Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'ranchette' Tag

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.

====================================

B LAZY M is branded a nightmare

March 18th, 2009, 10:15 pm by

Longtime Side Streets readers no doubt recall the stories of Jan Jackson, who lives with her husband in the mountainside subdivision known as the B Lazy M Ranch.

It’s a beautiful community on the western flank of Pikes Peak.

 

Here’s a GoogleEarth map to the B Lazy M:

And this is another view of the remote, wooded ranch.

Here is a view of Jan Jackson’s house, one of two she owns in the community of 35-acre ranchettes.

Jackson and her husband bought their first house with a barn and corral in 1999. They bought the house next-door, above, a few years later and moved. But they still own both properties.

 Jackson’s anger at the B Lazy M homeowners association was ignited when they questioned the size of a corral on the property at her first home. Then she accused the HOA of illegally storing water in this pond on Hay Creek.

The pond dam is 19 feet high and 200 feet long. It holds about 30 acre feet of water. It was built in 1963 to water cattle on the 1,600-acre ranch. After the ranch was developed into a subdivision in 1977, the HOA maintained it to water a few remaining cattle, to stock for fishing and as insurance against wildfires.

When the dam needed repair, the HOA issued a special assessment, which Jackson protested, to fix it and to buy water rights to fill the pond.

The dispute led to years of complaints, counter-complaints, allegations, tense meetings and deteriorated into name-calling and lawsuits.

Jackson launched a crusade not just against B Lazy M Ranch but against all HOAs, declaring war and vowing to abolish them. She has her own Web page and posts on many blogs on the subject.

Finally, in October 2007, 4th Judicial District Court Judge Thomas Kennedy ruled Jackson had repeatedly libeled members of the ranch owners association board of directors with venomous attacks that often started like this. . .

===

AHRC.com
An Article
The B Lazy M Ranch Owners Association in Colorado Goes Completely Dictatorial?California developer and his “cabal” appear to violate Colorado laws with impunity January 12, 2006By Jan Jackson (View author info)
Florissant, Colorado -The B Lazy M Ranch Owners Association (BLM ROA) board of directors (BoD) has outdone themselves this time.===      

 

======

Here is a link to a vintage Jackson rant in which she called board members psychopaths. The board of directors had 2,000 pages of evidence.

In addition, the judge issued an injunction that gagged Jackson from future screeds to her B Lazy M Ranch board, or about the board to newspapers, blogs like the AHRC, which stands for the American Homeowners Resource Center and is a major anti-HOA voice on the web.

Want to really dig into this case? Check out this link, which includes transcripts from the 2007 trial before Kennedy and his decision.

Now, the Colorado Court of Appeals has struck down Kennedy’s injunction against Jackson, freeing her to unleash new attacks. But not with impunity. She no longer faces contempt of court for speaking her mind, but she may be open to new libel lawsuits, bigger fines and court costs.

She is appealing to the Colorado Supreme Court claiming the one-year statute of limitations on defamation claims had expired on many of the statements. It’s unknown if the high court will consider the appeal.

=========================================