New Pickleball Courts Now Open In Glendale

New Pickleball Courts Now Open In Glendale

by Mark Smiley

From left to right: Storm Gloor, Glendale Mayor Pro-Tem; Mike Dunafon, Glendale Mayor; Joe Haskins, Glendale Chief of Police; and Josh Bertrand, Glendale Deputy City Manager.

Barret O’Brien, Chamber Board Member, left, and Joe Haskins, Glendale Chief of Police.

From left to right: Mayor Pro-Tem Storm Gloor; Mayor Mike Dunafon; Chuck Line, Glendale City Manager; Josh Bertrand, Glendale Deputy City Manager; and Jeff Allen, Glendale Chamber COO, cut the pickle to officially open the new outdoor pickleball courts in Glendale.

 The new pickleball courts are now ­available to play on in Glendale Park.

On October 24, 2023, the City of Glendale unveiled its new pickle­ball courts at the new Glendale Park, formerly known as Mir Park. With the recent closing of the outdoor courts at Eisenhower Park and Congress Park in Denver, the metro area was in need of another option for outdoor pickleball.

Under the Leadership of Mayor Mike Dunafon and the Glendale City Council, the City of Glendale has partnered with Arapahoe County Open Space Grant Program in 2023 to create the Glendale Park Phase One park improvements and usher in a new era of recreation in Glendale.

While the newly dedicated pickleball courts may be the main attraction, there are several important additional improvements which park patrons will appreciate. Working with Chief Joe Haskins and City of Glendale Police Department, the City applied prin­ciples of Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design to make improvements in the park. These park safety ­improvements include new site lighting and new “Portlandloo’s” stand-alone toilets which address com­­mon public bathroom concerns.

Also, a new picnic pavilion will be available to grab a bite to eat while watching the light-hearted activities on either the pickleball court or on the playground. Going forward, Ken LeCrone, Finance Director for the City of Glendale, has secured an open space grant from Arapahoe County for Phase Two improvements in 2024.

The Phase Two improvements will include improvements to stormwater drainage and the addition of a new dog run to the north side of the park,” said Josh Bertrand, Deputy City Manager, City of Glendale. “Patrick Carroll, Chris Roozing, and the Public Works team will continue working with our valuable partners, Matt Wilgenbusch with EmDub Designs, and ECI Site Construction Management, to complete phase two of the project.”

The work is expected to be completed by the end of Summer 2024. Glendale Park is located at 560 S. Elm Street in Glendale. Visit www.glendale.co.us for more information.

Did Bikers Bamboozle Voters In Denver Street Partnership Scheme?

Did Bikers Bamboozle Voters In Denver Street Partnership Scheme?

Bike Lanes Pedal Past Cracked, Crumbling Sidewalks As City Council Delays Repair Due To A ‘Built-In Bias’

by Glen Richardson

Small Roundabouts Big Problem: New “bikeway” roundabouts are causing accidents and slowing the response time for emergency vehicles. Denver Fire has paused its approval.

Reworked Doesn’t Work: Reconfigured bike lanes cut across and to the side of the 7th Ave. & Williams intersection. A blind spot caused resident Jan Douglas to take a spill.                  Photo: Channel 7, KMGH-TV

Disorderly Design: Bike lane intersection designs by Denver’s DOTI are creating chaos for motorists, pedestrians, and bi­cycl­ists. This helter-skelter design is at 7th Ave. and Williams St.

If sidewalks are for pedestrians, why did Denver’s bicycle lobby campaign for a sidewalk tax?

Biking advocates — using the name Denver Streets Partnership — launched the 307 Campaign in Aug. 2022 promoting “Denver Deserves Sidewalks.” The campaign claimed it would remove the responsibility for repairs from adjacent property owners and place the responsibility on the City of Denver. Through a “modest annual fee” citywide construction and repair of sidewalks would be underway and finished in nine years.

Passing with 55.85% of the vote last No­­vem­ber, residents using wheelchairs, crutches, canes, plus those with visual or cognitive impairment, would soon be using sidewalks. So would children and older pedestrians with reduced motor skills.

Fee Collection Delayed

A year later there are still no sidewalk re­pairs, nor will there be any until at least until July of next year. The Denver City Council has voted to delay property owner collection fees until July 1, 2024. That’s more than 18 months after voter approval and six months after it was initially scheduled to begin.

