Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for October, 2011

GHOSTS HAVE HAUNTED COLORADO SPRINGS FOR DECADES

October 30th, 2011, 11:30 am by

A famous photo of Brown Lady of Raynham Hall, first published in Countrylife magazine, 1926

Ghost stories . . . who doesn’t love them?

It’s never been easier to find ghost stories about your neighborhood. There are dozens of websites with stories linked to schools, fast-foot restaurants, hotels and prominent buildings.

There’s one from my neighborhood in Rockrimmon. It claims a fast-food restaurant is haunted by the screams of children and employees have reported the lights going out among other poltergeists.

The websites list hauntings by city and seem to have stories about every high school: Palmer High is haunted by a student who allegedly commit suicide 40 years ago after being denied a role in Macbeth; Coronado is haunted by a child who allegedly drowned in its pool 30 years ago; Harrison’s auditorium is the haunt of a ghost “Malcolm” who walks around, nudges students and more.

But I prefer some of the stories passed down for decades in books.

In fact, there are a couple classics in one of my favorite history books of all time: El Paso County Heritage, printed in 1985, by Juanita and John Breckenridge.

I’ve worn that book out looking up minutia on families, farms and towns across the region.

My favorite chapter is “Legends” which is a series of cowboy and ghost stories, several by Jim Easterbrook. who wrote books on western history.

One story tells of Beth O’Neil, known in the 1880s as the “waffle lady” of Colorado City.

O’Neil carried a large wooden box and sold hot waffles to miners, railroad passengers and barflies along Colorado Avenue, between 24th and 28th streets. The price was a nickel apiece.

“Waffles . . . hot waffles” was her simple cry as she walked up and down the avenue.

In the decades since, especially on fall evenings, there have been reported sightings of a mysterious woman vendor in the neighborhood. And some folks report smelling the aroma of hot waffles. Hmmm.

Another Easterbrook legend told of a young woman, Melinda Brolin, who, in 1900, worked in a cafe at 2625 W. Colorado Ave. — today the site of Gertrude’s Restaurant.

When she learned an old boyfriend was hunting for her, customers reported Melinda ducked into a tunnel under the cafe and disappeared. A short time later, the cafe burned and the tunnel collapsed. She was never seen again. Except for reports as late as 1985 that her footsteps could be heard in the hallway.

Gertrude’s owner, Tom Lazaron, said he’s never encountered Melinda.

“But after I bought the place four years ago, I noticed the doors in the hallway seemed to move on their own,” Lazaron said. “I think it happens when somebody opens the back door. Some employees swear I’m wrong.”

Maybe Melinda’s checking to see if her ex is gone!

Here are some of the websites I found:

StrangeUSA.com

MysticalBlaze.com

Julia Bauer

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IDIOT TEENS COULD TURN MOCK DISASTER INTO REAL THING

October 26th, 2011, 11:30 am by

The 116-acre ranch owned by Church for All Nations rises from Highway 115 at the base of Cheyenne Mountain. It has been the target of teens who drink, smoke dope and set buildings ablaze.

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Vandals seemingly covered every inch they could reach with graffiti.

A few weeks ago, emergency crews conducted a mock disaster drill on the premise a wildfire was ravaging Cheyenne Mountain in the Broadmoor Bluffs neighborhood near NORAD.

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Sadly, the next chaotic evacuation may be authentic if kids keep trespassing on a century-old ranch in the neighborhood, getting drunk and stoned and setting fires.

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That’s right.

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Idiot teens — yes, I know “idiot teens” is redundant — repeatedly have set fires amid parched scrub oak and crispy underbrush at the bottom of a hillside rimmed by their parents’ mini-mansions.

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An inferno capable to sweeping through all the Broadmoors — Glen, Oaks, Bluffs, Spires and Hills — seems inevitable, if someone doesn’t stop the kids.

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Trying his hardest is Stan Horton, who manages the 116-acre ranch on behalf of its owner, Church of All Nationson Templeton Gap Road.

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In recent weeks, Stan has caught 16 kids, many from Cheyenne Mountain High School, trespassing, partying and vandalizing the dozen or so old buildings, including the historic concrete house built around 1935 as a water tower but converted to a home.

