims relating to this contract must be filed with David Henderson, Deputy Chief of Operations, Cherry Creek School District No. 5, 9301 E Union Avenue, Greenwood Village, Colorado, 80111 before November 25, 2022.
Board of Education Cherry Creek School District No. 5 County of Arapahoe State of Colorado
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT
activities to be undertaken by the Colorado Department of Local Affairs.
On or about November 29, 2022 the Colorado Department of Local Affairs will subrequest U.S. ment of Housing and Urban Development on behalf of the Aurora Housing Authority for the release of HOME funds, under Title II of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act, to undertake the follow-
Project Title: Peoria Crossing II Multi-Fami-
Project: The project consists of the construction of 72 affordable rental apartments on approximately two acres of land in the Peoria Crossing Phase II will include 20 one-bedroom/one-bath; 16 two-bedroom/ one-bath; 18 two-bedroom/two-bath and 18 three-bedroom/2-bath apartments. The development is on an arterial street in a mixed residential and commercial neighborhood. The two phases will share one point of access to the east of the property, exiting to Quari Street. It has excellent visibility and very good access to shopping, services, employment and public transportation. It is 0.4 miles from an RTD light rail station, making it a transit-oriented development. There will be ample surface parking, on-site management and maintenance; an exercise room, flex space community room/media room for the residents, bike storage, a playground area, and numerous outdoor benches and tables for
Location: 3002 Peoria street, Aurora CO
Estimated Cost: Roughly $1,950,000 in HOME funds with total project costs of
The Colorado Department of Local Affairs has determined that the project will have no significant impact on the human environment. An Environmental Impact Statement under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), therefore, is not required. Additional project information is contained in the Environmental Review Record (ERR). Due to staff working remotely, the ERR will be made available to the public for review electronically via email. Please submit your request to DOLA at bret.hillberry@state.co.us or by phone weekdays 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. at 303-864-7730
Any individual, group, or agency may submit written comments on the ERR to the Colorado Department of Local Affairs. All comments received by November 28, 2022 will be considered by the Colorado Department of Local Affairs prior to authorizing submission of a request for release of funds. Comments should specify which
NOTICE OF FINAL PAYMENT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the AEROTROPOLIS AREA COORDINATING METROPOLITAN DISTRICT of Adams County, Colorado, will make final payment on or after December 5, 2022, to:
BrightView Landscape Development, Inc. 8888 Motsenbocker Road Parker, CO 80134 for all work done by said Contractor for the Aerotropolis Area Coordinating Metropolitan District, THE AURORA HIGHLANDS LANDSCAPE, HARDSCAPE AND MONUMENTATION, all of said work being within or near the boundaries of Aerotropolis Area Coordinating Metropolitan District, in the City of Aurora, State of Colorado. Any person, co-partnership, association of persons, company, or corporation that has furnished labor, materials, provisions, team hire, sustenance provender or other supplies used or consumed by such Contractor or its Subcontractors or Suppliers in or about the performance of the work contracted to be done and whose claim therefore has not been paid by the Contractor or its Subcontractors or Suppliers at any time up to and including the time of final settlement for the work contracted to be done, is required to file a written verified
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to § 38-26-107, C.R.S., that on November 17, 2022 final settlement with 53 Corporation, LLC will be made by East Cherry Creek Valley Water & Sanitation District for the Copperleaf Water Quality Pond J Improvements Project subject to satisfactory final inspection and acceptance of said facilities by the District. Any person, co-partnership, association of persons, company or corporation that has furnished labor, materials, team hire, sustenance, provisions, provender, or other supplies used or consumed by such contractor or his or her subcontractor in or about the performance of the work contracted to be done or that supplies, laborers, rental machinery, tools, or equipment to the extent used in the prosecution of the work whose claim therefore has not been paid by the contractor or subcontractor, at any time up to and including the time of final settlement for the work contracted to be done, may file a verified statement of the amount due and unpaid on such claim with East Cherry Creek Valley Water & Sanitation District, c/o, Michelle Probasco, Project Supervisor, 6201 South Gun Club Road, Aurora, Colorado 80016. Failure to file such verified statement or claim prior to final settlement will release the District and its employees and agents from any and all liability for such claim and for making final payment to said contractor.