City Council decided on the delay due to rising concerns expressed by prope

Chic Lanes Vs. Cracked Sidewalks: These hypothetical, idealized bike lanes are planned to be imposed throughout the city. Pedestrians and wheelchair users continue to watch their step as the gulf between the two uses widens.

rty owners. Increasingly, property owners told council members the Streets Partnership built bias and discrimination into the plan.

“I am part of the unfortunate 15% of people who will be paying over $400 a year in sidewalk fees simply because I am unlucky enough to live on a corner lot,” says Erin Feld­man. Like so many others, Feldman urged City Council not to roll the plan out without further consideration and ­planning. “They’re gross inequities in the plan and it is an unfair burden for people like me,” she tells the Chronicle.

Hit On Homeowners?

Before the Denver Deserves Sidewalks in­itiative passed in 2022, property owners were responsible for maintaining their own sidewalks as needed. The new Street Partnership funding structure instead collects money from homeowners based on linear footage of the property, wealth of the neighborhood, and if the home is on a corner lot.

Homeowners being responsible for their own sidewalks is akin to how other big cities take care of sidewalks. In Chicago, property owners and the city share the cost of replacing sidewalks. The cost per square foot to property owners is well below what a private contractor would charge. Through their Sidewalks Repair Program, New York City performs free repairs for qualifying broken sidewalks.

Advocates still claim the change is a safety and accessibility win in a city with so many broken and nonexistent sidewalks. But questions remain about how long the rollout will take, how much the program will actually cost, and what will done about properties with extremely high fees.

Sudden Switcheroo

Duped, misled, hoodwinked?

Throughout the campaign the Denver Streets Partnership promoted itself as a local street safety advocacy group. Today, however, the Street Partnership and Jill

Sad Sidewalk Symbol: Larimer Girl mural by local artist Jeremy Burns seems to suggest sadness and disappointment in Denver’s sidewalks.

Locantore, the executive director, are staff members of the nonprofit advocacy organization Bicycle Colorado. WalkDenver has also merged with Bicycle Colorado. Staff members of the former groups still claim to support sidewalk im­provements.

As the state’s political advocacy group for bikers, Bicycle Colorado helped pass Denver ballot measure 2A, creating the state’s first eBike subsidy. The city’s E-Bike rebates are designed to build an army of bike lane advocates. They also helped to get $12 million for the eBike subsidy program inserted into the Clean Air Grant program; and added over $1 billion in funding to the statewide transportation bill. Moreover, Bicycle Colorado has funded and promoted the in­creasingly controversial 196 miles of on-street bike lanes in Denver.

Biker Bunny Hop

The Denver 307 Campaign’s promise to repair deteriorating sidewalks still awaits the overhaul to begin. So does the construction of new sidewalks where needed, or upgrading walks to ADA standards.

Nonetheless, the bike lobby continues to bunny hop over the city’s cracked sidewalks, adding 24 miles of painted bike lanes, 45 miles of buffered bike lanes, 23 miles of pro­tected bike lanes, and 34 miles of neighborhood bikeways. Cost to the city so far is $13.4 million.

In addition, critics claim Denver’s Department of Transportation & Infrastructure (DOTI) is primarily giving bikers multiple ways to get around town, rather than a system for all people.

Bike Lane Impact

Denver expanded the ways the streets are used without being able to expand the streets. Their width is unchanged, but on many blocks, traffic lanes were narrowed to create space for a bike lane. On streets with protected bike lanes, a narrow buffer has also been squeezed in, making the traffic lanes even thinner.

Detractors say that due to being poorly planned, narrower streets in Denver are filled with cars and “mostly empty” bike lanes.

Denver and other cities were never intended to accommodate bike lanes, they argue. They also claim bike lanes make the worst common cycling accidents more common. Adding them also reduces parking spaces for cars and increases traffic jams. The debate also reflects tension over the future of cities, and anxiety over a new pattern of urban planning that no longer prioritizes the automobile.

Bike Owners Vs. Lobby

Albeit a powerful city-state political money moocher, Bicycle Colorado represents a small segment of Denver’s biking community. Most of the approximately 560,000 metro bicycle owners don’t participate in or fathom what the organization does.

Denver has had 889 bicycle thefts reported so far this year. Despite averaging 96.2 robberies per month, the lobby does little more than proclaim they “provide a voice for people who ride bicycles.”

