Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Colorado Department of Local Affairs' Tag

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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URBAN COWBOYS

March 1st, 2009, 10:04 am by

It seems El Paso County no longer is a fit place for cowboys. In fact, it officially ranks as an “urban county” as defined by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

It means there are more than 200,000 people living in the county, outside of the Colorado Springs metropolitan area. Whoa, pardner!

Don’t get too excited. A lot of wide open space remains in the county, hwich encompasses more than 2, 158 square miles or more than twice the area of Rhode Island!

There’s no denying, however, it is growing. By 2010, the Colorado Department of Local Affairs projects El Paso County’s population at 649,217, which would make it the most populous county in the state.

But it’s not as bad as it sounds. The designation as “urban” qualifies the county as an “entitlement community” and makes it eligible to become a direct receipient of lucrative Community Development Block Grants, a program started in 1974 for “neighborhood stabilization” projects designed to provide decent housing, economic opportunities and repair infrastructure for low-income Americans.

In Colorado, HUD distributes CDBG grants both 14 cities and 4 counties and to the state for distribution to small communities. In Colorado, HUD has given millions in response to mortgage foreclosures that have devastated many neighborhoods. Follow this link to its budget.

Here are some of the headlines from HUD’s work in Colorado in recent months:

2009

 

 

02/19/09 Obama Administration Awards Nearly $19.5 Million in Homeless Grants to Local Housing and Service Programs in Colorado
02/02/09 HUD Approves Nearly $4 Million in Neighborhood Stabilization Plans for Colorado Springs Communities Hard-Hit by Foreclosures
01/13/09 HUD announces more than $3.6 Million to two Colorado non-profits to benefit low-income persons with disabilities

2008

 

 

12/29/08 HUD Approves More Than $34 Million in Neighborhood Stabilization Plans for Colorado Communities Hard-Hit by Foreclosure
10/27/08 Secretary Preston Announces Funding for Disaster Assistance in Colorado.

Colorado Springs has been a CDBG entitlement community for years and used the money to refurbish low-income residents’ homes and pave miles of sidewalks, curbs and gutters among other projects in selected “Neighborhood Improvement Areas.”

In the past, El Paso County stood in line with dozens of smaller Colorado towns and counties and only received about $2.5 million over 15 years. Already, it is approved to receive $1 million for 2009, thanks to its new urban designation. Here is a look at the El Paso County Community Development Block Grant program.

The county has hired Tiffany Colvert to oversee the program. Here is her contact information:

Tiffany Colvert
Community Development Specialist

27 E. Vermijo, 5th Floor
Colorado Springs, CO 80909
719-520-6476, fax 719-520-6486

tiffanycolvert@elpasoco.com

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