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 17, 2022
The Colorado Department of Local Affairs certifies to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that Bret Hillberry in his capacity as Certifying Officer consents to accept the jurisdiction of the Federal Courts if an action is brought to enforce responsibilities in relation to the environmental review process and that these responsibilities have been satisfied. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s approval of the certification satisfies its responsibilities under NEPA and related laws and authorities, and allows the Aurora Housing Authority to use
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development will accept objections to its release of funds and the Colorado Department of Local Affairs’ certification for a period of 15 days following the anticipated submission date or its actual receipt of the request (whichever is later) only if they are made on one of the following bases: (a) thefying Officer of the Colorado Department of Local Affairs; (b) the Colorado Department of Local Affairs has omitted a step or failed to make a decision or finding required by U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development regulations at 24 CFR Partticipants in the development process havetaken activities not authorized by 24 CFR Part 58 before the approval of a release of funds by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development; or (d) another Federal agency, acting pursuant to 40 CFR part 1504, has submitted a written finding that the project is unsatisfactory from thejections must be prepared and submitted via email in accordance with the required procedures (24 CFR Part 58, Sec. 58.76) and shall be addressed to Noemi Ghirghi, CPD Region VIII Director, at CPD_COVID19OEE-DEN@hud.gov. Potential objectors should contact CPD_COVID-19OEEDEN@hud.gov to verify the actual last day of the objection period.
NOTICE OF HEARING BY PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO § 15-10-401, C.R.S.
Case No: 2022PR31158
In the Interest of:
Passion Brianna Blea-Young, Minor.
To: Paul Martinez
Last Known Address, if any for Paul Martinez: Unknown.
A hearing on Petition For Appointment of Guardian for Minor and Petition For Appointment of a Conservator for Minor for appointment of a guardian and conservator for the minor child, Passion Brianna BleaYoung will be held at the following time and location or at a later date to which the hearing may be continued:
Date: December 14, 2022
Time: 3:00 p.m.
Courtroom or Division: 12 (Virtual Courtroom)
Address: 7325 S. Potomac St., Centennial, CO 80112
The Court has authorized virtual appearances for this guardianship hearing. The Court’s virtual courtroom may be accessed as follows:
Meeting Link: https://judicial.webex.com/ meet/D18-ARAP-Div12
Meeting Number: 2598 388 7751 #
Joining via Phone:
Call +1-720-650-7664
Access code: 2598 388 7751 then press
# #
The hearing will take approximately 1 hour.
Barbara Elaine Young 1596 S. Norfolk Street Aurora, CO 80017
Attorney for Petitioner:
Kacie Lynn Mulhern, Atty. Reg. #47739
ROCKY MOUNTAIN CHILDREN’S LAW
CENTER
1325 S. Colorado Blvd., Suite 701, Denver, Colorado 80222
T: (303) 692 – 1165
F: (303) 302 - 2890
E: kmulhern@childlawcenter.org
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022
Sentinel NOTICE OF HEARING BY PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO § 15-10-401, C.R.S. Case Number: 2022PR31159
In the Interest of:
Juan Carlos Romero-Blea, Minor.
To: Mario Romero and Unknown Father
Last Known Address, if any for Juan Romero: Mexico.
Last Known Address, if any for Unknown
Father: Unknown.
A hearing on Petition For Appointment of Guardian for Minor for appointment of a guardian for the minor child, Juan Carlos Romero-Blea will be held at the following time and location or at a later date to which the hearing may be continued:
Date: December 14, 2022 Time: 3:00 p.m.
Courtroom or Division: 12 (Virtual Courtroom)
Address: 7325 S. Potomac St., Centennial, CO 80112
The Court has authorized virtual appearances for this guardianship hearing. The Court’s virtual courtroom may be accessed as follows:
Meeting Link: https://judicial.webex.com/ meet/D18-ARAP-Div12
Meeting Number: 2598 388 7751 #
Joining via Phone: Call +1-720-650-7664
Access code: 2598 388 7751 then press
# #
The hearing will take approximately 1 hour.
