Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'black' Tag

BLACK MUSLIM FAMILY CLAIMS NEIGHBORS HATE THEM

October 10th, 2010, 12:00 pm by

Do folks on Blazek Loop (seen in a map from FlashEarth.com) really hate Roberta and Darryl Watkins because they are black and Muslim?

Do they manipulate the irrigation system to ensure the grass around the Watkins’ townhome burns up and dies?

Did they plant trees behind their unit to obscure their view and hide them from the predominantly white neighborhood?

Did they vandalize lilac bushes the Watkins planted? Order the landscaping crew to ignore needles and leaves in the grass around their unit?

Do they warn new neighbors to avoid the Watkins due to their race and religion?

The Watkins sincerely believe neighbors have done all this and more. The believe they are victims of harassment, intimidation and retaliation

They believe their townhome was kicked out of a neighboring homeowners association in 2005 when the board learned a black family had purchased it.

The believe Colorado Springs Police won’t pursue a criminal complaint against their neighbors because they are protecting the Campus Commons Townhome Association and its president, a Colorado Springs firefighter.

And they believe the couple living next door to them in the same duplex, Charles and Carolyn Riggle, are the cause of all their problems.

The Riggles have lived in the left side of the townhouse since it was built in 1994. The Riggles live on the right side.

The Riggles say they welcomed the Watkins. They believe much of the animosity the Watkins feels toward them and the HOA is due to a misunderstanding about how the townhome works: everything outside the building is commonly owned property — not privately owned grass, landscaping and trees.

Charles Riggle said the trees are an example of the further misunderstanding. He said the trees were planted to create a buffer from adjacent Damon Drive and to stop neighboring townhome owners from driving across the grass  when moving in and out.

He said the burnt lawn is another misunderstanding. It’s true, he said, he turned the sprinklers on, manually, for a month or so when a problem developed with the automatic timer. And he did not turn on one sector near the Watkins’ unit.

But he explained that was only because the control valve is right next to their home. He didn’t want to upset them by walking up to their house and kneel next to their window to turn it on and off.

As for other complaints, the former president of the neighboring townhome HOA tells me the Watkins/Riggle building was never in their HOA and never removed because a black family moved in.

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TAKE A HISTORICAL TOUR OF BLACK FOREST

September 18th, 2010, 5:34 pm by

Folks in Black Forest are proud of the unique, unincorporated community north of Colorado Springs where they live. It’s 100 square miles of hills, Ponderosa pines and meadows.

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Some are so proud the Black Forest History Committee put together a DVD, booklet and map of the Forest and its history.

I found it fascinating. Of course, it starts with Gen. William Jackson Palmer, the entrepreneur who came here after the Civil War, built Colorado Springs, the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad and just about everything else around.

Of course, his growing town and railroad needed lumber so, in 1870, he bought 43,000 acres in the Forest and started chopping down trees. Soon, there were 16 sawmills turning pines in railroad ties and construction materials.

Before they were through, the original forest was wiped out.

When the loggers left, pioneers remained and started building their community.

That’s where the DVD really gets interesting. When it starts talking about the people who stayed and the changes the area went through before it became one big suburb.

For example, it tells about Oliver Shoup, a sawmill executive who ended up governor of Colorado. A main east-west road is named in his honor.

There’s a story of the black, tufted-ear Abert squirrels seen commonly in the forest.

Did you know fox were raised in the Forest, until a U.S. trade agreement with Russia flooded the market with cheap furs and the industry collapsed? The exotic fox raised here were simply turned loose. They mated and produced some of the odd-color fox now seen in the region.

You’ll also learn about the people who settled in Black Forest and helped make it the place it is today such as beloved teacher Edith Wolford.

And then there are the photos, like those on this page. There is a story behind each.

The DVDs are $15. If you want to buy the one, contact Tery Stokka, of the history committee, at 495-0895 or email him at tstokka@juno.com. Proceeds support the committee and the Black Forest Community Center.

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