Property manager Stan Horton put teens caught vandalizing the concrete house to work painting it. Today it looks much differently than just a few weeks ago.

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Already, two buildings have burned to the ground. Luckily the flames didn’t spread to the pump house or the dozens of surrounding homes.

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But Stan fears a tragedy.

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“It’s frustrating as can be,” Stan said as we toured the property. “We have fences. We’ve put up signs. But they keep coming in. They tag everything with spray paint. They destroy things.

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“I’m fed up.”

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Stan said the church was reluctant to press criminal charges as first. But as the vandalism and danger has escalated, Colorado Springs Police became involved.

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“We call the parents and they want to make excuses for their kids,” Stan said, shaking his head. “They just keep coming, no matter what we do.”

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The parents’ reaction is a mystery to Stan, a retired field artillery gunnery sergeant from Fort Carson.

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This building is one of two burned to the ground by vandals.

He can understand that kids are going to make poor choices. But parents’ shouldn’t reinforce those choices, he said.

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Sadly, the arson and vandalism has been going on for decades, according to Don Failing, who has pastured horses on the property since 1980 or so. He said kids from Fort Carson used to come and play on the property, before the Broadmoor Bluffs neighborhood existed.

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But in 1981, he said kids burned down a hay shed he had built for his horses. And then another small structure was burned repeatedly until it was destroyed.

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“The kids from Broadmoor Bluffs started running wild on the place,” Don told me. “It’s been horrible the past 10 years.”

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He described how the kids will cut entire sections of fence from a horse pasture, allowing the animals to run free in the neighborhood.

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“They have a mean streak,” Don said. “That bunch from Broadmoor Bluffs is totally destructive.”

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If the church can ever get the vandalism under control, it has big plans for the property.

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“We want to developer a Christian retreat center here,” Stan said. “Kind of like ‘Praise Mountain’ where people can come.”

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Already, the property hosts paintball tournaments for its youth ministry. Stan had hung a movie screen from one of the pump house balconies and hosted nearly 70 people for a “flashlight theater” movie night. He has plans for winter sledding, maybe motocross and horseback riding and more.

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That is if the place isn’t burned to the ground by neighbors’ kids first.

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Charred earth is all that remains of the building.Stan Horton, manager of the property, describes the damage done by vandals to the pump house as he stands inside the main level.

The ranch was owned from 1920 to 2005 by the Bensberg family.

Jim Bensberg, former El Paso County Commissioner, tells me the concrete building was built by his father and uncle in 1935. He said it was called “the Tower” and though it was designed for water storage, it was never used to hold water.

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Bensberg told me a river running through the property was dammed above the Tower to provide water to the two residences, one of which to the north burned in a well-documented fire in 1950.

Stan Horton, property manager for Church for All Nations, scrambles below a small dam that provided water to homes on the ranch.

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Stan Horton, church property manager, describes the damage done by vandals to buildings on the ranch.

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Nothing is safe from taggers, not even the water trough used for baptisims!

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The view out of the concrete house.

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Despite fences, chained gates and multiple signs, teens continue to trespass and vandalize the property.

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WILL WOODMEN HILLS COVENANTS EVER BE ENFORCED?

October 23rd, 2011, 11:31 am by
Woodmen Hills is a subdivision of about 2,200 homes in Falcon, an unincorporated community northeast of Colorado Springs along U.S. Highway 24.

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NO, is the answer to the headline if a determined group of Woodmen Hills residents get their way.

The Woodmen Hills Metro District wants the El Paso County Commission to give it the authority to enforce covenants in filings 1-10 of the subdivision in unincorporated Falcon, northeast of Colorado Springs.

Only the 900 homes in filing 11 have a homeowners association enforcing covenants. The other 1,200 homes, in filings 1-10, have covenants attached to their homes but no active HOA to enforce them.

And that’s the way many seem to like it.

When the metro district began enforcing them in 2008, resident Chuck Warne led a group of residents who sued to stop.

 

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A recreation center in Woodmen Hills.