Barbara Elaine Young 1596 S. Norfolk Street Aurora, CO 80017
Attorney for Petitioner: Kacie Lynn Mulhern, Atty. Reg. #47739
ROCKY MOUNTAIN CHILDREN’S LAW
CENTER
1325 S. Colorado Blvd., Suite 701, Denver, Colorado 80222
T: (303) 692 – 1165
F: (303) 302 - 2890
E: kmulhern@childlawcenter.org
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE OF HEARING C.R.P.P. 24 BY PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO § 15-10-401, C.R.S.
Case No. 2022PR31203
In the Matter of the Estate of: Pedro Miguel Martinez-Diaz
To: PEDRO JAVIER MARTINEZ
Last Known Address, if any: N/A
A hearing on Petition of Adjudication of Intestacy and formal Appointment of Personal Representative for the Probate Estate of Pedro Miguel Martinez-Diaz (aka Pedro Miguel Martinez Diaz) and any court orders or findings related thereto. This is a hearing pursuant to C.R.P.P. 24 (attendance at the hearing is not required nor expected) will be held at the following time and location or at a later date to which the hearing may be continued:
Date: December 9th, 2022
Time: 8:00AM Courtroom or Division:12
Address:7325 S. Potomac St. Centennial, CO 80112
***** IMPORTANT NOTICE*****
Any interested person wishing to object to the requested action set forth in the attached motion/petition and proposed order must file a written objection with the court on or before the hearing and must furnish a copy of the objection to the person requesting the court order. JDF 722 (Objection form) is available on the Colorado Judicial Branch website (www.courts.state. co.us). If no objection is filed, the court may take action on the motion/petition without further notice or hearing. If any objection is filed, the objecting party must, within 14 days after filing the objection, contact the court to set the objection for an appearance hearing. Failure to timely set the objection for an appearance hearing as required will result in further action as the court deems appropriate.
The Law Firm of Starzynski Van Der Jagt PC 200 S. Wilcox St. #206 Castle Rock, CO 80104
Ph:920-214-8501
Dagna Van Der Jagt, Esq #37704
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022
Sentinel NOTICE OF HEARING ON PROPOSED 2023 BUDGET AND 2022 BUDGET AMENDMENT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the proposed budget for the ensuing year of 2023 has been submitted to the Pioneer Business Metropolitan District (“District”). Such proposed budget will be considered at a meeting and public hearing of the Board of Directors of the District to be held at 2:00 p.m. on Monday, November 21, 2022 at Spencer Fane LLP, 1700 Lincoln Street, Suite 2000 | Denver, CO 80203. Information regarding public participation by teleconference will be available at least 24 hours prior the meeting and public hearing and may be obtained by contacting Stephanie Net, by email at snet@spencerfane. com or by telephone at 303-389-3712.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that an amendment to the 2022 budget of the District may also be considered at the abovereferenced meeting and public hearing of the Board of Directors of the District. A copy of the proposed 2023 budget and the amended 2022 budget, if required, are available for public inspection at the offices of Simmons & Wheeler, P.C., 304 Inverness Way South Suite 490, Englewood, CO 80112. Please contact Diane Wheeler by email at Diane@simmonswheeler.com or by telephone at 303-689-0833 to make arrangements to inspect the budget(s) prior to visiting the foregoing office. Any interested elector within the District may, at any time prior to final adoption of the 2023 budget and the amended 2022 budget, if required, file or register any objections thereto.
PIONEER BUSINESS METROPOLITAN DISTRICT
By: /s/ Todd Wright, President
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO MULTIFAMILY HOUSING REVENUE OBLIGATIONS
(PEORIA CROSSING II PROJECT)
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing pursuant to Section 147(f) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Tax Code”) will be held by the Housing Authority of the City of Aurora, Colorado, a public body, corporate and politic, doing business as Aurora Housing Authority (the “Authority”), for the purpose of providing a reasonable opportunity for interested individuals to express their views, either orally or in writing, on the proposed plan of financing providing for the issuance of one or more separate issues of the above-captioned exempt facility bonds, notes or other obligations, in one or more series (the “Obligations”), for the qualified residential rental project de-
scribed below pursuant to Section 142(d) of the Tax Code.
