Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Stetson Hills' Tag

NEIGHBORS LOCKED IN UGLY WAR ON SILVERADO TRAIL

January 29th, 2012, 11:30 am by

It was like watching a train wreck.

Residents of Silverado Trail in Stetson Hills east of Powers Boulevard came before the Colorado Springs City Council last week and lobbed ugly at each other.

“Pedophile.” “Pervert.” “Obsessive.” “Irresponsible parents.”

It’s not often such a nasty neighborhood fight takes center stage at City Council.

This screen capture from video shows Jeff Clarke as he testified on Jan. 24, 2012, before the Colorado Springs City Council. He was appealing an order by the city that he remove a basketball hoop built into the public right-of-way next to Silverado Trail.

At issue was Jeff Clarke’s appeal to keep his basketball hoop, built illegally next to the curb and facing Silverado Trail, a street of modest homes built in the 1990s.

Last summer, neighbors reported the hoop, with its steel pole, clear pastic backboard and adjustable mount, as a code violation.

Karen Amos admitted to the council that she filed the complaint in retaliation against Clarke.

The basketball pole can be seen against the curb on Silverado Trail. Jeff Clarke said the pole was there when he bought his house in 2003.

“Mr. Clarke has made us all very accountable for our own actions with regard to not following the code,” Amos testified. “To me, fair is fair. You can’t pick and choose which rules to enforce and disregard the ones that apply to yourself.”

As she, Clarke and neighbor Brigitte Scott testified, it became clear. Silverado Trail is a disaster zone.

Clarke, his wife and three sons bought their home and its street-side basketball hoop  in 2003. Life was fine then.

A career soldier, he retired  in 2006 after tours in Bosnia, Kosovo and Afghanistan. Then he returned to Afghanistan as a private contractor for two years.

When he came home in 2010, the neighborhood had changed, he said.

“In the time I was gone, many people have moved in and out of the neighborhood,” Clarke told me. “I come back and I’ve got foolish neighbors.”

Neighbors reported this basketball hoop to the city as a code violation in retaliation against its owner, Jeff Clarke.

He said neighbor kids take his landscaping rocks, damage his sprinkler heads and cars and pick his strawberries, apples and flowers.

“Due to the damage, I placed security cameras on my property,” Clarke said. “The true problem isn’t the basketball hoop but the parental supervision of their children and not accepting responsibility for the damage that they cause.”

Amos and Scott said Clarke is the problem, not them.

In this screen capture from video, Silverado Trail resident Karon Amos explains why she complained to the city about Jeff Clarke's basketball hoop.

They said he curses at their kids when they try to play on the basketball hoop, chasing them, screaming and intimidating them by photographing them.

Clarke admitted he has screamed at the kids and chased them away.

“But I didn’t cuss at the kids,” he told me. “I called them white trash. That’s my term of endearment for them and their parents.”

I think you get the picture.

The council did too, rejecting his appeal and giving him 45 days to remove the basketball hoop.

But this one isn’t over yet.

“I’m not pulling it out,” Clarke told me. “Absolutely not. I didn’t place it there. I’m not pulling it out.”

What if neighbors get even more upset?

“I’m not going to let anyone run me off my property or destroy or damage anything I’ve bought and paid for,” Clarke said. “If they want to get hostile, I can match their intensity.”

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Follow this link to watch Jeff Clarke, Karen Amos and Brigitte Scott testify before City Council. Jump ahead to the 1:48:38 mark of the video.

To read about it, follow this link to the City Council agenda and flip to page 137.

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NEIGHBORHOODS TURN TO SOCIAL MEDIA

May 29th, 2011, 10:06 am by

Ethan Beute

Ethan Beute and Stephanie Weber had the same idea.

Both thought Facebook would be a great way to connect with their neighbors.

So Ethan built a Facebook page for his neighborhood, Ivywild, south of downtown Colorado Springs.

Stephanie Weber

And Stephanie built one for her Stetson Hills neighborhood of Ridgeview on the city’s eastern edge.

Ethan spent a day walking around Ivywild, taking photos of homes, parks and businesses. He wrote a brief description of the historic neighborhood with precise boundaries and directions and launched his page.

Stephanie created an even more elaborate page for Ridgeview with a mission statement, names of homeowners association officials, links to neighborhood covenants, helpful phone numbers and more.

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Ethan said he built Ivywild’s for fun and to promote his neighborhood because he thinks others would share his enthusiasm for its old homes with their character and the cool businesses in the neighborhood.

Stephanie wanted to build the kind of community she remembered, growing up in Kansas. With so many people using Facebook, she considered it a natural way to reach out and find new friends.

And it makes a lot of sense. A Facebook page is easier to create and maintain than an individual website. People can chat more easily than via email. And they can share photos and things like covenants and newsletters more easily on a Facebook page.

Stephanie also had a sense of urgency. She wanted to use the Facebook page to promote a neighborhood picnic last August.

Today, the pages have gone in different directions.

Ethan managed to recruit a couple other enthusiastic neighbors who have joined him as administrators, feeding the Ivywild page with content.

Some of the content is current events — updates on the effort to create an urban renewal zone in Ivywild and transform the beautiful old elementary school into a  business center.

Some are links to newspaper columns about the neighborhood.

More often, the posts relate to wine tastings and brewpub specials or discounts at the neighborhood spa.

There’s even talk about restoring the neighborhood sign.

An architect's drawing of the Ivywild school. Plans call for it to become a brewery and bakery.

It appears the Ivywild Facebook page is updated every few days and it has 175 fans.

But the Stetson Hills Ridgeview page is not enjoying the same success.

After the picnic last August, Stephanie moved overseas. The page has gone dormant.

The last posts were photos of the picnic. It looked like fun. Families enjoying inflatable slides, face-painting, games and food.

Then silence.

Stephanie is disappointed that all her work seems to have been wasted.

Stetson Hills' Ridgeview neighborhood enjoys panoramic views of Pikes Peak.

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