Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'El Paso County' Tag

MEDICAL MARIJUANA DISPENSARY OR DRUG DEALER?

January 27th, 2010, 5:07 pm by

Folks in Rockrimmon are not convinced the Pure Medical storefront that opened in December is anything more than a drug dealer in the neighborhood.

medical-marijuana-sign

Pure Medical dispenses medical marijuana and has two stores in Colorado Springs — it’s store in the shopping center at Rockrimmon Boulevard and Delmonico Drive and another downton on Tejon Street.

Here’s a look at the area from FlashEarth:

medical-map

 Even though access to the windowless store is restricted to people with official medical marijuana cards, folks in Rockrimmon are upset about its existence in the same shopping center where neighborhood kids get candy and soda at the convenience store, or doughnuts, deli and sub sandwiches and pizzas.

medical-marijuana-storefront

Some residents have reached out to their homeowners associations.

The Comstock Village Homeowners Association sent out a survey to its 540 homeowners to get a sense of the feeling toward Pure Medical. Their survey was a response to a group of homeowners who spoke at a recent board meeting.

The Council of Neighbors and Organizations, or CONO, which represents the HOAs in the city, also is concerned.

It’s unclear what, if anything, anyone can do about the dispensaries until the Colorado General Assembly acts on proposals to regulate the budding industry.

The problem has been 10 years in the making. In 2000, voters decided to amend the Colorado Constitution in 2000 to legalize medical marijuana for “persons suffering from debilitating medical conditions.”

The issue erupted in 2009 after the U.S. Justice Department announced it would not actively prosecute medical marijuana businesses. Didn’t matter that marijuana remains an illegal drug under federal law. Dispensaries blossomed.

Check out these two Web sites catering to folks seeking dispensaries. One is the WeedMaps.com and the other is DispensaryDigest.com :

medical-marijuana-weed-map1

medical-marijuana-directory

In fact, Sheriff Terry Maketa recently said there are about 38 medical-marijuana dispensaries in El Paso County but only about three in unincorporated areas.

Colorado Springs has a task force studying what to do with the dispensaries.

And the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, which maintains a medical marijuana registery, is lobbying state lawmakers for laws to allow better regulation.

For example, it doesn’t want doctors to be able to profit from recommending people to the medical marijuana registry. And it wants tools to ensure doctors have not had their registrations revoked or suspended by the Drug Enforcement Administration.

Besides being a political issue, it’s a legal question being played out in state courts. Marijuana dispensary owners are suing for the right to sell pot, arguing communities can’t ban the dispensaries.

Some cities, including the Denver suburb of Centennial, counter that cities can prohibit businesses that violate federal law.

Fourteen states permit medical marijuana, but pot remains illegal under U.S. law.

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IT MAY BE JUST A HOLE IN THE GROUND, but it’s still home sweet home

January 10th, 2010, 12:05 pm by

Some folks grow up in mansions. Others in modest houses. And some grow up in little more than a hole in the ground.

That was the case for Marvin Baskett and his sister, Esther Redington.

Their childhood home was a concrete block basement house in the modest Knob Hill neighborhood, east of downtown Colorado Springs. Here they are in front of their old home: basement-house-marvin-laughing

 The house is barely taller than the 4-foot-high chain link fence surrounding the yard.

It sits at the southwest corner of Iowa Avenue and Yampa Street, just east of Queen Palmer Elementary School. Here is a map from FlashEarth showing the area: knob-hill-map2

 

 

It was built in 1947 by their father, Raymond Baskett, and home for years to the Baskett family: Raymond and his wife Beulah and their three children, Esther, Leatha and Marvin.

It looks like the house was swallowed by the ground. Protruding from the back of the roof is a covered doorway that leads down into the house. Here’s Marvin at the “front door” to his childhood home.

basement-house-door-marvin

Originally, there was no covered doorway, just an open stairwell down into the two-bedroom house. It had a living room and kitchen, running water and electricity.

But it was heated by a pot-bellied stove and they cooked on a wood-burning iron stove. The bathroom was an outhouse in the backyard. Ice was delivered every other day until 1951 when the family got a refrigerator and buried a natural gas line and installed a furnace.

