Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Associated Landscape Contractors of Colorado' Tag

WHEELBARROW BRIGADE TO HELP HEALING

April 20th, 2011, 12:08 pm by

It makes perfect sense that professional landscapers would celebrate Earth Day.

After all, landscapers are all about protecting the environment.

Planting trees and shrubs and flowers is not just a fad with these folks. It’s their lives.

And it makes perfect sense that landscapers, under the leadership of PLANET — the Professional Landcare Network — decided to launch a National Day of Service on Earth Day.

What better day to promote their profession, to reach out and remind everyone there are plenty of certified professional landscapers out there who care about their communities and their customers.

After all, we’ve all heard stories — I’ve written a few myself — about crooks claiming to be landscapers who take half your downpayment and disappear.

In our area on Friday, professional landscapers from around the Pikes Peak region will be volunteering their time and using donated materials to build a healing garden at Memorial Hospital for Children on Boulder Street east of downtown Colorado Springs.

If you have any doubts about the sincerity of these landscapers and their commitment to this day of service, consider this:

They are taking on a project that the hospital had budgeted $100,000 to complete.

And they will be moving all the materials — 50 tons of dirt, 5 tons of sand, 24 tons of sand/gravel roadbase, 2.5 tons of drainage rock, and uncounted tons of flagstone, boulders, pavers, trees and shrubs — by wheelbarrow to the site.

It will take volunteers a day just to haul all the stuff the length of a football field down a narrow ramp to reach the place they will build the healing garden.

I’d say that qualifies as a true day of service for these members of the Associated Landscape Contractors of Colorado.

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Here’s a look at the $110 million Memorial Hospital for Children on Boulder Street. The seven-story east tower opened at Memorial Health Systems’ downtown campus in December 2007.

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Volunteers from the Associated Landscape Contractors of Colorado's southern chapter will build a healing garden using donated materials on Earth Day, April 22, 2011, at the base of the Memorial Hospital for Children east tower. The garden will be built behind the retaining wall and railing.

The garden will feature three large circular patios, a fountain, benches and tables and a variety of plants.

The patios represent hope, life and healing. The area will be a retreat for children and their families as well as Memorial employees.

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PHOTO OF LANDSCAPER SHOCKS READERS

March 9th, 2011, 2:02 pm by
At least two Gazette readers were shocked to see a photo of this man, Cliff Miller, in Saturday’s paper.
Cliff Miller of Mountain High Landscaping and Lighting set up his display at the Colorado Springs Homes and Landscaping Show on Saturday, March 5, 2011. Two readers were shocked to see the photo. They say he owes them thousands for unfinished work.

Miller, 64, owns Mountain High Landscaping and Lighting. He was setting up a display at the Colorado Springs Home and Landscaping Show when a Gazette photographer snapped his picture.

Home shows are a place for homeowners to get ideas for landscaping their yards or to find someone to build a deck, patio or retaining wall. Typically, they are held in the spring and attract several thousand people in a weekend.

 

Gazette reader Bert Stewart attended the 2010 home show and that’s where he met Miller. He was so impressed with Miller’s display that he hired him to build a $7,000 patio at his Chipita Park home.

He paid Miller about half in advance, or $3,758, on April 17, 2010, and expected Stewart to start promptly.

Stewart said Miller showed up to design the new patio and even moved a few shovels of dirt and cut some sod for a walkway.

Then he disappeared. Stewart logged the phone call after phone call and has copies of emails he and his wife sent trying to get Miller to start work on the patio.

He told them he was sick and had excuses why he was a no-show. Then all communication stopped, Stewart said. So, on June 22, 2010, Stewart sued Miller for $3,853 — the amount of his downpayment and court costs.

Miller didn’t shown up for court and  on Aug. 31, 2010, Magistrate Judge Daniel Winograd ruled in Stewart’s favor, ordering Miller to pay.

Of course, Miller never paid.

So you can imagine the shock Stewart felt when he saw the photo of Miller in Saturday’s Gazette.

But he wasn’t the only shocked Gazette reader that day. Peggy Bohn of Colorado Springs was equally shocked. That’s because Miller did the same thing to her in 2009. For a lot more money.

Bohn said she paid Miller half in advance for a $15,000 retaining wall project in her yard. But the wall never got built. Like Stewart, Bohn sued and won a judgment.

When Miller failed to pay, she went back to court and got a default judgment. Miller promised to repay Bohn over 18 months. He gave her $100 in January 2010 and $100 in February 2010. Then the payments stopped.

Bohn and Stewart had the same reaction when they saw Miller’s photo. Bohn wanted to go down to the home show and stand there warning people to avoid hiring the landscaper. But she decided to stay home.

Stewart, however, hopped in his car, drove down and confronted Miller, demanding he pay the $3,800 he was owed. Miller said he didn’t have the cash.

Bohn and Stewart want to protect anyone else from falling victim to Miller, and suggest anyone considering hiring him or another contractor follow the advice of Carol Odell of the Better Business Bureau of Southern Colorado.

Odell strongly urges everyone to check the BBB’s website and see a company’s rating. Miller’s Mountain High had an “F” rating for three complaints.

Go to the BBB’s consumer page to check the rating for a business, to search for a BBB-accredited business or file a complaint. 

She also said consumers should vigorously check references, make sure a contractor is licensed, insured and bonded and never pay 50 percent up front.

At most, give a contractor one-third. Or go to their supplier to open an account and pay directly for materials. Or pay on delivery.

A reader suggests contacting the Associated Landscape Contractors of Colorado, 303-757-5611, for advice when researching potential landscape contractors.

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