Baird’s CEO Paul Purcell Hailed At Economic Club Of Colorado

Baird’s CEO Paul Purcell Hailed At Economic Club Of Colorado

by Charles C. Bonniwell

At its early spring meeting held at the Westin Hotel in downtown Denver, The Economic Club of Colorado honored the leaders of three companies known for being outstanding places to work. The Economic Club of Colorado describes itself as the leading forum in the Rocky Mountain West for world leaders in business, government and policy to meet the business leaders of the region.

The three featured panelists were: Monty Moran, co-CEO of Chipotle Mexican Grill restaurants, a Denver-based fast food chain with over 1,783 restaurants worldwide; David Palmer, Denver Managing Shareholder of the international law firm of Greenberg Traurig, LLC which has 1,800 lawyers and governmental affairs professionals worldwide; and Paul Purcell, Chairman and CEO of financial services firm RW Baird, which has over 100 offices on three continents including one in Cherry Creek.

What was extraordinary concerning the panel was that the businesses in their respective industries they lead are generally known for low employee morale. Large law firms and financial service companies provide high pay but often have difficult and highly stressful work environments. Fast food restaurants in turn are known at the local level for low pay and minimum career advancement opportunities.

Palmer, who has worked as an attorney in Denver for various prestigious firms his entire professional career, emphasized that Greenberg Traurig seeks to create an atmosphere where all different types of individuals can thrive and noted that his Miami-based firm was founded on diversity and diversity is imprinted in its corporate DNA.

Moran shared that when he became co-CEO only a relatively small number of individuals who worked in a local restaurant were ever promoted to lead manager. Over time he created a policy that requires 100 percent of the local managers be hired from within so that the employees have a stake in their own future. Under the designated restaurateur program hourly crew members can become managers earning over $100,000 a year. He emphasized that simply doing your job well was not enough and Chipotle only promoted individuals who also made everyone around them better.

RW Baird, which has offices in Colorado in Cherry Creek (Denver) and Boulder, was ranked fifth in the entire country in Fortune magazine’s “100 Best Companies to Work For” in line with such nationally known firms such as Google and St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital. Paul Purcell has headed up the company for over 21 years.

The investment advisor firm has $120 billion in client assets and Purcell is quoted in Fortune as attributing its success to one rule: “no a**holes.” That is perhaps a highly unusual rule for a company in an industry that is known for having a very high percentage of the same.

In an exclusive interview with the Chronicle Purcell expanded on why such a rule was so critical to Baird’s success. “You want your advisors concentrating on helping their clients become financially better off and not fighting and backstabbing each other. At Baird our only real product is our employees. Trust is everything in our business and very few people actually want to trust an ‘a**hole’ nor should they.”

Baird was founded in 1919 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and is privately owned. Approximately two-thirds of its associates are shareholders in the company. Due to conservative investing policies and little or no debt Baird weathered the disastrous 2008 financial downturn in remarkably good shape and has grown significantly over the last five to seven years with many of its competitors downsizing or going out of business.

Purcell at age 67 has not slowed down one iota but has begun the process of gradually handing over the reins of the company to his designated successor, Steve Booth, whom he named company president at the beginning of last year.

Baird’s mission statement totals one sentence: “To provide the best financial advice and service to our clients and be the best place to work for our associates.” It is unique for an investment advisor firm to have as one of its two principle goals being “the best place to work for our associates.” However, Baird apparently takes its mission statement very seriously as evidenced by the fact that the firm was rated by Fortune magazine to be in the top five companies in the entire country to work for. Locally Baird appears to be also making a major impact and was voted this year by the Greater Glendale Chamber of Commerce to be the “Business of the Year” highlighted by the firm’s Palm Group in the private wealth management field.

harvard12_04 of x woodFor Purcell, building and preserving a unique corporate culture at RW Baird has been a driving desire and goal. Purcell was a once proud partner in the investment firm of Kidder, Peabody & Co. In the 1980s he watched as that company’s corporate culture changed after its acquisition of General Electric in 1986. The culminating event occurred in 1987 when its star banker Marty Siegel became the center of the Ivan Boesky scandal and the firm paying $26 million in fines as part of settlement with then-U.S. attorney Rudy Giuliani. Purcell left the firm when he felt he could not save it from itself.

“Once you have watched something special be destroyed and lost, you treasure it all the more. You also realize that your goal is never totally achieved. What you have built can be wasted in a relatively short period of time unless you remain aware and appreciative of what you have and ever vigilant not to let it diminish,” Purcell noted.

