Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for November, 2009

FREE MONEY! And cheap money exists to rehab homes

November 22nd, 2009, 4:00 pm by

Colorado Springs administers several programs to distribute federal funds from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

 In fact, there’s a pool of about $700,000 available to help area residents install new windows, doors, furnaces, water heaters and other necessities. It’s distributed by the city’s Housing Development Division.

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 Loans are available to low- and moderate-income residents. There’s also money for landlords to help rehab rental units they own. And for folks needing to make their homes handicapped accessible.

There’s just one problem. Few people are applying for the rehab funds.

We’re talking loans with 3 percent interest rates to those who qualify. Some can get loans with no interest!

All you have to do is apply. The first step is calling the city’s rehab coordinator, Eileen McMullen, at 385-6877 or the main office at 385-5912.

McMullen and her office will talk about what’s available — the city won’t buy hot tubs or water sprinklers. But it will lend money for windows, doors, roofs, furnaces, hot water heaters and more.

For owner-occupied properties needing rehab, go to this link at the city’s Web site.

For landlords wanting to rehab rental property, the criteria can be found here.

And find information about handicapped accessibility at this link.

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LOUD, PROFANE, ANNOYING . . . welcome to public service

November 18th, 2009, 8:59 pm by

The Woodmen Hills Metropolitan District in Falcon, northeast of Colorado Springs, is one of those planned communities where residents get all sorts of amenities.

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The 2,400 homeowners get to enjoy 63 acres of open space, miles of trails, two recreation centers with indoor and outdoor pools, exercise facilities, playgrounds, meeting rooms and more. Here’s a map of the district’s trails and recreational facilities.

The district also provides water, sewer and streetlight services to the community. And it employs a staff of about 15 to maintain the community, which is protected by covenants.

 woodmenhillsflash1

 

In addition to the staff, the district has a five-member board to oversee the district. They are homeowners are elected by the neighborhood.

As with any homeowners association or neighborhood board, there is conflict.

About a year ago, the board found itself in conflict with Ron Pace,  a 45-year-old disabled veteran who moved to Woodmen Hills in 2006.

Pace heard stories about over-paid staff and got upset when water rates started going up. He started asking questions about the budget and salaries and covenant enforcement. Board members and staff didn’t like the way he asked his questions. They found him threatening. In fact, they accused him of threatening to “blow people away” with an AK-47.

Things distintigrated. Here’s a story The Gazette wrote in June 2009 about the conflict. Residents took sides. There were dualing Web sites created to argue the issues. Pace had one site and an ally built another.

 Pace admits he gets on peoples’ nerves. He is from the East Coast and he comes across more loud, profane and abrasive than folks in the West may be used to, he says. But he says he never threatened anyone and would never hurt anyone.

 El Paso County Magistrate Robin Chittum believes him.

 She found him loud, often inappropriate and annoying. But, as she said, welcome to public service.  If you don’t want to deal with people like Pace, don’t run for office.

 In fact, after what may be the longest trial in Colorado history regarding civil protection orders, Chittum dismissed the complaints against Pace, giving him freedom to again go anywhere in the district, attend board meetings, view records, approach staff and board members.

Here’s how pace-press-release described the magistrate’s decision.

And this is a news release from the Woodmen Hills Metro District responding to it: Read the rest of this entry »

SWING HIGH — even if you can’t walk

November 15th, 2009, 4:00 pm by

 It’s tough to swing high when you can’t even reach the playground because your wheelchair gets stuck in the sand.

 That’s what happened routinely to Abby Farrell, 10, when she went to a typical playground in Colorado Springs.

 ”It takes two or three friends to get me out,” said Abby, who has spina bifida and needs a wheelchair, crutches and braces to get around.

 Abby’s mother, Michelle Farrell, became frustrated that playgrounds were little more than a fortress to her daughter. I first wrote about Michelle and Abby in 2006. Here’s a portrait of them by Deborah Killian.

michelleabby

 

 

  Michelle didn’t blame the city. It was building play structures that comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act  for accessibility to the handicapped. Each playground had a “transfer station” where kids in wheelchairs can theoretically make the transition from chair to play.

