Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Congress' Tag

SNOW ANGELS TO APPEAR WHEN SKIES TURN WHITE

January 18th, 2012, 2:10 pm by

Amy Filipiak is watching for the skies to turn white.

When they do, if all goes according to plans, teams of Snow Angels will emerge to clear sidewalks within at least 1,500 feet of a half dozen schools in the region.

Filipiak and a group of neighborhood leaders and city officials have spent a year organizing Snow Angels around these elementary schools: Steele, Carver and West in District 11, Pikes Peak in D2, Frontier in D20 and Odyssey in D49.

Eventually, Filipiak hopes to see similar teams spread to all elementary schools in the Pikes Peak region.

“We put together a pilot program to see how best to get people to participate,” she said.

Amy credits the idea to bicycling advocate Al Brody. Both believe snow should never block a child’s path to school so they set about organizing teams of Snow Angels to clear the way.

Amy Filipiak, leader of the Snow Angel army

Brody sought out Amy because of her role as volunteer coordinator for the area’s Safe Routes to School program, which program promotes walking and biking to school by building sidewalks and bike paths, training crossing guards, installing bike racks at schools and encouraging students and families to participate.

Since Congress authorized it in 2005, the program has distributed $612 million in grants to more than 10,400 schools nationwide, covering 4.8 million children.

Filipiak then approached the city’s traffic engineering department and the Council of Neighbors & Organizations, the umbrella organization for area neighborhood groups.

CONO president Dave Munger said his folks quickly saw the potential and began contacting neighborhood associations where they might test the idea, such as the Old North End and the Organization of Westside Neighbors.

“Part of being a good neighbor is making sure kids can get to school safely without slipping and sliding,” Munger said.

CONO treasurer John Nuwer said the city embraced the idea and printed door hangers to help get the word out to residents within a radius of the six schools in the pilot program.

“They also printed some nice decals to give people who shovel their sidewalks to let people know you are a Snow Angel,” Nuwer said.

The program benefits more than just school children, said Vic Appugliese, president of the Old North End group.

Nobody wants to see Grandma out plowing her own sidewalk.

“This will help elderly neighbors who can no longer pick up a shovel. It will help us identify those folks and get them help,” he said. “This is a great program. We have a lot of pedestrians in our neighborhood. This is about helping everybody.”

There’s just one problem.

It hasn’t snowed enough to trigger the program.

When it does, the group is ready.

“We’re hoping a little bit of awareness will get people out to shovel their walks,” Filipiak said.

Are you ready, Snow Angels? The kids are counting on you! 

Here's the 1,500-foot radius around Steele Elementary in the Old North End Neighborhood. It's approximately three blocks in every direction. Organizers hope Snow Angels will clear all sidewalks in the zone each time it snows.

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STAND, BE COUNTED, CASH THE CHECK

September 15th, 2010, 4:22 pm by

The U.S. Census Bureau says most of the head-counting is done.

Now, Pikes Peak-area goverments hope to start counting the tax dollars that will flow our way thanks to the above-average response of folks in El Paso County and Colorado Springs.

About 74 percent of all households in the county responded to 2010 Census forms, exceeding the national average of 72 percent. Officials say that will translate into more federal tax dollars finding their way back to the region.

El Paso County Commissioner Sallie Clark said each person counted is worth $900, roughly, in tax revenue.

The Census — conducted every 10 years since 1790 – helps federal lawmakers determine how to distribute $400 billion in federal funding each year. (Whether or not is SHOULD spend all that money is another matter.)

 I’ll simply note the funding pays for things like:

  • Hospitals
  • Schools
  • Senior centers
  • Roads, bridges and other public-works projects
  • Emergency services

Then there’s the issue of representation in Congress. Seats in the U.S. House follow population. That’s another big reason it’s important to get a full and accurate count. Ditto the Colorado General Assembly. You don’t get your fair share of state representatives if you don’t stand up and be counted.

Some of the preliminary numbers are fascinating. You can slice and dice them by logging on to the Census Bureau’s American FactFinder  and searching by a variety of ways.

Here’s  a column I wrote in April 2009 and a previous blog I wrote about it.

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