Bike to Work Day ­— the free Denver Regional Council of Governments backed event ­— had 17,981 riders in 2023. A Winter Bike to Work Day in 2024 is set for Friday, Feb. 9, followed by the Wednesday, June 16, Bike to Work Day.

Surprising & Easy Home ­Organization And Decluttering Tips For The Holidays

Surprising & Easy Home ­Organization And Decluttering Tips For The Holidays

by Jessica Hughes

Labeling your bins takes the guesswork out of where things go.    

Oftentimes, the holiday season can feel overwhelming with the in-laws in town, additional obligations, finding the perfect gift, and then wrapping it. With so much going on, being organized can make a world of difference and ease the stress of “what box did I put the Christmas lights in last year.” Decluttering and organizing can help you focus on life’s other obligations this time of year. But where does one start?

Christina DesAuguste, founder of The Organizing Company — a professional organizing company that helps people organize their “stuff” in a functional, good-looking way, says to start with a method. “For those starting the process of organizing, it is best to start with a method, rather than “tips and tricks.”

During the holiday season, one of the biggest mistakes DesAuguste says she sees often is people frantically throwing things in their hamper or some other “catch all” and stick it in the closet somewhere right before friends and family arrive. “It’s best to try and not hide your mess before company comes over,” says DesAuguste. “Instead, try to come up with a method or process that sets you up for success.”

One method DesAuguste suggests when bringing out decorations for the season, is to place your non-holiday items in the holiday bins you pulled out from storage. This way, when the holidays are over, you can easily make the swap.

Christina DesAuguste gets organized with one of her Hilltop clients in Denver.

Organization not only reduces stress, but it looks good too.

“Make a decision about how you store your holiday decorations,” says DesAuguste. “You can do it by room or by category. But try not to do a “free for all storage” and take the time to be methodical.”

While DesAuguste emphasizes there is no one size fits all for organization items everyone must have, she does mention a few things she thinks everyone can benefit from. “A label-maker is huge help in getting things back where they belong. It helps eliminate the “where does this go?” question.”

Another item she strongly suggests might be one that surprises you. “A three-step stool is great to have handy,” says DesAuguste. “It sets you up for success by having easy access to things, so you put items back in their right place.”

In terms of decluttering your space to make room for all your holiday demands, DesAuguste says she is a big fan of having children go through their toys before gift-giving season. “Choose things they are ready to part with and donate. That way when new gifts come there is room for them.”

But taking away your kid’s toys might prove challenging, so starting with big bulky items that don’t have any meaning is another option. Think of items like excess small appliances, comforters you no longer use, or cleaning supplies you don’t use anymore. One other item that is less obvious but easy to discard is old paint cans.

Often forgotten about, paint cans clutter basements, garages, and crawl spaces,” says Kevin Lynch, the Program Manager for PaintCare Colorado. “Free up some of that space by taking cans of paint to one of our local drop-off sites or using the PaintCare Door-to-Door service to make room to store presents in advance of the holidays.”

PaintCare is the paint recycling program in Colorado for consumers and businesses to drop off their unwanted paint, no matter the brand, for free reuse or recycling. With more than 160 participating drop-off locations, most locations are at paint and hardware stores.

So, why worry about getting rid of your old paint cans, aside from decluttering your space? “The older that paint gets the less usable it is,” says Lynch. “Unused cans of paint can become rusty and leaky from moisture, especially in our fluctuating Colorado climate.”

Drop-off is available year-round during the retail location’s regular business hours. And if you don’t have the ability to visit one of the drop off locations, the Denver area is fortunate to have a PaintCare home paint pickup program, called Door-to-Door Service, for households with more than 10 gallons of leftover paint, stain, and varnish. There is no charge for the pickup service; the cost is included on the sale of all new paint purchased, which is how the PaintCare program is funded.

If you’re not ready for a full-blown organization method, DesAuguste offers a few organizing “hacks” to help get you started. “Build a “10-minute tidy up” into your daily routine. Having this time to make sure things get back to their proper homes is a great way to prevent the overwhelm that comes with huge piles of mail/laundry/dishes, or a wild playroom.” She recommends doing this after dinner and before sitting down to relax. “But whatever time of day you and your family can be consistent is great,” says DesAuguste.