In May 2009, a district judge slam-dunked the  Metro District.

Then, in June 2010, the Court of Appeals upheld the judge’s decision.

Case closed, right? Ha!

The metro district is determined to get authority to resume policing violations of covenants — rules governing parking, landscaping, fences, trailers and such.

On Thursday, they tried to convince the El Paso County Commission to give it the authority as part of a new “service plan” it is seeking.

The proposed service plan also would allow the district to raise its maximum debt authorization to $53 million from its current $16.2 million cap. And it would give the district a maximum mill levy of 60 mills. I found it interesting the covenant issue generated the most controversy.

Residents lined up to denounce the metro district and its previous efforts at enforcing covenants and to plead with the five commissioners to strip the provision from the service plan.

Among those testifying was Chuck Warne, who moved to Woodmen Hills in 2003 and sued in 2008 to stop the enforcement.

“You’ve got a very small group of people trying to impose their will on the majority of people,” Warne said. He said if residents want covenant enforcement, they can do it themselves.

“It’s up to the residents themselves if they want covenant enforcement,” he said. “They can create an HOA under their home rule powers. We don’t need the Metro District involved. They don’t listen to the people. They don’t care.”

Larry Bishop

Before Thursday’s hearing, Metro District manager Larry Bishop said many residents want covenants enforced and his board is responding to that demand.

“There’s a misunderstanding about whether the metro district is going to become a dictatorship and force covenant enforcement down peoples’ throats,” he said. “Voters will decide. It will be a simple ballot question: Shall covenants be enforced in this filing?”

I’ve spoken to folks in Woodmen Hills who would welcome the proposed vote in May 2012 and the enforcement of covenants.

They say there are too many RVs and trailers parked on the streets and other issues.

But it was enforcement horror stories that got the attention of commissioners Amy Lathen and Darryl Glenn last week.

“We’ve heard outrageous examples of abuse,” Lathen said, adding that she’s never gotten a request for enforcement from Woodmen Hills residents. “But I’ve heard many complaints.”

The commission delayed action until December. I’m guessing whatever the decision, the fight will go on.

Here’s a link to an independent Woodmen Hills Info website.

To read briefs filed in the appeal, click here.

Follow this link to the Court of Appeals decision upholding the judge’s decision.

The attorneys for the metro district wrote this letter explaining their position.

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WOODMOOR IS CAUGHT IN THE RAT RACE

October 19th, 2011, 3:50 pm by

Hey all you fans of the Southern Delivery System water pipeline . . . if you were thinking of moving out of Colorado Springs to escape the cost, don’t bother househunting in Woodmoor!

Folks there who wanted to move to the country and get away from big-city politics, angry public hearings and big fee increases imposed by public officials in defiance of the will of the people are being disappointed.

That’s the case for Woodmoor resident Jennifer Davis.

She and her family moved from California’s Bay Area to Woodmoor in 2008 in hopes of a quieter life.

But all the issues of the city seem to have followed her to Woodmoor, the unincorporated community of 3,000 homes east of Monument.

“I’m frustrated,” Davis said Tuesday, still fuming after attending a meeting Monday night of the five-member Woodmoor Water and Sanitation District Boardwhere 140 or so residents showed up to protect the proposed $30 million purchase of 3,300 acres of the JV Ranch near Fountain.

The ranch, owned by relatives of the late John Venezia, who developed Briargate and Peregrine, is coveted for its water rights. (Colorado Springs paid Venezia $3.2 million for 3,680 adjacent acres in 1989.)

The Woodmoor water board voted unanimously to buy the land after hours of emotional testimony and a near unanimous vote by the people in opposition to the purchase.

“It was power politics,” Davis said. “They didn’t listen to anything any of us said. Their minds were made up. Basically, they told us ‘We’re buying you a ranch and you’re going to pay for it and you’re going to like it.’ I was so dismayed by the arrogance of those people.”

Davis and others say they feel betrayed by the five board members. (Gazette IT expert Beth Courrau is on the board.)

Several Woodmoor residents asked me how the board could ignore the residents and saddle the water district’s 8,350 residential and business customers with a huge debt. Average residential water rates will increase $50 a month to pay for the ranch.