  But even the ADA doesn’t recognize, Farrell said, that only about 10 percent of wheelchair-using children can get out on their own. Many can’t sit unassisted. The playgrounds were useless to them.

 But Farrell had seen a “universally accessible” playground in Los Angeles. About two dozen have been built nationwide including in Broomfield and Fort Collins. But they are expensive and require design expertise.

swinghighlogo She decided to try to educate the city and the public about the need. And she started raising money to pay for the $1 million structure.

 Farrell founded the non-profit Swing High Project  and got busy. She hit the circuit of public meetings, committees and fundraising events.

 These playgrounds are different in key ways.

swinghighrampsThey must be built with ramps and surfaces must be coated to provide traction for wheelchairs and crutches and kids a little shaky on their feet.

 

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The swings must be safe for kids who can’t sit upright on their own. High backs and belts.

 

 

 

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They must be surrounded wiht rubber and foam-padded surfaces.

 

 

 

 

 The city committed $500,000 from the Trails and Open Space fund to build it. TOPS, as it’s called, is a one-tenth of a cent sales tax that can only be used for trails, parks and open space. And it got started planning the playground.

Here’s a look at a rendering of what is being built.

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 The state Great Outdoors Colorado Trust Fund, or GOCO, kicked in $200,000. It gets its money from lottery revenue.

 The Phil Long Community Fund dontated $75,000. The El Pomar FoundationKing Soopers and Aerial Gymnastics each donated $10,000.

 Farrell and her supporters have raised about $40,000 more but still are short of their goal. Still, the City Council approved the project a few months ago and construction recently started. Here’s a look at the site:

swinghighwide2

 Abby visited the site recently. Here she is:

abbyphoto

And here’s a view of the location from FlashEarthswinghighflash

Learn more about Michelle and her playground at her Web site including how you can donate, if you wish.

 They still need money to access a $25,000 matching grant. And they hope to build a small special-needs parking lot on the east edge of the playground. But they don’t have the money at this time.

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BONNYVILLE ought to be Bobsieville!

November 11th, 2009, 1:54 pm by

Meet Florence “Bobsie” Pachak, the unofficial queen of Bonnyville.

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I am crowning her queen of the little neighborhood of about 325 homes north of downtown Colorado Springs. Who else? She’s one of the original residents of the neighborhood.

Bobsie and her husband, Walter, bought their home in July 1948. She has lived there ever since! That’s 61 years watching Colorado Springs grow from a small resort and military town into a city that ranks about 50th in size in U.S.

bonnyville

Heck, I think we ought to start calling it “Bobsieville.”

Bonnyville has an interesting history. Pachak lived it all, but she was busy raising six children and didn’t recall much of it. So, as  a gift for Pachak on her 90th birthday on Nov. 12,  neighbor Joyce Dearing put together a history book for her, to remind her of all she had witnessed.

Bonnyville was developed by John Bonforte, who had a fiery relationship with the Colorado Springs City Council and Planning Commission. Below is how it looked from the air in an old newspaper clipping.

The view is to the southwest. The Santa Fe Railroad tracks are visible running at a diaganol from upper left to lower right. In the foreground is the Templeton Gap and the Rock Island Railroad lines:

bonnyvilleaerial1949

The Bon Shopping Center was built soon after the houses.

bonshoppingcenterThe Bon Shopping Center is considered the area’s first suburban shopping center when it opened in 1953 at the north end of Wahsatch Avenue.  

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A story in The Gazette Telegraph marveled at the “ultra-modern” look of the city’s first strip mall.

It still boasts the original sign, which reflects the “ultra modern” design of the center.

The shopping center has always been an integral part of the neighborhood.

Originally, a Safeway store stood on the far north end of the center in a space now occupied by an Ent Federal Credit Union office.

Over the years, Safeway moved to the south end of the center and expanded. It was that expansion that led Pachak to become a neighborhood activist.

She said Safeway wanted to buy four houses, including her house, and tear them down to allow a larger building. She and other homeowners resisted. Eventually, two homeowners sold out.

The Pachak worked to limit Safeway’s expansion because she feared truck traffic would endanger neighbors. In fact, her car has been struck seven times parked outside her home.