Purcell is also very much a believer in the parable from Luke that “for unto whomever much is given, of him shall much be required.” He is a major contributor to charities in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and in Chicago, Illinois, where he resides. He sits on a myriad eleemosynary boards from Discovery World to the United Performing Arts Fund. Purcell requires that wherever the company does business it gives back to the community in a major and important fashion.

Regarding RW Baird’s plans in Colorado, Purcell sees the Denver/Boulder market as one of the true hubs for the company in the western United States along with Austin, Texas; Seattle, Washington; and San Francisco, California. He also notes that some of the company’s top talent is joining the Cherry Creek office for many of differing reasons. Purcell concluded that Baird’s Cherry Creek office is growing at an extraordinary rate. But growth in and of itself has never been a goal of Baird, according to Purcell. Rather as the mission statement states it is “to provide the best financial advice and service to our clients” and those are not simply words but a true calling as is RW Baird’s commitment to its employees.

Proven Champions Continue To Impress

Proven Champions Continue To Impress

by Brent New
Writer for and on behalf of the City of Glendale

It’s hard to imagine a championship lathered in more debate and criticism than the Glendale Raptors’ Women Premier League (WPL) title in 2014.

They wanted a championship from the movies, something so pure and untouchable — like it should be. But no matter how much they wanted it, how hard they wished it, it just wasn’t.

They lost to the Atlanta Harlequins in the WPL semifinals, yet moved on to the title game after the Harlequins knowingly played an ineligible player and were forced to forfeit their 13-7 win.

“It was tough for me personally because I was told before the kickoff that the Harlequins had forfeited, but they would appeal,” Raptors former coach Michael Fealey said. “It messed with my head.”

The forfeit held up and his team eventually beat the Twin Cities Amazons 16-15 in the title game and claimed the first WPL title in program history.

Players and coaches had to defend their gold medal soon after.

“Some people said we didn’t deserve it. It was frustrating. There were people hiding behind computers, telling us we didn’t deserve it. Saying there should be an asterisk,” Raptors club president Jeanna Beard said. “But we know we deserved it. We know the fight it took, we know we’re champions.”

She hopes the WPL Raptors’ spring season will help silence the critics.

Also known as the developmental season, it began with a tournament win at the Champagne Classic in San Diego, Calif. in late February and will go through late May.

The main purpose of the three-month season is to develop and work with players on an individual basis. Beard, however, said there will be a little extra motivation in every game after what happened in the fall.

“We want to prove to people we are champions,” Beard said. “We’ve heard some stuff about our gold medal and we are tired of hearing it. We just want to make (the critics) shut up a little bit.”

Despite the ballyhooed cries from critics on their unconventional run to a national championship in the fall, and the hasty departure of their coach, the Raptors appear to be unscathed in the early weeks of the spring season. Raptors director of rugby Mark Bullock is in as interim head coach, and former Raptors players Kitt Wagner and Jamie Burke are in as assistant coaches.

In a rematch unbefitting of a tense national championship game that ended 16-15, they made short work of the Twin Cities Amazons in the not-so exciting sequel on March 7.

Joanna Kitlinski scored twice and Rachel Ryan added another as the Raptors beat the Amazons 51-17 at Infinity Park.

First-time WPL players Denali Graham and Fatima Chavez also added scores in the win.

“We had good play by veterans and some new players to us,” Raptors coach Mark Bullock said. “You want to see what you have everywhere on our roster and I think we got a good idea.”

On the field, forward Rachel Ryan, flanker Joanna Kitlinski and Beard were big pieces during the title run. And so far, they are leading the Raptors during the developmental season. Veteran players and key components to the 2014 title run Hannah Stolba, Jessica Sexaur and Tina Nesberg, in the meantime, will not participate in the spring season.

The mission is to give a lot of the younger and less experienced players on the Raptors women’s team a bigger role in the spring.

In the March 7 rematch, Ryan clobbered through the Amazons defense and put Glendale up 15-10 in the opening minutes of the second half.

Molly Kinsella and Graham scored on back-to-back possessions to push the lead to 37-17. And Kitlinski scored her second try of the day to give the Raptors the 44-17 advantage soon after.

“We played with good intensity and started playing the way we’ve practiced,” Bullock said. “It was good to see.”

When asked though if the Raptors will take a page out of the NFL and minimize the importance of games themselves during their noncompetitive season, Bullock scoffed.