Another trick she mentions is to assign tasks to a certain day of the week. “For example, Mom’s laundry day is Monday, Tommy’s is Tuesday, and Suzie’s is Wednesday,” says DesAuguste. “Have a day of the week you open your mail rather than trying to open and deal with it while you’re carrying in groceries and unpacking kids’ backpacks- it just ends up in a pile somewhere never dealt with.”

She also suggests that until you are ready to get your house fully organized you can designate a day of the week that you organize. “Build time into your routine for things like this so they are more likely to get done.”

If you’re having a hard time starting the process of organizing and decluttering, Des Auguste says to simply start with your why in mind. “It helps to know why and deciding that it’s worth it is important to getting started.” Learn to organize anything in less than 10 minutes with Morton’s free video and guide at theorganizingco.com.

Dreamy December Days

Dreamy December Days

Grab an eggnog, cozy up to your family and friends, and settle in for a month of holiday gatherings, glittering lights, and snowy peaks. It is the official start of winter and cold weather.

‘Tis the month many folks look forward to the most: Reuniting with loved ones, getting warm by the fire, snowball fights, and tacky holiday sweaters, and lots and lots of eating.

Here are our dreamy December choices for celebrating the values that unite us for shopping, dining, and entertainment through togetherness, generosity, and gratitude:

For a dreamy start to the holidays, take the family to Saturday Night Lights in Cherry Creek North Dec. 2-16, 5-7 p.m. Enjoy treats, see acrobats, and jugglers under 600 lit, musically choreographed trees. Information: 303-394-2904.

Join Chabad of Cherry Creek for the first night of Chanukah. Face painting, fire juggling, treats on E. 2nd. Ave. Dec. 10, 5-7 p.m. Information: 303-394-2904.

For laughs, catch the Ukulele Christmas Extravaganza as 65 ukulele crooners perform at the Lakewood Center Dec. 12, 7:30 p.m. Information: 303-987-7485.

Enjoy a blast of Holiday Brass, as the Symphony Brass adds power-brilliance to ballads, carols at Boettcher Dec. 15, 7:30 p.m. Information: 303-623-7876.

Winterize your sprinkler system to avoid winter weather’s freeze-thaw-freeze cycle if you haven’t yet, prompts Denver Water. More: state’s oldest water utility says to drain outdoor faucets, exposed pipes. Information: 303-893-2444.

For a holiday dining experience like no other, book your reservations early at the Monaco Inn Restaurant. Serving Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve from 5 to 9 p.m. Good food, good prices, and good service. Information: 303-320-1104.

Relax at the annual Crystal & Himalayan Singing Bowl Concert, as it returns to the Denver Botanic Gardens Dec. 16, 12:30 p.m. Information: 720-865-3500.

Hear Symphony’s take on Mr. Hound-Dog’s favorites at the Elvis Christmas Spectacular at Boettcher Hall Dec. 19, 7:30 p.m. Information: 303-623-7876.

Take the kids to the charming, song-infused retelling of Little Red Riding Hood at ­DCPA’s Randy Weeks Theatre through Dec. 25. Information: 303-893-4100.

Let the Symphony dance you into the New Year enjoying polkas, waltzes, and marches at Boettcher Hall Dec. 31, 6:30 p.m. Information: 303-623-7876.

Collect new toys for the 16th annual Dolls for Daughters® & Toys for Boys® Toy Drive being held at the National Western Complex Dec. 2, 8:45 a.m. to 4 p.m. They plan to provide a big toy, a small toy, and a wooden toy car to 3,500 children ages birth to 18. To guarantee toys for each child, parents of needy families are required to register for the event. In addition to collecting toys, the group needs Denver Toy Shop volunteers. Information: 720-330-2804.

You can set your watch by it: when December arrives, the same music blares from speakers everywhere. More than any other time, music plays on our emotions this month.

Think of Wham!’s Last Christmas, or Mariah Carey’s holiday earworm: They are songs to get us in a “holiday mood.” A warm mood infused by happy families, gifts, and eggnog.

‘Tis the season to be jolly… fa-la-la! Giving back last year’s fruitcake is compulsory. Relatives are optional. Stir the eggnog, lift the toddy, Happy New Year everybody.

— Glen Richardson

The Valley Gadfly can be reached at newspaper@glendalecherrycreek.com.