The hearing will commence on Monday, November 28, 2022, commencing at 8:30 [a.m.], Mountain Time, and will be held via teleconference accessible to the public at the following toll-free telephone number: 1-800-[1 720 707 2699], Passcode: [585291]#.
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON THE AMENDED 2022 BUDGET AND NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON THE PROPOSED 2023 BUDGET
NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO §15-12-801, C.R.S.
Case No. 2022PR374
Estate of Sheryl Gay Rummel aka Sheryl G. Rummel aka Sheryl Rummel, Deceased.
The Authority has been requested to make available proceeds of the Obligations, in a maximum stated principal amount not exceeding $16,000,000 to finance a portion of the costs of the acquisition, construction and equipping of an approximately 72unit multifamily rental housing project and transit oriented development, to be known as Peoria Crossing II, together with any functionally related and subordinate facilities (the “Project”), to be located at 3150 N. Peoria St., in Aurora, Colorado 80011. The expected initial legal owner and principal user of the Project will be Peoria Crossing II LLLP, a Colorado limited liability limited partnership, or another affiliated entity of the Authority.
THE OBLIGATIONS SHALL BE SPECIAL, LIMITED OBLIGATIONS OF THE AUTHORITY. THE AUTHORITY WILL NOT BE OBLIGATED TO PAY THE OBLIGATIONS OR THE INTEREST THEREON, EXCEPT FROM THE ASSETS OR REVENUES PLEDGED THEREFOR. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE STATE OF COLORADO, THE CITY OF AURORA OR ANY OTHER POLITICAL SUBDIVISION THEREOF (OTHER THAN THE AUTHORITY) BE LIABLE FOR THE OBLIGATIONS, AND THE OBLIGATIONS SHALL NOT CONSTITUTE A DEBT OF THE STATE OF COLORADO, THE CITY OF AURORA OR ANY OTHER SUCH POLITICAL SUBDIVISION. THE AUTHORITY DOES NOT HAVE THE POWER TO PLEDGE THE GENERAL CREDIT OR TAXING POWER OF THE STATE OR ANY POLITICAL SUBDIVISION THEREOF. THE AUTHORITY HAS NO TAXING POWER.
The Authority will, at the above time and place, receive any written comments from and hear all persons with views in favor of or opposed to the plan of financing, the proposed issuance of the Obligations and the use of the proceeds thereof to finance the Project.
It is intended that the interest payable on the Obligations be excludable from the gross income of the owners thereof for federal income tax purposes pursuant to the applicable provisions of the Tax Code. A report of the hearing will be made to the Mayor of the City of Aurora who will consider the issuance of the Obligations for approval. Approval by the Mayor of the Obligations is necessary in order for the interest payable on the Obligations to qualify for exclusion from the gross income of the owners thereof for federal income tax purposes.
Dated November 8, 2022.
HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF AURORA, COLORADO
Posted at: https://www.aurorahousing.org/
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING AS TO PROPOSED 2023 BUDGET AND AMENDED 2022 BUDGET
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a proposed 2023 budget has been submitted to the EAST SMOKY HILL METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NO. 1 for the fiscal year 2023.
A copy of such proposed budget has been filed in the office of the accountant, CliftonLarsonAllen, LLP, 8390 East Crescent Parkway, Suite 300, in Greenwood Village, Colorado, where same is open for public inspection. Such proposed budget will be considered at a special meeting of the East Smoky Hill Metropolitan District No. 1 to be held at 7:00 p.m. on Monday, December 5, 2022. The meeting will be held at the Trails Recreation Center, 16799 E. Lake Avenue, Centennial, Colorado 80015. If necessary, an amended 2022 budget will be filed in the office of the accountant and open for public inspection for consideration at the special meeting of the Board. Any interested elector within the East Smoky Hill Metropolitan District No. 1 may inspect the amended and proposed budgets and file or register any objections at any time prior to the final adoption of the amended 2022 budget and proposed 2023 budget.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Directors (the “Board”) of the SOUTHGLENN METROPOLITAN DISTRICT (the “District”), will hold a meeting via teleconference on Monday, December 5, 2022 at 10:00 A.M., for the purpose of conducting such business as may come before the Board including a public hearing on the 2022 amended budget (the “Amended Budget”) and 2023 proposed budget (the “Proposed Budget”). This meeting can be joined using the following teleconference information: https://teams.microsoft. com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MDI3O DJlZjAtZWYwNi00ZDgyLWEwYzItMmVh MjhlMTE5M2E2%40thread.v2/0?context= %7b%22Tid%22%3a%224aaa468e-93ba4ee3-ab9f-6a247aa3ade0%22%2c%22 Oid%22%3a%227e93cd08-3bae-48d3b32e-d8f57cd88c24%22%7d, Conference ID: 555 488 931#, Phone number: 1-720547-5281.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that Amended Budget and Proposed Budget have been submitted to the District. A copy of the Amended Budget and the Proposed Budget are on file in the office of CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, 8390 E. Crescent Pkwy., Ste. 300, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111, where the same are open for public inspection.
