Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Pleasant Valley' Tag

IS PLEASANT VALLEY COUPLE ON DOORSTEP OF DISASTER?

January 27th, 2013, 5:00 am by

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Since 1976, Frank and Barbara Sanders have lived quietly on the northern edge of Pleasant Valley along the banks of Camp Creek, giving them a front-row seat to Rock Ledge Ranch and Garden of the Gods.

Last June, the Sanders had a front-row seat for the Waldo Canyon fire. They watched in horror as the hills above the valley became choked in billowing black clouds of smoke and the forest glowed a sickening orange at night as trees torched in the spreading wildfire.

Now, the Sanders may have a front-row seat to the aftermath of that disaster.

Experts fear the Sanders and much of Pleasant Valley could face devastating flooding from ash and debris-laden water with the next hard rain.

The inferno that killed two people and burned about 350 homes in Mountain Shadows also scorched upwards of 18,250 acres in the Pike National Forest, especially in Queens Canyon and the headwaters of Camp Creek.

Experts agree it’s not a question of “if” a hard rain will bring flooding. The question is “when” and “where” the flooding will occur. There are several drainage basins where rainfall, especially a notorious Colorado microburst, could unleash a raging black torrent.

Flooding could occur in Woodmen Valley, below Peregrine, where Dry Creek runs. Or in Mountain Shadows and surrounding neighborhoods along Douglas Creek. Certainly Manitou Springs and the communities up Ute Pass already have suffered and remain vulnerable from Williams Canyon and Waldo Canyon flooding.

But perhaps no neighborhood is more at risk than Pleasant Valley,  a 1950s-era subdivision of about 800 modest homes. It’s a likely target because it’s the first neighborhood below Queens Canyon, where the fire raged for days before exploding down the foothills and into Colorado Springs on June 26.

Any significant rain is expected to carry tons of sterilized soil, rocks and burned timber down the mountainside, through Glen Eyrie and Garden of the Gods before it slams into Pleasant Valley.

A photo by Frank Sanders shows the washed out culvert and portion of Chambers Drive damaged in a 1999 flood near his Pleasant Valley home.

The Sanders’ tidy little home would be swamped by the first wave.

“We are very apprehensive about the next summer or two,” Frank Sanders said. “I don’t know how much mitigation they can do, really.”

The couple bought federal flood insurance. And they have a new weather radio so they’ll hear any storm warnings.

But they keep thinking back to April 1999 when a wet spring and late snow caused Camp Creek to jump out of its banks and into their driveway and lawn.

“The water coming down the street and flowing through our driveway like a river,” Frank said. “It was calf-deep and very swift.

“It gives you a really helpless feeling. All you can do is watch the water rise. It was pretty bad.”

Frank ordered a pallet of sandbags from a hardware store and the city arrived with a long rubber bladder that workers filled with water to create a dike to divert floodwaters around the house.

In this photo courtesy of the Sanders family, Frank Sanders, right tries to remove water from his Pleasant Valley property during a 1999 flood.

“We had an inch of water in the basement,” he said. “We’d have had it a lot worse if the city hadn’t showed up.”

That relatively small flood was bad enough to wash out two corrugated steel drainage pipes that carried the creek under the intersection of 31st Street and Chambers Way. Asphalt hung like a rolling, black tablecloth across the void.

The road was closed nearly a year as crews rebuilt a concrete culvert to carry the creek under the intersection.

“You just wondered how it would ever get back to normal again,” Barbara Sanders said.

Already, they’ve had a frightening hint of what they might expect. Last July, a moderate rain brought swirling black water choked with ash and gravel down Camp Creek.

“It was black as tar,” Frank said. “And it smelled like fire.”

Fortunately, city crews had cleared dead trees at the mouth of the culvert before the rainfall so there was no repeat of 1999. In fact, Kurt Schroeder, of the city parks department, said crews removed hundreds of dead trees and even more live New Mexico locust trees from the creek as it winds through Garden of the Gods.

In addition, he said city engineers are looking for ways to slow any floodwater as it pours through the city park, reducing its possible impact on Pleasant Valley.