“You must not know me too well if you think that,” he laughed. “We are going to approach every game to win. That’s the point of playing. We want to have competitive games and treat it no different than we ever do.”

While some things never change, the Raptors’ WPL team has done nothing but since they won the national championship. And the life of a champion, no matter who the critics, certainly has its perks.

Moving On Up . . .

The city of Glendale and the Raptors recently agreed that the WPL team will play three, maybe four home games in the stadium at Infinity Park in the fall.

The San Diego Surfers (Sept. 12), Oregon Sports Union (Oct. 10) and Berkeley All Blues (Oct. 24) are all scheduled to be played in the stadium, and the city said they have asked the Raptors to get one more quality opponent onto the regular season schedule to make a total of four home games.

The city also said via email that they are putting together a proposal to host the WPL National Championships on Nov. 13 and 15.

“I think everyone is looking to get back in the stadium,” Stolba said. “We look forward to getting back on the big stage.”

The Raptors are also hoping to use this momentum to start a Division I or Division II team to go alongside their WPL team.

An expansion to the women’s rugby side is imminent.

As of now, the Raptors just have a B-side, which is okay, but they’d rather have a non-elite team that plays consistent competitive games throughout the year.

“It’s hard for the B-side to play in a lot of competitive games,” Bullock said. “That’s the challenge when you start looking at levels below elite (in rugby).”

A D-I or D-II would allow for more competitive games and a more meaningful season for non-elite players.

The process is in the early stages.

“I’d love to say we could have it in 3-5 years,” Beard said. “But maybe that’s optimistic.”

You can keep up with all your Raptors news at GlendaleRaptors.com.

A Simple Guide To Denver Municipal Election On May 5, 2015

A Simple Guide To Denver Municipal Election On May 5, 2015

An election for the mayor of Denver and the entire City Council will be held on May 5, 2015, much to the surprise of many Denver residents. Part of the reason for the lack of publicity of the election is the strange form of democracy we have going on here in Denver. Our municipality has informally adopted what they call the “one and done” rule sometimes seen in third world kleptocracies, i.e., once you are elected you never face another competitive election ever again. Unfortunately for city officeholders there are term limits in the municipality or they would never have to leave office except feet first as they go on to their heavenly reward.

By way of illustrative example, Mayor Michael Hancock has been incredibly inept in everything he has handled from the Sheriff’s Department scandals to the police protest debacle to the disastrous development policies. Succeeding two very strong mayors in Wellington Webb and John Hickenlooper, Hancock is an incredibly feckless and weak character, although highly personable.

Our mayor was at one time a mascot for the Denver Broncos football team and in office he has continued that role as the official team mascot for the greediest of real estate developers and most corrupt of union bosses. Yet he runs for a second term virtually unopposed.

Turning to the City Council, we are still attempting to determine when the last time was that an incumbent Denver City Council member lost in an election. Most incumbents never even have an opponent after their first election.

Editorial - Timothy OBrien 4-15

Timothy O’Brien

The reason, of course, is not that we love our incumbents so much here in Denver, but rather money — the mother’s milk of politics. To attempt to beat an incumbent in a city council district race costs at least $100,000; $500,000 for a city-wide position other than mayor; and for mayor at least $1,000,000. The only people who will provide you such sums to run for city office are real estate developers and labor unions, but they already own the incumbents and so why would anyone provide money for any putative challengers. Of course, if you are very wealthy you could self fund, but you may have noticed wealthy people do not want to run for municipal office in Denver other than perhaps mayor. The rich will consider running for governor, or senator or even congressman, but not a spot on the Denver City Council. This is why Denver City Council members are always voting themselves never-ending raises, i.e., they need the money.

As a result there is no real race for the mayor’s position or a majority of the council seats which is why the public is paying little or no attention to the election. You never saw the Russian public get real excited either about essentially non-elections in the old Soviet Union.

But that does leave elections for six open council seats as well as city auditor. These competitive races include Council Districts 4, 6 and 10 which the Glendale Cherry Creek Chronicle serves in whole or in part.

Editorial - Wayne New 4-15

Wayne New

But who should one vote for in these races? It’s actually pretty easy. Go to www.den vergov.org/elections and download the financial disclosure statements of the candidates. In each race there will be one candidate that has raised an incredible amount of money. In their disclosure statements you will see the lawyer lobbyists from CRL Associates and Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck LLP as well as endless developers and real estate investors. You well also see a smattering of unions such the Teamsters Local 17 PAC. These candidates have already been acquired by those who control and own Mayor Michael Hancock.