Raymond was in construction and built several of the small bungaloes in the area of Iowa Avenue and Yampa Street. He planned to build an entire house above the basement. But he cut off a finger during construction. The resulting medical bills drained the family’s savings so the house was never finished, Marvin Baskett said.

It really wasn’t out-of-place in Knob Hill  a working-class neighborhood east of downtown Colorado Springs and the intersection of Platte Avenue and Union Boulevard.

 It’s one of those places the developed after World War II without much in the way of building codes. It was unincorporated El Paso County and home to folks of modest means.

Some oldtimers say Knob Hill‘s major artery, Platte Avenue (a.k.a. U.S. Highway 24) resembed the two ends of Nevada Avenue, where small motels and shops were built on the outskirts of the city. 

In recent years, residents and business owners formed the Platte Avenue Business & Neighborhood Association, which has worked to improve the area with new medians, sidewalks, curbs and gutters among other projects.

Here are a couple more photos of the Baskett family home.

basement-house-closeup

basement-house-doorway

Here’s a look at a couple other nearby basement houses.

This one is on the northwest corner of Alexander Road and Cache La Poudre Street. For decades, it had a free-standing door at the back, visible on the left, leading down to the house. A few years ago, a house was built atop the basement.

basement-house-alexander

The building below is just down Iowa in Otis Park and has served as a community center.

basement-house-otis

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SKI LANE — rural/urban conflict at its worst

December 6th, 2009, 1:16 pm by

 Cumbre Vista is a new subdivision, recently annexed onto the northeast edge of Colorado Springs, where about 60 new houses have been built along with streets, curbs and sidewalks, a neighborhood park with gazebo and ballfield.

 cumbrevistasign1

 

 

 

 

 Below is a map of the subdivision from the El Paso County Assessor’s Website. The dark areas on map are part of Colorado Springs. The white areas are part of unincorporated El Paso County.

skilanemap

 The new neighborhood looks like many others scattered around Colorado Springs with one exception. It features a 12-foot cliff.

 The cliff was built by developer Infinity Land Corp. when it decided to obliterate Ski Lane, a country road that existed since 1956.

 There is a legal question whether it was a deeded right-of-way or simple easement.

Here’s how Ski Lane looked before it was destroyed. The lane ran left to right, atop the little hill in this view facing west. The gravel road coming toward the camera on the left was Sorpresa Lane. The gravel road on the right was created by construction of Cumbre Vista.

skilanebefore

 Here’s how it looked after construction began. The developer simply cut down the hill, leaving Ski Lane hanging.

skielaneafter

  The cliff made it virtually impossible for the handful of county residents who live on the south end of Ski Lane to use their historic northern route out of the neighborhood toward Black Forest.

 In fact, it took intervention by City Planner Larry Larsen to get the ugly hairpin curve built at the base and side of the cliff, to restore a reasonable access to Ski Lane.

 Here’s the ugly “solution” to the cliff. Larsen said it was the best the city could do given the lack of cooperation from the two sides.

sorpresauturn

  Here’s a link to a blog I wrote about the mess in October 2008.

  The cliff and the hairpin curve are considered temporary. Eventually, Ski Lane will be lowered to link to the new subdivision streets. The only question seems to be when it will occur. Eventually, all the unincorporated land around Ski Lane will be developed and swallowed by the city.

 Will the residents have to live with it until they die or move? Or will a pending lawsuit force the developer and Woodmen Heights Metro District to compensate them for their loss?

 They are gambling on the court but don’t want Colorado Springs City Hall to jeopardize their chances by accepting Cumbre Vista officially from the developer. They fear the court would view that action as approval of the way they were treated.

 They made those arguments a few weeks ago before the Colorado Springs Planning Commission. Commissioners took turns criticizing the way neighbors were treated. But ultimately they approved the plat, calling it a private legal matter.

 To get in and out of Ski Lane, residents must negotiate an ugly, eroding hairpin curve onto Sorpresa Lane and go through Cumbre Vista, which sits on 115 acres south of Cottonwood Creek near Woodmen Road and Powers Boulevard.