Any interested elector of the District may file any objections to the Amended Budget and Proposed Budget at any time prior to final adoption of the Amended Budget and Proposed Budget by the Board. This meeting is open to the public and the agenda for any meeting may be obtained by calling (303) 779-5710.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
SOUTHGLENN METROPOLITAN DISTRICT
/s/ WHITE BEAR ANKELE TANAKA & WALDRON Attorneys at Law
Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given that PODS Enterprises, LLC, located at 21110 E 31st Circle, Aurora, CO 80011, will sell the contents of certain containers at auction to the highest bidder to satisfy owner’s lien. Auction will be held online at www.StorageTreasures. com starting on December 2, 2022 and ending on December 9, 2022. Contents to be sold may include general household goods, electronics, office & business equipment, furniture, clothing and other miscellaneous personal property.
First Publication: November 17, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE OF SELF STORAGE SALE
Please take notice StoreLocal Storage CoOp Englewood located at 3411 S Irving St Englewood CO 80110 intends to hold a public sale to the highest bidder of the property stored by the following tenants at the storage facility. The sale will occur as an online auction via www.storagetreasures.com on 12/2/2022 at 12:00 PM. William Pearce unit #0110; Jessica Sandoval unit #0326. This sale may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain terms and conditions apply. See manager for details.
First Publication: November 17, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022 Sentinel
NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO §15-12-801, C.R.S. Case No. 2022PR30763
Estate of Frances Marie Miller, Deceased. All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before March 10, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Teresa Kirko
Personal Representative 220 Shelby Ct. Helena, MT 56902
Attorney for Personal Representative
David A. Imbler Atty. Reg. #: 52038 Of Counsel, Spaeth & Doyle, LLP 501 S. Cherry St., Suite 700 Glendale, CO 80246 Phone: 720-542-2147
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022 Sentinel
All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before March 3, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Michael Justin Rummel
Personal Representative 324 Inverness Dr S, 7-303 Englewood, CO 80112
First Publication: November 3, 2022
Last Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO §15-12-801, C.R.S. Case No. 2022PR030563
Estate of Larry J. Fore, Deceased
All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Adams County, Colorado on or before March 17, 2023, or said claims may be forever barred. Jennifer L. Fore Personal Representative 15991 W. 60th Circle Golden, CO 80403
First Publication: November 17, 2022
Final Publication: December 1, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO §15-12-801, C.R.S. Case No. 2022PR31028
Estate of Louise H. Vigoda aka Louise L. Vigoda aka Louise Vigoda, Deceased.
All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before March 7, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Richard J. Vigoda Personal Representative 23600 Peppermill Court Bonita Springs, FL 34134
Attorney for Personal Representative
Jay H. Chapman
Atty Reg #: 00645 Chapman & Roth, LLC 1355 S. Colorado Blvd., Ste. 600 Denver, CO 80222
Phone: 303-759-4004
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO §15-12-801, C.R.S.
Case No. 2022PR31087
Estate of Carol Ann Conreux Farmer aka Carol C. Farmer aka Carol Farmer, Deceased.
All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before March 3, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Richard W. Farmer Personal Representative 5962 Lickton Pike Goodlettsville, TN 37072
Attorney for Personal Representative Richard D. Hughes, Esq.