Sadly, but understandably, another name you should be on the lookout for is the Greater Glendale Chamber of Commerce. Our publisher, Chuck Bonniwell, is a co-founder of that organization and sits on its Board of Directors but, of course, only has but one vote. Glendale since its founding in 1859, and particularly after its incorporation in 1952, has had to fight Denver tooth and nail for its very existence. Starting in the 1990s, thanks to mayors Wellington Webb and John Hickenlooper and the Glendale powers that be, there has been a rapprochement. As a result there has been the fire department merger, the beautification of Cherry Creek South and the building of the Infinity Park complex among other positive projects that have benefited both cities.

Glendale, as well as its business chamber therefore, seeks to have a positive relationship with the powers that be in Denver, which today is Mayor Michael Hancock and the people who control him. On page 24 you will locate the Glendale Chamber’s endorsements and you can judge for yourself how convincing you find its logic and rationale.

The unions, the developers and the Glendale Chamber suggest you support Kendra Black in Council District 4; Liz Adams in Council District 6; Anna Jones in Council District 10; as well as Chris Nevitt for City Auditor.

If you want more 30-story Broe Towers eliminating the view of the mountains for all of Cherry Creek and the Country Club area, along with more massive apartment buildings blocking sunlight from ever reaching certain streets in Cherry Creek North, these are your candidates. If you think that the endless traffic jams along Colorado Boulevard and 1st Avenue and the rest of the city are not long enough and can be made even worse, these are your candidates. If you want to see a corrupt and unethical Planning Board with no consideration ever for the parking and traffic concerns continue, these are your candidates. These candidates will religiously follow the political Golden Rule, i.e., he who has the gold rules, and that is not the average everyday citizen or voter.

Editorial - Paul Kashmann 4-15

Paul Kashmann

That is not to say Black, Adams and Jones are not pleasant people, but so is Hancock. On a personal basis, we particularly like Anna Jones who has an infectious laugh and wonderful wit. But she served on the mayor’s Planning Board for several years and that is a disqualifier for us.

Concerning the auditor’s race Chris Nevitt is their choice. He is the councilman from District 7 who brought you the hideous twin 30-story Broe Towers. Unlike their other candidates, Chris Nevitt is most definitely not a nice person. He is best known, by most, for his screaming rants at citizens who came to City Council to oppose projects Nevitt’s money men backed. One longtime Denver resident and politico, whose opinion we respect, said of Nevitt, “He is the worst human being I have ever met on the Denver City Council and that is saying something as there have been some real doozies.” Nevitt at one time was simply a union shill on City Council but in recent years he has expanded to prostituting himself out to every developer in Denver he could find. He has no background in, or experience, auditing and wants to use the office as a stepping stone, God forbid, for a run for mayor after Hancock is term limited. He is the weakest and least qualified candidate for any office in Denver in many a year, which no doubt explains why he is undoubtedly the favorite in the race.

So who should you vote for? Well, in the auditor and in District 6 races there are only single opponents. Luckily Timothy O’Brien in the auditor’s race and Paul Kashmann in District 6 are wonderful candidates who need no introduction to many voters. O’Brien, in fact, is a C.P.A. who is qualified and experienced in auditing, having served as the Colorado State Auditor. He is a resident of southeast Denver, and he and his wife are proud parents of three daughters. He is also truly independent and not beholden to anyone. While an argument can be made for endorsing an Anna Jones for City Council, no one with a straight face can claim that the morally repugnant Chris Nevitt deserves to be elected over the qualified, decent and honorable Timothy O’Brien. But this is politics in Denver and the normal rules of minimum decency simply do not apply.

Editorial - Halisi Vinson 4-15

Halisi Vinson

Kashmann is the longtime publisher of the Washington Park Profile who just recently sold his interest in that well-respected and beloved publication. A gentle and convivial soul, he prides himself in seeing an issue from many different sides. He even has a Colorado State Senate Commendation for 20 years of community service. He is not a believer in the political Golden Rule, but rather the original one of treating people as he would like to be treated himself. Kashmann would actually listen to citizens who would come before the City Council to make their case. Any municipal council, but in particular the Denver City Council, would benefit from having a Paul Kashmann.