 The neighbors’ effort is being led by Bill and Maureen Marchant. In their lawsuit, the neighbors say they have a deeded right of way that dates to 1956 which guarantees them northern access route. They say the developer cannot simply move or eliminate that right-of-way.

 A few weeks ago they went before the Colorado Springs Planning Commission urging them not to approve the plat. Neighbors planned to appeal to the City Council on Tuesday. But late last week Larsen withdrew his approval of the plat, citing an issue with the deed. Maybe there’s still time for the district to settle the issue and turn the ski jump back into country lane.

 I’m guessing resolution will involve checks to residents with several zeroes on the end. Or Cumbre Vista will feature a cliff that may make residents wonder what kind of subdivision they really live in.

TRAFFIC CONCERNS in Rockrimmon and Wagon Trails

October 4th, 2009, 4:00 pm by

============ UPDATE   BELOW –  UPDATE BELOW ============

Remember the smashing fences in Rockrimmon? You know, the folks who live at the bottom of the hill where Vindicator Drive meets Rockrimmon Boulevard? They’ve lived with cars crashing into their yards for years.

Below is a map from FlashEarth.com of the area:

fenceflash

Two families – Mitch Logue and Donald and Colleen Kunecke, wanted the city to install guardrails to prevent future incidents like this one below:

fencewreck2

I’ve written about it a couple times. Here is a link to a previous blog about the problem.

Well the Colorado Springs traffic engineer, Dave Krauth, said the intersection won’t accomodate guard rails. But he’s interested in testing sophisticated new traffic sensors to see if he can stop some of the carnage.

The sensors track cars entering an intersection as the traffic signal is about to change. Traffic engineers call this moment the “dilemma zone.”

 The sensors can delay the change to allow the cars to clear without stomping on their gas and plowing over the curb and into a fence and yard.

There’s also news on another bottleneck in the city. This one is a two-lane stretch of Dublin Boulevard between Bridle Pass Drive and Powers Boulevard. Here’s a look from FlashEarth:

dublinflashoverview

Readers like Tim Little want to know why Dublin suddenly shrinks from four lanes to two and a stretch of pavement sits unfinished.

It’s a twisted tale of land that is annexed vs. unincorporated land stuck in El Paso County.

dublincitylimits

It is further complicated by rules about when a develop must build infrastructure like roads, curbs and sidewalks.

Krauth said the road will be widened as land is developed along the stretch. Already a short piece was widened but never attached to the intersection at Bridle Pass due to a property line issue.

dublinflashcloseup

The rest of the road won’t be widened until county land on the north side is developed and annexed into the city.

As a result, motorists are stuck with roads that look like this view to the east:

dublinroadclosed1

And this view looking west:

dublincurvewestb

================ NOW THE UPDATE ================

 

I now have an answer to the mysterious disappearing pavement.

dublinflashcloseup1

The new black pavement was installed by the developer of a townhome project adjacent to Dublin Boulevard. However, it ends about 400 feet from the intersection to the west.

Why didn’t the developer just finish the job?

Tim Mitros of city engineering tells me the pavement ends at a property line. Developers are required to install infrastructure — sidewalks, curbs, gutters even roadway – adjacent to their projects. But not for a neighbor’s land.

In the case above, the pavement ends at the property line of the next parcel and the remaining 400 feet will be installed if and when the adjacent land is developed.

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NEIGHBORHOOD ACTIVISTS 2, Developers 0

May 20th, 2009, 6:16 pm by

In 2007, residents of the Woodmen Valley near Peregrine along the southern boundary of the Air Force Academy found themselves battling to preserve their neighborhood on two fronts.

Here’s a look at the valley from www.FlashEarth.com

 woodmenmap1

 

First, a developer revealed plans to convert the old Woodmen-Roberts Elementary School since 1990 known as the Woodmen Center, not a strip mall with a liquor store, dry cleaner and coffee shop.

woodmencenter2

Then another developer asked the city to annex 40 acres of land and eight homes where he planned to build a subdivision with 80 homes.

cedaravalleymap

 

hefley3 The project included a 5-acre parcel that for years was the home of  retired Congressman Joel Hefley.