El Paso County Commissioner Sallie Clark said the Sanders were smart to buy insurance and get a weather radio.

And she urged the Sanders and their neighbors to attend public meetings like one scheduled Tuesday being sponsored by the city to discuss flood risks and mitigation efforts.

“I don’t mean to scare people, but they need to be aware that this could be very serious,” Clark said.

The Sanders are sufficiently aware, if not downright scared.

“We’ve gone to several meetings,” Barbara said. “We’ve gotten maps of the floodplain and read everything we can.”

In addition, they volunteered their house for taping of a video to teach volunteers how to fill and place sandbags as the city and county trains for possible flooding.

They’d prefer to return to enjoying their quiet old life. But they are preparing for the worst, with a scrapbook full of Waldo Canyon fire photos handy to remind them why they need to worry.

“Our only saving grace,” Frank said, “is that it is going to be a dry summer. There’s not much more to say. We just sit and wait. The more mitigation work they can do on the burn area, the better. We just hope it doesn’t rain hard.

Last August, Camp Creek ran black with ash and soot from the Waldo Canyon fire burn area far above the Pleasant Valley neighborhood in Queens Canyon.

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CRAWL SPACE ISN’T SUPPOSED TO INCLUDE HOMELESS DRUGGIES

February 10th, 2012, 11:30 am by

Door to crawl space under Pleasant Valley home where homeless druggies have been partying.

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Pleasant Valley is a neighborhood of about 800 homes mostly built in the 1950s-'60s on the west side of Colorado Springs, south of the Garden of the Gods.

Katie Hamilton had heard noises at night recently and assumed she had deer in the backyard of her Pleasant Valley home.

Then her dogs started going nuts in the dark.

Again, she assumed it was wildlife upsetting them.

She was thinking much differently Wednesday after her son went into the crawl space under her home of 22 years to fix a wiring issue.

What they discovered was scary and creepy and a warning to anyone with an unsecured crawl space.

“We went under the house and found an empty beer can which was very clean,” Katie said. “And we found three wooden stakes, each burned on the ends.”

Not your typical party room. The crawl space under Katie Hamilton's house appears to have been visited by intruders using drugs in the night.

This I had to see, so I drove over to her home.

We pushed open the plywood access door in her backyard and climbed under the house.

Sure enough, there was a clean Budweiser can in the gravel next to her furnace and wooden stakes, burned on their pointed ends.

She found other stuff, like an empty box of cigarettes and rags and even an odd square cut from packing material with a hole burned in it.

What the heck has been going on under her house?

Katie Hamilton displays some of the paraphrenalia she discovered in the crawl space under her home.

“It’s kind of creepy,” Katie said. “It looks like people have been coming and going.”

It all adds up . . . the noises in the night, the barking dogs, the paraphernalia under the house.

“I’m wondering if someone is going under my house to do drugs,” she said.

Katie said she goes under the house monthly to change her furnace filter.

“I would have seen it,” she said. “This stuff wasn’t here.”

Her home backs up to an alley and though the yard is fenced, access to the plywood door would be simple.

And given Katie’s observations in recent months, the idea of intruders seems plausible. The alley seems to have become a drifter highway. She often sees strangers walking back there, or on bikes, even pulling wagons with stuff in them.

Worse is the trend she perceives in her west side neighborhood of a wave of crime: home invasions and car break-ins.

“I hate to say it but it seems like things are getting worse,” she said.

Soon as she made her troubling discovery, Katie sounded an alarm.

She alerted the Pleasant Valley Neighborhood Association which posted a warning on its website.

Dawn Sandoval, a member of the association board, praised Katie for getting word out to the neighborhood.

“It’s very shocking,” Dawn said. “People need to know.”

Then, Katie got busy securing her home. She hired a contractor to install a security door on her crawl space so she no longer has to worry about intruders.

But, like a good neighbor, she’s worried about those around her.

“We have some older neighbors,” Katie said. “I wouldn’t want this happening to them.”

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