A large portion of the JV Ranch, southeast of Fountain, is seen on the El Paso County Assessor's website. The Woodmoor Water and Sanitation District voted Monday, Oct. 17, 2011, to pay up to $30 million for 3,300 acres of the ranch to obtain its water rights.

 Worse, neighbors say, they will have to spend perhaps $100 million more to build a pipeline to deliver the water uphill to Woodmoor.

(Where have I heard this scenario before? Actually, Springs Utilities is paying about $2.3 billion in phase one of the SDS pipeline project. The eventual full price is unknown.)

“I’m shocked,” said Bob Benton, a 15-year Woodmoor resident. Benton left the meeting early, convinced the board would never proceed in the face of such fierce opposition.

“That’s impossible,” Benton said.

The 3,300 acres of the JV Ranch to be purchased by the Woodmoor Water and Sanitation District includes Calhan Reservoir, seen here. A 3,680-acre parcel purchased by Colorado Springs in 1989 is just east of this property.

“I’m completely shocked. More than 130 people voted ‘No’ at the meeting. Emphatically no. I’ve never been more disgusted in my life.”

Carolyn Streit-Carey also attended the meeting and was sickened by the vote.

“It was a sham,” she said. “The board simply went through the motions of holding a public hearing. They didn’t listen to anyone. I think most of the people in the audience felt betrayed.”

 

This is a map of the Woodmoor Water and Sanitation District service area.

Water district manager Jessie Shaffer defended the vote as the right thing to do.

Groundwater is diminishing, he said. A reliable source is imperative. Woodmoor’s future is at stake.

Tell that to the neighbors.

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To read more about SDS, click here for an archive of Gazette stories.

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NOT READY TO BE A GHOST TOWN, VICTOR IS PULLING TOGETHER

October 16th, 2011, 11:30 am by

 

 

Two years ago, the historic gold mining town of Victor was staring at a crisis.

The loss of state gambling grants left City Hall on the brink of insolvency. The possible closing of the town’s largest employer, the Cripple Creek & Victor Gold Mine, threatened to push Victor to financial ruin. I feared it was becoming Colorado’s newest ghost town.

“It was the perfect storm,” said Clay Brown, a regional manager of the Colorado Department of Local Affairs, or DOLA. “It was a real wake-up call.”

Everyone holding the ribbon, left to right: -Veldean Petri, Victor City Council; Clay Brown, regional manager, Colorado Department of Local Affairs (DOLA); Victor Mayor Buck Hakes; Reeves Brown, executive director, DOLA; Don Daniel and Michael Wallace, both Victor City Council; and Robert Thompson, assistant regional manager, DOLA

 

Today, Victor stands as the poster child for how state and town officials can work together.

It’s an example of how businesses and citizens can help rescue their local government and each other.

They even held a ribbon-cutting on Sept. 29 to celebrate their achievements. DOLA executives were there along with town leaders, business officials and residents.

This was the view west down Victor Avenue in May 2010.

They are happy because Victor is a blueprint for survival and recovery from hard times.

Want proof? Just take a walk in the heart of town.

Check out the shiny black asphalt and creamy new concrete sidewalks, curbs and gutters.

What you can’t readily see is the new drainage system protecting businesses and homes from chronic flooding.

 Or the new electronic water meters.

Or the water treatment plant upgrades.

Or the gas lines being installed to allow a total town conversion from propane to more efficient natural gas.

This was the vew west down Victor Avenue in October 2011 after new asphalt was laid and new sidewalks, curbs and gutters were installed.

It’s happening thanks to a powerful partnership between City Hall and DOLA.

“Things are really looking up,” Mayor Buck Hakes said last week.

 “It’s gratifying to see the changes. People are starting to get more excited. There’s a whole new attitude. It’s much more pleasant than it was several years ago.”

In 2009 with Victor teetering on a budget meltdown, Clay Brown came in to stabilize finances and help get the town budget in order.

He determined Victor was giving away its most valuable asset: water.