But, ironically, the expansion came to benefit her family. First, Walter, a carpenter, was hired to build the project. And now, decades later, she likes having the store so close.

Bonnyville has mostly been a quiet neighborhood of modest homes. But it has had its share of excitement and been home to a few folks who would go onto to become famous.

For example, Bonnyville found itself in the newspaper headlines in November  1948 when a B-29 Superfortress crashed and burned just north of the Patty Jewett Golf Course.

bonnyvilleplanecrash

 It had just taken off from Peterson Field – now Peterson Air Force Base —  headed for Smoky Hill Air Base in Salina, Kan., according to the Nov. 5, 1948, Gazette Telegraph report.

The story said the No. 4 engine went out, and the No. 3 engine caught fire.

The newspaper reported: “Eyewitnesses to the crash said the burning ship was headed directly for the Bonnyville subdivision at a very low altitude.”

Unable to turn the plane around, the pilot, Capt. E.J. Cook, instead guided the plane away from Bonnyville to open fields near Patty Jewett Golf Course for an emergency landing.

The burning airplane first struck the ground just east of the golf club, where leaking gasoline started a brush fire. Then it “cut a path 300 yards long, ripping down barbed wire fences and bouncing over several gullies before coming to a stop without nosing over.”

leonyoung The late Leon Young, left, longtime Coloardo Springs City Council member who, for three months in 1997 served as the city’s first black mayor, had this recollection of Bonnyville in a 1993 interview:
“I came back from the Navy, and in 1947 I wanted to buy a house. The first veterans housing project, Bonnyville, had a big sign saying `GIs $250 down.’ I went up to the trailer there and the man asked me what I wanted. I said, `I’m a veteran. I want to buy a house.’ He said, `We’re building houses for veterans, but not for you.’ I was turned down for two FHA loans and by that time I had saved $3,000 down.”

While Bonnyville lost the chance to host Young, it was the home for several years of Harry Hoth, a co-ounder of the Bonnyville Improvement Association, who became owner of Pikes Peak Broadcasting Co. and its KRDO TV and radio stations.

harryhothHoth, left, used the neighborhood association as a springboard to the City Planning Commission, on which he served in1951-62; then to the City Council in 1959-67 and finally served as mayor of Colorado Springs in 1963-67.

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And Bonnyville was the inspiration for perhaps the most popular comic strip in history.

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schulzcharlieborwnIn 1951, cartoonist Charles Schulz spent a year living in Bonnyville while his comic strip, “Peanuts” featuring  Charlie Brown, left, made short-lived debuts in seven newspapers. Two decade later it was featured in 2,200 newspapers reaching 200 million readers in 68 countries.

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TINY NEIGHBORHOOD WINS — or did it?

November 8th, 2009, 5:00 pm by

Residents of the Rawles Open Space Neighborhood fought developer Kristine Hembre, below, and her plans to build five houses on a five-acre parcel in the tiny community along Mesa Road north of Uintah Street.

kristinehembre

But she satisfied the Colorado Springs Planning Commission and city staff with her plans, forcing neighbors to appeal to the City Council.

There, in April, they argued the city had an obligation to protect the character of historic neighborhoods from incompatible developments.

They said five modern houses, as Hembre proposed, on the parcel seen below from FlashEarth would ruin the Rawles neighborhood character with its rustic feel.

Rawles residents cherish their rustic neighborhood, which was built around a 7.6-acre open space named for the property’s original owner.

 

 

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Here’s a historic photo of the property:

 rawleshistoricphoto

 

Here’s a look at the property on a map from the El Paso County Assessor’s Web site: 

rawlesmap.

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Here are blueprints Hembre’s Elle Development Co. created for the property. Her plan included installing 2,000 feet of sewer and water lines to serve her subdivision, called Horizon View

 

rawlesblueprint

Hembre had to be frustrated after spending three years and hundreds of thousands of dollars on her subdivision only to be told by the City Council in April to work with neighborhood opponents on a compromise.

Especially after she satisfied all the demands of the city’s zoning and codes. Check out my previous blog posts from April 26 and May 3 to read more on her project.

Despite that frustration, it was surprising when she dropped the project a couple weeks ago, just a day before she was to appear before the Council again to get her new plans approved.