Atty Reg #: 1218
THE HUGHES LAW FIRM, P.C. 7807 E. Peakview Ave., Suite 410 Centennial, CO 80111
Phone: 303-758-0680
First Publication: November 3, 2022
Final Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY PUBLICATION
PURSUANT TO §15-12-801, C.R.S. Case No. 2022PR31105
Estate of Robert Clyde Amme aka Robert C. Amme aka Robert Amme aka Bob Amme, Deceased.
All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before March 3, 2023, or the claims may be forever barred.
Dianne E. Amme
Personal Representative 30 Starlake Lane Norwich, Vermont 05055
Attorney for Personal Representative
Zachary F. Woodward, Esq.
Atty Reg #: 48265
SOLEM WOODWARD & McKINLEY, P.C. 750 West Hampden Ave., Ste. 505 Englewood, CO 80110
Phone: 303-761-4900
First Publication: November 3, 2022
Final Publication: November 17, 2022
Sentinel
1) X-ray doses
5) Sounds of laughter
9) Holler
14) Assist a robber, e.g. 15) Separable cookie
16) "If a tree falls in the forest and "
17) "American" schedule components
20) Takes home from the pound
21) Ukrainian capital 22) More than a heavy drinker 23) Certain Civil War fighter 24) "_ all in your mind" 26) Set _ world record
43) In spite of the fact, to bards
44) Dillies
45) Blunt-tipped sword 46) Take offense to 48) Flagstones
50) Airshow stunt 52) "We Do Our Part" org. 53) Foolish sentimentality
56) Anger 59) Wishes undone 61) Fall 63) Some kitchen attachments 66) Word with "tube" or "city" 67) Lemon quality 68) Exciting part of a seat? 69) Bucks 70) Eyelid malady 71) Notable deed
1) Traffic cop's gun
2) Domicile
www.publicnoticecolorado.com
3) Disband
4) March movement
PUBLIC NOTICE OF PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF AN ADULT ARAPAHOE COUNTY COURT, COLORADO Case No. 22CV238
5) Attractive one, in old slang
6) "Entourage" role for Jeremy
STATE OF WISCONSIN, CIRCUIT COURT, LINCOLN COUNTY ORDER TO APPEAR AND SHOW CAUSE Case No. 22-FA-38
PUBLIC NOTICE OF PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF AN ADULT ARAPAHOE COUNTY COURT, COLORADO Case No. 22CV238
STATE OF WISCONSIN, CIRCUIT COURT, LINCOLN COUNTY ORDER TO APPEAR AND SHOW CAUSE
Case No. 22-FA-38
7) Relative of "Dam!"
8) Bulgarian capital
PUBLIC NOTICE is given on October 26, 2022, that a Petition for a Change of Name of an Adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court.
9) Whiny individual
PUBLIC NOTICE is given on October 26, 2022, that a Petition for a Change of Name of an Adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court.
10) Harley, in slang
11) Aahs' partners
12) "Render _ Caesar "
The Petition requests that the name of JOBADIAH SINCLAIR WEEKS be changed to Jobadiah Sinclair Weeks. /s/ Judge
13) Pop quiz, e.g.
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022 Sentinel
REQUEST TO PUBLISH TO NOTICE TO NON-CUSTODIAL PARENT OF CHANGE OF MINOR’S NAME AND PUBLICATION ORDER Case No. 2022C100662
Use a spoon 19) Legendary diva Home 25) Type of duck 27) Pack animals 28) A house of worship 29) _ Island (old immigration checkpoint) 31) Generous serving 32) Lestat creator Rice
In the Matter of the Petition of: Parent/Petitioner: Aleisha McLennan for Minor Child: Jayden Avery Hampton McLennan to change the Child’s Name to: Jayden Avery McLennan
1. The last known address of the non-custodial parent was: unknown
2. The non-custodial parent no longer lives at that address.
3. Reasonable effort was made to contact the non-custodial parent by certified mail at the last known address as follows: Jayden’s biological father and I dated for a very short time and I have not had any contact with him since Jayden was 6 months old. I never had an address for him.
4. The certified letter has been returned marked delivered. The return envelope is attached.
It is requested that the Court permit notice by publication on the non-custodial parent.