This view looks south down 3rd Street from Diamond Avenue. Besides the new asphalt, sidewalks, curbs and gutters, Victor boasts new red-white-and-blue banners donated anonymously by a resident.

Ancient, failing meters, coupled with a leaking delivery and sewage system were costing precious revenue.

Brown helped Victor get grants to replace all meters in town, map and repair the sewers and water lines. Same for the crumbling or non-existent sidewalks and streets downtown.

“We’ve caught up on our budget shortfall,” Hakes said. “We’ve got a new drainage system so gravel from Battle Mountain doesn’t wash down into our streets with every hard rain.

“Now people can come and walk around on sidewalks that aren’t cracked  and broken. We have handicapped ramps.  You can stop and walk around, go shopping or eat at a restaurant on good sidewalks. It’s very important.”

Brown credits the mine for helping rescue Victor, mainly by paying more for its water supply.

“It’s the most community-minded mining company I’ve ever seen,” Brown said.

Residents are helping, too, working to attract businesses and tourists.

“It’s amazing what they’ve done,” Brown said. “It’s been a great community effort.”

A Victor City Council member plants and waters flowers in the ore carts downtown to spruce up the shopping district.

I went up recently to see the fall colors. I’ve always liked Victor with its massive headframe in the park, the great architecture of the downtown, the cool broom business and shops.

Over the years, my family has routinely made the trip up Old Stage Road. We’ve even spent the night once in the Victor Hotel.

It’s a fun place to wander around, grab a burger and a beer, shop and imagine life a century ago. I also like the cemetery on the west edge of town.

There’s a lot to see in Victor. And, judging from their recovery, a lot to learn.

Are you taking notes, Colorado Springs?

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ALMOST ANOTHER HOA HORROR STORY

October 12th, 2011, 12:29 pm by

Collin McAllister

Collin McAllister almost received a rude welcome into this world.

Collin’s dad, James McAllister, nearly missed his birth on Oct. 5, 2011, all because of the Dublin Townhomes at Stetson Hills Community Association‘s zero-tolerance policy for parking violations.

The HOA board doesn’t like folks who park without a permit inside the complex near Powers and Dublin boulevards.  Hates it, in fact. So much that the board hired Collins Towing to cruise the streets at night.

Anyone caught without a permit gets towed, no questions asked.

That policy hit the McAllister’s hard when Tiffany McAllister went into labor late on Oct. 5.

Before  James, a civilian firefighter at Fort Carson, raced his wife to the hospital, he called friends to come babysit their three older children. The friends arrived around midnight.

James, Emma, 4, Steven, 3, Easton, 2, and Tiffany McAllister in a 2010 photo.

At 7 a.m. the next morning, the friends called James, frantic that their car was gone. It was no longer parked in front of the McAllisters’ home. And the friends needed to get to a doctor’s appointment.

“I knew it had to be the HOA’s towing company,” James said.

With Tiffany deep in labor, James raced home to take his friends a car.

While he was there, James knocked on the door of Steve Bell, the four-year president of the Dublin Townhomes HOA board.

“I told his wife that Steve’s parking rule got my friends’ car towed and they needed their car back immediately,” James said. “It was an urgent matter.”

He drove back to the hospital to rejoin Tiffany.

But his phone rang again.

Again, he had to leave. His friends needed $232 cash to retrieve their car before the end of the day.

“I tried to explain to the tow company but there was no compassion,” James said.

Luckily, he was able to witness the birth of his son, Collin. But he was furious.

So I called Steve Bell, who initially took a hard line.

“I’m assuming he knew when the delivery time was due, he’d have to have a babysitter come over,” Bell said. “He should have given them a parking permit.

“We have signs on every entrance, parking is by permit only. James is a former board member. He was well aware of the rules.”

Ouch. That’s pretty harsh.

I’ve been through the chaos of childbirth a few times. I’ve made the midnight handoff of kids on a trip to the hospital. Glad I didn’t have to remember the HOA parking rules at the time!

Streets are narrow within the Dublin Townhomes complex.

Bell said he’d investigate, consult with his two board members and decide if “extenuating circumstances” exist to waive the tow fee.