In the other two races there are a myriad of candidates. In Council District 10 the person who has the greatest prospect of beating the money boys behind the mayor is Wayne New, the past long-term president of the Cherry Creek North Neighborhood Association, who has been fighting the good fight for decades. For our tastes we would prefer if New would have battled the greediest of the developers in Cherry Creek North even more fiercely, but that is not his personality. He wants to make things work for all involved.

Wayne New apparently has the money boys a little worried as they sent out the dirty tricks guys to gin up a phony ethics violation by the contemptible Colorado Ethics Watch. A neophyte at campaign financing, he forgot to add to some of his campaign literature the standard “Paid for by Wayne New for City Council” in microscopic print. Oh, No! The crooks behind the mayor are really, truly desperate to defeat Wayne New which in our book is all the more reason to vote for him.

Finally in District 4 the person putting up the best fight is Halisi Vinson who has the backing of major park advocates as well as Wellington Webb. Webb, like many Denverites, is desperate to have at least one park advocate on the City Council. When he wrote to the Friends of Denver Parks, “First they took our park and now they want to buy a council seat,” he was directly referring to Mayor Michael Hancock and his despicable developer friends. Webb’s daughter Stephanie O’Malley is Hancock’s Manager of Safety and his support for Vinson could cost his daughter that highly coveted job. We at the Chronicle agree with former Mayor Webb in this instance, that the only honorable thing to do is to stand with Ms. Vinson.

We ask you to consider the candidates in your District and vote for the ones who might actually make a difference at the City and County Building. In our mind the choices are clear.

— Editorial Board

The Attack On The Denver Police Monument

The Attack On The Denver Police Monument

Blasting With Boyles

Michael Jackson said settlements out of court do not equate guilt. How many protesters have been arrested in Denver since the Democratic National Convention, Occupy Denver and the attacks on the police monument? Remember, we’ve had two people arrested for a protest on the Denver police memorial for fallen officers. These were “Paid Protesters” — now known as “PPs.”

Boyles 4-15So as we’re told, about 200 people marched from Lincoln Park to police headquarters on 17th Street. The number of PPs isn’t clear but the damage done was more than adequate. These PPs trashed the equivalent of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, the Vietnam Wall, and the WWII monument. The names on that wall of the men and women, minorities and Anglos, represent men and women whose lives were taken protecting the citizens of Colorado.

To understand why they would do this is beyond my level of comprehension. I’m not the smartest guy in the world but pouring paint on the names of the fallen, desecrating the American flag (later to be denied by police spokesman Sonny Jackson — but more on that later) and writing “F*** the cops” on the back of the memorial is below my IQ level.

Now as we know, Matthew Goldberg, 23, and Robert Guerrero, 25, are out on $5,000 bail. Two days after the attack, Denver police spokesperson Sonny (Santino) Jackson, a onetime 9News cameraman, told a gathering of the Denver press that Old Glory was not desecrated, and that no names of officers were papered on the sides of the police building and the monument to be marked for harm.

Because of my radio show and individual police officers sending us photos sent with their cell phones, we were instantly able to disprove Santino’s claims. On our website, we had pictures of the defacing of the memorial, the flag on the ground, names of the officers that they wanted damaged and one particularly beautiful picture of a Denver police car burning beneath which they had printed “Sometimes dreams do come true.”

Sonny did have his Ron Ziegler moment (you all remember Ron, Tricky Dick Nixon’s spokesperson), and then Brian Maass at Channel 4 obtained a video taken out of the window at police headquarters showing these protesters and one man kneeling down taking red paint out of a backpack and dumping it over the top. These brave men were wearing bandanas to hide their identity. (Dude, where is your strength of conviction?) As Brian Maass said, “This memorial bears the names of dozens of fallen officers,” and from Brian’s video we learned that Denver police officers were inside the building with the doors chained and were looking out the window watching it happen.

For the life of me I don’t how the men and women of the Denver Police Department were able to maintain their cool. Later that week, Mayor Hancock appeared on Mike Rosen’s KOA radio show telling Mike’s audience that it happened so quickly that it was over before we knew it. We are told that that same line was used for Denver’s Mayor Hancock by the girls at Players and Sugar.