 

 

 

Here’s a look at the project:

cedarvalleylane

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Neighbors formed the “Woodmen Valley Preservation Association” and opposed both projects. They insisted on so many restrictions on the Woodmen Center property that the developer dropped plans for a strip mall.

Today, a new owner is preparing to move in: Nursing and Therapy Services of Colorado.

The other project, to get Colorado Springs to annex the 40 acres including Hefley’s house and build an 80-home subdivision failed when activists discovered that several of the property owners signed away their right to subdivide years ago when they accepted city water.

Now, the old Hefley spread, with its house and 5.37 acres,  is on the market for $725,000. Here’s a look at it:

hefley1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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WETLAND or secret government conspiracy?

April 3rd, 2009, 7:04 pm by

Neighborhood gossip erupted into a nasty chain of e-mails recently in a good example of what can happen with neighbors don’t talk and simply spread half-truths and make faulty assumptions.

In this case, the gossip started spreading because El Paso County  didn’t aggressively inform residents of the Woodlake subdivision in northern part of the county about plans to build a wetland on a greenbelt it owns among the neighborhood’s 400 or so 5-acre ranchettes. See the FlashEarth.com image below.

The tempest bubbled up after crews began building a nearly one-acre wetland in the 92-acre greenbelt that surrounds the Kiowa Creek drainage.

Three Woodlake residents saw the work and assumed one of their neighbors, Tim Stickel, must be involved. Stickel works for the El Paso County parks department. The wetland was near his house. And he was responsible for convincing Woodlake residents in 2004 to give the greenbelt to the county in his role then as president of the Woodlake Property Owners Association.

Ah ha! Gotcha!

In a series of e-mails, the three accused Stickel of a conflict of interest. They alleged county officials of being complicit. And they tried to scare neighbors by suggesting the crews were building a pond that would drain the wells they rely on for drinking water. Worse, the pond would cause an epidemic of West Nile virus. Worse yet, their children would drown in the pond.

Except for one thing. They were wrong. It was all just neighborhood gossip.

Tom Wolken, who runs county parks, said Stickel was not inovlved in the project. The wetland was created as a favor to the Colorado Department of Transportation, which had ruined a wetland near Baptist Road and Interstate 25 during a construction project. It needed to replace the wetland it ruined and the county offered a piece of its greenbelt.

And they weren’t building a pond. Sure, there was heavy equipment brought in and tons of earth moved. But crews were digging to install a culvert that would act as a sponge and absorb seepage from the ground to feed the wetland. Native grasses, willow trees and vegetation were to be planted. There would be no pond and no wells drilled to tap the aquifer to feed the wetland, Wolken said.

Finally, the idea of a conflict of interest was false, Wolken said. Stickel had not hidden his employment from his neighbors. He had not gained anything personally from the transfer of ownership. And the whole thing had gone to a vote of the neighbors who agreed to give the greenbelt away because the association didn’t have the money to pay for liability insurance and noxious weed control.

In fact, it wasn’t the first time the property had been swapped between the neighborhood and the county. For some reason, the same thing happened 20 years ago. No one seems to want it.

Neighbors Reta League and Darryle Pfauntsch defend the e-mails they wrote and the wild conspiracy theories and doomsday scenarios they had suggested.

 League said she feared her well might be compromised. And the sight of heavy equipment was shocking without explanation from the county, she said. She just wanted answers.

Pfaunstch defended things his strong suggestion that Stickel was guilty of a conflict. Pfaunstch said he doesn’t like Stickel and remains angry he lost the argument in 2004 to give away the greenbelt. But Pfaunstch insists he was not indulging his personal dislike of Stickel and trying to get him fired.

“I have no regrets,” Pfauntsch said.

Bottom line: the county should have done more than erect a couple of small signs announcing a wetland. If it had communicated better with its neighbors, it could have avoided dealing with a flurry of snarky e-mails and innuendo.

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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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