“But I honestly can’t think of any extenuating circumstances,” Bell said.

Now, I’ll grant you that streets are narrow within the Dublin Townhomes complex. Like a lot of these communities, the developers wanted to squeeze as many units on the lot as possible so they made the streets and driveways ridiculously small.

I’m sure parking is a nightmare and has to be controlled.

But I don’t agree with a zero-tolerance policy. The only one who wins with that sort of policy is the towing company.

Just as I was teeing the HOA up to pound it into a sand trap, I got an email.

Bell had apologized to James and Tiffany and the HOA board was reimbursing the $232.

James is grateful but still upset: “They need to revise their parking policies.”

I agree, but credit Bell for his change of heart. Some HOAs would stand firm.

I just love a happy ending!
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FEAR FACTOR CLIMBS IN SPRINGS NEIGHBORHOODS

October 9th, 2011, 11:30 am by

Are you afraid in your neighborhood?

Scared to walk at night?

What about the daytime?

A new survey reports that fewer than 50 percent of folks in the Pikes Peak Region feel “very safe” walking their neighborhoods at night!

The 2011 survey of the Quality of Life Indicators in the Pikes Peak Region released Friday reports the number of people who feel “very safe” walking in their neighborhoods at night has dropped below 50 percent.

According to the report, 82 percent of people surveyed feel “very safe” or “somewhat safe” strolling their neighborhoods in the day.

But when night falls, the number drops to just 71 percent. And fewer than half feel “very safe.”

I was shocked.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m no macho man. Over the years, I’ve been scared, day and night, visiting certain neighborhoods . . . the housing projects in Chicago, the Tenderloin in San Francisco, or any neighborhood in Oakland, East St. Louis and Kansas City, Kan.

But never have I felt fear in Colorado Springs.

I know there are neighborhoods here where you can get robbed or shot . . . Briargate, Peregrine, Flying Horse, Broadmoor.

Let’s face it, any neighborhoods where there are nice cars, fancy homes and money are targets of crime.

The only fear I’ve felt walking at night in the Springs is from the rare mountain lion or frequent black bear who roam our region. I’ve seen mother bears get pretty aggressive around humans at dusk. I even faced one in my own garage.

But the survey is talking about fear from humans and that is much different. And it doesn’t seem to matter that the crime rate in the region is 10 points below the national average.

 

Colorado Springs neighborhood activist Dave Munger and Mayor Steve Bach spoke at a news conference in September 2011.

So I asked neighborhood guru Dave Munger, president of the Council of Neighbors and Organizations, about the findings.

“I’m a little concerned,” Munger said, noting that some of the fear may be related to another finding of the survey that showed the city’s police are solving fewer crimes than ever.

The so-called “crime clearance rate” dropped to 22 percent in 2010 in Colorado Springs and it was 27 percent in El Paso County. In Fountain, the rate was just 23 percent.

“Unfortunately, I don’t have a great solution for this,” Munger said. “The question is: How do we make sure we are providing a safe environment for all our citizens and good a quality of life for all citizens regardless of their ability to pay for it?”

On the positive side, he said, the survey showed a growth in the number of neighborhood organizations. There are about 200.

“That’s a terrific thing,” he said. “Neighborhood and community organizations are where we learn to work together and understand what it means to live and work together. They are basic units of democracy.

“When a neighborhood is organized and makes decisions to improve the quality of life, it will impact the people in the immediate vicinity in a positive manner.”

Wonder if those neighborhood groups are good at solving crimes?

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TINY TYLER PLACE NEIGHBORHOOD VANISHES AS LAST HOUSE DEMOLISHED

October 5th, 2011, 12:55 pm by

(Special thanks to Matt Mayberry, director of the Pioneers Museum, for helping me with the history of the house, neighborhood and its owners!)

Take a good look at the Steven Stearman House on the campus of Penrose Hospital north of downtown Colorado Springs. In a couple days, it will be gone.

The Steven Stearman House on the campus of Penrose Hospital north of downtown Colorado Springs as it looked Oct. 4, 2011. The century-old house was to be demolished on Saturday, Oct. 8. For the past 30 years, it served as a guest house with four apartments for families of hospital patients. A salvage crew hired by the Old North End Neighborhood removed as many fixtures, doors, windows and wood trim prior to demolition.