/s/ Aleisha McLennan, Parent/Petitioner
Dated: October 5, 2022
/s/ Judge
First Publication: November 17, 2022
Final Publication: December 1, 2022 Sentinel
In re the Marriage of: AMANDA MICHELLE. BOYD, Petitioner, -andRICHARD MYRON BOYD, III, Respondent.
The Petition requests that the name of JOBADIAH SINCLAIR WEEKS be changed to Jobadiah Sinclair Weeks. /s/ Judge
TO: RICHARD MYRON BOYD, III 15402 E EVANS AVE APT. 207 AURORA CO 80013
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022 Sentinel
TAKE NOTICE you are hereby ordered to appear and show cause before the Court, the Honorable Bonnie Wachsmuth, in her courtroom, Lincoln County Courthouse, 1110 E. Main St., Merrill, Lincoln County, Wisconsin, on December 1, 2022 at 2:00 p.m. CST, then and there or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, why divorce should not be granted and ordered by the Court:
REQUEST TO PUBLISH TO NOTICE
TO NON-CUSTODIAL PARENT OF CHANGE OF MINOR’S NAME AND PUBLICATION ORDER
Case No. 2022C100662
1. Establishing a Final Order with sole legal custody of the minor child to the Petitioner, Amanda M. Boyd.
In the Matter of the Petition of: Parent/Petitioner: Aleisha McLennan for Minor Child: Jayden Avery Hampton McLennan to change the Child’s Name to: Jayden Avery McLennan
1. The last known address of the non-custodial parent was: unknown
2. Granting primary placement of the minor child to the Petitioner, Amanda M. Boyd.
2. The non-custodial parent no longer lives at that address.
3. Denying any periods of placement between the Respondent, Richard M. Boyd, II, and the minor child at this time pursuant to Wis. Stats. §767.451(4).
3. Reasonable effort was made to contact the non-custodial parent by certified mail at the last known address as follows: Jayden’s biological father and I dated for a very short time and I have not had any contact with him since Jayden was 6 months old. I never had an address for him.
4. For entry of an Order establishing child support for the minor child pursuant to Wis. Stats. §767.511
5. For a determination of tax exemption, division of assets, division of debts, and maintenance, all as may be just and appropriate.
4. The certified letter has been returned marked delivered. The return envelope is attached. It is requested that the Court permit notice by publication on the non-custodial parent.
/s/ Aleisha McLennan, Parent/Petitioner
6. For such other and further relief as is just and appropriate based upon the circumstances presented herein pursuant to Chapter 767 of the Wisconsin Statutes.
Dated: October 5, 2022
Failure by the party named above to appear may result in the Court entering default judgment and granting the relief sought by the Petitioner, Amanda M. Boyd. BY THE COURT.
/s/ Judge
November 17, 2022
1, 2022
In re the Marriage of: AMANDA MICHELLE. BOYD, Petitioner, -andRICHARD MYRON BOYD, III, Respondent.
TO: RICHARD MYRON BOYD, III 15402 E EVANS AVE APT. 207 AURORA CO 80013
TAKE NOTICE you are hereby ordered to appear and show cause before the Court, the Honorable Bonnie Wachsmuth, in her courtroom, Lincoln County Courthouse, 1110 E. Main St., Merrill, Lincoln County, Wisconsin, on December 1, 2022 at 2:00 p.m. CST, then and there or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, why divorce should not be granted and ordered by the Court:
1. Establishing a Final Order with sole legal custody of the minor child to the Petitioner, Amanda M. Boyd.
2. Granting primary placement of the minor child to the Petitioner, Amanda M. Boyd.
3. Denying any periods of placement between the Respondent, Richard M. Boyd, II, and the minor child at this time pursuant to Wis. Stats. §767.451(4).
4. For entry of an Order establishing child support for the minor child pursuant to Wis. Stats. §767.511
5. For a determination of tax exemption, division of assets, division of debts, and maintenance, all as may be just and appropriate.
6. For such other and further relief as is just and appropriate based upon the circumstances presented herein pursuant to Chapter 767 of the Wisconsin Statutes. Failure by the party named above to appear may result in the Court entering default judgment and granting the relief sought by the Petitioner, Amanda M. Boyd. BY THE COURT.
First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 24, 2022 Sentinel
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First Publication: November 10, 2022
Final Publication: November 17, 2022 Sentinel