But neighbors might not want to celebrate. She told city staff her project isn’t quite dead. She’s just going to sit on it a while. Not a lot of new homes are being built in today’s economy.

And who knows. After what happened on election day, she might have a whole new City Council to deal with in the near future and the outcome might be much different.

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ON SECOND THOUGHT . . . maybe new houses, road could SAVE the neighborhood

November 4th, 2009, 6:34 pm by

For years, residents of Mesa Springs neighborhood fought to prevent Colorado Springs from extending Centennial Boulevard south from Fillmore Street to connect with Interstate 25 at Fontanero Street.

They feared their 50-year-old neighborhood of modest homes would be wrecked by Centennial. They saw it creating a Bermuda Traffic Triangle between Centennial, Fillmore and I-25.

Here is a look at the area from FlashEarth:

mesaspringscentennial

 But now a developer has contacted the city about building upwards of 500 homes — either single-family, townhomes, condos or apartments — on 47 acres on the west edge of the neighborhood.

The property owner is MVS Development of Albuquerque, N.M. They hired NES Inc., a land planning and landscsape architecture company in the Springs, to get the land rezoned.

Ron Bevans, an NES project manager, said the owners want the city to approve a broad rezoning plan. Part of the project would include consolidating a 17-acre landfill on the site into an 8-acre open space that would be capped.

Here’s another look from FlashEarth:

mesaspringsflash

The project, which Bevans described as in its infancy stage, would include building a big chunk of the Centennial extension.

Curb and gutter exist for a half mile or so south of Fillmore, said James Mayerl, a city planner who is reviewing the MVS project. And Mayerl said the new project might be the impetus for actually completing Centennial.

In fact, the city is studying the transportation plan for the corridor, looking for ways to take pressure off the intersection of Fillmore and I-25. The long-planned Centennial extension would be a  key piece of any plan.

Bevans said his clients do not have blueprints or a builder for the project. They simply are preparing the site for eventual development and alerting neighbors that the process is underway.

Many neighbors are apprehensive about the proposal. They already suffered the loss of 127 neighborhood homes when I-25 was realligned a decade ago and the sound wall erected. And they recently suffered the closure of their neighborhood school, Zebulon Pike Elementary.

But some neighbors, like Carol Gravenstein, view the project and the extension of Centennial as a way to resurrect the school if enough new families move into Mesa Springs.

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LIFE’S A VACATION, unless you live near a rental

November 1st, 2009, 4:26 pm by

Colorado Springs has appointed a task force to determine whether it should license, regulate and tax vacation rental homes.

Turns out there are 60-80 homes sprinkled around the city that are advertised around the world in Web sites as vacation rental properties.

vacationrentalwebsite

They are favored by parents of Air Force Academy cadets when they come for parents’ weekend or graduation.

Many families looking for a reunion site prefer vacation homes over hotels or bed-and-breakfast inns.

Folks with special needs, like sterilized kitchens or quiet places for elderly or children, often choose vacation rental homes over hotels.vacationrentalwebpage1

 

Problem is, they bring a parade of strangers into neighborhoods. Strangers who soak up parking spaces and sometimes hold late parties. A few people living near vacation rental houses have begun complaining to the city about the situation.

So Dick Anderwald, the city’s land use and planning chief, created the Vacation Home Rental Task Force Committee to study the issue. He appointed neighborhood activists, vacation rental home owners and city planning staff to the task force.

Here’s the agenda for the initial meeting in September:  vacationrentals. Please note that the roster of task force members changed after this was printed. Michael Clark and Autumn Hyser dropped out.

One of the task force members, Jackie Ayers, owns the “Old Colorado Springs” 1902 Downtown House W/ Private Hot Tub - Colorado Springs  Here’s a look at her house from the Web site:

1902downtownhouse

She also manages a vacation rental for another owner. Ayers said the task force is an over-reaction to the complaints of a few people, including two task force members who live near vacation rental homes — one on the Westside and one in the Broadmoor.

Anderwald apparently agreees. He said the issue appears to be confined to a small area of the city and the task force likely won’t produce new rules and regulations.

However, owners of vacation rental homes likely will start getting tax bills from the city for sales taxes they have not been paying.

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