The old house has been vacant since 2008 when Penrose opened the new John Zay Guest House.

Now, it is coming down to make room for more parking for  a nearly completed four-story medical office building, Penrose spokesman Chris Valentine said.

Folks in the adjacent Old North End Neighborhood had hopes of saving the house, moving it and restoring it into a community center.

Penrose even offered the $50,000 it will spend razing it toward relocating it.

But the cost of moving totalled $80,000. Then there was the expense a lot, which nearly doubled the cost. Building a new foundation and restoration would drive the price so high the neighborhood couldn’t afford it.

The Steven Stearman House doesn't look terribly different from the day it was built circa 1900 by Charles H. Tyler, a retired real estate and manufacturing baron from St. Louis who came to Colorado Springs and started building homes on "Tyler Place" just west of North Nevada Avenue.

 

This GoogleEarth image does not show the new four-story medical office building nearly completed just south across Tyler Place from the Stearman House.

It’s a shame because it’s a great old house. From one angle, it doesn’t look much different than it did when it was built circa 1900.

In reality, it’s an architectural orphan — a Queen Anne Victorian-style house amid a sea of concrete slab parking structures and office buildings of Penrose Hospital.

The value of the house is not lost on leaders of the Old North End.  They tried to save it, recognizing a rich piece of its history will be lost Saturday.

But like an organ donor, the house will live on in perhaps dozens of neighboring houses thanks to a last-minute salvage effort by neighborhood leaders.

They will take the salvaged fixtures, windows, doors, trim and other items and store them for a silent auction among the neighborhoods 900 or so residents and business groups.

A 1940 aerial photo of Penrose Hospital with the Tyler Place neighborhood at the top. Photo courtsey the Pikes Peak Library District archives.

Still, the Stearman House deserves to be remembered for the man who built it and the surrounding neighborhood now vanished, for its noteworthy owners and, more important, for the service it provided during the last 30 years as a guest home for out-of-town families of hospital patients.

A 2010 aerial photo of the Penrose Hospital campus from GoogleEarth showing the Stearman House and highlighting the old Tyler Place neighborhood.

The two-story frame home with large windows, hardwood floors, ornate trim, fireplace and wrap-around porch is the last link, in its original location, to Charles H. Tyler, who moved to Colorado Springs in 1900 from St. Louis where he had amassed a fortune in real estate and manufacturing.

He died at age 69 on June 20, 1902. But during his brief time here, Tyler built a handful of homes west of Nevada Avenue on “Tyler Place.” He went by the title “Captain Tyler” based on his claim as a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi River during the Civil War years.

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(His obituary also claimed he invented the roll top desk. Of course, the 1850 U.S. Patent is held by Abner Cutler of Buffalo, N.Y. and historians trace the desk design to 18th century France.)

Vic Appugliese, president of the Old North End Neighborhood, orchestrated a salvage effort of the Stearman House. Items taken from the house will be sold at a silent auction with proceeds to benefit the neighborhood.

From 1915 to 1924, the house was home to T. Ernest Nowles, who joined the Evening Telegraph newspaper in 1901 as a reporter, rose to managing editor and eventually negotiated the merger with The Gazette in 1923. He became president and general manager of the merged Gazette Telegraph, titles he held until he sold the paper to R.C. Hoiles in January 1946.

In 1981 the house became known as the Steven Stearman House in honor of a cancer victim whose surviving family financed its conversion into apartments for families of Penrose Hospital patients.

Preserving that history was foremost in the mind of Vic Appugliese, president of the Old North End Neighborhood Association, when he learned the house was to be demolished.

“My grand scheme was to save this house, move it somewhere in the neighborhood and use it as a community center for the Old North End,” Appugliese said. “Ultimately, we realized that due to time, expense and location the house couldn’t be saved. So we decided to take what we could out of it and continue to dream of a community center.”