So Sonny Jackson lied about the incident to the mainstream press. In fact, on the following week when a vigil was called for people to come to the memorial on a Wednesday, the chief, the mayor and Sonny Jackson went there glad-handing individuals, thanking people for what they do. Hell’s bells. They are the reason it happened. And, of course, like the cover of Sports Illustrated, the Mayor comes out and says, “I support Chief White.” That came the day after the cops’ union asked for White’s resignation. I don’t understand how this city works. I don’t understand how principal media in this city works. These lies and actions of the administration have gone on unchallenged. The mayor will get re-elected. The chief will keep his gig. The television stations will continue to tell you how great it is that Peyton Manning has taken a pay-cut, that Dinger should remain as the Rockies’ mascot, and the hot little weather girl will tell you, “Danger, weather is coming our way.”

What I believe we are seeing in Denver is the Fergusonization of the media. We are witnessing the Denver media turn Jessica Hernandez into Michael Brown of Ferguson, Mo. When they first spoke with the people who they were led to believe were Jessica’s parents, they needed an interpreter. Now they appear in The Denver Post speaking English. We have come to a fork in the road. Michael Hancock is running virtually unopposed, the police are the bad guys, and the thugs are the good guys.

So on May 3 we do our second NC1 Honor Run, a motorcycle event we now do annually, named after Sergeant Dave Baldwin, Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department, killed in the line of duty. This year we are raising funds for John Adsit, the Denver police officer who was hospitalized December 3, when he was protecting hundreds of students from East High School as they marched on the high school chanting a hoax, “Hands up! Don’t shoot!” It never happened. Another fabricated anti-cop statement.

So the next time you are being burglarized or robbed call the ACLU.

— Peter

Early Bloomers Brighten Spring

Early Bloomers Brighten Spring

Valley Gadfly

Spring flowers come along and cheer us up at a time when we most need it — after surviving this year’s wintry weather. Speaking for myself, it isn’t going too far to say flowers help me convalesce as I recuperate from this year’s blustery barrage. Many people are just beginning to catch spring fever as this month gets underway.

Others, like myself, “think spring” much earlier than that despite the cold, snow and ice. Officially, of course, the first day of spring or vernal equinox was March 20.

Here are our sun-drenched choices for shopping, dining and entertainment to create color, warmth, renewal and re-growth to add a little “spring” in your step:

3          Robins are busy making nests. The days are getting warmer and the Denver Auto Show at the Convention Center April 8-12 is a sure sign it’s spring and time to rev new-fangled engines. Information: 303-228-8000.

3          View the ’67 Family Dog rock posters in the Byers-Evans Gallery to imagine artistry of the past through May 10. Information: 303-620-4933.

3          Spring is the time when everything feels fresh and new. Sully & Co. can help men spring into the season with casual, comfortable and classy clothes sure to make you feel like a new you. Information: 720-398-8064.

3          Music is a beautiful spring rite, especially when Natasha Peremski plays Brahms at Boettcher on April 10, 7:30 p.m. Information: 303-623-7876.

3          For a fun spring fling attend the Families First fundraising dinner-dance at DTC’s DoubleTree Hotel April 18, 5:30 p.m. Information: 303-745-0327.

3          Taste, savor, experience spring by enjoying lunch or dinner at the recently spruced up Ambli’s Gourmet Eatery & Wine. Information: 303-355-9463.

3          Brighten up your spirits by taking in the film screening of Arise at the Denver Botanic Gardens April 22, 6:30 p.m. Information: 720-865-3580.

3          Proclaim spring’s arrival by participating in Doors Open Denver as event showcases the city inside and out April 25-26. Information: 303-446-2266.

3          Take a spring stroll to help homeless pets by attending the 22nd annual Dumb Friends League Furry Scurry in Washington Park May 2, beginning at 9 a.m. Participants will enjoy refreshments, contests and demonstrations plus appetizing treats from local food trucks. Funds raised during this event allow the League to provide care for sick or injured animals and much more. Information: 303-751-5772, ext. 1378.

Yes, we know April can be a transition time with unstable weather producing storms or snow. Still, spurts of sunshine have given us spring fever. If pussy willow shrubs were people, they’d fall into the spring fever camp with us. They display their fuzzy catkins while winter is still entrenched, one of the first plants to herald spring.

Often thought of as wild shrubs, you can grow pussy willows in landscapes. Along with early spring flowers they lighten our spirits after a long dreary winter.

Early blooming flowers are the surest sign of spring. The Valley’s many days of sunshine produce some of the top flowers in the nation. The intensity of our light creates flowers with extra brilliance. Cultivating flowerbeds is the secret to growing blushing beauties just as sweet April showers do spring May flowers.

— Glen Richardson