So Penrose agreed to let the Old North End hire a crew to remove the interior fixtures and trim. The items, combined with others salvaged from a home demolished by Colorado College, will be sold at a silent auction with proceeds benefiting the neighborhood.

The organ donation was a good idea but Appugliese doesn’t want people to forget Tyler Place, the captain, Nowles, Stearman and the rest.

“I want people to remember that this was a home to a lot of people,” Appugliese said.  

“This was a place of solitude for years for people visiting the hospital. It gave a lot of comfort to a lot of people over the years.”

Some of the windows and trim salvaged from the Stearman House.

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Cheyenne Mountain is visible from the front bedroom of the Stearman House.

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Penrose Hospital spokesman Chris Valentine looks over the salvaged items inside the Stearman House.

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KEEP YOUR STINKING CURBS AND GUTTERS! WHO NEEDS ‘EM?

October 2nd, 2011, 11:30 am by

This is a view looking east down the 1100 block of West Cucharras Street in the Old Colorado City neighborhood.

Notice anything funny about how the cars are parked? 

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Residents of the 1100 block of West Cucharras Street like to pull their cars off the street and onto the parkway. Sometimes, they hang over the sidewalk, which residents installed themselves over the years.

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Here, take a closer look.

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See all the vehicles hanging over the sidewalk?

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Rather than parallel park along the curb, as happens in the vast majority of Colorado Springs neighborhoods, folks on Cucharras park perpindicular to the street.

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And if they crowd the sidewalk, who cares?

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Clearly, no one on the north side of the block cares. This is the way they’ve lived and parked forever.

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And it’s the way they want it to stay.

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When the city hired crews to install curbs and gutters on the south side of the block, connecting to existing curbing along Cucharras Park, folks across the street became worried.

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Paul McElroy intalled his own sidewalk in 1988 but he didn't put in a curb or gutter. He and his brother have three trucks, two trailers and a camper. They need the parkway to park their vehicles and maneurver them into the driveway.

Paul McElroy warily viewed the installation of curb and gutter across the street from his century-old bungalow, where he’s lived since 1979.

“They better not be coming over here,” he said, leaning on his fence. “Nobody said anything to me about curbs and gutters. We don’t want them.”

Similar sentiments echoed up and the north side of the street.

The rest of the city can have curbs and gutters, but folks in the 1100 block of Cucharras are perfectly happy with a dirt gutter next to the pavement.

And the city better think twice before it comes around trying to install curbs.

Here's a look at the east end of the 1100 block of West Cucharras Street from www.FlashEarth.com.

“I’m totally against it,” said Steve Booth, who has lived on Cucharras since 1995. “I want nothing done with the front of our house. They really don’t know what they’re doing.”

His wife, Wendy, said it would be a mad scramble for parking if everyone was forced to parallel park along a curb. Especially since only a couple houses have driveways.

“We have nine homes on our side of the block,” Wendy said. “We’d be losing a lot of parking spots.”

Even worse, Cucharras Park brings a lot of cars to the area.

“We’d all be jockeying for spaces,” Wendy said. “This way, we can get more cars in.”

Other neighbors agree with Paul, Steve and Wendy.

Michael Hay doesn’t want to lose his parking spaces.

“If they have to put in curbs, it would be nice if they put in the type you can drive up over like they have in some parts of the city,” Hay said.

 Of course, the city tends to frown on anyone parking on the grass or parkway.

And it’s illegal to block a sidewalk, although police won’t respond to a complaint unless the vehicle is creating a traffic hazard.

Newcomers to Cucharras, Rick and Jacqui Quinn, just moved from a neighborhood near downtown where parking was a challenge.

“It’s nice to have a place to park and pull in off the street,” Rick said. “If it’s not broken, don’t fix it.”

It doesn’t appear the curb and gutters will be “fixed” anytime soon.

Mike Chaves, acting city engineer, says he has no plans to add curbs now.

But he never said never.

“Not at this time,” Chaves said. “We understand some residents don’t want them But there are accessibility issues. Other neighbors want to walk. It’s a balancing act.”

Here's some of the new sidewalk, curb and gutter installed on the south side of the 1100 block of West Cucharras Street.

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